How Steve Comes Back in Wonder Woman 1984
If you’ve watched Wonder Woman 1984, then you know that Steve Trevor comes back to life because Diana wishes for his return on the Dreamstone. At the time, she doesn’t totally believe in the power of the ancient stone (mostly, because she thinks it is some knockoff and not an actual artifact made by the gods), but she still goes for it because she misses Steve so goddamn much. Hr wish is granted and Steve is brought back to life in the body of a local architect, played by Kristoffer Polaha (whom you may know from the excellent Life Unexpected, among other things).
The Problematic Nature of Steve’s Return From the Dead
Wonder Woman 1984 completely ignores the uncomfortable nature of Steve’s return, which sees the WWI pilot waking up in some random guy’s body (presumably without that dude’s consent), and proceeding to use it as if it were his own. After waking up in Not Steve’s body, Steve proceeds to have sex with Diana, eat Cheez Whiz, and get into several life-or-death scenarios that could lead to the forever deaths of both Steve and Not Steve with one stray bullet. Sure, Diana is a good protector, but, because of her wish, she almost immediately starts losing her powers, putting Not Steve’s body in even greater danger. When Diana tries to convince Steve to stay behind when she goes to confront Maxwell Lord at the White House because she wants him to be safe, there is no discussion of how Steve is also using this poor stranger’s body without thought to the implications or consequences. When Steve convinces Diana to let him come along, it is framed as Steve making his own choice about his own body, but, you know, it’s not his own body. Eventually, Steve convinces Diana to renounce her wish, sending Steve back from the heaven-like afterlife from whence he came and restoring Not Steve’s consciousness to his own body. Again, this decision is not at all framed as the right thing to do because Steve has effectively stolen some poor schmuck’s body, but rather as the right thing to do to save the world—which, yes, definitely… and, even if the fate of the entire world were not at stake, this guy deserves his bod and existence back. The only reason to have Steve Trevor come back in another body would be if the creative team desperately wanted the character back but could not secure the actor for the return, which was not the case. In fact, it was probably closer to the opposite. Since they had Chris Pine, they didn’t need to have Steve Trevor come back in another body because the audience and Diana saw Steve Trevor in his original form anyway. Basically, it was a wholly unnecessary decision that, for some viewers, ruined the movie altogether. Wonder Woman 1984 is now available to stream on HBO Max in the United States.