It's true that WW follows a more conventional three-act play type of narrative, and is therefore easy to follow for those accustomed or acculturated to that conventionalism.
But I wish more stories would challenge that normative artificial narrative structure. Writers and directors should think outside the box and try to make something more organic instead of always imposing the same structure on everything. Life is not a neat three-act play.
Kor
Anybody who wants to see a modern day Superman story done right just need to look at The CW's Supergirl.
Well, that was not going to happen with a film that was heavily patterned on Captain America: The First Avenger. Wonder Woman so closely followed the Cap journey of a character who finds themselves/rises to the occasion during a 20th century war, only to (ultimately) reappear in the present day, that WW as a origin film was not going to break the well-used 3-act play structure.
"All of the self-congratulatory back-patting Hollywood’s been doing over Wonder Woman has been so misguided," Cameron told The Guardian. "She’s an objectified icon, and it’s just male Hollywood doing the same old thing! I’m not saying I didn’t like the movie but, to me, it’s a step backwards."
"Sarah Connor was not a beauty icon," he said. "She was strong, she was troubled, she was a terrible mother, and she earned the respect of the audience through pure grit. And to me, (the benefit of characters like Sarah) is so obvious. I mean, half the audience is female!”
“James Cameron’s inability to understand what Wonder Woman is, or stands for, to women all over the world is unsurprising as, though he is a great filmmaker, he is not a woman. Strong women are great. His praise of my film Monster, and our portrayal of a strong yet damaged woman was so appreciated. But if women have to always be hard, tough and trouble to be strong, and we aren’t free to be multidimensional or celebrate an icon of women everywhere because she is attractive and loving, then we haven’t come very far have we. I believe women can and should be EVERYTHING just like male lead characters should be. There is no right and wrong kind of powerful woman. And the massive female audience who made the film a hit it is, can surely choose and judge their own icons of progress.”
I dunno, T2 Sarah Connor was pretty badass.What makes these comments particularly egregiously wrong is that the real-world Gal Gadot would give his fictional Sarah Conner a run for her money.
Without detailing this thread, I'm going to say that it's a very troubling state of affairs when even the subject of entertainment has been overrun by an epidemic of people buying into an idea that isn't even remotely accurate and can be easily and factually disproven and continuing to espouse and cling to said idea even after it has been disproven.
charging into battle and killing soldiers
Anybody who wants to see a modern day Superman story done right just need to look at The CW's Supergirl.
So a "beauty icon" can't be a strong, independent kick-ass lead?
What makes these comments particularly egregiously wrong is that the real-world Gal Gadot would give his fictional Sarah Conner a run for her money.
I think the Hannibal TV series is a perfect example of this. I'm not one that usually goes for the violence and gore, but that show had some of the most beautifully shot scenes of violence and gore I've ever seen.I personally don't like it, but there is a tradition of "beautiful violence" in film (John Woo, for example) with brutal things presented in an aesthetically interesting and artistic manner, such as gunshot wounds bursting like blossoming flowers. Perhaps Snyder is going for that.
Kor
I think the Hannibal TV series is a perfect example of this. I'm not one that usually goes for the violence and gore, but that show had some of the most beautifully shot scenes of violence and gore I've ever seen.
I disagree. When, in the screening I attended, audience members repeatedly whooped and cheered her slow-motion, totally awesome kills in the No Man's Land/occupied town sequence, I don't think they were applauding the scene for its nuance. Imagine how powerful it might have been if she'd noticed, after the battle was over, that she'd killed several teenage soldiers who were basically children. Could have been a deep, nuanced moment. Instead, we get a scene in which she's enchanted by her first snowfall, flashing her bright, undisturbed smile, and then gets cozy with her hunk.Did everyone Diana kill to free those people deserve death? Maybe not, but that's the point!
Well, that's just objectively false.It's just that Cameron transformed her into a buff survivalist. He has a hard time with the idea of a female action hero who can hold onto her soft side rather than needing to sacrifice it.
I disagree. When, in the screening I attended, audience members repeatedly whooped and cheered her slow-motion, totally awesome kills in the No Man's Land/occupied town sequence, I don't think they were applauding the scene for its nuance. Imagine how powerful it might have been if she'd noticed, after the battle was over, that she'd killed several teenage soldiers who were basically children. Could have been a deep, nuanced moment. Instead, we get a scene in which she's enchanted by her first snowfall, flashing her bright, undisturbed smile, and then gets cozy with her hunk.
Sure, the movie pays cursory attention to the matter of human nature later on, but I still want to know why Diana didn't grill Steve on human history during the weeks-long sail from the Mediterranean to London before she starts killing. (And I think it's clear that the answer is they couldn't pretend WWI Germans were basically Nazis had she done so.)
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