Became a Bionic Woman clone
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HarvSoul — 10 years ago(August 11, 2015 10:34 AM)
I guess once they have established her Paradise Island ties, it was an understood fact that they didn't need to show over and over again. Like most TV shows, when you establish a character's home life in one episode (like parents or relatives), you don't need to show them all the time to know that they are there. They are kept on a back burner and only brought out when necessary.
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dpcole7 — 10 years ago(September 27, 2015 09:30 AM)
The show was rebooting itself (sans actors) long before "reboot" was ever coined for TV show regurgitation!
Kudos to the cast for trying to make it work, but season 3 is such a mess.
Season 1 was the best, but season 2 where they had a brief chance to reference the war and its repercussions were the best. Once they did the christmas tree aliens from outer space, Frank Gorshin's robot collection (great actor, wasted talent), the greedy computer collector named "Mr. Haveitall", season 2 went downhill pretty far. Yet the suits thought that putting in more of what made season 2 stink for season 3, and replace all the original and good music with elevator muzak would somehow improve it?!
The computer thief episode was actually above average for season 2 (along with the WW2-themed episodes and a couple others), but - really - the name "Havitol" was cringe inducing as an in-joke. -
Eric-62-2 — 10 years ago(October 07, 2015 02:06 PM)
On a deeper level, the transforming of this show into something more like Bionic Woman also meant the show basically ended up right where it started with the premise of the Cathy Lee Crosby version from 1974. If you think about it, the Crosby template gave us a WW with limited superpowers, working for a contemporary spy agency headed by Steve Trevor.
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Jimmy-128 — 10 years ago(November 17, 2015 01:54 PM)
Crosby's WW didn't have any superpowers, because at the point when they started filming, WW in the comics didn't have any, either. She went through an unpowered stretch from the late 60s to the early 70s, where she relied on martial arts and a mentor named I Ching.
Yes, you read that correctly. -
Geek_XX — 9 years ago(July 04, 2016 11:40 AM)
Season 2 went downhill the minute Steve Trevor stepped aside for it to be all about Wonder Woman.
The first season at least allowed Diana and Steve to work well together and the chemistry worked.
But then Diana became a full-fledged IADC Agent all by herself and checking in to Steve every once in a while.
I'm sorry, but if you're an agent, you probably don't want a desk job.
Even the scene when Steve mentioned his promotion he looked pissed. -
YGoodwriter — 9 years ago(September 12, 2016 06:32 PM)
It's weird that Wonder Woman became irrelevant in a show called "Wonder Woman". If they wanted to make it into 'Diana Prince: Secret Agent', they should have done the storyline that was done in the comics in the sixties, from issues 179-204, when Diana gave up her powers and became a Martial Arts expert, under the tutelage of Master I-Ching. She worked by day as a clothing boutique owner and in her spare time, she and I-Ching solved crimes and caught spies.
This phase of her DC series was clearly influenced by the British spy show "The Avengers", and specifically by Diana Rigg's portrayal of Emma Peel. Diana even started to dress like Emma Peel in the comic.
The name of the comic series was changed to "Diana Prince: Wonder Woman", until she got her powers back in issue # 204.
Doing it this way could have differentiated it from "The Bionic Woman" and still focused on Dian instead of Wonder Woman. It would also eliminate the need of Steve Trevor (who had been killed off in the comics at that point.)