8

Review by Andrew Bloom
VIP
9
BlockedParentSpoilers2021-01-15T14:38:44Z

[7.7/10] Another really entertaining episode. This is more explicitly doing Bewitched and 1960s sitcoms, and there’s a lot of sheer entertainment to be had from a riff on tropes of odd couples trying to fit into their idyllic neighborhoods.

I also appreciate the recognition of classic sitcom tropes and how they’d evolved in the subsequent decades. That goes beyond just the different decor in Wanda and Vision’s home. We see them walk outside and go seemingly on location, beyond the confines of a single set. We also see many more people of color populating their white picket fence town. It’s small details, but they add up to show change.

The notion of Wanda trying to impress Dottie, the queen bee of the neighborhood (Emma Caufield, aka Anya from Buffy the Vampire Slayer), and Vision to get in good with the neighborhood watch, so as to further their joint initiative to fit in works as a great premise for the episode. There’s a lot of humor to be wrung from off-beat Wanda trying to fit in with the Stepford-esque ladies under Dottie’s purview, and awkward square Vision accidentally fitting in with the guys of the watch.

What’s more, the set piece of the two of them trying to pull off a magic act at the local talent show, where Vision is functionally drunk due to some literal gum in the works, and Wanda has to work to make people think it isn’t magic, is fantastic. There’s a great, frantic energy to the whole routine, and both Olsen and Bettany play it to the hilt.

This was also a great episode for stray lines. The running gag of people chanting “For The Children” in unison brought a lot of yuks. The poor mustached man from the prior episode going “That was my grandmother’s piano” when Wanda turns it into a wooden standee was a solid laugh. And one of the housewives in the audience asking “Is that how mirror’s work?” when Wanda uses them to try to explain Vision’s phasing hat trick had me rolling in the aisles.

But it’s not all laughs. There’s more horror at the edge of the frame that’s done quite well. The presence of an airplane that’s visibly Iron Man’s colors seems to shock Wanda as revealing that something’s wrong here. When Wanda assures Dottie that she doesn’t mean any harm, Dottie says “I don’t believe you,” in genuinely frightened tones, while a strange voice cuts through the radio, causing her to break a glass and bleed fluid that likewise breaks through the black and white color scheme. It’s another superbly done unnerving moment.

There’s also some interesting lines that have double meanings that are quickly glossed over, like their new friend saying “I don’t know why I’m here,” seemingly referring to the garden party, but also suggesting she’s been wrapped into this fantasy world somehow and doesn’t know why. There’s a lot of little bits of dialogue that work like that in this one, and it’s fascinating.

We also see and hear some loud thumping, played for laughs in the “move the beds together” scene (another wink toward classic TV changes), but also witness it used for legitimate scares. There’s some frightening imagery when the man emerges from the sewers in a beekeeper outfit and more “Who’s doing this to you, Wanda?” calls are heard, especially when Wanda uses the power to rewind the tape. The advent of a pregnancy is an interesting development, and the arrival of color with their kiss is some great effects worth.

I’m nursing a theory that this is all part of Wanda coping with the loss of Vision, feeling sick or afflicted and unwittingly creating this fantasy world out of some kind of grief, wrapping more and more people into it. Whatever the answer, color me appropriately intrigued by the mystery, charmed by the pastiche, and appropriately disturbed at the hints of something deeply wrong with all of this.

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9 replies

@andrewbloom I think you're right on that speculation. What I love is, that even if one has read the House of X storyline l, like I have, we have still no idea what's going to happen, other than maybe recognising sooner that this world is created by Wanda I'm curious, how this will develop!

@wherop I'd find it very amusing if it ended with a "Yes more mutants" and boom, there's your introduction!

@andrewbloom “Rolling in the isles?” “Frightening imagery?” “Horror at the edge of the frame?” I was confused by this review until I saw the comment “Airplane visibly in Iron Man’s colours” it’s not an airplane, it’s a helicopter. You are obviously not seeing this show clearly. It’s unfunny, un-scary, pretentious rubbish!

@trevskie Lol calm down, someone can have an opinion that's not yours and that's perfectly ok. Helicopter, plane, they both fly it's a dumb thing to discredit someone for.

@andrewbloom Well I myself enjoyed Herb & Norm because they did an amazing job and were fun to watch and really added to the dynamic!! Lets remember not to only describe them as POC and nothing more, they're actors with talent and many great things to offer.

@mattdeezly1996 I'm not sure what you're referring to.

@andrewbloom I have to say, it wasn't until I read this review that I reflected on the decade changing -this perhaps speaks even more deeply about said shift to colour at the end of the episode. From what I understand colour broadcasts started to normalise in US households somewhere in the 60s going on 70s. I can't believe I never noticed the furniture has completely changed as a hint of the reference period shifting.

As much as it's strange to discuss, you raised another interesting narrative point about the introduction of people of colour. Considering the era, and the extent of this pastiche of suburbia (with literal white picket fences) it was striking. Only "Norm" appears in episode 1 (briefly) with actor Asif Ali being, if I'm not mistaken, South Asian. I put the surprising diversity of the neighbourhood down to a quirk of the situation they're in; Wanda and Vision being from circa 2020 it would be normal for them to know a diverse group of people, even if it doesn't quite fit the context. But perhaps I am overthinking it!

(As a little personal research: looking at Bewitched, which ran for 254 episodes from 1964 to 1972, the cast of main and recurring characters is almost 20 people; and I don't think any one of them is a person of colour. Not a critique, but a point of reference)

Thank you for another insightful review, eagerly looking forward to what surprises in the next episode.

@andrewbloom this reply is FOR THE CHILDREN

@princerules64 That's a really interesting point. I totally took it as commentary on the shifting nature of television, but maybe it's just an in-universe nod to the fact that in the modern era, the suburbs are more diverse than they were in the White Flight 60s and 70s, no matter what veneer Wanda puts over them. Thank you again for the lovely compliment!

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