Wonder Woman has scored overhwelmingly positive reviews and looks set to be a huge box office hit, so a sequel being offically announced any day now feels like an inevitability. While we wait for that to happen, though, there's obviously still plenty the first solo adventure for the Amazon warrior leaves us to discuss.
For starters, there are the movie's many Easter Eggs. From obscure references to the source material to nods to the larger DC Films Universe and unexpected cameos, you'll find them all listed below.
It goes without saying that potentially MAJOR SPOILERS for Wonder Woman follow from here, but you've all seen it by now, right? Even if you haven't, this is a must-see guide for all the Easter Eggs you need to keep your eyes peeled for and will help you know where to look when you inevitably see it again and again...
10. Wonder Woman/Superman Parallels
When a group of German soldiers attack Steve Trevor and Diana Prince on the streets of London, one of them attempts to finish the former off with a bullet aimed straight at the spy's heart. Wonder Woman, however, manages to deflect that with one of her bracelets and it then drops directly into his hand.
Fans of Richard Donner and Christopher Reeve's Superman will recognise the nod here as it's pretty much lifted directly from that film in the scene where Clark Kent catches a bullet shot at Lois Lane by a mugger. Both the Man of Steel and Amazon Warrior look similarly timid when they leap into action and the way this scene is shot in Wonder Woman is actually nearly identical to Superman.
5. The God Of Truth
Having learned that she's the daughter of Zeus and incensed by the death of Steve Trevor, Wonder Woman finally unleashed the full extent of her powers while battling Ares. Diana Prince actually wins the battle by using her father's lightning and that's something we first saw in the comic books way back in 2010's Wonder Woman #39 by Gail Simone. There, her metal cuffs were a gift from Zeus and forged from his own aegis, though it doesn't seem that's the case in this movie.
Regardless, it is a cool nod to the source material and far from the only one. In Wonder Woman #37 (also written by Simone), Ares tells Diana that "war is truth" and makes a near identical comparison in the movie when he declares that he's not the God of War; he's the God of Truth!