Empire (UK)

WONDER WOMAN 1984

- BEN TRAVIS

The perfect movie for anyone who ever read George Orwell’s novel and thought, ‘needs more magic lassos’.

★★★★ OUT NOW (CINEMAS) CERT 12A / 151 MINS

DIRECTOR Patty Jenkins

CAST Gal Gadot, Chris Pine, Kristen Wiig, Pedro Pascal, Robin Wright, Connie Nielsen

PLOT In 1984, Diana Prince (Gadot) is living a quiet life in Washington and discreetly helping people as Wonder Woman. That is until a scheme from charlatan businessma­n Maxwell Lord (Pascal) threatens global catastroph­e, tempting bumbling gemologist Barbara Minerva (Wiig) down a dark path, and giving Diana something she never expected: the return of her long-dead lover, Steve Trevor (Pine).

FOR THE FIRST time in about two decades, 2020 has been a year without a single major planet-rescuing superhero on the big screen. (Birds Of Prey arguably qualifies, though Harley Quinn was more concerned with saving an egg sandwich than saving the world.) After years of box-office dominance, the one thing DC and Marvel’s greatest heroes weren’t prepared for was a global pandemic. But as the year closes, one comic-book blockbuste­r has defied the odds to make it to the big screen and rescue 2020 from total misery: Wonder Woman 1984.

It’s fitting that Diana Prince is the one to swoop in and save the day — after all, she was the original bright new hope of the DC Extended Universe, once so mired in morally murky seriousnes­s (and visually murky set-pieces). Patty Jenkins’ 2017 film pierced the grimdark pomposity of Man Of Steel and Batman v Superman in an outing that dared to embrace the inherent goodness of its central hero, a sincerity that shone through both in its super-powered set-pieces, and in the budding romance between

Gal Gadot’s Amazonian warrior-goddess Diana and Chris Pine’s human (but superhuman­ly handsome) World War I pilot Steve Trevor.

It’s clear that Jenkins feels even more empowered this time around to hold firm to Wonder Woman’s intrinsic ethos: that she is a bastion of truth and honesty, whose physical strength is complement­ed by the warmth, love and generosity that she radiates. Jenkins’ belief in and understand­ing of Diana’s true power is written right into the DNA of Wonder Woman 1984, shining through in its quietly revolution­ary imagery and the thematic underpinni­ngs that pit our hero against Pedro Pascal’s shady villain.

Where Wonder Woman pitched a previously sheltered Diana into wartime, the sequel fast-forwards several decades to the mid-’80s — and despite an initial influx of legwarmers, spandex and red-chrome Porsches, Jenkins resists leaning too heavily into the era’s popculture signifiers. Instead, the ’80s is invoked as a peak age of capitalist excess embodied by

Pascal’s Maxwell Lord, all smarmy mannerisms and cheesy gestures. He’s a very different kind of bad guy to Wonder Woman’s Ares, and yet niftily deployed as the antithesis of Diana

— a liar-in-chief, appealing to people’s basest instincts in order to further his own personal gain, corrupting everyone he encounters.

Combined with the film’s Washington DC setting, it’s not hard to see what — or, who exactly — Jenkins is getting at. Despite the retro setting, the Trumpian satire means 1984 speaks directly to 2020. “I’m not a con man… I’m a television personalit­y,” says Lord in one pointed barb. Pascal puts in an entertaini­ngly broad performanc­e, Lord’s tacky persona becoming more unhinged as his Wolf Of Washington schtick gives way to a deeper corruption tied to the powers of a mysterious crystal.

Caught in Lord’s tractor beam is Kristin Wiig’s Barbara Minerva — a square gemologist who, per Lord’s catchphras­e, very much wishes for more. After an early encounter with the effortless­ly elegant Diana, she longs to be “cool, sexy, special” like her, sparking a Peter Parker-style glow-up. But as her admiration of Diana turns into something more dangerous, she goes from glamorous head-turner to full-blown Joan Jett — all smudged eyeliner, animal print and thigh-high boots. Wiig proves novel casting — her inherent likeabilit­y garners sympathy in the early scenes, but she holds her own through Barbara’s transforma­tion, conjuring real menace when she turns the tables on a predatory creep.

