Maybe in some of the movies, but with some of them, like the Dr. Strange sequel… if you didn’t watch Wandavision, you would have no idea what is going on. A huge amount of it involves the aftermath of Wandavision.
Can confirm. I read all of these stories back in the comics, saw most of the movies, but never watched Wandavision. I had no understanding of why she was suddenly the villain.
To be honest I watched WandaVision and didn’t really understand why she was suddenly the villian. It’s like they cut a scene from the ending of WandaVision or the beginning of Doctor Strange that would have developed her motives better. But that’s generally the issue right now (in my opinion), they aren’t spending enough time developing the characters.
Yeah, I was very much a fan of the first Dr. Strange movie and was looking forward to the sequel, but I was not a fan of Wandavision so when I found out the movie was basically Wandavision II (with guest appearance by Dr. Strange) I just didn’t bother.
This is a problem for any franchise that tries to interweave its shows too closely, as soon as one comes along that leaves a sour taste in my mouth anything else that’s closely entwined with it comes with a poison pill. Having a common fictional setting is great but moderation is needed and great care must be taken not to “break” it. I’ve dropped out of several other franchises that I used to think I would be a life-long fan of because of modern attempts to revamp the setting that just ruined them IMO.
Usually I can wrap up the basic plot points from a relevant show on the way to the theater. I was actually surprised this movie too scenes right out of the show to introduce the character
Maybe in some of the movies, but with some of them, like the Dr. Strange sequel… if you didn’t watch Wandavision, you would have no idea what is going on. A huge amount of it involves the aftermath of Wandavision.
Can confirm. I read all of these stories back in the comics, saw most of the movies, but never watched Wandavision. I had no understanding of why she was suddenly the villain.
To be honest I watched WandaVision and didn’t really understand why she was suddenly the villian. It’s like they cut a scene from the ending of WandaVision or the beginning of Doctor Strange that would have developed her motives better. But that’s generally the issue right now (in my opinion), they aren’t spending enough time developing the characters.
MoM was written before Wandavision was finalized iirc.
It felt like they just undid a ton of her plot development in the opening bits of MoM.
Apparently Sam Raimi never watched it, and Feige didn’t say “no, you have to”
Yeah, I was very much a fan of the first Dr. Strange movie and was looking forward to the sequel, but I was not a fan of Wandavision so when I found out the movie was basically Wandavision II (with guest appearance by Dr. Strange) I just didn’t bother.
This is a problem for any franchise that tries to interweave its shows too closely, as soon as one comes along that leaves a sour taste in my mouth anything else that’s closely entwined with it comes with a poison pill. Having a common fictional setting is great but moderation is needed and great care must be taken not to “break” it. I’ve dropped out of several other franchises that I used to think I would be a life-long fan of because of modern attempts to revamp the setting that just ruined them IMO.
Usually I can wrap up the basic plot points from a relevant show on the way to the theater. I was actually surprised this movie too scenes right out of the show to introduce the character