The Daily Courier

Wonder Woman combats huckster’s rise

- By JAKE COYLE

If you’re going to make a movie about wish fulfilment, 1980s America is about as good as you can do for a setting outside the Arabian Desert.

“Wonder Woman 1984,” Patty Jenkins’ time-travelling sequel to 2017’s record-setting “Wonder Woman,” shuttles Gal Gadot’s warrior to the era of Regan economics, parachute pants and “Rio.” All have their cameos in “Wonder Woman 1984,” a superhero parable of greed and fanny packs with pointed references to today.

Two movies in, it’s clear that Jenkins and DC Comics have a thankfully different concept for Wonder Woman as a film franchise. Like its predecesso­r, “Wonder Woman 1984” is spirited, purposeful and blessedly lacking in grandiosit­y. And both films place Wonder Woman not under the burdensome heft of world building or even universe saving — or at least Gadot comes across as too resplenden­tly regal to ever seem weighed down. She’s more a moral and muscular counterwei­ght to ego-driven male misdirecti­ons, steering history through the repeating pitfalls of megalomani­acs intoxicate­d by power.

Last time, it was German and British military leaders under the sway of Ares, the god of war. This time, it’s a struggling entreprene­ur/TV personalit­y who, in stealing an ancient gem — the “dream stone” — from the Smithsonia­n in Washington, D.C. (where Gadot’s Diana now works), gains the power to grant wishes. Max Lord (Pedro Pascal) goes from deadbeat dad to despot, turning into a conman of mythical dimensions. He’s a diabolical genie without a bottle, or to paraphrase Robin William’s Aladdin, he’s got phenomenal cosmic powers sans the itty, bitty living space.

A snake oil salesman who placates cravings while stealing everything else is, you might say, a touch timely. “Wonder Woman 1984” plays up its Trump critique about as much as it does its ‘80s style. In one scene, Steve Trevor (Chris Pine), summoned from the grave by Diana’s own wish while holding the gem, giddily tries on all the period-appropriat­e clothing like Ken’s fashion show in “Toy Story 3.” Best in the first “Wonder Woman” were the screwball fish-out-of-water scenes of Diana experienci­ng London with Trevor; this time the roles are reversed, and the charm a little less.

What does Max’s rise have to do with Wonder Woman? A huckster is a kind of perfect foil to Diana, conceived from the start as a force for truth. (Her lasso of truth was modeled after the polygraph, an invention of Wonder Woman creator William Moulton Marston.) Jenkins opens the film with an Amazonian flashback to an obstacle course race on the island of Themyscira where a young Diana learns the value of truth. “No true hero is born from lies,” says Antiope (Robin Wright).

The dream stone transforms another, too: Barbara Minerva, a meek archeologi­st played by Kristen Wiig. Awkward in heels and most everything else, she mutters that she’d like to be more like Diana when holding the stone, setting off a metamorpho­sis that playfully remakes Wiig’s typical screen presence, and creates another foe for Wonder Woman.

Just as in “Wonder Woman,” I think Jenkins has left some opportunit­ies on the table. The first film, despite being set in 1918 during WWI, omitted any real interactio­n with the era’s then-flourishin­g women’s rights movement — a vital source of inspiratio­n to Marston. Likewise, “Wonder Woman 1984” — more focused on “greed is good” decade and its contempora­ry resonances — doesn’t much pause to interrogat­e the 1980s’ gender imbalances. Like the last movie, “Wonder Woman 1984” becomes consumed by its (admittedly quite good) antag

onist. It drags in the third act in a messy White House battle and a prolonged finale.

But I still like these movies more than most superhero films. They feel both campier and more real than Marvel movies — more like the page-turning thrill of a comic book. The ambitions of “Wonder Woman 1984” may be just outside its grasp, but it seldom feels predestine­d or predictabl­e — a preciously rare commodity in the genre.

As its characters awaken to their powers, turning from recognizab­le people to monsters, the film keeps changing shape, enlarging as it goes. Jenkins’ pop cinema craft is limber and lucid. Pascal’s performanc­e, more sweet than sinister, is scintillat­ingly over the top.

Premiering in theatres and on HBO Max in North America, “Wonder Woman 1984” will close out a year largely absent of superheroe­s in a release plan that has upended the film industry. It’s a very big film heading primarily to the small screen, at a time when the pandemic has made the escapist, popcorn-eating moviegoing that superhero movies are made for impossible, or nearly so. That makes “Wonder Woman 1984” a nostalgia act in more ways than one.

“Wonder Woman 1984,” a Warner Bros. release, is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Associatio­n of America for sequences of action and violence.

Running time: 151 minutes.

Three stars out of four.

 ??  ?? Gal Gadot and Chris Prine in a scene from “Wonder Woman 1984”
Gal Gadot and Chris Prine in a scene from “Wonder Woman 1984”

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