- #WONDER WOMAN SEASON 1 DVD REVIEW MOVIE#
- #WONDER WOMAN SEASON 1 DVD REVIEW FULL#
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The 2nd and 3rd stabilized itself by that time, but also suffered from it’s incredible repetitiveness and predictability. The tone shifts wildly between the 1st and second season, with the camp factor being much higher in said first season.
#WONDER WOMAN SEASON 1 DVD REVIEW MOVIE#
You can definitely tell the behind the scenes writing squabbles that happened, as the show itself jolts from the World War II era of the first season (and of course the TV movie pilot) into 1970s present day for the 2nd and 3rd. The show lasted longer than expected, but was also fraught with issues.
#WONDER WOMAN SEASON 1 DVD REVIEW FULL#
The episodes (which are surprisingly long at 50+ minutes for each episode) are full of 70s cheese and whimsy, but still loveable fun at the end of the day. If you watch one of the special features an interview with producer Douglas Cramer reveals that he was known as the “king of camp” back in the 1970s and fully reveled in that aspect of the show.
#WONDER WOMAN SEASON 1 DVD REVIEW SERIES#
The series is nowhere as goofy as Adam West’s Batman, but nowhere as straight forward and serious as George Reeves iteration of Superman, but the camp is most definitely present.
So much so that when Gal Gadot was cast, there was enough fan outcry over the differences to actually cause a stir in the 2010s.įollowing up The Adventures of Superman in the 1950s, and Adam West’s legendary performance as Batman in the 1960s, Wonder Woman takes giant cues from both those series, blending the seriousness of The Adventures of Superman with the campiness of Batman. Wonder Woman was one such attempt, and while it was 1970s cheese (all those old Super Hero shows from that era were cheese, as much as I love my nostalgia) it iconicized Lynda Carter for decades to come. The 1950s The Adventures of Superman sort of started it all, but the 1970s was when the powers that be tried to bring more and more super heroes to the TV screen. But the 1970s and early 1980s also had their go at the iconic super heroes, and DC once more was top of the heap.
I know we’re living in an age where Super Heroes are finally done justice due to the increases of technology, allowing for better costumes, CGI enhancement for their powers, and a litany of fans who rabidly will eat up whatever DC and Marvel put out. Once upon a time she was an amazonian warrior and a 1970s icon of super heroes. "So, let’s make sure we respect tradition and mythology, but let's not be handcuffed creatively.For those of you who have only been following super heroes for the last 20 years or so, there was a time when Diana Prince/Wonder Woman wasn’t a demigod with powers that could rival superman. "We paid attention to some of the pitfalls that other films had experienced in the past, in the world of DC, and what, rightfully, got a lot of fans unhappy and pissed – and, as a fan, I was one of them. "You get one shot out of the gates to build these characters properly," he continued. The star also explained that he wants to make sure that his take on the character stays true to the DC comics original, saying that the filmmaking team have learned from some of the "pitfalls" of other DC movies. I don't know who that Superman is going to be, and I don't know who's going to play him. "So to me, there's a battle that's going to go down one day, between Black Adam and Superman. "We can do anything if we keep the audience first," Dwayne said.