Hugh Howey Profile picture
20 Feb, 18 tweets, 6 min read
[thread]

Folks at Marvel were trying to figure out how to launch phase 4 of the MCU, incorporate the addition of the X-Men, the relaunch of the Fantastic Four, and help the MCU on Disney+ get off the ground, and Feige was like:
The meta goes deep on WandaVision. This bit might be unintentional, but there's poetry in Marvel Studios launching its first foray into TV shows with a show about TV shows. Some history:
The previous Marvel TV properties were (mostly) run by Marvel Television and Jeph Loeb. They did some brilliant work, but the MCU films largely ignored the goings-on over there.

Now everything is in one house. It has the potential to be a huge freaking mess.
Part of the problem is how to insert the "first family" of Marvel comics into the MCU timeline. The Fantastic Four are old-school. The MCU heroes we know looked up to them and went to them for advice. Now they are going to get an MCU origin story. That's a conundrum.
Kevin Feige is a big comic nerd with a whole team of comic nerds, and one of them was probably like:

"Hey, did you know the witch who mentored Wanda was a nanny for the Fantastic Four? Maybe she could be in this."
Wanda is the ultimate glue in the Marvel Universe, being both a mutant and an Avenger. She first appears in an X-Men comic, but becomes an early (not quite original) Avenger, and her identity is more closely tied to the latter.

Fox and Marvel fought over her before Marvel said:
Until now, Marvel Studios has not been allowed to have mutants in their films, because Fox owned the rights to the X-Men. No mutants! They couldn't even mention them! How insane is that?
It's only as insane (at times) as the Scarlet Witch herself. I remember when House of M came out, and us weekly comics readers lost our collective, oversized brains.

Wanda was bending reality and causing a ruckus. Then she said these 3 words:
And like that -- *poof* -- they were gone. Most of them, anyway. A handful of really lucrative characters remained for $$$ reasons.

In some ways House of M was a reaction to a Marvel comics problem: too many mutants were being created. The universe was getting messy.
Wanda, who began her comics career as a bad guy before becoming an Avenger and saving the world multiple times (like in the films), has always wrestled with her past, her pains, and her powers.

WandaVision is nailing this.
But the real genius is that Marvel is about to introduce mutants into the MCU in a way that pays homage to the comics.

Wanda rid the world of Mutants, but she also brought them back. Her fight to shape reality was both a destructive and creative force.
In the last two episodes, we've seen Wanda's brother return from the dead, but he's the version from the X-Men franchise! We've seen her turn Monica Rambeau into a mutant! And now the nanny for the Fantastic Four (her old mentor) is the primary antagonist!
A whole lot is being done in a show that some have said is about nothing.
There are so many layers upon layers and nice little touches. From the retro costumes, to the decade-nailing advertisements, to the screen ratio changes, to the evolving way that TV stories have been told, all while launching a new TV venture that breaks every mold!
When my partner heard me waxing philosophically about how brilliant WandaVision is, she asked what made it so good. I realized that the full enjoyment would require a lot of prior reading and film-watching.
I'm sure WandaVision is an entertaining watch for non-comic-nerds, but it's absolute nirvana for us geeks. This is the episode when the parents get back together, when all the kids move under the same roof, and the storytelling potential explodes with opportunity.
We will someday see an MCU scene with the Scarlet Witch and Reed Richards, one with She Hulk and Wolverine, maybe even a fight between cosmic Spidey and the Incredible Hulk. And looking back, it'll be Wanda who opened that door.
As a postscript: the ad for Nexus, which looks like every awful prescription drug commercial, is it's own self-contained genius. The Nexus in the comics connects all possible realities. The multi-verse is also being launched in this show where "not much happens."

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More from @hughhowey

27 Dec 20
I used to wear Wonder Woman Underoos as a kid. My mother would make me behave by telling me I wouldn't be able to watch the original Lynda Carter show. I was OBSESSED.

Which makes the current DCEU version of WW downright depressing for me.

/THREAD
The problem with Wonder Woman in the live action DCEU has similar roots to the problems with ALL the live action DCEU. There isn't a single person in charge who understands and LOVES these characters. So no singular vision. To whit:

indiewire.com/2020/12/patty-…
Jenkins was correct to toss out Whedon's version of Diana. No way she sits on the sidelines while people suffer. That's not my Diana. My Diana would also not be an idiot over Chris Pine, but that's a different rant. This rant is about TERRIBLE WRITING.
Read 16 tweets
28 Oct 20
I write speculative fiction for a living, so let's do something fun. I'm going to tell you a story that takes place in an alternate universe, one in which Trump wins reelection in the biggest landslide since Reagan carried 49 states. It goes like this:
All his life, Donald Trump has hated anything *not* him. A classic narcissist, this hate of the "other" made him xenophobic and racist. He started his campaign decrying Mexicans. One of his first moves was to ban the entry of Muslims.
The hate of "other" also made Donald Trump a germaphobe. This is a guy who once said that shaking hands is "barbaric." This was long before we collectively agreed with him. He was ahead of his time.

washingtonpost.com/news/morning-m…
Read 47 tweets
11 Sep 20
9/11 used to be a somber day of remembrance for me. Ground zero was a hectic place.

But then we started having two or more 9/11s every week without much action from our leaders, and now I realize that 9/11 wasn't about the loss of life.

1/x
9/11 was about feeling violated. All those people who passed away 19 years ago were killed by a handful of religious extremists. Humans did it. And we wanted vengeance.

That thirst for blood cost trillions of dollars and thousands of lives in a war that continues today.

2/x
It's wild to me that the time when we should have done less, we went to extremes. And the time when we should have taken extreme actions, we did very little.

One month of closed borders, mandatory mask use, and hand-washing could have saved 200k - 400k American lives.

3/x
Read 13 tweets
29 Aug 20
Frost's greatest gift -- and the one most difficult to access -- is his use of the unreliable narrator. His poems lie to us. These untruths conceal deep and profound truths.
Frost's most famous poem is perhaps the most famous poem of all-time, the Mona Lisa of poems, his THE ROAD NOT TAKEN.
The most fascinating thing to me about THE ROAD NOT TAKEN is that most people get the title wrong. Which is incredibly meta. Because I'm about to blow your mind. The poem is about two paths that are identical in one aspect: Neither path has ever been walked down.
Read 23 tweets
12 Jun 20
People are worried about book pirates and I'm over here worried about people not reading.

Other things I don't vilify that bypass author and publisher income:

Handing a book you love to a friend.

Used bookstores.
There are several different kinds of pirates:

1) Hoarders. People who steal just to amass large amounts of 1s and 0s on hard drives. They consume .00001% of what they steal. They weren't going to pay for it anyway.

These are the pirates people fear the most, for no reason.
2) Broke people. There are voracious readers out there who don't have the income to support the number of books they consume. These are often the super-spreaders who start book blogs, write book reviews, and pester their friends to read more.

Please steal my books.
Read 8 tweets

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