Showing posts with label Wonder Woman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wonder Woman. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 9, 2021

What Went Wrong With Wonder Woman 1984?

A quick rush through interesting concepts with unexplored implications results in a very confused story


When we last saw Wonder Woman, in her first solo film, she was a caring protector of the desperate, on a mission to eradicate violence from the world. She learned that her classical standards of morality got more complex when applied to imperfect people in a modern setting, but it was from her contact with those people that she learned the true meaning of heroism.

In her sequel film, playing now on a laptop near you, she gleefully commits sexual abuse on a stranger without a second thought.

Fans are disappointed, to put it mildly. We wished for more Wonder Woman, and look what it cost us.

The choice to tell Wonder Woman’s story as a series of prequels runs into a storytelling roadblock. From the beginning, these films were burdened with the need to accommodate for Diana's turn into the loner we saw in 2016’s Batman v. Superman. This means that, no matter how much joy and light she brings into the world in her own films, she’ll always be fated to the depressing ending Zack Snyder set for her. We can hope for her next film to happen after Justice League, when she’s found a new reason for living, but for now, she’s caught in a trap made of bad plotting.

Warner Brothers has had serious difficulty figuring out how to use its iconic characters not named Batman. To illustrate this problem, there’s a scene near the end of BvS that I keep thinking back to. It’s a small moment, but it clarifies much of what feels so wrong yet so hard to articulate about the DCEU. It comes after the monster Doomsday is unleashed. When the news feed is interrupted, leaving the fate of Metropolis uncertain, Diana Prince resolves it’s time to end her isolation and join the fight. So she takes her luggage and exits the airplane she’s just boarded. A flight attendant notices her as she walks out and goes after her, obviously disconcerted by her behavior.

And here comes the moment, the crucial reveal of character. We get that this is a super-emergency and she’s in a hurry, but if this were the Lynda Carter incarnation of Wonder Woman, she’d show some empathy for the flight attendant whose job she’s disrupting and invent some silly excuse for her urgency to leave. This version, instead, simply keeps on her way. She doesn’t apologize for ignoring airline safety procedure, or spare a thought for the other passengers whose schedule she’s decided to inconvenience, or even acknowledge the existence of the concerned lady still calling out for her. This is a Zack Snyder protagonist, which means an Ayn Rand caricature of independence, and therefore the protests of puny mortals (let alone employees of the service industry) are beneath her notice. Perhaps the movie wants us to think she’s being cool or focused, but in this scene she’s just being needlessly rude.

Snyder’s detached and selfish portrayal of the superhuman has cast a long shadow over Patty Jenkins’ efforts to do justice to Wonder Woman, a heroine Snyder showed no hint of knowing was created to embody the female-coded virtues of compassion and openness. A single line of dialog during Clark Kent’s funeral ended up serving as a hobble around the development of the character who is supposed to be the heart of the Justice League.

So, after BvS, there was an expectation hanging in the air: 2017’s Wonder Woman was supposed to explain what horrible experience could have moved Diana to walk away from mankind. The answer turned out to be a mix of existential despair (humans didn’t abandon their violent tendencies even after she slayed the literal God of War) and heartache (Steve Trevor’s sacrifice).

And here we have another key moment, another reveal of character. Famously, Bruce Wayne’s reaction to personal tragedy was to protect the helpless so no one else would have to know the same pain. In the DCEU, Diana’s reaction to personal tragedy is to hide from other people and spend an entire century refusing to move on from a guy she knew for all of one week. So, kudos to the DCEU, I guess, for achieving the improbable feat of making Wonder Woman look more emotionally stunted than freaking Batman. Even now that we’ve collectively agreed to forget BvS, the bad choices Snyder made in that story (and, more generally, Warner Brothers’ bad choice of putting an Ayn Rand fan at the helm of a superhero franchise) continue to haunt Wonder Woman’s characterization.

