Wonder Woman gets tough, modern makeover

http://www.cbc.ca/arts/books/story/2010/06/30/wonder-woman-new-look.html

DC Comics has unveiled a tougher new look for Wonder Woman, as part of
a darker, contemporary storyline that reboots the iconic super
heroine's tale.

DC officials revealed the dramatic change late Tuesday for Wonder
Woman #600, which is available in comic book stores on Wednesday.

The Amazonian heroine's image has been redesigned by comics artist and
recently named DC Comics co-publisher Jim Lee for a new tale penned by
noted writer J. Michael Straczynski (who is also behind DC's just
announced Superman Grounded series) that drastically changes her
backstory.

"Suppose someone went back in time and changed one thing, and it
changed your life to the point that you had little or no memory of
what life had been like before the change happened. What would you do
to get it back? Should you get it back? Who did it? And maybe more
important…why did they do it? That is the question faced by Diana
starting in issue 600," Straczynski told fans in a statement on the DC
website.

In the alternative new arc, Wonder Woman's idyllic birthplace Paradise
Island is attacked by an unknown force that slaughters most of the
Amazonian clan. Before her death, doomed queen Hippolyta passes her
infant daughter Diana to a few guardians who escape the island and
raise the child in an urban setting — though the refugees remain
constantly hunted and on the run.

Though the revamped costume features revamped versions of the
character's magical accessories (the famed bracelets, tiara and
lasso), it is considerable less revealing than the one-piece
swimsuit-like original, with a dark red tank top tucked into black
leggings and boots. A cropped, midnight blue jacket completes the
ensemble.

The "street-fighter's look" is a bit more universal considering the
original's undeniable connotations to the American flag, Lee has said.

It is not the first major image change for Wonder Woman, who made her
debut in an issue of All Star Comics in 1941 before eventually earning
her own title.

During the 1960s, she adopted a mod look and took up martial arts; in
the 1990s, she donned a black leather outfit when the mantle of Wonder
Woman was briefly assumed by another character named Artemis.

The new costume is "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?,'" Straczynski said in his online posting.

Along with Superman and Batman, Wonder Woman is considered to be one
of the core DC Comics heroes. The character has also been featured in
cartoons and in a popular late-1970s TV series starring Lynda Carter.

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