Released in 2017 and one of the year’s biggest hits at the international box office with more than $823 million, Patty Jenkins-starrer Wonder Woman largely allowed its lead, Gal Gadot, to see her career skyrocket.
Written by Alan Heinberg, Zack Snyder and Geoff Johns, the film follows the arrival of an Amazonian warrior in the human world during World War I to save the population from the manipulations of Ares, the Greek god of war.
Almost all of the characters appearing in Wonder Woman are based on those who originally appeared in DC Comics. But there is one notable exception: General Erich Ludendorff, played by Danny Huston in the film. This is not the creation of comics, but of a real person, a prominent figure in the German army during the First World War.
In the film, General Erich Wilhelm Ludendorff, an officer in the Imperial German Army, is the employer of scientist Isabel Maru, aka Dr. Poison, a Spanish-born chemist who creates deadly gases that even gas masks can’t help but filter out. Ludendorff is the main antagonist of Wonder Woman, as he is the one who is convinced that he is the god of war that the superhero faces. And in what he ends up triumphant, thanks to lightning, he ends it.
Far from this superheroic and 100% fictional ending, the authentic General Ludendorff actually played an important role in the 14-18 War as he served as Commander-in-Chief of the German Army from 1916 to 1918.
Inseparable from General von Hadenburg, they gradually became the real decision-makers in Germany after the latter was named Supreme Leader of the German Army, replacing Falkenhayn, who was dismissed in August 1916.

An apostle of total war against Great Britain by using an excessive submarine fleet, Ludendorff was one of the main architects of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, signed in 1917 with Russia, then in the midst of the Bolshevik Revolution, allowing him to return German divisions. West to finish off France and her allies.
After the war, he supported the National Socialist movement until the famous beer hall putsch organized by Adolf Hitler in Munich, which turned into a fiasco in November 1923. Hitler was sentenced to three years imprisonment in Landsberg Castle, Ludendorff was acquitted. Due to the lack of evidence and his service during the 14-18 years of war.
Elected as a member of the Nationalist Group of the Reichstag from 1924 to 1928, he retired from political life in the same year. It is enough, first of all, to devote himself to the neopagan movement, which he founded with his wife in 1925. His quarrel with Hitler did not prevent the latter, Chancellor of Germany from 1933, from receiving a national funeral when he died in December 1937 in St. At the age of 72.
Source: Allocine

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