That’s how we come to 2020’s Wonder Woman 1984. This sequel had a great opportunity on its hands: to undo the curse of grittiness that, through that one line of dialogue, had forced the inclusion of a defining calamity in Diana’s otherwise shining backstory. The excesses of the 1980s could have provided the perfect push for this withdrawn goddess to start enjoying the comforts of mundane life. Alas, to maintain continuity with the aloof Diana we saw by Clark’s grave, WW84 makes it very, very clear that she’s still very, very sad.

Even worse, the long jump from Steve’s death to his return necessitates that Diana stays emotionally stuck for all the intervening years. This doesn’t present our heroine in a good light, and it could have been easily avoided. In an alternate studio choice, the same plot of WW84 could have happened right after the first film, during the Roaring Twenties, and its parodic exploration of consumerism wouldn’t have lost any of its bite. As a bonus, we would’ve been spared the disturbing implication that Diana, an immortal goddess learned in classical wisdom, has been incapable of personal growth for decades.

In WW84, said growth comes with bitter tears, when she accepts (as must all adults unless they’re immortal gods or yuppies) that her wants are not paramount, that the cosmic forces of destiny don’t owe her a happy ending. This theme of exchanges and deserts is a recurring one, not only in this film (which keeps it true to its period setting), but across the DCEU. Martha Kent’s horrific line to Superman, “You don’t owe this world a thing” (the worst teaching you could impart on an aspiring hero, and especially false when applied to an alien refugee raised by human foster parents), finds an equally sinister echo in Queen Hippolyta’s warning to Diana, “They do not deserve you.”

Those statements are not metaphors. They deliberately use the language of bookkeeping, of literal debts and earnings. Both convey the same core idea, one firmly rooted in the greedy tradition of Ayn Rand: we have to earn the help we receive, and the mere experience of suffering doesn’t give us a right to be saved; if anything, we should kiss the feet of the supermen who deign to help us. In the Snyderverse, heroism is never a duty or a responsibility; victims have no inherent claim to the hero’s goodness. 2017’s Wonder Woman found the way out of this ethical dead end: heroism is an act of love, and love is not transactional.

In an attempt to further correct Snyder’s Rand-inspired error, WW84 has Steve explicitly assure Diana that the world does deserve her, but this revelation comes too late. Everything in the world of WW84 is transactional, especially love. Everything comes at a price. Donald Trump’s Maxwell Lord’s final redemption, in the form of a child’s love, comes after he’s already been defeated, after there are no longer any stakes to care about. It’s not this child’s love that saves the world, but a calculation of costs that convinces Maxwell to opt out of his devil’s bargain.

The value of unconditional love in a world of runaway greed is just one in the parade of fascinating ideas left regrettably underutilized in this film. Maxwell’s son wishes for him to be great, but Maxwell’s trajectory does not become noticeably different from that point on, so what changed? Barbara wishes to be like Diana, but since she doesn’t acquire her kindness or her morals, what does that say about Diana’s nature? If giving people what they want (for a price) is the basis of capitalism, what meaning should we read in Maxwell’s tactic of unsubtly suggesting to people what he wants them to want?

WW84 suggests these topics without devoting any time to give them their due consideration. However, one point that does get attention is Barbara’s rhetorical question during the midpoint infodump: “What’s more precious than what you wish for?” This is exactly the right question to pick as the key topic of the film. To this we get a clear answer: the thing that is more precious is what you already have and might lose. It’s right that this theme is handled as the central one, but then we get a whole speech about it, with a teary Diana preaching at the camera for three full minutes in case it’s not clear, because this time around we’re not punching our problems, dammit. There’s a creepy CEO to save.

What ultimately feels so strange about WW84 is that it tries to juggle too many balls. It’s a Cold War nuclear dystopia built atop a corporate corruption thriller built atop a fairy tale about wishes built atop a rags-to-riches morality play, and those types of stories operate by different rules. Where do they coincide?

