Gal Gadotis waiting for theboosh.
“Ahhh, so uncomfortable!”
And the look of everything!

There was the fear of the Cold War," she concedes.
“But it really was like, ‘This is gonna go on forever!’
The feeling that the world was this cornucopia that would never stop giving was so enormous.”

In this go-go decade, though, the line between want and need is easily blurred.
You’re entitled to it!'
“It’s fing greed, of course.

But it’s also about ‘How do you be your best self?
How do you win?’
So he’s definitely the face of that version of success.”
“And I was really, really happy to find out it was her.”
Jenkins never had any doubt that Wiig was right for the part.
I don’t think of her being a female villain, although she is.
I feel that way about Wonder Woman, too.
“And in this one I get to be much more wide-eyed and joyful.
I’m like the Watson to her Holmes.”
That, says Jenkins, is exactly why she chose him: “He’s not beta at all.
He’s a super alpha who can absolutely wear his discomfort on his sleeve.
Chris just very naturally has that quality.
Pine appreciates, too, that the movie’s take on romance isn’t exactly typical of the genre.
“Whereas in this, it’s part and parcel of the spine of the lead character.
But even love, of course, can’t conquer all at least not without a little heavy metal.
Even when the stakes are high, though, certain occasions still call for the classic red and blue.
“Seeing the old round letters on the Gap logo!”
“It was like I had stepped back into my childhood.
I was such a mall girl.”
But then when they cut we go, ‘Oh my God, are you okay, Booby?
Did I scratch you, sister?'”
(If it’s not exactly Fury Road, it definitely doesn’t look like a breezy one.)
But now I feel like I know where I’m going and I know what we’re doing.
She has the powers of a goddess, but she has the heart of a human.”
And the wings, too, to make it fly.