Steve dies. Diana vs Ares [Part 2] | Wonder Woman [+Subtitles]

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Published 2017-10-12
Wonder Woman (2017)
SUBTITLES: English, Russian, French, Portuguese
Wonder Woman vs Ares \ Diana Prince vs Sir Patrick Morgan
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Film discription: Before she was Wonder Woman, she was Diana, princess of the Amazons, trained warrior. When a pilot crashes and tells of conflict in the outside world, she leaves home to fight a war, discovering her full powers and true destiny.

Director: Patty Jenkins
Cast: Gal Gadot (Diana Prince / Wonder Woman), Chris Pine (Steve Trevor), Connie Nielsen (Hippolyta), Robin Wright (Antiope), Danny Huston (Ludendorff), David Thewlis (Ares)
DC Comics
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All Comments (21)
  • she was so close to turning into injustice diana, only thing that stopped her was steve
  • @rockstarfoxy654
    "The War is Over" Hitler 20 years later: Hippity Hoppity, Poland is now my property
  • @jsescanor1612
    Note to self: don't let any person named steve drive a plane.
  • @natepopard9852
    Her pain at 2.26 after seeing him leave her at that moment. The way she yells in agony is truly heartbreaking.
  • @111Panda
    Ares mentions Steve WW: So you've chosen death
  • @notforone
    Steve's death makes me cry no matter how many times I've watched it. His character was so well portrayed, played, written. Kudos to everyone involved, especially Chris. Their love is so beautiful & pure.
  • When Diana raged in agony and you see those little lightnings, what a way to show her connection to Zeus as his daughter. Goosebumps literally.
  • @reach9318
    Every guy hero named Steve is destined to sacrifice himself with a plane haha.
  • @SeptemusHeap
    Damn, Steve was the real hero here. A man without powers, with only his own mortality and wit to put on the table. Any one of us could be like Steve, someone who rises up to the cause to do something that is beyond them, beyond their own mortality.
  • @gachatea2615
    Her scream gets me every time it's just so satisfying
  • I wanna see Dumbledore come in and say "Lupin, you're fired,I'm sorry"
  • @nuttyteetee8495
    It seems like blond guys named Steve in the early to mid 1900s don’t do so well with planes...
  • 3:42 This part right here is the pinnacle of this scene for me. “Look at her, and tell me I’m wrong! She is the perfect example of these humans, and unworthy of you sympathy in every way!” Chills every time I hear those words and watch Dr. Maru’s mask fall away to reveal her monstrous scars. Dr. Maru really is the perfect example of the dark side of humanity, and her face reflects that. Not just committing horrible, self-serving, and destructive acts of violence (the scars from past experiments on weapons and on humans gone wrong), but covering it up with what we want people to see (her mask). Dr. Maru covered up her evil deeds with a mask of scientific advancement, brilliant personal achievements and defending her homeland. When Ares strips the mask away, he’s showing Diana that there is nothing redeeming, nothing glorious, about what she’s accomplished. All she has done is make the world a more violent and evil place. And so she deserves to die. But Diana knows that what’s underneath Marus mask isn’t all that she is, or ever could be. She isn’t naïve. She knows that Maru is everything Ares says. But Steve and her friends showed her how much more they can be. Somehow Patty Jenkins captured the essence of humanity with this scene. That dispute all the hurt we cause, the ways we fail, the things we hide behind the masks, we can still be so much more.
  • @PhlilipeAlves
    At 1:18 she felted so lonely without Steve. That's why she called him several times until his death. And then the anger and pain she had in loosing him. It almost turned her into the "dark side". That's what Ares was trying to do (he was very satisfied at the moment) until she remembered Steve's last words.
  • @samuelbrown4764
    Steve was the mvp of the movie. So insanely likeable it made his death suck
  • @Tvarski1
    So powerfully acted. I felt the pain in her scream.
  • @kb523
    DC may not have the best or most consistent storylines but their cinematography is always amazing
  • There’s a moment in 2:05 where we can see him knowing that it’ll be the last time he’s alive. The sense of grief follows but then at 2:12, acceptance, his love for her and his reason “why” gives him the strength to pull the trigger. I was really surprised (in a good way) with the romantic elements between them in this film and in part 2 as well.