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  3. WandaVision is a miniseries of many genres note / / created by Jac Schaeffer, directed by Matt Shakman (himself a child actor from '80s sitcom Just the Ten of Us), and executive-produced by Kevin Feige, based on the Marvel Comics characters Scarlet Witch and The Vision.

    • YMMV

      A page for describing YMMV: WandaVision. This page contains...

    • Episode 1 - "Filmed Before A Live Studio Audience"
    • Episode 2 - "Don't Touch That Dial"
    • Episode 3 - "Now in Color"
    • Episode 5 - "On A Very Special Episode..."
    • Episode 6 - “All-New Halloween Spooktacular!”
    • Episode 7 - "Breaking The Fourth Wall"
    • GeneratedCaptionsTabForHeroSec

    Episode 1 throws us squarely into classic 1950s sitcom territory, giving us the production design, the 4:3 black-and-white photography, and the general visual “vibe” of these types of shows immediately. I Love Lucy, Leave It to Beaver, The Honeymooners (down to Kathryn Hahn’s off-screen husband being named Ralph, Jackie Gleason's leading Honeymoone...

    In Episode 2, we jump roughly a decade in genre time into the world of 1960s television comedy. Most specifically, the episode evokes I Dream of Jeannie, a 1965-1970 sitcom also about a powerfully supernatural woman trying her best to seem “normal” in American society, down to its similar animated title sequence and climactic shift into Technicolor...

    Another episode, another shift forward by one decade in television history! From moment one, you can tell we’re in the 1970s, a time of rapid progression in the television comedy form, as if producers realized they couldn’t put the social unrest and desire for change from the ‘60s back into the genie/Jeannie bottle. The final moments of Episode 2 l...

    After a brief, “fully takes place in a more traditional MCU-styled world outside of the sitcom” hiatus in Episode 4, we’re back, baby! And we’re cutting between this aforementioned MCU world and our increasingly surrealized sitcom world in a curious matter, trying our best to define and control certain labels and structures even as these labels and...

    Television Halloween specials took a turn in the late 1990s and early 2000s, even (especially?) if the programs were intended for kids. A Boy Meets World episode hard-pivots into an out-and-out slasher tale, with surprisingly graphic kills. The Simpsons throws continuity out the window, content to skin its main characters, grind their bones and blo...

    Wanna know what era of sitcoms this week’s WandaVision dives into? All you have to do is listen to the opening credits theme. From its rhythm to its chord progressions to it’s barely different melodic lines, Episode 7’s theme is unequivocally The Office’s theme, which alongside the episode’s title, handheld camera style, and pitch-perfect Jim Halpe...

    WandaVision is a TV show that engages with the genre and formal conventions of broadcast television, from the 1950s sitcom to the Twilight Zone. The show explores how Wanda and Vision are assimilating to the American culture and society of the era, while also critiquing its xenophobia and post-war politics. Read how every episode of WandaVision references and engages with TV tropes, forms, and sitcom styles.

    • Gregory Lawrence
  4. Jan 10, 2021 · Each episode is a new decade, and a new collection of TV tropes for audiences to wade through.

  5. With Elizabeth Olsen, Paul Bettany, Kathryn Hahn, Teyonah Parris. Blends the style of classic sitcoms with the MCU, in which Wanda Maximoff and Vision - two super-powered beings living their ideal suburban lives - begin to suspect that everything is not as it seems.

  6. Feb 25, 2021 · The Perfect Pastiche of TV Tropes and Trends in ‘WandaVision’. While some fans wonder how the series connects to the future of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, others of us are appreciating how...

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