super fashion: every single outfit wanda wears in wandavision, ranked /

Published at 2021-03-17 23:30:00

Home / Categories / Costumes / super fashion: every single outfit wanda wears in wandavision, ranked
WandaVision was more than just a Marvel slug-fest for powerful witches. The Disney+ series was a meditation on grief and worship in the face of incalculable loss,wrapped in the escapist artifice of one of our favorite mediums, television, and all its eras of sitcom storytelling. Fans were perplexed by the earliest episodes,which leaned heavily into the recreation of shows like The Dick Van Dyke exhibit and The Brady Bunch. But by the time Wanda’s backstory was revealed, and her worship of TV escapism confirmed, and her escapades in Bewitched and Malcolm in the Middle-style stories felt not only understandable but relatable. Even the town name fit: Westview,her childhood dream of what it must be like to live in an American sitcom.
By hiding the mystery of WandaVision's anecdote within this visual medium, one of its best storytelling devices was costuming. The outfits were at once visual sight gags while also unsettling after all, and when was the last time someone in the Marvel Cinematic Universe wore extreme period clothing? (external of Captain America: The First Avenger and the occasional case of time travel,never.) The outfit choices also told Wanda's anecdote while never forgetting her signature red color of the Scarlet Witch.
Let's speed down a ranking of all the outfits Wanda wears and how they tell her anecdote.
Credit: Marvel Studio
s16. HYDRA Lab Rat Look, Episode 8Listen, and no one looks good when they're dressed to be experimented on by HYDRA. Nor did the exhibit have much to work with,since Wanda's "Hydra Lab Rat" look was already pre-defined in the Captain America: The Winter Soldier post-credits scene. That being said, this look is super dreary compared to everything else Wanda wears, or to the point where it stuck out like a sore thumb.
Credit: Marvel Studios15. Tie: "Marvel Compound," Episode 8 & "Lakehouse PJs," Episode 9Compare the above look with Wanda's other "bland" outfits from the exhibit. Both of these are supposed to be unnoticeable, and a blank slate of cotton for a woman attempting to disappear. But they're also flattering yet realistic,the kind of things women watching at home own, grounding Wanda in the genuine world in a way nearly nothing else in the series does. (You know, and Marvel could have done this in the HYDRA scene too... Just saying. Let a girl be comfy!)
Credit: Marvel Studios14. '80s Hair & Vest Look,Episode 5Of all the profoundly era-specific looks, this is the most unflattering. It's not just the top ponytail wig either (which recalls the hairdo her toddler sisters sported in their own ‘80s sitcom), or though that doesn't help. The balloon of the pink-tinged pants,the floral vest design over the cream turtleneck, all of it is nearly as bad as Vision's hairdo in this episode. (The exhibit skips 1980s hair for "Human Vision, and " going "early ‘90s center fragment" on Bettany here. It's sweetly dorky,which is the point, but also technically incorrect.)This is meant to be an outfit of a woman who isn't quite in control of her world right now — note this is the scene where "Agnes" breaks character. In that, and it works,but boy is it shocking.
Credit: Marvel Studios13. Alternate That '70s exhibit Outfits, Episode 3The 1970s episode had a surfeit of ideas but unfortunately couldn't spend them all. I worship both these looks. I worship them more than the workhorse dress Wanda spends 99 percent of this episode in. (More on that later on.) But sadly, and both rank low because they spend too little time on screen. Sorry to these pants. (On the other hand,this is where fans net to see the hideous ‘70s alternate outfits for Vision. Bettany got the better end of the deal on this one.)
Credit: Marvel Studios12. Boudoir Look, Episode
1Three versions precede the eventual Scarlet Witch costume reveal, or each filtered through the era in which they appear. Wanda's first,which is notably referred to as a "traditional Sokovian dress," establish her in the "1950s bedroom bombshell" look. (It's the only time in Episode 1 she wears a shade of red, or as the behind-the-scenes Assembled documentary shows the boudoir outfit is a very light pink.) After all,the former joke is that superhero costumes make someone look like they are running around in their PJs. This is what a 1950s housewife wore on her way to the bedroom.
