In Italy only the two last seasons of Wonder Woman were broadcast, so I never seen the episodes set during WW2....
So... How do the two series compare in terms of reconstruction of the historical period, depiction of sexism etc?
That's a good question that I can't answer yet, since I haven't seen Wonder Woman in ages. Fortunately, the MeTV network should begin rerunning the first season two weeks from tomorrow, and I plan to start watching then.
Good lord, the 70s hair was atrocious...especially in the pilot! It takes me right out of the show when Nazis are sporting shag and sideburns.In Italy only the two last seasons of Wonder Woman were broadcast, so I never seen the episodes set during WW2....
So... How do the two series compare in terms of reconstruction of the historical period, depiction of sexism etc?
Good lord, the 70s hair was atrocious...especially in the pilot! It takes me right out of the show when Nazis are sporting shag and sideburns.In Italy only the two last seasons of Wonder Woman were broadcast, so I never seen the episodes set during WW2....
So... How do the two series compare in terms of reconstruction of the historical period, depiction of sexism etc?
And of course, downtown D.C. bore a striking resemblance to Rodeo Blvd.
As far as historical accuracy goes...from what I saw, they treated WWII very lightly...one couldn't tell from the show that there was an actual war going on overseas. One got the impression that WWII consisted of Steve Trevor's missions against Nazis operating in America.
But the shag is a microcosm of the show's level of historical accuracy...and you'd be sorely mistaken referring to WW as a "drama".
Tonally, the show seemed to be trying to strike a balance between the overt campiness of Batman and a more serious action/adventure approach...with the end result being that it did neither terribly well.
As far as historical accuracy goes...from what I saw, they treated WWII very lightly...one couldn't tell from the show that there was an actual war going on overseas. One got the impression that WWII consisted of Steve Trevor's missions against Nazis operating in America. He was referred to as a war hero and it made me wonder, given the show's time setting, exactly when he was supposed to have been in combat.
As far as historical accuracy goes...from what I saw, they treated WWII very lightly...one couldn't tell from the show that there was an actual war going on overseas. One got the impression that WWII consisted of Steve Trevor's missions against Nazis operating in America.
Well, that pretty much was what Captain America did for the first couple of years of his comic. And in the early part of the war era on the Superman radio series, Clark Kent was recruited by the government to hunt down Nazi saboteurs in America. Then there's the really racist 1943 Batman serial, where Batman was battling a supposedly Japanese prince/mad scientist planning sabotage in the States. That was a major thread in wartime superhero and action-hero fiction, the hunt for fifth columnists on the home front. So it's not completely inauthentic for WW to use the same focus.
After the perfect goddess woman disappeared, Steve goes on to marry the plump secretary comic relief, Etta Candy and have babies between seasons and dies. I really think that Trevor Snr may have been retarded, or there was something in the water? Etta wasn't that much smarter.
It wasn't just that they were doing stories on the homefront, it's that they were conspicuously avoiding any direct references to the actual war. No scrap drives, recruiting lines, or USO stuff for period-authentic flavor. You'd think from the show that the fighting Nazis in America thing was the entire war. It was like somebody was doing a whitewashed Saturday morning cartoon about the war.
All-Star Squadron showed us Pearl Harbor. All-Star Squadron (can't abbreviate that!) let us know what was happening overseas. All-Star Squadron was loaded with period-authentic wartime homefront business.
The first season of WW had none of that. I'm getting the impression that you guys actually need to watch a few episodes of WW's first season. Then you can try to make a case for what a great historical drama it was.
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