Wonder Woman seems to think she can Tina Tyler Archivesend World War I in one swing.
So we'd be led to believe from a sneak peek of Wonder Womanshown Wednesday night at Cinemacon, the annual gathering of movie theater owners and Hollywood studios.
Director Patty Jenkins was on hand to introduce the all-new footage, which started with the trailer released just days ago, then forayed into a long clip -- of Steve Trevor and Diana of Themyscira (Chris Pine and Gal Gadot) sailing away from her homeland and toward the warfront.
SEE ALSO: First look: 'Fate' takes the 'Furious' franchise into James Bond territory
"How long until we reach the war?" she asks Trevor, the first man she's ever met. (Later they verbally tangle over whether they should "sleep together" on their chilly voyage -- she's all about it, while he's a little squeamish about "assuming" anything.)
"The war? Which part?" he asks, proceeding to mansplain that the war is taking place on fronts all over Europe.
"Where the fighting is most intense," she says. "If you take me there, I'm sure I will find Ares."
"The god of war?" he says, revealing that yes, he paid attention in middle school.
"The god of war is our responsibility," she says, and here's where it gets interesting: "Only an Amazon can defeat him. And once I do, the war will end."
A-ha! So it seems that Wonder Woman may have an agenda for leaving home after all.
And of course, he's not buying any of this, despite that he just met an Amazon.
"I appreciate your spirit," he replies. "But this war is a great big mess. And there's not a whole lot we can do about that, and once we get to London we can find the man who can."
To which she retorts: "I'm the man who can."
Ohhhhh snap! Is Wonder Woman going to end the war?
Batman-news.comreported last month that David Thewlis would be playing Ares, though Warner Bros. has yet to confirm that, and he's only listed as playing a character named "Sir Patrick." Is he the villain of this story?
And for what it's worth, Ares is a major player in the Wonder Woman DC comics canon -- but he's not yet listed on the film's IMDB page. Was this a big reveal or one of those passing-reference easter eggs?
We'll have to find out on June 2.
Topics DC Comics Wonder Woman
Nielsen compares 'Bird Box' numbers to other Netflix originalsNo one, not even the people in the photos, wants this lost wedding albumCNN reporter bodychecked to ground amid violent protests in CharlotteLuna Lovegood reveals her Patronus on Twitter, and she's not happy'Glass' is a disappointing sequel to 'Unbreakable' and 'Split''Captain Marvel' has highest first day ticket sales of almost any Marvel moviePaul Hollywood is staying on 'Bake Off' and everyone is making the same joke5 photos that show the Charlotte protests have reached a crisis pointStudent suprises teacher with the shoes he's always wantedMarie Kondo memes imagine her as a bloodthirsty demon spiritAutoX's selfDramatic footage shows intense plane crash during raceStudent suprises teacher with the shoes he's always wantedThis 1995 ad featuring Donald Trump will ruin stuffed crust pizza for youStudent suprises teacher with the shoes he's always wanted2019 Dell XPS 13 finally puts the webcam back in the right spotUK police get new powers to seize and search naughty dronesInside Google's very strange amusement park ride at CES 2019Now we know how fast a black hole spins when it shreds a starTulsa teacher's Facebook post: 'put yourself in the shoes of a child of color' Redux: John Edgar Wideman, Gail Godwin, Jascha Kessler Poetry Rx: The Most Beautiful Part of Your Body Is Where It’s Headed Joy Williams Will Receive Our 2018 Hadada Award Staff Picks: Cucumbers, Chiropractors, and Kleptocrats 2018 Whiting Awards: Patrick Cottrell, Fiction Shakespeare's Twitter Account Redux: Luisa Valenzuela, Gordon Lish, Thomas Healy What We Can Learn From Neruda's Poetry of Resistance Cooking with Alexandre Dumas Best robot vacuum deal: Save $800 on Roborock Qrevo Master Between Me and My Real Self: On Vernon Lee News as Art in 2018 Cecil Taylor (March 25, 1929–April 5, 2018 ) Announcing the New Editor of ‘The Paris Review’ Don’t Hate Us ’Cause We Fabulous Slap the Wave Whiting Awards 2018: Anne Boyer, Poetry and Nonfiction Redux: A Mild Olfactory Hallucination The Moment of the Applause by Amit Chaudhuri Helen Weinzweig’s Interior Feminist Espionage Novel
1.5104s , 10108.6015625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Tina Tyler Archives】,Prosperous Times Information Network