'Wonder Woman' Report Latest to Cite 1978 'Superman' as Inspiration for Director Patty Jenkins
While Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice and Suicide Squad both
were among 2016’s biggest box-office hits, their relative
underperformance (neither cracked the year’s Top 5 in earnings) and
negative-to-hostile critical reception has left Warner Bros’ DC Extended Universe with a lot left to prove. Its next attempt to wow audiences is next summer’s Wonder Woman, in which Gal Gadot steps from BvS supporting player into the title role as the Amazonian warrior princess. In a lengthy new Time profile on the character‘s 75-year
history, the film’s director points to the granddaddy of modern
superhero movies — a film far less dystopian that DC’s latest — as one
of her inspirations.
Related: United Nations Drops Wonder Woman as Honorary Ambassador Amid Controversy
Writer Eliana Dockterman’s Time feature notes that Jenkins sought in Wonder Woman to channel Richard Donner’s 1978 Superman starring Christopher Reeve.
Specifically, she says she wanted to fashion a larger-than-life
adventure led by an iconic hero for everyone to look up to — and, in
particular, present a Superman-like figure for young girls:
“We’ve
spent years treating male heroes in certain ways. I just applied those
same tropes to her, and all these incredible radical moments suddenly
appear to an audience.”
It’s not the first time Jenkins has cited Donner’s film as inspiration. Last summer at San Diego Comic-Con’s Wonder Woman panel, The Hollywood Reporter quoted her saying:
“In 1978, when Superman
came out, that movie made me have an experience that I had never
before. I cried for Superman, I wanted to be Superman. That’s the most
powerful artistic experience I had as a child.”
Related: ‘Wonder Woman’ Star Gal Gadot Celebrates the End of Filming on the Solo Movie
A Variety feature about Wonder Woman also pointed to the lasting effect of Donner’s Superman on Jenkins, “with Christopher Reeves’ aw-shucks protagonist and John Williams’ triumphal score, as an inspiration for her film.”
She elaborated to Variety that,
in her view, “Wonder Woman’s not a dark character. I want to tell a
very positive story. I feel like for years everything was leaning harder
and darker. There was an expectation that Wonder Woman needed to be
tougher or harder, too. But for me, the final victory is if she remains
warm and loving.”
The filmmaker’s words on Donner’s Superman were backed up by a scene in Wonder Woman’s trailer, which, as we previously noted (via @ComicBookDebate),
features a shot of Gadot’s heroine saving her suit-and-hat male
compatriot Chris Pine from a gunman’s bullet — a moment that echoes,
albeit in gender-reversed form, a nearly identical scene from Superman.
Like all of us, @PattyJenks loves Superman (1978). The EPIC #WonderWoman trailer definitely had a nod to Reeve's #Superman. Simply AMAZING pic.twitter.com/oPZHNU7oAP— ComicBook Debate (@ComicBookDebate) November 3, 2016
If DC
is indeed harkening back to its first big-screen triumph for its
upcoming venture, it’s a move that’s hard to argue with, if for no other
reason than that Donner’s film remains one of the genre’s all-time
greats. To read more from Gadot and Jenkins on their would-be
blockbuster, as well as the long and controversial history of DC’s
Amazonian heroine, check out
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