"The Wonder Women" not "Wonder Woman"

Julia 2022-01-16 08:01:45

It is estimated that most people were initially attracted by the film’s pungent subject matter and the hot word "Wonder Woman" (or abandon it). After watching it, I felt that the producer used a movie poster similar to "Wonder Woman" and a one-sided "Wonder Woman" word as a publicity stunt. As a biographical drama film, Telegraph commented that the film is "horny as all get-out, even though its impeccable period drama trappings couldn't look more butter-wouldn't-melt" ( Professor Marston and the Wonder Women review: an impeccably kinky take on the superhero origin story ) is really appropriate. Originally, the characters, plot, and direction of the film cannot escape the various R-level and above keywords to be blocked. As a result, performance, music, clothing, modeling, scene design, editing style, age and keynote were mixed by the director. Like a retro literary film with a dramatic plot, it feels a bit dismembered, re-edited, and republished with illustrations and vernacular annotations.

At first glance, the film seems to revolve around how Professor Marston was inspired by the two muses in his life (that’s why it’s the wonder women, and woman is plural) to create Wonder Woman, but the female director’s Lara The style and perspective are too prominent and obvious, which weakens the male protagonist Professor Marston, especially the two female protagonists are too shining, and when we are in confrontation, we are like the world. About Professor Marston, I The only thing that impressed me was the embarrassed expression of watching the two heroines kiss from a distance at the door, and he didn't know where to go next. Professor Marston used his own DISC theory to analyze E and O. The two Muse around him made people feel that the male observation ability of thinking in the lower body is really superficial. Even the conclusions drawn by the doctor of psychology are so superficial. . It really confirmed what he said about his wife, who was much smarter than him. O looks such a harmless, kind, innocent, and flawless woman, if she has a little brain, where is just a submission, she has been the dominant side from the beginning, and she is a naked siege, professor and wife In fact, it has been stuck since the beginning.

ferocious and grade-A bitch and O is pure of heart, so he wants to have both so that he can have a "perfect". It turns out that the so-called representative of feminist wonder The source behind the creation of women is the instinctive desire of a straight man who wants both red roses and white roses. The director seems to show the audience a very harmonious balance of equilateral triangles. Although it is not understood and accepted by the world, it is comfortable and stable for the parties, because the three people love each other two at the same time. In the film, O’s physical attraction to Professor Ma’s “beauty to straight man” appearance is understandable (just like O’s fiance said that your intentions are too obvious, as individuals can see), but Professor Ma Hode How can I trap O? This plot bug is too obvious. In the first half of the movie, Professor Ma created an ordinary male image of a decent young professor at most. How can he attract O, a white rose that seems innocuous and harmless but can always hit the nail on the nail? Follow it closely (the director of Lala still has a psychological contempt for men, consciously or unconsciously). It is estimated that the director himself did not want to understand this paragraph when he was editing it, so he was too lazy to think about explaining the relationship between men and women. It would be better to spend more space to shape the entanglement between o and e. The female and female theme is also his own anyway. Better at. I looked at the spark between the E and O lines, but the logic was clear and smooth. It seems that O was attracted to E at first, but from O read E’s paper first, left and went back to the laboratory, and then chased down to confess that she admired her more. O asked E a series of questions about the relationship with Professor Ma (o is really It’s time to go to the News Department of Columbia University. The question is ordinary and honest, but the key points are cut to the point. A pretentious questioner like e will definitely dig out his heart and lungs), o The lie detector tells the truth, E. Where is ferocious on this road, except for a disarming warrior at the beginning, warning o not to sleep with your husband. It seems a bit cruel and understandable (later was forced to apologize by the husband who had no eyesight), and I have been cautiously confessing it all the time. o, I am afraid that I will be eaten to death by touching porcelain dolls. After the relationship became clear, E was making money to support his family, and E obviously didn’t like being tied up, but after wearing "golden armor" like a white rabbit, etc., it was really leading the three-person relationship (from the plot of the movie) In terms of perspective, in fact, the big and small climaxes and transitions are all directed by o; from Professor Ma’s DISC theory, o is the proper induction. Professor Ma basically skips compliance and directly falls into the submission, and e always fails after compliance. Escaping from my restless heart and voluntarily submit).

The director was actually conveying this message intentionally or unconsciously, so I really found such a harmless blond Bella Heathcote to play the third wheel, which sounds very annoying, and it also made Rebecca who looks vigorous. Hall came to play e, like a tailor-made for her, she can't look beautiful, but she is a smart female celebrity who can't control a little distance but is admirable. Fortunately, the story is to tell the audience that these three people live together peacefully and enjoy themselves, or else o completely shows the audience a successful model of the junior high level, the average audience should hate it so much...Speaking of which Professor Ma’s image of the heroine has been overwhelmed by the heroines. If it weren’t for the director to use the creation of the "Wonder Woman" anime image to bring the story back to the original film intent of the hero image, I would have forgotten (and nothing A sense of violation).

Another scene run through the film for the male protagonist is to explain to the president of the American Children’s Association that the "Wonder Woman" comics are children's books that are beneficial to the physical and mental health of young people and should not be banned. Then I kept listening to Professor Ma's forced whitewashing of various sm in the comics to promote women's power and power...A complete bullshit, bullshit, more than a four-page ppt to raise funds. Hehe, I think the most ingenious (or ulterior motive) scene where the director satirizes Professor Ma is when the publisher listens to Professor Ma talking about the great potential of his cartoons to change the American education industry, and throws him a sentence "do you" always lay it on so thick?". The heroine's concept is of course great, but you add so many 17-forbidden dramas to her and you have to hard sell this beneficial child of the United States. The success rate of persuading Harvard to grant your wife a doctorate is much higher than this.

To add to the question, when Professor Ma is eloquently praising women, he has an American-style Jia Baoyu's sense of sight. Brother Bao is also "when I see my daughter, I feel refreshed; when I see a man, I feel muddy and stinky." I hope there is a Grand View Garden in which only thirty-six hairpins and other girls (Paradise Island) live. When I was a kid, I was so confused that I didn’t know anything about the Dream of Red Mansions. I finished reading it. The university held it up and re-read it. I was ashamed to understand it. In the end, I was afraid how my parents could rest assured that I read the Red Mansions when I was a kid?!

The last but not least, the film actually featured Charles Guyette, my new male god JJ Field, as a friendly guest, speaking English with a little French accent. How did the originator of Fetish Art in the United States originate in France? Is this political evidence? ?

View more about Professor Marston & the Wonder Women reviews

Extended Reading

Professor Marston & the Wonder Women quotes

  • Elizabeth Marston: What we want can never happen.

    William Moulton Marston: Why not?

    Elizabeth Marston: Because the world won't let it.

    William Moulton Marston: The world can't stop us.

  • Brant Gregory: What is your intention towards Olive?

    William Moulton Marston: I don't understand...

    Brant Gregory: I didn't ask you. I know what your intention is, you're rather obvious.

    [indicating Elizabeth]

    Brant Gregory: What is *your* intention towards Olive?