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Wonder Woman Review

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Wonderful

(NOTE: THIS REVIEW CONTAINS MINOR SPOILERS)

Wonder Woman succeeds in achieving a number of things that DC's recent films have not: Crafting a character that is easy to care about, telling an origin story that establishes believable and relatable motivations, and putting that character through situations that make us genuinely sympathise with her, in addition to being completely in awe of her at her most powerful.

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This is because Wonder Woman is a film that takes its time with its story. The first third is spent with the titular character as she grows up on the island of Themyscira, amongst a civilization of Amazons. As a child, she's forbidden from taking part in the combative traditions of the warrior tribe, though her unbridled enthusiasm eventually leads her down that path regardless, and she grows into a skilled fighter as an adult. British spy Steve Trevor (Chris Pine) eventually crashes near the island and informs the Amazons of a raging conflict, World War I, and Diana's (Gal Gadot) unsuppressed, idealistic drive to save innocents and put an end to the whole concept of war, results in the two of them leaving together.

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This time on Themyscira is well spent. The mythological origins of the Amazons and the events that lead to her departure from the island are explained succinctly, and precedence is instead given to the personal interactions between Diana and the important people in her life. Director Patty Jenkins isn't afraid to slow down and let us see Diana gradually come into her own, discover new things, and use her knowledge to reinforce her own determination and personal values, however naive they may seem.

Diana's naivety, born from her sheltered upbringing, is regularly played for laughs during interactions with Chris Pine's character, and especially later on when the events of the film move to Europe. Gags about sex and seeing a penis for the first time start the trend on a borderline cringe-worthy note, but the awkwardness of Pine's charmingly goofy character, and the unperturbed confidence of Gadot, quickly make these scenes more charming. These recurring moments also gradually pave the way for the film, and Diana, to escalate the scale of her curiosity, allowing her to interject and protest about what she sees as black and white injustices, as opposed to what the world sees as societal norms. Antiquated gender roles, racial discrimination, and the morality of modern military warfare are just some of the touchstones. And although they may portray obvious sentiments to most, the way Jenkins allows the audience to accompany Diana through these revelations makes her story of a superhuman coming of age something relatable on a very human level. You see what kind of values fuel her motivations, and in turn, you become intrigued by how these values are tested, and how they affect her eventual transformation.

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But as much as Wonder Woman enjoys spending time watching Diana evolve as a person and exhibit believable emotional vulnerabilities, it also revels in the pure joy of watching Diana unrelentingly destroy dozens of bad dudes. The film's numerous action sequences are sharp and punchy, and of a satisfying length, often leaving you wanting more. Slow motion tracking shots are used to great effect here, allowing you to really appreciate the acrobatic fighting style of Diana and the Amazons. The camera doesn't shy away from close-up impacts, which feel hefty and powerful, and earn the wincing of on-screen characters. Horseback combat and archery add to these memorable moments, as do World War I militaria like bolt-action rifles, machine guns, and tanks.

But like the scenes themselves, these flashy combat tools appear sparingly, used as exclamations, and never outstay their welcome. The same can be said of the appearance of Diana's weapons and powers. We get glimpses of her abilities in the first act--heightened agility, healing, and strength--but it's not until Diana gets to the real world where we see her become truly threatening. Each discrete encounter is fast-moving but aggressive, making Diana's power moments both uniquely impactful on screen, as well as helping to exemplify her efficient skill in melee combat. Because these fights are not belaboured, moments where Gadot deftly tangles a group of soldiers in the gleaming Lasso of Truth, or pummels someone through a brick wall with her shield using incredible force, become striking payoffs that leave you in awe, trembling with excitement long after.

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The only exception here is the final climactic encounter, where the film loosens its restraints to allow for some Zack Snyder-style superhuman bombast. Other minor irks involve a romantic subplot, which felt like it needed a little more time to feel plausible, and the fact that despite Wonder Woman being a film where people of a variety of colors speak a variety of foreign languages (with English subtitles), all characters of German descent simply speak English. The ridiculousness of this decision is heightened when Pine's character goes undercover as a German officer and gets by security just fine with German-accented English.

Ultimately, Gal Gadot and Patty Jenkins have together shaped the story of a hero who is at the same time relatable and formidable. Diana's journey of self-discovery is one that is plausible, and the film's focus on exploring who she is as a person, as well as what she can do as a superhuman gives the character, and overall film, a gratifying roundedness that makes you eager for more.

The GoodThe Bad
Gal Gadot's Wonder Woman is both relatable and awe-inspiringRomantic subplot needs a little more development
Sharp, powerful, and memorable action scenesGerman characters puzzlingly speak English
Steady, enjoyable narrative pacing
A believable, fleshed-out origin story

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ChesterV13

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It should be called HORRIBLE WOMAN. As usual, DC picks the most WRONG person for the part of an AMERICAN super hero! Not only does she NOT fit the part, she's a horrible actor! Doesn't even look the part. Such a travesty. Marvel keeps beating DC down in the movie arena....and it's not difficult to see why. Marvel knows how to pick the RIGHT people for the RIGHT parts!

This movie has only gotten so much fanfare, simply because there has never been a Wonder Woman movie before. THATS THE ONLY REASON.

Im sick of DC spitting in the face of loyal fans and the legacy of the American super heroes its supposed to uphold.

And on top of all of this, foreigners playing AMERICAN super heroes. Whats next, a black woman playing Dr. Who? A transvestite playing James Bond??? A Japanese man playing Kunta Kinte?

Leave it to Hollywood greed-mongers to bastardize, pervert, defile yet ANOTHER American iconic super hero into a monstrous murder machine.

A travesty. Simply a travesty.

