Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Wonder Woman comes to Animated Life


It's been a long time coming, but DC Comics' most famous female super-hero finally comes to (small) screens in her own movie today. Some folks might try to dismiss Wonder Woman without a closer look, since it's an animated film, and it's direct-to-DVD, but they'd be fools to do so.


This updated take on the classic warrior-in-a-strange-land tale is an enjoyable mix of butt-kicking and empowered romantic comedy that will satisfy geek guys, gals, and kids alike.
The action starts (and starts big) millenia in the past, where the Amazons are fighting for the fate of all humanity against the armies of Ares, god of war (voiced by Alfred Molina), whose very proximity inspires chaos and conflict. Pegasi and Amazons battle gargoyles, Minotaurs, and every other dark member of classical mythology while Ares watches it all, literally feeding on the death and destruction. But Queen Hippolyta (Oscar nominee Virgina Madsen) isn't afraid to bring the battle, and a bit of tragic vengeance, straight to the gods.


To draw Ares out, and to make him angry and careless, she kills his son on the battlefield. The anti-Oedipal nature of the act is that this is Ares' son from an act of rape he committed on Hippolyta.


No, this isn't your average Saturday-morning super-hero cartoon. Wonder Woman is a PG-13 movie, and doesn't shy from it. Indeed, in interviews producer Bruce Timm has admitted that the first cut of the movie sent to the MPAA received an R rating. Parents may want to screen the movie before showing it to younger kids, but on the scale of other DC animated super-hero movies, Wonder Woman is much more palatable for younger kids than, say, Superman: Doomsday.


Ares is defeated, at least for the time being, but the gods intervene to keep Hippolyta from exacting ultimate justice. Ares' dad Zeus (David McCallum of The Man from U.N.C.L.E. and NCIS) can't bear to see his son killed, but at least mom Hera (Marg Helgenberger- China Beach and CSI: Crime Scene Investigation) understands things from a woman's point of view. Ares will be imprisoned under the Amazonians' care, and his powers capped via a pair of magic wristbands. And to assuage Hippolyta's outrage at justice denied, Hera gives the Amazon women the hidden isle of Themescera and extended lifespans so they can perfect their manless paradise. And she grants Hippolyta one more gift - the chance to have a daughter without needing one of
those horrible, nasty, and brutish men to plant the seed.]
That's the setup that brings the story into the modern day. Fighter pilot Colonel Steve Trevor (the always hilarious Nathan Fillion - Firefly, Dr. Horrible) gets shot down over the Meditteranean by nasty middle-easterns with black jet planes, and through a chance of fate, crash lands on Themescera, only to be found by the now grown-up Princess Diana (Keri Russell - Felicity, Mission Impossible III). Trevor is something of a charming rogue, intriguing Diana while confirming most of her monther's negative images of the male of the species. Hippolyta is ready to execute him and be done with it when Ares escapes, and the fate of the world once again comes into peril. Now they need to send Trevor back to the world of men to warn them of the danger Ares poses, and one Amazonian must go with him as the ambassador from the hidden isle. If you remember anything of your Wonder Woman origin story, you'll easily guess who gets the job.


That's enough of the plot spoilerage, but suffice to say both action and a healthy dose of romantic comedy ensue. The crowd in the preview screening at Wondercon spent most of the movie straying between laughter and "boo-yah" style cheers.


Bruce Timm has been at Warner's for 20 years now, and continues to crank out the superior super-hero fare. What started with the gritty noir of Batman: The Animated Series continues with a serious, funny, action-filled look at one of the greatest super-heroes ever drawn, and all signs show he's perfectly happy to keep playing with the characters DC has given him (a Green Lantern animated movie is on track to be released this summer).


Director Lauren Montgomery demonstrates a well-balanced eye towards mixing the fun and serious aspects of the material, and Michael Jalenic's screenplay, from a story by him and well-respected comics writer Gail Simone, interjects great geeky moments of humor and action. And an all-star cast of voice actors, deftly handled by iconic voice director Andrea Romano brings it all to life. While Marvel seems to have hit upon the formula for turning its comics properties into successful live-action movies, Warner Animation has the market tied up when it comes to keeping the comics looking like comics while treating its audience like grown-ups.

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