As with the last film, the heart and soul of Wonder Woman 1984 is Gadot. Her Diana exudes grace and goodness, her power displayed with an unabashed femininity that still feels revelatory amid a crowded landscape of ripped male heroes. There’s an acrobatic fluidity to her action choreograp­hy that’s joyous to watch, a sense of weightless­ness as she propels herself through the air. Superman might fly, but Wonder Woman soars.

Her dynamic with Steve Trevor (mysterious­ly returning for reasons we won’t divulge, despite sacrificin­g his life in Wonder

Woman) remains beautifull­y played. There are no Marvel-style gags here, but Pine draws plenty of chuckles as a more puppydog-ish version of his pilot. This time around he is the fish out of water and not Diana, marvelling at the wonders of a whole new age: punks, escalators, contempora­ry art and break-dancing. In a lovely touch, he is stunned by the achievemen­ts of NASA. After an action-heavy opening, Wonder Woman 1984 downshifts gears to spend a significan­t amount of time with its characters — Steve and Diana in particular. While some might find it a little slow, the easy charm of their company is delightful to bask in.

When the action does kick in, a year largely devoid of spectacle means the set-pieces sing with an extra vitality. An opening flashback in which a young Diana (a returning Lilly Aspell) competes in an Olympic-style Amazonian contest is thunderous and jubilant, its propulsive energy matched by the unexpected thrill of seeing a little girl drive a massive action sequence. As with the last film, there’s a wholesome tone that feels beamed in from a simpler era — one heavily armoured truckchase is shot through with an Indiana Jones-ian sense of derring-do. If Jenkins’ touchstone has always been Richard Donner’s Superman, an immensely entertaini­ng mall robbery conjures an unashamedl­y comic-booky kinetic flair akin to Raimi’s Spider-man films, while a later clash rivals X2 for super-powered, White House-based showdowns. Notably, the formerly underused Lasso Of Truth gets more time to (literally) shine here, dazzling as it dances across the screen, and — in one joyous image — hitching a ride on a passing projectile.

Not all of the action lands. After the sludgy CGI climax of Wonder Woman, a face-off between Diana and an ‘evolved’ Barbara threatens to repeat similar failings. Thankfully, their brawl is a brief footnote in a final reel that shoots for a more ideologica­l triumph of good over evil. One scene of personal sacrifice that dovetails into the final act perfectly captures an atypical form of heroism, rivalling the first film’s No Man’s Land sequence for sheer emotional power.

It’s in this sense that WW84 feels most triumphant. Between the pandemic, the protests against masks and vaccines, and the Presidenti­al election, 2020 has been genuinely gruelling. It’s hard to know exactly how Jenkins’ film would have played had it been released months ago as intended — likely as an impassione­d plea for collective empathy wrapped up in spandex. Now, as the vaccine rolls out and the Biden-harris era looms, it feels like a colossal exhale — a promise of better days to come, testament to the reliabilit­y that light will triumph over darkness.

What’s most clear in Wonder Woman 1984 is that Patty Jenkins truly recognises the power of the imagery she’s committing to the screen: what it means to see a young girl be an action hero; the resonance of a power-hungry businessma­n broadcasti­ng on White House comms; the majesty of Diana ascending skyward in the pursuit of changing the world for the better. These moments are so potent that it already feels like they have a life beyond the screen. Wonder Woman 1984 not only delivers the blockbuste­r thrills that 2020 has been missing — even more thrilling is the feeling it leaves you with: the hope that we too can propel ourselves into a brighter future.

VERDICT

A vibrant and virtuous adventure packed with all the heart and heroism we’ve come to expect from DC’S shining light. Wonder Woman 1984 really is the hero 2020 needed all along.

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left: Wonder woman: Gal Gadot; Remind you of anyone? — Pedro Pascal as the bigly corrupt Maxwell Lord; Catch her if you can: Lilly Aspell as the young Diana; I wanna be like you: Barbara (Kristen Wiig) meets Diana.
Clockwise from left: Wonder woman: Gal Gadot; Remind you of anyone? — Pedro Pascal as the bigly corrupt Maxwell Lord; Catch her if you can: Lilly Aspell as the young Diana; I wanna be like you: Barbara (Kristen Wiig) meets Diana.
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 ??  ?? Top: Diana liked to take her lockdown workout to extreme levels. Above: She is gold! Gold!
Top: Diana liked to take her lockdown workout to extreme levels. Above: She is gold! Gold!

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