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Wonder Woman (1974 film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1974 television film by Vincent McEveety

Wonder Woman
DVD cover.
GenreFantasy
Based on
Written byJohn D. F. Black
Directed byVincent McEveety
Starring
Music byArtie Butler
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
Executive producerJohn D. F. Black
ProducerJohn G. Stephens
CinematographyJoseph Biroc
EditorGene Ruggiero
Running time75 minutes
Production companyWarner Bros. Television
Original release
NetworkABC
ReleaseMarch 12, 1974 (1974-03-12)

Wonder Woman is a 1974 Americanmade-for-televisionsuperhero film based on theDC Comicscharacter of the same name, directed byVincent McEveety and starringCathy Lee Crosby. The film was apilot for an intended television series being considered byABC. The film presented the character as aJames Bond–style superspy, and did not contain many elements from the comic book series.[1] Ratings were described as "respectable but not exactly wondrous" and ABC did not pick up the pilot.[2]

Instead, Warner Brothers and ABC developeda different Wonder Woman television concept that fit the more traditional presentation of the character as created byWilliam Moulton Marston, turning away from the 1968–1972 era that had influenced the pilot.The New Original Wonder Woman, which premiered in 1975, starredLynda Carter and eventually led to theWonder Woman TV series. Crosby would later claim that she was offered the chance to reprise the role in that series.[3]

Background

[edit]
Cathy Lee Crosby in the first Wonder Woman film.

The film, Wonder Woman's first appearance in live-action television, was made in 1974 for ABC. Written byJohn D. F. Black, the TV movie resembles the Wonder Woman of the "I Ching" period. Wonder Woman (Cathy Lee Crosby) does not wear the comic book uniform, demonstrates no apparent superhuman powers, and is depicted as blonde (differing from the black hair established in the comic books).

The pilot aired originally on March 12, 1974.[4] and was repeated on August 21 of that year.[5] Ratings were described as "respectable but not exactly wondrous".[2] ABC did not pick up the pilot, although Crosby would later claim she was offered the series that was eventually given to Lynda Carter.[3] An ABC spokesperson would later acknowledge that the decision to update the character was a mistake.[2] DC Comics however did make this version canonical in the limited runInfinite Crisis as Wonder Woman of Earth-462.

Warner Brothers released this pilot into syndication as a stand-alone 90-minute telefilm, where it played on independent TV stations throughout the 1970s and 1980s. In December 2012, Warner Brothers made the Cathy Lee Crosby pilot available as a Video On Demand purchase through their online store.

Plot

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Diana Prince is chosen to leave Paradise Island to become Wonder Woman and show the world the value of women. Later, Diana, as assistant to government agent Steve Trevor (Kaz Garas), pursues a villain named Abner Smith (Ricardo Montalbán), who has stolen a set of code books containing classified information about U.S. government field agents. Along the way, she has to outwit Smith's chief assistants: the handsome yet dangerous George (Andrew Prine) and a rogue Amazon, Ahnjayla (Anitra Ford), whom Smith has taken on as a bodyguard; a brief duel between Wonder Woman and Ahnjayla is the film's only significant action sequence, which occurs during the final third of the story.[6]

Cast

[edit]

Home media

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Warner Home Video released the TV film to DVD in 2012 through Amazon.com and theirWarner Archive collection.

References

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  1. ^Sacks, Jason; Dallas, Keith (2014).American Comic Book Chronicles: The 1970s. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 145.ISBN 978-1605490564.
  2. ^abcShales, Tom (November 7, 1975). "Wonder Woman Tries Comeback".The Washington Post.
  3. ^abJoby, Tom (May 12, 1980). "Cathy Crosby turns down 'Wonder Woman' offer". Associated Press.
  4. ^"TV Staff Previews".Uniontown (PA) Morning Herald. March 12, 1974.
  5. ^"TV Key Best Bets".Wisconsin State Journal. August 21, 1974.
  6. ^Bergeron, Tom (2004). "Forward".What Were They Thinking?: The 100 Dumbest Events in Television. By Hofstede, David. Back Stage Books. pp. 31–33.ISBN 978-0-8230-8441-8.

External links

[edit]
TV series
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See also
Films directed byVincent McEveety
Characters
Wonder Women
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characters
Enemies
Factions
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Publications
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In other media
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