- This topic has 41 replies, 17 voices, and was last updated 14 years, 3 months ago by Paul Schilling.
-
AuthorPosts
-
July 1, 2010 at 7:25 am #93591GWHHParticipant
By Albert Ching, Newsarama.com / June 30, 2010
Wonder Woman has a bold new look, one of the most dramatic changes of her 70-year history.
Designed by DC Comics co-publisher Jim Lee, Wonder Woman’s new costume retains the bracelets and tiara, but is considerably less revealing.
Criticized for years for fighting crime in effectively a one-piece swimsuit —often considered either sexist or simply impractical — the DC Comics icon has a new costume as of this week’s Wonder Woman #600, and it’s one considerably less revealing, complete with long pants and a jacket. Signature elements such as the character’s bracelets, tiara and magic lasso remain. The costume was designed by acclaimed penciler and DC Comics co-publisher Jim Lee.
DC Comics announced the change Tuesday evening.
“It’s a look designed to be taken seriously as a warrior, in partial answer to the many female fans over the years who’ve asked, ‘how does she fight in that thing without all her parts falling out?'” said incoming series writer J. Michael Straczynski.
“It reflects her origins in both the outside world and the world of Amazons: tough, elegant…a street-fighter’s look which also incorporates elements of her classic design,” Straczynski said. “It reflects the two sides warring for ultimate victory, and underscores the path she must take.”
It’s also a versatile outfit, according to Straczynski.
“She can close it up to pass unnoticed … open it for the freedom to fight … lose the jacket or keep it on … it has pockets (the other fan question, “where does she carry anything in that outfit?”), it can be accessorized,” Straczynski wrote in DC’s official release. “it’s a Wonder Woman look designed for the 21st century.”
Straczynski also commented on some of the classic elements that were retained.
“The bracelets are still there, but made more colorful, tied on the inside and over the hand, with a script W on each of them that form WW when she holds them side by side…and if you get hit by one of them, it leaves a W mark. This is a Wonder Woman who signs her work … letting her enemies know that she’s getting closer.”
Straczynski noted to DC Comics that the new outfit is Wonder Woman’s “first significant change in her appearance since the character debuted in 1941,” with the notable exception of a mod bodysuit briefly sported in the ’60s.
With the new costume comes a new direction for the title: Thanks to some time-shifting by the Olympian gods who created Wonder Woman, the superheroine’s history has been changed so she grew up in a modern, urban environment, with little memory or conection to her mythical origins.
“The Gods, for reasons of their own but which may have something to with their survival and perhaps the survival of Earth itself, have changed the timeline. In the new timeline, years ago the Gods removed their protection from Paradise Island, and left it vulnerable to attack,” Straczynski shared in the press release. “And attacked it was. Led by a dark figure, a veritable army descended upon the Island, equipped with weapons that could kill even the Amazons. Outgunned, doomed, Hippolyta gave over her three-year-old daughter to a handful of guardians who spirited her away as Hippolyta led one last desperate battle against the forces that had come to destroy all she had created. In that final battle, she and most of the Amazons were killed, though some managed to escape.”
This new direction will also bring Wonder Woman into opposition with new enemies.
“It’s now nearly twenty years later. Diana has been raised in an urban setting, but with a foot in both worlds. She has little or no memory of the other timeline. She knows only what she’s been told by those who raised her On the run, hunted, she must try to survive, help the other refugee Amazons escape the army that is still after them, discover who destroyed Paradise Island and why … and if the timeline can be corrected or not,” Straczynski wrote in DC’s official materials. “She also does not yet have access to her full powers, but will be gaining them as she goes. Along the way, she will face a range of enemies — human and otherwise — who we have not seen before.”
Essentially, both the new look and new direction amount to a rebirth, wrote Straczynski.
“This is Wonder Woman reborn, literally and metaphorically: fast, elegant, tough, smart … the savior of her people, their guardian and protector … avenging the fall of Paradise Island, searching to discover why Paradise Island was abandoned by the gods,” Straczynski told to the publisher. “In the end, what she discovers will change her life and the world forever…and she will come face to face with a decision that will mean life or death for the entire human race.”