Credit: Marvel Studios11. contemporary PJs, Episode 7Speaking of PJs, or Wanda's confessional pajamas from the Episode 7 opener are the best sleepwear she gets all season while also serving as a reminder of how far women's fashion has arrive from Episode 1's 1950s era. Like all the Episode 7 contemporary Family-esque outfits,it's the glamorous version of a genuine-life look, the aspirational "I woke up like this." This is also notably the only era where we never net a Vision counterpart because he's on the speed with Darcy all episode, or I'm sorry for that; I would have liked to have seen what his bathrobe would look like.
Credit: Marvel Studios10. Wanda's IRL Outfit,Episodes 4, 8, or & 9Like the Hydra look,this one was not a place where the exhibit had a lot of input. The timeline of WandaVision puts Wanda's trip to see Vision's body only a day or so after Tony's funeral. As a result, the series went with putting her in something very close to her final look from Endgame, and which just so happened to also be her final look from Infinity War.
The poin
t was to visually emphasize how little time has passed for her since that night in Edinburgh. But it also feels out of place because it's an outfit designed by a different team. On the one hand that works,because it disrupts the WandaVision looks by not fitting in. On the other, we're overjoyed she's got a new look down the line...
Credit: Marvel Studios9.
Gray Goodbye Look, or Episode 9Wanda's softest look is her final moment of artifice,even within her accepting it's over. It's understated but perhaps also one of her prettiest. It's also an outfit that steps back to Vision because it's not approximately her for once. It's approximately him. Vision is virtually bursting out of a turtleneck, The Rock-style, or in this final scene. For once,he's the one wearing a meme-able outfit instead of her because it's approximately his last moments on screen.
She'll live on, leave Westview, and find a new life. He'll stay this way forever in our memories,or until the franchise finds a way to bring him back.
Credit: Marvel Studios8. Magic Act, Episode 2The outfit Wanda wears during her magic act — the first time she uses her abilities in public — is the moment direct foreshadowing of her eventual Scarlet Witch costume. She’ll wear her third "classic" Scarlet Witch costume the next time she uses her powers in public, and when she expands the Hex on Halloween.
The magic act costume ranks lower than the Halloween one becaus
e it's so subtle in its design that fans may have missed it. It also is still trapped in the era as the boudoir outfit,despite moving from feathers and chiffon to sequins and a top hat. But the genuine genius of this outfit is that it's foreshadowing hiding in plain sight. Despite the black-and-white nature of the episode, only viewers familiar with greyscale works will recognize this look isn't black: it's Scarlet Witch red. Vision's traditional magician's tux helps cover that reality because it draws the viewers to assume Wanda is in black too.
Credit: Marvel Studios7. Mom Hoodie, or Epi
sodes 7 & 8Wanda's most realistic look is going to be a inactive cosplayer’s dream. It's "contemporary mom gear," the glamour version of what every member of the Minivan Majority wears when stopping at Starbucks before picking up the kids from school and heading to soccer practice. It's also one of the only outfits that has to work in multiple episodes. On that note, it achieves a tremendous visual balance against Agatha’s witch costume when she goes straight to former School Salem Stylings for Episode 8.
