When Agatha All Along was first announced back in 2021 as a music-heavy follow-up to WandaVision, it was hard to imagine how showrunner Jac Schaeffer could recreate the magic that made the original such an inspired piece of storytelling. WandaVisionâs shows-within-a-show premise and clever use of practical effects, along with being one of the first Disney Plus series, helped to set it apart from previous Marvel projects. But Schaeffer also used WandaVision to weave beats from the franchiseâs tentpole films into a cohesive narrative that helped bring the entire MCU into its multiversal era.
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Agatha All Along rushed its journey down the ‘Witches’ Road’
Agatha All Along’s season finale felt like a full-circle moment poised to put the MCU back on track.
From its very first episode, Agatha All Along went to great lengths to show us that, even with WandaVisionâs lead killed off in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, there was still plenty of â and perhaps too much â meat for Kathryn Hahnâs Agatha Harkness to chew on. The showâs two-part finale stuck the landing by living up to its title in more ways than one. Though the MCUâs interconnectedness has felt increasingly wobbly post-WandaVision, Agatha All Along ended in a way that feels poised to put (at least some of) the franchise back on track. And with another follow-up series already in development, it seems like Marvel has figured out that these specific stories are the ones it has the best shot of knocking out of the park.
This piece contains spoilers about Agatha All Alongâs finale.
WandaVision briefly touched on covens in a flashback to the 17th century when Agatha killed her mother Evanora (Kate Forbes) and their group of sister witches. But Agatha All Along digs deeper, introducing characters like Agathaâs ex-lover Rio Vidal (Aubrey Plaza) and a mysterious teen whoâs unable to share his name (Joe Locke). Because Agatha herself was already framed as a unique threat to magic users, it was difficult to suss out what kinds of dangers were lying in wait for the coven as she and the teen recruited fortune teller Lilia Calderu (Patti LuPone), potions master Jennifer Kale (Sasheer Zamata), protection witch Alice Wu-Gulliver (Ali Ahn), and ordinary Jersey woman Sharon Davis (Debra Jo Rupp) to their ranks.Â
But Agatha All Along established a very clear focus for all of its players. The âWitchesâ Roadâ â a realm entered by covens singing âThe Ballad of the Witchesâ Roadâ â and its ability to grant wishes to those who passed its trials gave the witches a reason to work together. And similar to how Agatha All Alongâs send-up of Mare of Easttown was a callback to WandaVisionâs sitcom spoofs, the Witchesâ Road felt like the showâs biggest way of emphasizing the power of practical effects.
The Road, with all of its hand-painted leaves and trees that transformed the set into an otherworldly forest, hammered home how Agatha All Alongâs creative team was smartly using its lean budget to create magic that felt more real than its predecessorâs. And the Roadâs horror movie-inspired trials to test witchesâ skills gave the show a narrative structure that was similar to but distinct enough from WandaVisionâs to make it seem like Agatha All Along truly was the second chapter in a trilogy of stories rather than just a spinoff.
As tends to be the case with genre TV shows with big casts, Agatha All Along occasionally struggled to keep all of its plates spinning at the same speed as Agathaâs. Each witch got a chance to shine when facing a different trial, but some of their backstories â especially Jenniferâs and Aliceâs â felt rushed and went largely unexplored. Some of the trials themselves were a bit shaggy. (At one point, the witches brew a poison antidote by dumping a bunch of ingredients into a sink.) As unwieldy as Agatha All Along sometimes was, though, it was also willing to kill characters off with a finality that helped it become sharper as the season progressed.
There was still some question as to what Agatha All Alongâs big bad might end up being by the seasonâs midway point, when Sharon and Alice had already bitten the dust. But all of the showâs puzzle pieces began fitting together in episodes five and six as the teen was revealed to be Billy Maximoff / William Kaplan, one of the Scarlet Witchâs sons, who had possessed the body of a dead person.
One of the more impressive things about WandaVision was the way it managed to rework some of Marvelâs most convoluted Scarlet Witch and Vision comics arcs into a story that was concise and compelling enough to keep people who werenât readers of the comics consistently engaged. Much of Billyâs comics lore â he and his brother wind up having their souls reabsorbed by the demon Mephisto before being reincarnated as strangers â is even wilder than his spiritual motherâs. But Agatha All Along made quick work of incorporating many of those beats with a story reminiscent of WandaVisionâs âWe Interrupt This Program,â which cleverly stepped outside of the seriesâ sitcom conceit.
Unlike Aliceâs and Sharonâs arcs, it was clear early on that Agatha All Along was teasing something important with Liliaâs many moments of confusion stemming from her power to see the future. What was far less obvious, however, was that the show was using her to set the stage for a time-jumping episode that would provide key context for some of the showâs most satisfying twists: Rio was actually the personification of death in disguise.
Of all the Marvel characters who might pop up in a Disney Plus show, it was genuinely surprising to see Death given how, in the comics, sheâs a cosmic entity most often associated with Thanos (and occasionally Spider-Manâs clone). But Deathâs arrival also brought a fascinating gravity to everything happening to the coven. It added some context to the showâs rising body count and a new layer of intrigue to Agatha and Rioâs romantic past â another beat that could have benefitted from more fleshing out. Death gave Jennifer, Billy, and Agatha a clearly defined foe to rally against as they neared the Roadâs end. And while the witchesâ final battle against Death wasnât all that much to write home about, it brought Agatha All Alongâs own story and its deeper connections to WandaVision into much clearer focus.
Agatha All Alongâs final two episodes establish how, right up until Agatha and Billyâs coven sang the ballad together and created a doorway, the Witchesâ Road never truly existed. It was just a myth that began in Agathaâs early days of being a witch and a new mother to her son. Spreading the idea of the Roadâs existence gave Agatha an easy way to lure witches into the woods under the pretense of opening a portal, only for her to steal their magic. That was her plan all along with the present-day coven, and she probably would have gotten away with it, too. But in the showâs final episode, Agatha returns as a ghost to tell Billy that things worked out very differently in this instance because of his desire for the Witchesâ Road to be real.
That plot point and Agathaâs insistence on remaining with Billy as a spectral mentor crystalized the degree to which Agatha All Along really was continuing WandaVisionâs story â pushing forward its characters and also what a Marvel show can do.