Talya wrote:
Taskiss wrote:
WW suffers from the same thing all DC movies have so far - it takes everything too seriously and the characters have no flaws to deal with/overcome on their path to heroism.
I liked it in spite of it's hubris.
FarSky wrote:
...A part of my brain fleetingly wondered "what the ****?", but then quickly realized it didn't care.
Haha.
Seriously, "no flaws" for Diana? How about:
- Extreme naïveté about everything in society, so extreme that not only could she not function in 1918 England, but people accompanying her could hardly function while trying to overcome her gaffes to which she remained blissfully oblivious.
- Single-minded, prideful and stubborn -- pursues an enemy she erroneously believes to be the cause of all war on Earth and it's not even the right guy. (Not that he didn't deserve it, but she even executed a man over a case of mistaken identity.)
Going back to the naïveté - the real villain was hiding right in front of her and she never recognized him, thanks to both of the above.
She's a goddess, unaware. That's more of a condition than a flaw. So is ignorance. And I did touch on hubris. They're just not really complex characters, in my opinion.
The flaws I'm referring to are flaws in the sense that people in general are flawed, and in particular how MCU characters flaws are portrayed, like Tony Stark, Scott Lang, Peter Quill (he slept with an Aaskvarian for crying out loud!) and such. Flawed characters that pretty much triumphed in spite of their flaws, and never really overcome the flaws, at least in how the origin stories are presented. With the exception of Cap, they're anti-Mary Sue's, and still have a sense of humor about them.
I think people can relate to those types of characters better than the DCEU's gods among men, and I know I do. Batman is about the only character I can think of that someone can relate to on a personal level and he's emotionally unavailable at best. The TV series are much better in my opinion than the movies, as far as that goes. I'm fairly interested in the Spider Man story, but not at all in Aquaman. The Flash could be good.... I wouldn't have gone to see Wonder Woman if my kids didn't encourage me to go, but I'm glad I did, just because it's looking like a long time till the next move I'm interested comes out. Black Panther I'll pass on, Valerian is a "meh", Thor is a must-see, as is Avengers Infinity Wars. There's like 5 months between Spider Man and Thor.