
to seemingly destroy Wanda, quickly came and went.
Pietro is actually Ralph, who seems to own the house Agatha was using. Here’s a running list of some of the big takeaways: WandaVision’s finale - literally called “The Series Finale” - wrapped up as much as possible within roughly 40 minutes excluding credits. But just in case, here’s your warning that we’re getting into the nitty-gritty details ahead.) Image: Disney Answering the basics (I have to imagine if you’re reading a piece about a show’s final episode, you understand that spoilers are ahead. TV show finales are always tough to perfectly land - it’s why there are only a handful of series that have achieved a nearly perfect scorecard by the time the credits roll on the last episode - but for a show about the power of a woman’s grief and unrelenting love, the team did one hell of a job.Īll right, so where does the finale leave us? Sure, there are some rushed sequences and scenes compacted into a couple of minutes that could have stretched out for 15 or 20. At the same time, WandaVision never lost sight of the story it wanted to tell, the show it wanted to be, and the finale does a mostly decent job of hitting those final notes. Like too many third acts within the MCU, big, splashy CGI fights in lieu of more nuanced storytelling can sometimes get in the way of providing a satisfying, emotional closure for fans. It may not have delivered the bang some fans were expecting, but there is still plenty of story that WandaVision sets up for the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s fourth phase.īefore we get into that, the biggest question is whether WandaVision nailed the ending. Eight weeks and nine episodes later, WandaVision has come to an end.