You could be watching “The Falcon and the Winter Soldier” and discover that John Walker is now just Jon Walker. This means you could be rewatching “Iron Man 2” and see a scene you never saw before, or notice a character’s hair color has changed. This means, in theory, all of the MCU films could be vulnerable for change. Let’s say the “Loki” theory is true and that Loki messing up the timeline allowed these little changes to happen in Marvel Cinematic Universe films. We can see more and different versions of our favorite movies.īut more importantly, this shows us that movies are, in a way, fluid. I mean, isn’t this what we just saw with the “Justice League” movie coming to HBO Max? The four-hour Snyder Cut - as well as the black-and-white version - are full director’s cut versions of a film that we would have never normally seen. Like a filmmaker uploading a movie to YouTube, a Marvel director could - in theory, though probably not always in practice - reupload another version of “The Avengers” to fit their liking. They can freshen up the colors of a poorly lit scene, or they can replace one shot with another. What does this mean for us, as real people, doing real things? It means that Disney+ - or any streaming service company - can change or alter any content at any time. Let’s take a second here to consider what this means outside of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. The theory suggests that Loki and Sylvie from “Loki” have been messing with the timeline, which could change other Marvel productions, including “WandaVision.” That could mean that Loki is changing the timelines in real time, and we’re now discovering the fluidity of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. One possibility - the changes could be a real-time change spawned by Loki, according to ’s Brandon Davis. It’s unclear whether or not Disney+ or Marvel made these changes on purpose, or if it was some editing mistake. We know “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” will connect with “WandaVision,” so those changes fit. There’s also a floating shape in the background, which looks a little like a cape - and fans believe it to be Doctor Strange in his “astral form.” And then, on top of that, the end credits added “Doctor Strange Theme,” by Michael Giacchino - which wasn’t there before. For one, there are more trees in the open wilderness outside of the cabin. But it has some minor changes to it - literally changes you probably wouldn’t see if you didn’t read this article. The new version of the scene is mostly the same as far as that part goes. The ‘WandaVision’ post-credits finale has been changed.‘Black Widow’ is finally giving Black Widow her due.
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