The latest WandaVision trailer reveals plenty of exciting new footage, as well as one of the show's many theme songs. After a 2020 without any major Marvel projects (save for the final season of Agents of SHIELD), fans are gearing up for a jam-packed 2021. The first bit of content on the schedule is WandaVision, the first MCU-set series to premiere on Disney+. Though it was once planned to cap off 2020, WandaVision was bumped to the early weeks of 2021; it will debut in just over a week and a half, meaning the wait is finally almost over. As a result, the marketing for the series has kicked into high gear.

WandaVision stars Elizabeth Olsen as Wanda Maximoff (Scarlet Witch) and Paul Bettany as Vision, the star-crossed couple that was torn tragically apart at the end of Avengers: Infinity War. Somehow, though, WandaVision will see the two settling into domestic bliss, the kind that comes straight from a classic sitcom. Like all things within the Marvel universe, however, nothing is as it seems, and Wanda and Vision must soon face the developing cracks in their newfound peace. In addition to Olsen and Bettany, WandaVision stars Teyonah Parris, Kat Dennings, Randall Park, and Kathryn Hahn.

Related: WandaVision Theory: Vision's Death Made Scarlet Witch More Powerful

Ahead of its television premiere later tonight, Marvel Studios has unveiled a brand new trailer for WandaVision. The minute-long spot shows new footage of Wanda and Vision's sitcom life, including hints of the couple's twins and SWORD. Also, all good sitcoms feature catchy theme songs, and WandaVision won't be any different. The new trailer features what is presumably the first of many themes, which were created by Frozen duo Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez. Christoph Beck wrote the score. Check out the trailer below.

Anderson-Lopez and Lopez designed themes for WandaVision's many decades, with the first taking place within the 1950s. "‘WandaVision’ is such a cool, strange, one-of-a-kind project," Lopez said. "When the director, Matt Shakman—an old friend from my college days—pitched it to us, we didn’t have to think about it. We loved the bright feeling of American sitcoms mixed with the deep sense of unease the story had, and it was a really inviting challenge to help set that tone." Anderson-Lopez added, "I grew up in the ’80s watching shows from every decade on the networks all day long. Episodes from ‘I Love Lucy,’ ‘Brady Bunch’ and ‘Family Ties’ shaped who I am and how I move through the world. So this project was a dream come true." With this addition, it's very clear WandaVision is going all in on the sitcom style that has been proudly on display throughout the show's promotional efforts.

WandaVision is shaping up to be unlike any other Marvel project that came before, right down to its music. This only makes its impending arrival even more exciting. Marvel fans were disappointed to be left with virtually nothing in 2020, so there's no better way to start a new year with a truly eccentric project. There are still so many mysteries about WandaVision to uncover, from Vision's mysterious resurrection to what Wanda's powers have to do with their new life. Thankfully, answers will begin arriving in about ten days.

More: MCU Theory: WandaVision Explains Where The X-Men Mutants Have Been

WandaVision premieres on Disney+ on January 15.

Source: Marvel Studios

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