‘Wonder Woman’ a wonder of a hero
Diana Prince, we’ve been waiting for you.
Wonder Woman (eeeg out of four; rated PG-13; in theaters nationwide Thursday night) is a departure from most superhero films you’ve seen. It’s a female superhero film — which is revolutionary enough — but it’s also a genuinely surprising film that plays with genre and throws out the now tired superhero movie formula. It’s an action film, a romantic comedy, a coming-of-age story, a period piece and a war movie all in one. Above all, it’s a hopeful story about humanity.
Wonder Woman is the best movie Marvel rival DC Comics has put out in its own universe, and unlike the recent parade of bleak superhero tales from both studios, it makes you feel good.
The film, set in World War I, takes us back to the beginning of Diana’s (Gal Gadot) story, showing her growing up on the island of Themyscira, an allfemale paradise that’s home to the Amazons. When pilot Steve Trevor (Chris Pine) crashes there, his description of the devastation of the Great War compels Diana to help fight.
Although the Themyscira sequences are beautiful and include an adorable young Diana, the movie truly begins to sing when she and Steve begin their adventure. Gadot and Pine have fantastic chemistry and Pine does well as the audience surrogate, displaying appropriate amusement and curiosity at Diana’s strange ways.
But it’s Gadot’s film and she is electric as Wonder Woman, a role she debuted in last year’s Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice to wide acclaim. Unshackled from that film’s dreary baggage, the Israeli actress is able to shine as brightly in
Wonder Woman’s smaller moments as she does when she lifts a tank. Her expressive face is magnetic as she witnesses the horrors of the world for the first time. Her optimism is heartbreaking, but it also is inspiring.
The film’s action is explosive and engaging, and a sequence where Diana ventures into no man’s land in the middle of a trench battle is stunning. While many recent superhero films are dizzyingly directed and overstuffed with heroes, director Patty Jenkins wisely chooses to focus, at times in slow motion, on Wonder Woman alone as she takes out her foes, making her fight scenes feel at once more visceral and more ethereal than what audiences are used to.
Wonder Woman falters slightly in its third act, where its climactic battle tries and fails to outdo with big special effects what earlier sequences did with stunts and Gadot’s charisma. It’s only when the film feels the need to check off the boxes of the modern superhero movie that it loses its momentum.
Diana and the film are genuine about everything, which is what makes it feel so special. In a time when public discourse is fraught and full of misinformation and hatred, watching Wonder Woman fight so hard and so earnestly for love is a profound experience.
It’s hard not to feel, well, wonderful.