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"Professor Marston and the Wonder Women" 2017 with Luke Evans, Rebecca Hall and Bella Heathcote
Harvard Professor of Psychology + Ahead-of-the-Curve Feminist Views + Atypical Sex Life/ Desires = Creation of a Strong Female Comic Book Superhero with S&M / Bondage Overtones
Similar to many of today's biopics, this one plays fast and lose with the facts, but stays kinda close enough to reality to at least sketch the outline of the true story.
As noted in the "helpful and mathematical" equation above, Wonder Woman's creator was a super-smart egghead who respected and encouraged (in the context of the times) independent woman - his wife was a feminist and super-smart egghead, too. Reasonably early in their marriage, they have a threesome that becomes long-term with an also-into-it student that, at least in the movie, works for all three of them most of the time - but owing to the times, the whole thing blows up in everyone's face.
And the next step: All three move in together (of course), both women have Marston's children (of course) while financial needs leads him to create a female comic book hero (of course) that becomes massively successful and controversial (of course). The controversy - which could have been the crux of the movie - is handled too briefly and shadowy.
That, overall, is the major miss of this slow moving, but not boring, story - it is oddly very thin on Wonder Woman who shows up late in the movie and, then, mainly only in one great montage of comic book covers and panels playing against flickering images of the now-familiar-to-the-viewer S&M and bondage predilections of Professor Marston. Wonder Woman's bracelets, bustier, ropes, boots are all sexual fantasy translated into superhero paraphernalia. (However, not once do we see a magic bracelets deflect a bullet - possibly the most creative superhero power of all.)
That's it - the story connects the dots from Marston's life to Wonder Woman and, then, all but ends with Marston's early death leaving his wife and their shared mistress to spend the next forty plus years together (apparently, they really did all get along).
The period details, while beautiful overall (the Harvard classrooms and offices are incredible), are oddly off as they hardly change over the twenty plus year timespan of the movie. It seems, the stylists decided on a late '30s look with only the most modest of tweaks for everything from the '20s to the '40s. Also, oddly, no attempt is made to show the characters aging over that period either.
It's a bit of a strange movie, that could have tightened its narrative and spent more time on Wonder Woman, but it is boosted by the powerful performance of Rebecca Hall and an interesting and atypical story. Only worth viewing if the material interests you.
Harvard Professor of Psychology + Ahead-of-the-Curve Feminist Views + Atypical Sex Life/ Desires = Creation of a Strong Female Comic Book Superhero with S&M / Bondage Overtones
Similar to many of today's biopics, this one plays fast and lose with the facts, but stays kinda close enough to reality to at least sketch the outline of the true story.
As noted in the "helpful and mathematical" equation above, Wonder Woman's creator was a super-smart egghead who respected and encouraged (in the context of the times) independent woman - his wife was a feminist and super-smart egghead, too. Reasonably early in their marriage, they have a threesome that becomes long-term with an also-into-it student that, at least in the movie, works for all three of them most of the time - but owing to the times, the whole thing blows up in everyone's face.
And the next step: All three move in together (of course), both women have Marston's children (of course) while financial needs leads him to create a female comic book hero (of course) that becomes massively successful and controversial (of course). The controversy - which could have been the crux of the movie - is handled too briefly and shadowy.
That, overall, is the major miss of this slow moving, but not boring, story - it is oddly very thin on Wonder Woman who shows up late in the movie and, then, mainly only in one great montage of comic book covers and panels playing against flickering images of the now-familiar-to-the-viewer S&M and bondage predilections of Professor Marston. Wonder Woman's bracelets, bustier, ropes, boots are all sexual fantasy translated into superhero paraphernalia. (However, not once do we see a magic bracelets deflect a bullet - possibly the most creative superhero power of all.)
That's it - the story connects the dots from Marston's life to Wonder Woman and, then, all but ends with Marston's early death leaving his wife and their shared mistress to spend the next forty plus years together (apparently, they really did all get along).
The period details, while beautiful overall (the Harvard classrooms and offices are incredible), are oddly off as they hardly change over the twenty plus year timespan of the movie. It seems, the stylists decided on a late '30s look with only the most modest of tweaks for everything from the '20s to the '40s. Also, oddly, no attempt is made to show the characters aging over that period either.
It's a bit of a strange movie, that could have tightened its narrative and spent more time on Wonder Woman, but it is boosted by the powerful performance of Rebecca Hall and an interesting and atypical story. Only worth viewing if the material interests you.