WandaVision Episode 4 Ending Explained: What “It’s All Wanda” means

WandaVision Episode 4 Ending Explained: After her ejection from the Westview sitcom, WandaVision episode 4 comes back with Monica Rambeau, but really what does her line ‘it’s all Wanda’ imply?

What’s going on in the final moments of the new episode of WandaVision, and what does the “it’s all Wanda” line from Monica Rambeau mean? As their sitcom-Esque lives played out in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, the initial three episodes of WandaVision season 1 preceded the people of Westview, but episode 4 took a somewhat different strategy.

WandaVision Episode 4 Ending Explained

WandaVision’s most recent iteration re-runs previous chapters, albeit, from the viewpoint of SWORD, Darcy Lewis,0 and Jimmy Woo, starting with the moment Monica and billions of others return to life following Thanos’ crippling snap (or “the Blip” as Marvel always insists on naming it).

Jimmy and Monica start researching the incident in Westview, only to find that the whole town has been overlooked and the perimeter is enveloped by a mysterious energy field. Monica is mistakenly sucked through the barrier, prompting SWORD to send the so-called “Westview anomaly.” to a full complement of scientists and military forces to investigate. It’s Dr. Darcy Lewis who points out that Westview broadcasts an old-school sitcom, and she watches happily as Monica seeks to get to Wanda by referencing Ultron, before being thrown back outside immediately.

What “It’s All Wanda” means in Episode 4

Episode 4 of WandaVision finishes in the same spot as episode 3, with Monica sprawling by SWORD’s provisional field base on the lawn. Monica has plenty to say this time, though. Before the final credits roll, the SWORD officer spouts ‘it’s all Wanda’ with the gravest of gestures. But with respect to WandaVision’s multiple mysteries and the show’s potential, what does the line imply?

The most possible interpretation of Monica’s line “it’s all Wanda” is that Ms. Rambeau feels Scarlet Witch is responsible for all that’s going on—the disappearances, the energy barrier, the mysterious sitcom, all of it. Since the premiere of WandaVision, the origins of the Westview truth has been a keen subject of discussion, and several hints that Wanda herself is in charge have been dropped in the past 3 seasons. Sitcom events revolve completely around her, she will rewind time when Vision seems suspicious, and on Wanda’s order, characters are excluded from the fabrication.

Now, with the benefit of retrospect, looking back at Monica’s scenes, it is easy to see why she thinks Wanda is the one in charge. Combined with everything Monica experienced during her sitcom tenure (assuming she remembers it), Wanda’s violent language and willingness to drive people out bring Monica to the natural inference that Wanda’s hand is responsible for everything odd happening at Westview.

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