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If you found yourself working on a major motion picture, you wouldnât be faulted for wanting a souvenir to commemorate the experience. Granted, oftentimes productions take great efforts to ensure that props, set pieces, costumes and more arenât removed, but every now and then, one of the major contributors can get away with bringing some memorabilia home. For
Wonder Woman 1984âs Gal Gadot, this was the helmet for Diana Princeâs golden armor.
Gal Gadot recently shared the gold helmet on display on her home, and while it doesnât sound like she was able to get away with snagging all of the armor, the helmet on its own is enough to draw someoneâs eye if theyâve stopped by the Gadot household. Take a look at the actressâ Instagram post:
Dec. 21, 2020 4:26 pm ET
As âWonder Woman 1984â began streaming in preview on my living-room screen, I felt something of the pre-Covid thrill of sitting in a theater and being drawn into the 2017 âWonder Woman,â a terrific action spectacular starring Gal Gadot as the Amazon warrior princess Diana. That one included a flashback to Themyscira, the Amazonsâ island home, where Diana as a child was being trained in martial arts. The sequel, with Ms. Gadot once again in the title role, starts with another flashback to Themyscira, but Diana, nearly into adolescence and played as before by Lilly Aspell, is competing against formidable women in the Amazon Games, a succession of challenges that make the Olympics look like hopscotch. This opening sequence is as elegant and exciting as anyone could have wished for. When itâs over, though, the film, opening in theaters and streaming on HBO Max, turns coarse, shrill and chaotic, a kinetic but uncomic concocti
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Next weekâs
Wonder Woman 1984 marks Pedro Pascalâs superhero movie debut, as heâs playing Maxwell Lord, one of the sequelâs main antagonists. However, this isnât Pascalâs first go-around in the world of DC Comicsâ most famous Amazon. Back in 2011, Pascal starred as Detective Ed Indelicato in the unaired pilot for NBCâs
Wonder Woman 1984, Pedro Pascal acknowledged that he was worried that his involvement with this failed
Wonder Woman TV show might have resulted in him not getting to play Maxwell Lord had the appropriate parties been aware. As the actor put it:
CST
Warner Bros. Pictures presents a film directed by Patty Jenkins and written by Jenkins, Geoff Johns and David Callaham. Rated PG-13 (for sequences of action and violence). Running time: 151 minutes. Opens Dec. 25 on HBO Max and in theaters (where they’re open). Now THAT’S a superhero. Three years after the visionary director Patty Jenkins and the perfect-for-the-part Gal Gadot teamed up for the beautifully rendered, surprisingly deep mega-hit “Wonder Woman,” the oft-delayed sequel will be released in U.S. theaters and on HBO Max on Dec. 25 and it’s a Christmas gift equal parts thrilling, comedic, romantic and action-packed, with a tone reminiscent of the Richard Donner “Superman” movies and the 2000s “Spider-Man” films. To be sure, we get a classic comic book movie storyline about a megalomaniacal madman intent on taking over the world, but there’s often a relatively light tone to the proceedings. This is a throwback piece of pure pop entertainm