In their 1972 book Anti-Oedipus, philosophers Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari propose the concept of a desiring machine to describe how contemporary society twists the process of desire until subjects are locked into systems that produce their own oppression. They claim, “no desiring machine can be built without demolishing entire social sectors.” When Maxwell seizes the Dreamstone and tells it, “I wish to transform this film’s subtext into text,” he becomes the literal desiring machine, the living incarnation of everything that can go wrong with capitalism, a remarkable development in a cinematic universe once ruled by Zack Snyder.

But the intended message gets lost under a sudden world war threat and a pointless detour to Egypt and Barbara’s quoting of Taxi Driver and an unexplored subplot about business’s unholy marriage with televangelism and Steve’s Quantum Leaping onto a poor stranger who’ll never suspect what was done with his body. Like little Diana in the opening scene, this story wants to cut short to its destination without actually going all the way. And like little Diana, it’s its own cheating that prevents it from scoring.

The Math

Baseline Assessment: 6/10 still enjoyable, but the flaws are hard to ignore.

Bonuses: +1 for Gal Gadot's wardrobe, a delightful nod to Lynda Carter's similarly stylish tenure. +1 for the pitch-perfect silliness of societal chaos, reminiscent of the Donner era of Superman. +1 for a smart questioning of the hidden costs of unbridled consumerism. +10 for that wonderful cameo.

Penalties: −1 for having Cheetah retread the exact same plot as Michelle Pfeiffer's Catwoman. −2 for leaving the main villain unpunished, actually rewarding him in the end, and shoehorning a backstory that makes him be the one in need of saving. −1 for insisting on the bizarre theme of "Diana gets strong when she loses Steve." −1 for having too much fun with the word "lame," which may have been common in the 1980s, but is recognized as definitely ableist in our era. −10 for turning a beloved feminist icon into a rapist.

Nerd Coefficient: 4/10 not very good.

POSTED BY: Arturo Serrano, multiclass Trekkie/Whovian/Moonie, accumulating experience points for still more obsessions.

Monday, August 7, 2017

Tip of the Hat: DC Super Hero Girls

Occasionally, there's something that comes along that simply reminds you of the joy of fandom. The execution may not be perfect, but it's nevertheless touching, or thought-provoking, or simply fun. We wanted to introduce this occasional series to shine a light on those things when we find them.



After The Force Awakens came out, there was a controversy over the lack of Rey toys. She was the main character of the movie, but kids couldn't get her action figure because she was a girl. Star Wars toys are for boys, Hasbro decided, and boys might not play with a girl action figure. In an era where toys are more heavily gendered than at any time in the past, that kind of cynical thinking might make sense in a boardroom somewhere, but the internet was quick to let Hasbro know that this absurd omission was not appreciated. She was the main character!

But this was nothing new, of course, and nothing new in sci-fi or fandom, to be sure. After Avengers 2: The Age of Ultron came out, my daughter wanted Scarlet Witch and Black Widow action figures. Happy hunting, dad! It took a while, but I finally found a Scarlet Witch. I never did track down a Black Widow. So when The Force Awakens deal happened, one of our female contributors and I virtually arm-wrestled to see who would write a post about the whole thing. She, because she was an adult woman in fandom, and me, because I have little girls. I won, but in the end, I wasn't sure I could add much to the discussion that hadn't already been put out there.

Fast-forward a couple of years, and this, then, is the happy version of what that post might have been.

As I write this, two of my girls are asleep with their arms wrapped around Bumblebee, Wonder Woman, and Harley Quinn vinyl figures. At this point, those have not left the girls' side at bedtime for weeks and weeks. My youngest daughters have taken to randomly dropping into superhero poses and scrunching up their faces in tiny, tiny impersonations of grim determination in the face of bad guys. We are reading graphic novels together. This is all thanks to DC Super Hero Girls, which, if you've missed it, is a franchise where most of the female characters, even the bad ones, from the DC Universe are thrown together as teenage friends at Super Hero High and its two rival schools. It maybe doesn't make that much sense if you know more about the characters, but that's not really the point.

