http://www.sfgate.com/movies/article/Wonder-Woman-remade-from-woman-s-view-33936927.php?fb_action_ids=364755816941140&fb_action_types=og.likes&fb_source=aggreation_id=288381481237582#src=fb

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  • ...It would appear:-( that:-( , becaue I made a 1-letter mistake when I first , painstakingly , put this endless URL up (which I tried to correct:-() , that I can't correct it , EVER:-( .

      Perhaps someone else could put a new link up , please ?

  • Here you go.

     

    You should be able to change the URL. Since it's your thread, if you're logged in you should see an "Options" button at the top right of the thread. Click on this, then on "Edit Discussion", and delete the URL and copy and paste in a correct one. There is no editing time limit on thread-starting posts. I was lucky enough to call up a version of the page with a shorter URL.

  • ...Thank you :-) !

  • ...I haven't quite given this a fullfull read...It does appear that this woman made her film from a bit " outside " our world , fen.........The subject of indie documentaries touching on comics/genre has interested me and.........

  • This is the correct link.

  • Thanks for that link, Dandy.

     

    Did anyone else spot this:

     

    "It's based on untraditional values of heroism - mentorship, working as a team, empathy, justice - when you should actually resort to more aggressive tactics, and when not to," Guevera-Flanagan said

    Justice is an untraditional value of heroism?

  • Come to think of it, I'm not sure heroism and justice have much of a relationship.  I guess they did between the 1950s and the 1980s, but not much outside that window of increased idealism.

    In comic books, at least, comic book heroes took a sharp turn towards violence, revenge and cynicism in the 1980s and never really recovered.  It was presented sometimes as a return to the original versions of the characters, and to a degree that was true.

    We don't often remember how much more faith in manking people had in the first few decades after WW 2.  There was a time when the UNO stood for something and was respected.

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