#600 comes out in stores this Wednesday, June 30, written by Straczynski and drawn by Don Kramer and Michael Babinski.
July 1, 2010 at 7:39 am #93592HolidayParticipantWe already have another thread on this. I said it there and I’ll say it here: she looks like a grown up version of Sailor Mercury.
July 1, 2010 at 9:32 am #93598Paul SchillingParticipantDon’t go CRYING in your sugar frosted flakes fan-boy/girl. THIS IS NOT THE FIRST TIME IN THE HISTORY OF WONDER WOMAN THAT SHE WORE PANT!!!
Issue #178 Sep/Oct issue of 1968 drawn by Mike Sekowsky and inked by Dick Giordano until issue #203 Nov/Dec 1972 drawn and inked by Giordano she wore pants. (MY God she wore the pant-suit before Bea Arthur was Maude)
Besides it’s not up to Straczynski or his artist if sales drop (DC has an obligation to the Marston estate to keep the book going ) Didio will speak “ex-cathedra” on this issue and go back to the way she looked so we have someone other than Power Girl to drool over.July 1, 2010 at 1:25 pm #93606AlexGKeymasterIt not about art or story. DC is a corporation, its all about the bottom line and pushing product.
If you hate this then don’t spend your $$$ on the title.
They’ll get the message when they see the numbers of sales decline.
“I like a good story well told. That is the reason I am sometimes forced to tell them myself.”
~ Mark Twain / Samuel Clemens (1907)July 1, 2010 at 4:28 pm #93610FettParticipantThis doesn’t look like a costume Wonder Woman would wear, but rather, one someone would dress her up in.
I don’t believe she’d wear heels. It makes no sense. Nor would she wear a leather jacket.
I also don’t think she’d wear pants and a corsets.
July 1, 2010 at 5:03 pm #93611musclelover2002ParticipantLike I wrote in the other thread, I am not a big fan. By the same token I don’t subscribe to any comics so its not like this will really affect me. I just think she looks more like Black Canary minus the fish net stockings. I don’t mind change, I am just not a big fan of this look.
I find it amusing that the suspension of disbelief for some readers did not come into the fray when wondering how she stayed in her costume. It is a comic after all. Tossing a tank into the moon by an Amazon goddess in a comic is totally understandable but not the fact that she can stay tucked in, lol. That somehow is way too implausible.
I hope it does not last but we shall see.
ps- good foreknowledge by Hephaestus to carve W’s into the braceletsJuly 1, 2010 at 10:18 pm #93618Paul SchillingParticipantone more thing, disbeliever… go to comics.org and do a wonder woman search for the covers
July 2, 2010 at 2:00 am #93623Paul SchillingParticipantI did a little more research in 1995 during the Perez era #93 (jan) -#100 (Aug) Diana wore a tight fitting pair of bicycle shorts , a small midriff, and jacket.
If you look closely at WW #600 you’ll see that the stories are tributes to the old which leads into her going into a warp leaving her with no memory and new costume.
WW has always done poorly in sales so the new costume should get people buying.
Also if Hollywood makes a live action movie They want to go back to an almost Cathy Lee Crosby look with an outfit that will work. Not to many women can fill Lynda Carter’s outfit the way she did.July 2, 2010 at 3:32 am #93625fasolaParticipantI think the comics you reffer to, are the ones where she loosses the WW mantel to Artemis, and she is not the “official” WW, and Artemis is.
July 2, 2010 at 6:34 am #93628Mr. StoneParticipantI actually don’t understand how anyone thinks her original costume isn’t functional anyway. It has no cape to get in the way, she has full movement of her limbs, and she’s not in heels.
Leather jacket? Really? How is that functional?
However, as someone has said, it’s a freaking comic book. Suspension of reality is a given.
This is f-ing stupid, but one thing I do know about comics, it won’t last. The original is too iconic. They tried the same crap with Superman and he always end up back in some close variation of his original suit.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.