My family was introduced to the franchise when it launched with a comic issue my oldest daughter picked up at Free Comic Book day two years ago. She read it, immediately told me about it, and told me that she wanted to know how the cliffhanger resolved as soon as it came out. Anything that gets them reading more comics, I'm excited about. We have since picked up all three published trades, and while I can't say, as an adult, that they're the most compelling titles on the block, my girls all love them...even the girls that can't read yet. So I was pulling for the project from the outset, but it seems like, given the volume of DC Super Hero Girls stuff out there now, it's succeeded far beyond just a successful comic book line. There's a Cartoon Network show, two straight-to-video features, DC Super Hero Girls gummy snacks, and...here's the kicker...so, so many toys.

I took a spin down the toy aisle at Target right after Wonder Woman came out. Here's what I saw:


A whole section of nerd toys for little girls! Sure, some of those figures have a distinctive doll-like character to them, but check these out:



That's an action playset and a weapon. For girls. And it makes me so happy.

How's Marvel doing on the next aisle? Well, you can see that next to the Marvel section there's some more DC stuff. Those are legit, non-doll large action figures for multiple Wonder Womans (a pair of Gal Gadot and one of Lynda Carter, just out of frame) and Supergirl. If you want a large Black Widow, you can get her on the bottom shelf in a set with four guys. You can find a couple Rey, and a lot of (dead) Jyn Erso, which is an improvement, but it's still a pretty stark contrast to what DC is doing.


I know somebody had a fight somewhere to make this happen. Somebody at Mattel gambled that you could make an entire action/superhero property aimed at girls and not go broke. And whoever fought that fight, I thank them, and I hope they're enjoying their raise.

My wife sobbed through the entire Wonder Woman movie, because when she was growing up, Wonder Woman was it. She was the female superhero, not the best female superhero. Now, my girls can have arguments about whether or not Bumblebee is better than Wonder Woman because she can shrink down. Or if Batgirl is better than Supergirl because she's not taken out by kryptonite.

It's entirely possible that DC Super Hero girls is about to reach a point of saturation (there's now a LEGO DC Super Hero Girls, too) where people might start getting tired of it. It's possible that it's just a money grab. But my girls don't care. They just dig the show, and playing with the toys.

Three years ago, they wouldn't have had the option. And I think that's pretty badass.

Posted by Vance K — father of children, cult film reviewer and co-editor of nerds of a feather since 2012, Emmy-winning producer, and musician.

Tuesday, June 20, 2017

Microreview [film]: Wonder Woman


Wonder Woman opened to much ado, and critics are raving, at least in the SF/F realm, saying Wonder Woman is the superhero you’ve been waiting for, even going as far as to call it a ‘love letter to feminism'. Look, I get it, we’ve been waiting a reeeeeely long time to see a female superhero smash box office numbers, but just because it now exists, doesn’t mean it’s the one.



(Mild spoilers may follow)

The film opens with young Diana, daughter of Hippolyta, the leader of the Amazons, and Zeus (I assume you know who he is), desperately wanting to train as a warrior but forbidden to do so by her mother. Like a good little bad ass, she sneaks out and trains anyway, until her mother finds out many years later and dictates that fine, she can train, but she must be trained harder and fiercer than any warrior before her. The final training scene ends with Diana displaying a show of power she didn’t know she possessed. Shortly after, a WWI plane breaks the protective barrier surrounding Themyscira and Diana (Gal Gadot) rushes out to save the drowning pilot Steve Trevor (Chris Pine). From him she learns that the outside world is involved in a terrible war, and knowing that the god Ares is bound to return to reign destruction, Diana sets out with Steve, against her mother’s wishes, to kill Ares and end the war.