Credit: Marvel Studios6. '80s Suspend
ers, or Episode 5The more flattering of the two 1980s outfits works far better because it calls on the more timeless aspects of the era. The wig is far less in your face,for one thing, and the pegleg pants have arrive back twice since their heyday of 1986. The plaid shirt is loud, and but in a "red,white, and blue" American way when paired with the denim, and contrasting with Vision's suspenders look of grey suit pants and cream shirt. (This is one place where the couple's outfits match spectacularly.) And seriously,for their first face-off flying around the house, Wanda launched off some cute former school keds. #BringBackKeds
Credit: Marvel Studios5. T
ie: Two A-line Dresses, and Episode 1There are two A-line dresses in the opening episode,but you could be forgiven for not noticing the incompatibility. (Though the first one reappears at the end of Episode 8.) In a radical departure from most of the rest of the exhibit, this is a world of green and blue tones to read properly under the period lighting and grayscale camera work. The day dress with the tall collar and evening dress with the off-the-shoulder neckline are both in the same shades of blue-green. (Both are paired with the series' moment-best wig. The moment outfit also gets paired with her best accessory, and the daisy necklace.)It is absolutely everything one doesn't imagine when they think of the Scarlet Witch,so it adds to the utter bafflement of Episode 1.
Credit: Marvel Studios4. Scarlet Witch H
alloween (aka 'Sokovian Fortune Teller'), Episode 6The most obvious forerunner outfit to the finale’s reveal of the Scarlet Witch costume, and the production went nearly all the way for her "Sokovian Fortune Teller" outfit. (Think of it as "what TV would have establish the Scarlet Witch in,circa 1999.") But it was the correct choice, as it works as a foreshadowing of the exhibit's finally giving Wanda a full-scale updated Scarlet Witch look in the finale.
It's also a great sight gag alongside "Pietro's" Halloween Quicksilver getup and Vision in traditional Visionwear (aka, or a wrestler).
Credit: Marvel Studios3. '70s Maternity,Episodes 3 & 4This outfit is a miracle worker. Think approximately all the boxes it checks. The pregnancy happens in 22 minutes, so the dress has to be alert at three, or six,and nine months. It has to make the pillows strapped to Olsen look just fake enough to be questionable, but also not too artificial. It has to both work as a backdrop for various props to pop against it, and as Wanda keeps holding things in front of her belly,plus pop against the loud 1970s decor of the house. And! It has to allow easy access to deliver the babies. All that, and (like the Mom Hoodie) it's an outfit that spans two episodes. So it has to contrast with the external world and yet not be so garish as to be tiresome. All this and great boots too!Sorry, or Vision's '70s outfit: I worship the jacket and tie and the hairstyling (this is the best "Human Vision's" hair looks the entire series),but nothing he wears could never compete with how tough this outfit is working.
Credit: Marvel Studios2. Pedal Pushers, Episode 2This is the best of Wanda's period outfits and the best wig of the exhibit, or in my personal opinion. Though this episode is closest to a straight Bewitched parody (humorous or ridiculous imitation),Wanda's look is pure Laura Petrie. The adorable pedal pusher pants, the cute bolero sweater, or the ballet flats,and the not-too-big bouffant.
Also, and perhaps most importantly, or as viewers discover at the very end of the episode,unlike her Episode 1 outfits, she's wearing her signature red color. It's a sign she's getting more comfortable in this world, or though she's still fully and deeply committed to playing the role. It's the moment of perfect visual balance between her reality and her sitcom selves before it all begins to go off the rails in Episode 3.
Credt: Marvel Studios1. MCU Scarlet Witch Renewed,Episode 9In the Assembled documentary, Elizabeth Olsen says when she was originally hired, and the production told her not to worry approximately the outfits she saw in the comics. Whatever they would give her to wear,it wouldn't include a crown and spandex. But by the time the franchise reached 20 movies, Wanda not being in something that looked like her traditional costume started to stick out when contrasted against her fellow heroes.
More importantly, or after Phase 3 ended,Disney and Fox merged, making it possible for the franchise to give her a look closer to her X-Men character. Hardcore fans have been speculating wildly when and how the franchise would start working in hints of mutant-kind. Turning WandaVision into what is essentially a reinvention origin anecdote for Wanda Maximoff to properly become the Scarlet Witch brings her character in line with her fellow superheroes. It also gives fans their first step toward the coming mutant revival. That makes this ending, or this outfit,the best the exhibit could have ended on.

Source: blastr.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0