SXSW 2012: 'Wonder Women!' Pushes Hollywood To Bring Wonder Woman To The Big Screen

The Huffington Post   First Posted: 03/13/2012 6:58 pm Updated: 03/13/2012 7:21 pm

From Joss Whedon to David S. Goyer to Nicolas Winding Refn, filmmakers have repeatedly tried to resurrect Wonder Woman for today's audiences. The problem? It seems no one can actually get a feature film based on the iconic DC Comics character off the ground. That's alarming for a number of reasons, not the least of which is that Hollywood has released superhero movies based on little known comic-book characters like Jonah Hex.

The new documentary "WONDER WOMEN! The Untold Story of American Superheroines" -- which has screened to packed houses at South By Southwest this week -- deals with how the character, first created by William Moulton Marston in 1941, has influenced women over the last seven decades. Containing interviews with Gloria Steinem, Lynda Carter and the most adorable fourth grader you've seen onscreen this year, "WONDER WOMEN!" makes a strong case that Wonder Woman should be reborn on the big screen.

"How many really sub-characters in terms of the male, like Thor [have been made into films]?" said director Kristy Guevara-Flanagan after the Tuesday afternoon screening in Austin. "The trilogy is Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman, and she has yet to get her due."

Of course, it hasn't been for a lack of trying -- at least on the part of people like Whedon. The "Avengers" director -- and the man responsible for turning Buffy the Vampire Slayer into a modern-day Wonder Woman for young girls -- was interested in making a feature film about the goddess with Cobie Smulders in the lead role.

"I in no way want this to be a slam on Warner Bros., but the fact of the matter is, it was a waste of my time," he told EW back in 2007. "We never [wanted] to make the same movie; none of us knew that."

"Drive" director Refn hopes he has a bit more luck with the studio; Refn wants to make Wonder Woman with Christina Hendricks as star.

"She's mature, which I think Wonder Woman has to be, because it's a very complex character," he told Vulture about Hendricks. "You know, the whole Wonder Woman concept is 'What if women were more powerful than men?' And I certainly can't come up with a more ideal choice to play that, both consciously because she's very smart but also because of her sensibility and her physicality, so -- for me -- she's the perfect choice [...] I certainly don't know anybody of both sexes who doesn't find her extremely attractive."

Whether Refn gets his chance to make Wonder Woman remains to be seen, but after David E. Kelley's very public flame-out with bringing Wonder Woman back to TV, don't hold your breath. To Guevara-Flanagan, however, not taking another shot would be a mistake.

"If you look at them in other cultures -- like Japan, where manga is really popular -- boys and girls are reading [comics] equally. I think that's because they're written for both of them. So I guess we've kind of trapped ourselves here -- and those particular companies have trapped themselves out of an audience."

For more on "WONDER WOMEN!" check out the film's website.

Also on HuffPost:

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From Joss Whedon to David S. Goyer to Nicolas Winding Refn, filmmakers have repeatedly tried to resurrect Wonder Woman for today's audiences. The problem? ...
From Joss Whedon to David S. Goyer to Nicolas Winding Refn, filmmakers have repeatedly tried to resurrect Wonder Woman for today's audiences. The problem? ...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dede Eagleburger
Beauty is in the eye of the makeup brush holder
01:20 PM on 03/16/2012
Okay as someone who has idolized WW since I was a little girl, I have to weigh in on this...
First off, it could work. But IMO, it needs to be done as a purely action movie - I am thinking "Tomb Raider"-ish. Don't spend a bunch of time on the backstory-handle it with the occasional flashback.
You have to use the classic costume, too - the one that was primarily used for the last oh, 40 years or so, until recently?
Make it a grand action-adventure with lots of butt-kicking, flying, lassoing, bullets-and-bracelets...and gloss over any 'romantic' angles.
I really enjoyed Green Lantern because they didn't try to bog it down with too much and they should do the same with WW.
Just my take...:)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
deckercat
change the world
09:16 PM on 03/15/2012
wonder woman starring keri russell and nathon fillion was pretty cool.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BeatnikBetty
beatnik pagan poet
06:09 PM on 03/15/2012
I am a Wonder Woman!

Just sayin'!
09:58 PM on 03/14/2012
Wonder Woman was one of my two earliest crushes, and she's still on my short list for The Perfect Woman. I remember when they finally wrote Steve Trevor out and I rejoiced... and now that I've found out here on HuffPo that Agent Scully likes girls, I'll still hold out hope for Princess Diana. Hey, Diana, over here...
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ladameennoir
Child of the Reagan 80s
07:58 PM on 03/14/2012
When I was a child, Wonder Woman was my hero, and I have to disagree with our three friends below who don't think this would work. If they stayed very true to the comic book story, then yes, that would be very limiting. But no movie producer would do something like this today without demanding a lot of artistic liberties. The costume, for one, would have to be modernized. The world being saved by a race of amazon (literally and figuratively) women would be a very interesting story to young girls. The only thing getting in the way is that Hollywood is run by men, who didn't have WW as their hero when they were boys.
04:09 PM on 03/14/2012
It would seem to me that a strong female i wonder woman we appeal to young women, and a sexi wonder woman would appeal to the young men, so it seems like it should work.
02:53 PM on 03/14/2012
No.

