If yara ends up having more impactful appearances in the DC verse, better character development, personality development and power feats than Diana. That will be the final nail in the coffin. And with the way DC has treated Di for the past decade. I wouldn't be surprised if this actually happens.
CW shows have not been my cup of tea, and I don't expect this to be any different. I have enjoyed Stargirl, but it didn't start on the CW. I can see the desire to have a WW related show, but am a bit clueless as to why a completely new character is the direction they are taking.
Yeah, remember that awesome comic preview of Yara slaying a dragon? I can't wait to watch the show and see nothing even remotely close to that happening...
Last edited by Dipter; 11-17-2020 at 01:44 PM.
I just hope we see some actual Wonder Rogues on the show.
Rumor has it that Warner is taking DC in a completely brand-new direction, relying less on strict comic-book continuity and U.S.-centric tastes and going for a more global approach to their characters and franchises and allowing, essentially, "all stories to matter and count" in terms of continuity, even where things seem contradictory. There's also going to be a lot more synergy between the various parts of the DCU in terms of comics, books, television, film, etc.
I also heard that Warner might be pulling DC out of the monthly comic book business, focusing more on YA books, graphic novels, trades, etc. There seems to be a genuine push to broaden DC's market beyond the 35+ year old white/male comic collector and appeal to a wider base around the entire world. Much of DC's recent restructuring and re-staffing, as well as pulling out of Diamond Distributors and holding their own comic con and likely pulling away from established comic conventions, seems to be pointing in this direction as well.
Wonder Girl as an Indigenous/Brown Brazilian girl as the starting place for this new direction seems like they are actually going to put their money where their mouth is.
I imagine this is going to upset longtime readers/collectors (though I imagine there will still be stuff for us to enjoy), but likely provide a stable future for the industry as a whole.
Last edited by SonOfBaldwin; 11-17-2020 at 02:28 PM.
Author of the Instant New York Times bestselling novel, The Prophets, from G.P. Putnman's Sons.
The male Cheetah was from Argentina not Brazil, right?
I saw this news the other day.
No heavy thoughts, but I think the idea of an Amazon from the Amazon is pretty solid pulp concept that fits the modern day zeitgeist well enough, and I think that costume design is fantastic, and I like the prospect of what looks like a clean push for a brand new character (which we could use more of) that is less derivative than the usual (because they're usually just "more Bat-Kids"). You give me fun stories, a tangential relationship to Wonder Woman's world, and some new scenery and world-building in a part of the world that is less explored in these pulpy stories, I'm pretty down.
This'll likely tie into that mysterious Third City of Amazons that Diana and Artemis and Nubia found at the end of Orlando's run, yeah? Wasn't that in South America?
Between this and Vixen headlining a book ... ALSO with a fantastic costume design ... and I'm pretty stoked for the next few months to check it out and see if they've got some storytelling legs.
Last edited by K. Jones; 11-17-2020 at 04:49 PM.
Retro315 no more. Anonymity is so 2005.
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