Warning: Full spoilers for Agatha All Along Episode 5.
The reveal? (aka Wiccan), one of Wanda Maximoff’s “twins” from WandaVision .
If Episode 4 of Agatha All Along gave us a moment of musical catharsis and coven bonding, Episode 5—“Darkest Hour, Wake Thy Power”—systematically dismantles it. In a blistering 30 minutes, showrunner Jac Schaeffer flips the board, reminding us that this is still a story steeped in manipulation, generational trauma, and the terrifying consequences of unchecked power. The episode opens with the coven crashing through the next door on the Witches’ Road: a straight-out-of-VHS horror movie from the 1980s. The production design here is immaculate—wood paneling, flickering tube TVs, and a synth score that hums with dread. The trial? A Ouija board.
Warning: Full spoilers for Agatha All Along Episode 5.
The reveal? (aka Wiccan), one of Wanda Maximoff’s “twins” from WandaVision .
If Episode 4 of Agatha All Along gave us a moment of musical catharsis and coven bonding, Episode 5—“Darkest Hour, Wake Thy Power”—systematically dismantles it. In a blistering 30 minutes, showrunner Jac Schaeffer flips the board, reminding us that this is still a story steeped in manipulation, generational trauma, and the terrifying consequences of unchecked power. The episode opens with the coven crashing through the next door on the Witches’ Road: a straight-out-of-VHS horror movie from the 1980s. The production design here is immaculate—wood paneling, flickering tube TVs, and a synth score that hums with dread. The trial? A Ouija board.