WandaVision: All 10 major characters ranked

Paul Bettany as Vision and Elizabeth Olsen as Wanda Maximoff in Marvel Studios’ WandaVision. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021 All Rights Reserved.
Paul Bettany as Vision and Elizabeth Olsen as Wanda Maximoff in Marvel Studios’ WandaVision. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021 All Rights Reserved. /
facebooktwitterreddit
Prev
1 of 9
Next
WandaVision, WandaVision season 1, WandaVision season 1 episode 9, WandaVision finale, Marvel Cinematic Universe, MCU, Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness
Paul Bettany as Vision and Elizabeth Olsen as Wanda Maximoff in Marvel Studios’ WandaVision. Photo courtesy of Marvel Studios. ©Marvel Studios 2021 All Rights Reserved. /

Who are the best characters from Disney Plus’ WandaVision?

WandaVision is in the books. Marvel Studios’ first Disney Plus series, it was full of happiness, laughs, tragedy, and loss. With their sitcom simulation, the first couple of episodes were a lot of fun, but no one would have expected what would come going forward.

We were given more than anyone could have expected throughout the show’s run. If you stuck around, then you’re one of the lucky ones. Every episode of WandaVision was better than the last leading to one heck of a finale. However, it’s important to remember that it wouldn’t be as good if it wasn’t for the phenomenal cast. But how did the characters fare?

Let’s break down the best characters from this season of WandaVision.

***WARNING! Spoilers of the season finale ahead***

10. The supporting cast of WandaVision

A show would succeed without a great supporting cast. WandaVision had that in abundance. When this writer says the supporting cast, he means characters like Mrs. Hart, Dottie Jones, and Herb. They were the unsung heroes because, for most of the season, WandaVision was a show inside of a show, so it made sense that the supporting cast would be important to the story – and all of them were in their own ways.

They weren’t just random characters in the lives of Wanda and Vision. They had a purpose from the very first episode. The faces they made or the fear in their voices whenever they were “woken up” by Vision indicated that not everything was what it seemed. In the last episode, the painful truth about the Westview residents was confirmed because, even though they seemed happy, they were really being tormented. Some of them hadn’t seen their family in too long and all of them experienced Wanda’s nightmares when they slept, pushing Wanda to realize that what she was doing was hurting them. This right here was an example of why the show simply wouldn’t have worked without them.