Rose McGowan is the perfect Wonder Woman.
01:05 PM on 03/14/2012
When are they going to get it through their heads....? Wonder Woman does not work on the big screen in the 21st century. Not with that corny girl power suit. And you can't mess around with that too much. It would be laughable it really would. What are you gonna do have her wear a black suit like catwoman? No. It doesn't work. They tried it with the unsold tv pilot last year and it was a joke. Maybe as part of an eventual Justice League movie perhaps but as far as a wonder woman movie. Not happening. Batman, Superman, X-Men and you can go dark and make it real and serious. Wonder Woman would be a cartoon. Besides they are doing female superheroes..there's a Black Widow spinoff film after the Avengers movie. They're just gonna have to learn to let Wonder Woman go. If they really think about it it does not work as a live action movie.
09:58 PM on 03/14/2012
You haven't explained why.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dede Eagleburger
Beauty is in the eye of the makeup brush holder
01:26 PM on 03/16/2012
It doesn't need to be dark - what it needs is LOTS of action. That's what is so awesome about Wonder Woman, she can beat you so many ways - with her fists, or her lasso, or her flying or speed, or her bracelets...Don't get bogged down trying to explain the backstory or introducing too many elements, and for Hera's sake do NOT use that awful new costume!!
12:57 AM on 03/14/2012
Part of the problem with Womder Woman not getting the movie treatment she deserves, could be that most of DC's characters do not lend themselves to the big screen. With the notable exception of Superman and Batman, DC's universe does not have the angst that the Marvel Universe has. Superman has a Christ like quality to him, an orphan sent from a dying world by his father to bring "truth, justice and the American way" to the planet, while Batman haunts the Gotham night seeking revenge for the death of his parents at the hands of a criminal. Compare that with Spider-Man's guilt over his uncle's death and his realization the "with great power, comes great responsibility", the X-men dealing with prejudice, or Iron Man's alcholism. Those are real problems that ring true with many people. Marvel's heros and heroines have issues that all of us deal with everyday. As far as both universes being male oriented, one of the most powerful X-men is Jean Grey in her incarnation as the Phoenix.
07:19 AM on 03/14/2012
Master you are right on! I get sick of people trying to make analogies of Super hero/heroines, and know nothing about the characters or their back stories. I don't believe this documentary (I will watch it of course), knows anything about super heroines or the universes they live in. The characters you mentioned are in depth and have rich back stories in the comics including Wonder Woman. It's hard for Hollywood to spend millions of dollars on a project then lose money at the box office (did I just give the suits in Hollywood props, YUCK?!), and lets face it most super hero movies fail i.e the early Captain American films. C'mon lets be honest now, 1980's TV although close to my heart, sucked! (Talking cars, military guys who drive in a black van and never get shot) I have two girls one whats to be fighter pilot and the other a cop, lets write a article on the real problem how "real people", have a bigger influence on our young girls. I think that the comics books get it right, who cares whether a movie gets made.
10:06 PM on 03/14/2012
Sorry, but aside from Doc Strange I have always preferred DC - and Vertigo - to Marvel heroes/heroines. Although I'm disappointed with both in their handling of LGBT major characters, I appreciate what DC did with Batwoman, and after all the revision on the WW backstory and finally dumping the entire Steve Trevor storyline, Princess Diana of Themiscyra would make the perfect out superheroine. She is, after all, an Amazon, one of the great sources of lesbian-feminist mythology
01:47 PM on 03/15/2012
I really get tired of people saying that Superman didn't have enough angst when he clearly does. Think about it: you are an alien being on a planet where you are the only powerful person on the planet and people only connect with you when you perform acts of valor. As a normal everyday person as he is as Clark Kent, he doesn't really exist to anyone.

Fitting in is a problem that many adults and children, especially in this day and age go through.

Batman, Spider-Man and all the other heroes that have come after Superman don't (to me) have a real universal issue. Superman does. Internal struggles are fine and all, but you people can only reach so far into your head. This is why Superman works better as a character than others.
03:24 PM on 03/15/2012
Very strange that you think the Amazons are a source of "lesbian-feminist mythology" when Homer claimed in the Iliad that they were warrior women who procreated with men, keeping the female children and giving the male children to other peoples. Achilles, the great warrior of the Greeks, killed the Amazon queen in front of Troy and was stricken with sorrow when he saw her beauty after he pulled off her helmet. Princess Diana was hetrosexual or she would not have been the successful character she was. If you want a strictly lesbian comic book character, there is Gen 13's Rainmaker by Image Comics