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Dumper_Pumper

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Apparently 60% of all women are wearing the wrong sized pads. (According to Always.) I wonder if Wonder Woman is in that 60%.

I'm not a robot.

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blackace

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Edited By blackace

@spaced92:Electra & Catwoman were horrible. Only DC movies I enjoyed was the first Batman, Dark Knight, the first two Superman movies with Christopher Reeve and Man of Steel. I do like "The Flash" TV series. Gotta wait and see how Justic League turns out. Wasn't overl thrilled about Batman -vs- Superman: DoJ either.

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crognalsen

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I just find these female characters to be incredibly dull. Perhaps women think the same thing of male heroes over the years, but they were drawn from real life and made by men. Now we have female characters written to act like men, but without the flaws that are most interesting in many cases. The dark side so to speak that women generally can't portray. Things possible to do with sexism, but more often to do with overall fun. Once you have seen a modern strong female character you pretty much know exactly what you will get every time. A dull goody two-shoes that are going to show all men how bad they are and how great she is. Then she will accept the male who is willing to worship her as a god. Her personality will be built on how intelligent she is instead of how fun she is. There are actually many movies like this out there now. It is because script written by people that can't come up with a unique female character and are afraid to write something that might portray a strong female hero in a bad light or show them to be vulnerable in some way. Good characters (male and female) are very dull and predictable. How about some characters that are actually fun instead of trying to force a certain stereotype down people's throats. I guess people just have different opinions than me on what is interesting to watch. Even the villains in today's movies are not nearly bad enough to be interesting in most cases.

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SOul_FUNk

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@crognalsen: yeah , we have seen far too many stereotype cliche in character, good characters without a single flaw are way too predictable, and this is what made them look boring, we need more character like Deadpool , and Jokers

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dhaynes25

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Edited By dhaynes25

Some men on here complaining about the "no men" screening yet we men have gentleman's clubs and other clubs exclusive to men but it's not a big deal. The screening for women only doesn't affect me at all. It's a major movie starring a female lead. Congrats. My wife, my son and I will be there Day 1 with our Wonder Woman shirts ready to embrace this movie and enjoy it

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deactivated-5afeea4d8be41

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@dhaynes25: Thank god someone here isn't threatened by a couple of screening of a film.

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Forester057

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@dhaynes25: Imagine the outrage if say we had a man only screening event for say Thor or Hulk or Superman. It would be huge with protests, marches, bullhorns and everything. Only men will keep taking womens' crap like this and embrace it like its a good thing. Better check your nuts out of your wifes lockbox, with permission of course. Its just a movie you say, but man its gotta bug you somewhere down where your nuts used to be perhaps? Its just the damn double standard and the fact that women know we will show up with a big nutless grin on our face to see WW as soon as we are allowed to. Pathetic.... * this BS. Skip this movie and show you still have dominion of your nuts. We've turned that other cheek so many times (and that BS has been used to excuse it as somehow manly). Had enough? I have.

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judaspete

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@forester057: It's true, there is some hypocrisy to the all-female screenings, and there probably would be some outrage to an all-male screening of a male fronted super-hero movie. But then, there is a huge gender imbalance with these movies. Wonder Woman is probably the first serious female-fronted superhero movie. I can't think of another off the top of my head, unless you want to say Catwoman and Elektra were serious. With that context, I totally get why women might want to have an exclusive gathering somewhere to celebrate.

Seriously, which male superhero should men come together and celebrate our man-ness with? You listed three off the top of your head, and that's not even the half of it. We've got Batman, Spiderman, Aqua Man, even freaking Ant-Man has a movie, and Captain Marvel got pushed back so they could make a second one of those sooner.

If a single Wonder Woman movie is all it takes to emasculate the whole male population, then we don't deserve our balls.

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deactivated-5afeea4d8be41

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@forester057: I don't think there would be protests and marches.... It's hardly banning men altogether. It was a special screening to get women excited for the first female led superhero film in 12 years.

What if it was an LGBT screening for a superhero film with a gay character, would that have straight people up in arms too? (probably) It's such a pathetic thing for anyone to complain about. But I guess white men are starting to get threatened by equality, seeing as they've been making all the decisions the past erm..... forever.

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Fedor

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Edited By Fedor

@dhaynes25: Gentlemen's clubs allow women to come in whenever they like, women just choose not to. A theatre also isn't a club, it's a business.

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Forester057

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@fedor: True they actually love for women to come, because duh. More women = more men, stupid creatures that we are.

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Fedor

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Edited By Fedor

@forester057: I bounced at an 18+ "Gentlemen's club" for a couple years long ago, the effort the owner put into getting women to show up was crazy. No cover, free drinks (water/soda. Although everyone shows up wasted.) even had rare promotions where they would give women patrons ones to tip.

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RogerioFM

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@dhaynes25: It's kind of a stupid thing to complain I admit.

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scatterbrain007

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Saw it mentioned below, how is this movie "SJW content"? Because there is a female lead? Is that the only qualification any sort of popular media needs to have to be stigmatized as such? I really like the dumbasses out there that hear about a comic book movie, already hate it, go see it anyway, and hating it the entire time just to bitch about hating it.

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deactivated-5afeea4d8be41

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@scatterbrain007: Welcome to the world of the self entitled.

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Alecmrhand

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If youve seen Captain America you know the plot. Its kinda the same movie....just not quite as good.

Overall competent. Better than BvS ---Not worth a 20 dollar ticket. A solid rental.

Gal Gadot was well cast thought. She is a believable WW.

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musalala

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"German characters puzzlingly speak English" apparently this was deliberate as they didnt want to confuse younger viewers.

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