
Age: 40
female
Gemma Christina Arterton (born 2 February 1986) is an English actress and producer. After her stage debut in Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost at the Globe Theatre (2007), Arterton made her feature film debut in the comedy St Trinian's (2007). She portrayed Bond Girl Strawberry Fields in the James Bond film Quantum of Solace (2008), a performance which won her an Empire Award for Best Newcomer. Arterton has since appeared in a number of films, including The Disappearance of Alice Creed (2009), Tamara Drewe (2010), Clash of the Titans (2010), Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (2010), Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters (2013), Their Finest (2016), The Escape (2017), and Vita and Virginia (2018). She received the Harper's Bazaar Woman of the Year Award for acting in and producing The Escape. Her theatrical highlights have included starring in The Duchess of Malfi (2014), Made in Dagenham (2014), Nell Gwynn (2016) and Saint Joan (2017). Arterton was nominated for Olivier Awards for her work on both Nell Gwynn and Made in Dagenham, and she won the Evening Standard Theatre Award for the latter. Since 2016, Arterton has run her own production company, Rebel Park Productions, which focuses on creating female-led content in front of and behind the camera. She has executive-produced four feature films and two short films. She is also on record as being a supporter of the Time's Up, ERA 50:50 and MeToo movements. Arterton played an integral role in persuading actresses to wear black at the 2018 BAFTAs in support of Time'sUp, and has been involved with ERA 50:50, an equal pay campaign in the UK, since its inception.

Gemma Arterton

Wonder Woman
for Wonder Woman in Justice League
Suggested by not_another_ted

We join the bigger world of superheroism as we find ourselves with a series of individuals who have been regularly teaming up to fight crime for some time now, but they're not a team. Not yet. They barely even know each other. They team up simply because it's easier. Less of an actual team-up, and more just fighting the same criminals at the same time. Then several super-powered individuals (The Crime Syndicate), eerily seemingly alike several of our heroes, are transported to Earth from another universe, and as each one of them are confronted by Earth's heroes, battles ensue. After the "Crime Syndicate" members get away, the heroes group and recollect themselves. As they struggle to stop the "Crime Syndicate's" havoc on Earth, they realize that they have to fight together, actually together, to stop the threat. They need to cooperate; they need to trust each other. And they eventually do. The heroes eventually learn that the transported meta-humans' Earth was invaded by an evil entity who killed all the other heroes of their world, which made the "Crime Syndicate" decide to travel to another Earth, and claim that one as their own, inadvertently becoming the very thing they were trying to escape, and our heroes help the Syndicate reclaim their Earth from the evil entity Amazo. The heroes return to their Earth a team, hailed by the public. Before the credits roll, we see the officially formed Justice League ready to defend the Earth from the intergalactic conqueror, Starro.





