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    Movie Review

    Wonder Woman falls prey to paint-by-numbers filmmaking

    Alex Bentley
    Jun 1, 2017 | 4:15 pm
    Wonder Woman falls prey to paint-by-numbers filmmaking
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    To what does Wonder Woman owe such a fate? Since her debut in DC Comics in 1941, she has been an inspiration for countless readers and been considered on par with fellow Justice League members Batman and Superman. Yet, while those two guys were celebrated with multiple media projects, Wonder Woman, even with her 1970s TV show, always seemed to live on the periphery.

    Nearly 40 years after Superman was given his first blockbuster film, Wonder Woman has finally arrived. But, just her luck, the Amazonian’s big screen debut comes in the midst of the so-far underwhelming DC renaissance, led by director/producer Zack Snyder. Snyder and his team have tried to match the might of the Marvel Comics universe, but their impatient attempts at building worlds have led to subpar films.

    By far the best part of the film, which is directed by Patty Jenkins (Monster), is the extended opening showing the upbringing of Princess Diana (Gal Gadot) on her home island of Themyscira. Here we’re introduced to her mother, Hippolyta (Connie Nielsen), trainer Antiope (Robin Wright), and the rest of the Amazons who are biding their time learning how to fight in anticipation of war returning to their shores.

    It comes in the form of Steve Trevor (Chris Pine), an American spy on the run from the Germans in World War I. While most of the Amazons think the best course is to stay and defend the island, Diana is determined to help Trevor with his mission and to bring the war to an end once and for all.

    Diana’s history and initiation into the ways of the Amazons is alternately fun, rousing, and intriguing. Unfortunately, those qualities are mostly missing from the rest of the movie as she is inserted into a story that paints by numbers instead of drawing outside of the lines.

    As one would expect, Diana’s god-like strength and powers are showcased on multiple occasions as she proves time and again that she doesn’t require a man to stand up for her or save her. While many of these scenes are exciting, they are rarely thrilling, with poor CGI rearing its ugly head on more than one occasion.

    It’s a tad disheartening that the film falls back on conventions as many times as it does. To help them get to the battlefront, Diana and Trevor enlist a ragtag group of men in an obvious and clichéd attempt to bring quirkiness into the story. And, yes, Diana and Trevor become romantic, because apparently not even Wonder Woman is allowed to fight a war without falling for a man.

    The film is also narratively weak, taking multiple shortcuts to get where it wants to go instead of taking the time to explain things properly. At nearly two-and-a-half hours, you’d think they’d have plenty of time to shore up any plot holes, but the movie’s landscape becomes so littered with them that it’s impossible for it to be comprehensible.

    They even fall down on the job when it comes to showcasing the film’s greatest strength behind Wonder Woman herself: the superhero’s already iconic theme music. Her entrance to the screaming guitar in Batman v. Superman was the best moment in that film, and you’d think they’d pick the perfect moment to unleash it here. Instead, it’s played a few times in scenes that do not live up to the badass nature of the theme or character.

    Fortunately, Gadot does not succumb to the rest of the film’s faults. In moments both big and small, she is the Wonder Woman that people have been yearning for. Diana’s physical prowess is obvious, but her resolve in standing up for those who can’t stand up for themselves is where Gadot truly shines.

    It’s not a stretch to say that Wonder Woman is the best of the recent DC Comics movies, but that’s kind of damning with faint praise. Despite Gadot’s performance and the chance to finally see Wonder Woman get her own showcase, the film doesn’t hold a candle to anything Marvel has produced in the past 10 years.

    Said Taghmaoui, Chris Pine, Gal Gadot, Eugene Brave Rock, and Ewen Bremner in Wonder Woman.

    Said Taghmaoui, Chris Pine, Gal Gadot, Eugene Brave Rock, and Ewen Bremner in Wonder Woman
    Photo by Clay Enos/ TM & (c) DC Comics
    Said Taghmaoui, Chris Pine, Gal Gadot, Eugene Brave Rock, and Ewen Bremner in Wonder Woman.
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    Movie Review

    Zootopia 2 Disney is an OK sequel that keeps the fun of the original

    Alex Bentley
    Nov 25, 2025 | 3:31 pm
    Nick (Jason Bateman) and Judy (Ginnifer Goodwin) in Zootopia 2
    Photo courtesy of Walt Disney Animation Studios
    Nick (Jason Bateman) and Judy (Ginnifer Goodwin) in Zootopia 2.

    When Zootopia came out in 2016, Walt Disney Animation Studios was in the midst of a great run of original films, including Wreck-It Ralph, Frozen, Big Hero 6, and finally Moana. Their output since then has not been as good, including three mediocre sequels, three so-so originals, and only one truly great film, Encanto.

    All of which is to say that the odds for Zootopia 2 breaking that trend were low even before they started working on it. The odd couple pair of rabbit Judy Hopps (Ginnifer Goodwin) and fox Nick Wilde (Jason Bateman) are now officially detectives in the Zootopia Police Department, but they still have a penchant for not following the orders of Chief Bogo (Idris Elba). Such mischievous behavior doesn’t sit well with the other detective teams, which include pairs of zebras, hippos, hogs, and goats.

    Still, their slightly insubordinate ways put them on the path toward discovering the infiltration of Gary De’Snake (Ke Huy Quan), the first reptile to be seen in Zootopia in a long time. He’s trying to steal a book that would prove that his relative was the rightful inventor of a weather technology that gives all animals in Zootopia an ideal climate. But the high-powered Lynxley family, including father Milton (David Straithairn) and son Pawbert (Andy Samberg), lay claim to the idea and won’t give it up easily.

    Written and directed by Jared Bush, and co-directed by Byron Howard, the film retains the fun of the first film if not the consistently interesting story. Though Judy and Nick get along much better than they did previously, they still don’t see eye-to-eye on everything. It’s Judy who takes more risks this time around, with Nick’s rule-breaking ways seeming to have rubbed off on her, a nice twist that leads to some ironic situations.

    The filmmakers struggle to make the story as easily coherent this time around, with the new characters a decidedly mixed bunch. The Lynxleys are supposed to be the bad guys of the film, but they’re not featured enough to drum up any enmity for them. The detective duos are fun comic relief, especially the two who refer to themselves as the Ze-bros, but none of them factor very much in the actual story.

    Instead, the filmmakers fall back on things like cameos from small characters from the first film and a flurry of groan-worthy animal puns. While it’s fun to see the sloth Flash (Raymond S. Persi), sheep Bellwether (Jenny Slate), and Gazelle (Shakira), their appearances are too brief to carry the movie overall. The visuals are as fantastic as expected of Disney films, especially the myriad fur/hides/scales of the different creatures, but the film is not designed to necessarily wow in that respect.

    Both Goodwin and Bateman prove again that they were cast perfectly for their respective roles, as Goodwin fully embodies Judy’s relentless enthusiasm and Bateman brings the wry tone to his street smart character. If you know them, it’s fun to have people like Samberg, Straithairn, Quinta Brunson, and Patrick Warburton in supporting roles, but no one but Warburton and his distinctive voice elevates the film.

    Like most of Disney’s recent sequels, Zootopia 2 is a pleasant enough movie that lets fans revisit some favorite characters. But when a bar is set high with the first film as it was with Zootopia, it takes more outside-of-the-box thinking to have the second one measure up in any significant way.

    ---

    Zootopia 2 opens in theaters on November 26.

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