Wonder Woman deepfake replaces Gal Gadot with Lynda Carter
See what 70s Wonder Woman actor Lynda Carter looks like as Gadot in 2017 s Wonder Woman movie in these impressive deepfake videos. Listen - 01:44
Original Wonder Woman TV actor Lynda Carter looks right at home replacing Gal Gadot as the new Wonder Woman in this deepfake video. Video screenshot by Bonnie Burton/CNET
Now thanks to this convincing deepfake video, fans can see what Carter would look like as Wonder Woman in 2017 s Wonder Woman movie.
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âWonder Woman 1984â is mostly run-of-the-mill but offers a handful of evocative moments
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After several pandemic-related delays, the latest installment of the DC Extended Universe, âWonder Woman 1984â (WW84), was released on HBO Max on Christmas Day. Patty Jenkins returns as director alongside Gal Gadot as Diana Prince. The film takes our titular heroine to the glamorous 1980s with some cheesy aesthetics along the way.
The film follows Diana Prince, an employee at the Smithsonian in Washington D.C. by day and Amazononian warrior by night. Also an employee at the Smithsonian is Barabara Ann Minerva (Kristen Wiig), a dejected and socially awkward geologist. The same geology department is soon visited by a seemingly conniving businessman and television personality, Maxwell Lord (Pedro Pascal). Surely enough, Lordâs true intentions are revealed to involve acquiring the Dreamstone (previously in Barabaraâs possession), a mys
‘Wonder Woman 1984’: The super woman for our time
Gal Gadot and Chris Pine star in a scene from the movie Wonder Woman 1984. The Catholic News Service classification is A-III adults. The Motion Picture Association rating is PG-13 parents strongly cautioned. Some material may be inappropriate for children under 13. (CNS photo/Clay Enos, Warner Bros.)
By Joseph McAleer • Catholic News Service • Posted January 8, 2021
NEW YORK (CNS) Everyone’s favorite Amazonian princess returns to save the planet in “Wonder Woman 1984” (Warner Bros.), an entertaining follow-up to the DC Comics superhero’s 2017 outing.
Director Patty Jenkins is once again at the helm, and this time has co-written the screenplay with Geoff Johns and David Callaham. Naturally, the plot is silly, at times preposterous. But that’s not unexpected for an old-fashioned popcorn movie, a Saturday-matinee serial writ large.
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Wonder Woman’s last jaunt took her from the hidden island of Themyscira to a Europe ravaged by WWI. Decades later, Patty Jenkins’s
Wonder Woman 1984 finds Diana Prince (Gal Gadot) living in a world that seems more peaceful at least at first glance. While working at the Smithsonian, she comes across an ancient stone that grants wishes Monkey’s Paw-style, first bringing back her boyfriend Steve Trevor (Chris Pine), then generating two new formidable foes for the superhero to contend with: Pedro Pascal’s Max Lord and Kristen Wiig’s Cheetah. As the film’s title might suggest, the year is 1984, and aside from leg-warmers and Gary Numan songs, its cars are one of the very few ways this film is recognizably set in this decade.