Wonder Woman 1984.....movie review

in #archon3 years ago


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What I didn't care for was the way that they bring Steve back as a soul that has some irregular person's body, and that Diana and Steve, while having this present man's body, are not just in this current man's home, and taking a stab at his garments, however she engages in sexual relations with this had man in his bed.

On the off chance that this wish stone made others' desires worked out, and made monster dividers and made different things appear, why didn't they simply bring Steve back in his own body? For what reason did he need to assume control over this arbitrary man's life, who essentially has nothing to do with the matter? I'll wager you if the jobs were switched, and Batman or Superman wanted for a dead sweetheart to return, and it had some arbitrary woman's body, and they had a scene with them awakening together in bed, that there would have been a commotion, on the grounds that isn't that viewed as assault? Having intercourse with somebody who's tanked or tranquilized, and not in charge of their body or ready to give assent, isn't that viewed as assault? Also, in the rest of the film this man, who is controlled by the soul of Steve Trevor, is placed into different unsafe circumstances and surprisingly took shots at and I don't imagine that is cool.

Additionally, I thought you just get one wish, so for what reason did Barbara get two wishes? Her first desire to become like Diana, at that point the subsequent wish to turn into a peak hunter/Cheetah?

That totally negates what we were told in the start of the film. Also, for what reason are largely the men depicted as heckling jerks (i.e., aside from Steve Trevor)? Also, why would that be a young man simply meandering around unattended in different workplaces and offices, and in the one of the last scene's he's abandoned and strolling alone on a stretch of interstate, and toward the end comes running free and clear without help from anyone else? Where's his mom or gatekeeper? Likewise, how does a man (Steve Trevor) who just flew planes in the 1940's ready to fly a military fly that has 1980's innovation? I think there are excesses of plot openings and things that have neither rhyme nor reason, and that are simply unacceptable and cringeworthy, particularly the way that a superhuman has intercourse with a non-consenting had man.

That is simply unacceptable on such countless levels and this film is simply unacceptable on such countless levels.


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