multipass
This is where the movie becomes rather contrived at times. Of course, in the ‘real world’ Diana is the stereotypical fish out of water, and incredibly reminiscent of Leeloo Dallas – beautiful and innocent and guided through society by an obvious love interest, but incredibly fierce and independent at times. And while the initial battle scene at Themyscira was magnificent to watch, the fight scenes throughout the film were far too Matrix-esque, down to the often rubbery-looking Diana. Wonder Woman herself is very sexy, which in and of itself isn’t a bad thing, but the film seemed to be mostly shot from the male gaze, with many upward body shots of Diana in her short armor. This was especially disappointing since the film was directed by a woman.

Overall, Wonder Woman was a decent superhero film. It was flashy and entertaining and Gal Gadot stole every scene she was in. Chris Pine was fantastic as well and the chemistry between the two was a pleasure to watch. I agree with most of fandom when the say it was exciting to see a solo female superhero finally grace the big screen and shatter box office expectations (Wonder Woman wasn't even playing in the Big D, IMAX-like room at my local theater, I assume due to low turnout expectations), and Diana had some great one liners like ‘what I do is not up to you’ directed at Steve Trevor, but it very much falls short of being the female representation we’ve all been waiting for. As my wonderful partner (who is often exasperated by my relentless critique of pop culture) pointed out when the credits rolled, she still needed the man to save the world at the end – just like Leeloo, and Furiosa, and the many other ‘strong female leads’ that came before.

The Math

Baseline Assessment: 7/10

Bonuses: +1 for showing haters that a female led and directed movie can be highly successful, +1 for the few, but great, scenes where Diana's independence is highlighted (e.g., 'what I do is not up to you') 

Penalties: -1 for needing the love of/for a man to recognize her true potential, -1 for the male gaze thing

Nerd Coefficient: 7/10 - an enjoyable experience, but not without its flaws

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Posted by: Tia  nerds of a feather contributor since 2014

Monday, March 28, 2016

Batman v. Superman: Reactions in Haiku

Many of the nerds of a feather left the nest this weekend to see Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice. After comparing notes, though, we felt it had already been savaged by enough critics, so how to respond to the collective shrug we all felt after nearly three hours of yawning?

With haiku, naturally.

We give you, then, our reactions to DC/Warner Bros. Avengers remake via our terrible impressions of an ancient literary artform.

You can't see it in the picture, but they're both punching the audience.
I took a stab at a more traditional review, just shorter:

Bats and Supes and Lex
Nothing in that whole movie
Made a drop of sense.

Mike chose particular moments in the film to respond to:

Bruce Wayne is sleepy
Please wake up, Bruce! Wake up, Bruce!
Your dreams really suck

...and...

You are not my friend
Your mom's name is Martha too?
Let's work together

That last particular plot point was echoed by Zhaoyun:

Benry fight a lot
What could make Subatman one?
Jesse and Martha

This prompted English Scribbler to weigh in on the nature of our haiku, with a dubious haiku of his own:

Spoiler-filled these haiku are
Is Affleck wearing a Wonderbra?

Affleck, of course, was the big question heading into the weekend, which I answered:

Sure, Affleck is fine
But can Eisenberg's face stop
Twitching all the time?

Tia took a broader view of things:

Leave it to these two
To sour the debut of
New Wonder Woman

...as did English Scribbler...

Big crass smash
The grumpy boys clash
Studio takes all our cash

While our editor-in-chief, The G, opted out entirely.

I did not see it
And I will never see it
Better shit to do.

And Dean made a suggestion for those who made the same call:

Vote with your money
Why not go see Zootopia?
It has a real plot

And while I understand that when we decide to review movies in haiku we're all winners, in a more literal sense, Charles was the winner. Because he gave us this:

Their faces so close,
lips ache, capes touch in shadow.
Why so serious?



Posted by Vance K, co-editor of nerds of a feather, flock together since 2012. Written by the team.