Nolte: World Spared ‘Wonder Woman 3’ After Petty Jenkins Goes Full Diva
Patty Jenkins refused to take story notes from another woman, and now the world will be spared her rendition of Wonder Woman 3.
Patty Jenkins refused to take story notes from another woman, and now the world will be spared her rendition of Wonder Woman 3.
Rotten Tomatoes is so broken that until its release date, “Wonder Woman 1984” earned a 89 percent fresh score.
As the release clock ticks, the big question now is what to do about Black Widow, F9, and No Time to Die in a world where most movie theaters remain closed and Wonder Woman 1984 just crashed and burned at the box office.
It is now official: the ultra-woke “Wonder Woman 1984” is a worldwide box office catastrophe.
“Wonder Woman 1984” can blame only itself for its death at the international box office, not the coronavirus.
NEW YORK — Despite premiering simultaneously by streaming service, “Wonder Woman 1984” managed the best box office debut of the pandemic, opening with $16.7 million over the Christmas weekend, according to studio estimates Sunday.
There’s no question Steve Trevor is inhabiting another man’s body, and there’s no question that Wonder Woman is a sociopath who has no problem with this.
“Wonder Woman 1984” is 40 minutes too long, has more plot holes than Joe Biden has hair plugs, and made my butt go numb in the last hour because that’s what happens when the filmmakers coast on razzle dazzle.
‘Wonder Woman 1984’ is a box office flop, making it the seventh franchise destroyed by Hollywood’s Woketards.
The superhero sequel “Wonder Woman 1984” has earned an estimated $38.5 million in ticket sales from international theaters, Warner Bros. said Sunday. Most of the earnings came from Chinese theaters, where it earned an estimated $18.8 million. It wasn’t enough to take first place in the country, however — that honor went to a local release.
NEW YORK (AP) — “No New ‘Movies’ Till Influenza Ends” blared a New York Times headline on Oct. 10, 1918, while the deadly second wave of the Spanish Flu was unfolding. A century later, during another pandemic, movies — quotes no longer necessary — are again facing a critical juncture. But it’s not because new films haven’t been coming out. By streaming service, video-on-demand, virtual theater or actual theater, a steady diet of films have been released under COVID-19 every week. The Times has reviewed more than 460 new movies since mid-March.
This idea that there’s some pent up desire to return to the movies just isn’t true. There seems to be plenty of pent-up desire to do a whole bunch of other things, but sitting in a movie theater is not one of them.
The villain in the upcoming Warner Bros. superhero film “Wonder Woman 1984” is partly inspired by Donald Trump, director Patty Jenkins revealed in an interview with ScreenRant.