Agree with Charles1dad, as after some critical listening, you may still prefer the Totem Hawk to the Wilsons. If you compare two cars, the most expensive may not be the better one, however it may be more luxurious, but that doesn't make it better. I also agree with Zd542 that Wilsons are likely more critical of the electronics used.
As far as home theater, in the early days, center and rears were derived with rear being limited bandwidth and mono, however today all channels are discrete, uncompressed, and full bandwidth. A sound may move through the room in anyway imaginable, or be fixed at any place in the room, therefore any two or more speakers may be used to create the sound. More than just the "coolness" of identical speakers is the fact that there will be an absolute perfect seamless blend throughout the entire room with very little to no localization of the speakers. No matter how good the timbre match is with different speakers, it will not be perfect like identical speakers. This is easy to hear by running the test tone. Timbre matched will be better than mixed speakers, but there will be a slight character difference to the test tone as it moves around the room. With identical speakers, that test tone will sound exactly the same all the way around the room.
Final thought is the last line at the end of this article.