The 2020 Summer Olympics may have been delayed, but the Games are on for Wonder Woman 1984. In the upcoming film, a flashback sequence will show young Diana participating in the Amazon Olympics, where she will put her might to the test alongside her sisters. During a set visit attended by CBR, the cast and crew offered a preview of what moviegoers will see during Themyscira's Olympic Games.

"All the other characters do have their arcs, and we want them to have their arcs, but we really have to make sure that we service Wonder Woman first and foremost," producer Charles Roven explained. "What we wanted to make sure that we did was to give her challenges that aren't expected, right, but we also wanted to make sure that the audience knows that the roots still stem from the character they met in the first film."

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"That's why we opened the film in Themyscira at the Amazon Olympics, as we call them, and why we meet young Diana again, not just because we know that the audience wants to see that character, which is always gratifying to go, 'Oh yeah, we loved her so much,' but also because we wanted to make sure that the audience knows that that character, even though we met her when she was eight, still has a growth curve and all those things," he teased. "But also it lets you know, 'Oh yeah, that's Diana core is that.' She's the character that always wanted to be a winner, that always wanted to be heroic, that always wanted to save the world."

"When we meet her [in 1984], and it's whatever it is 60 plus years later, we get to see what she's been doing, but we also get to see what you might expect, that her life's far from perfect, right?" he continued. "She's still doing the things that gratify her to try to save the world in a quiet way. You know there are rumors about her, but it's really a lot of what the joy of her life is, is that. The rest of her life is quite spartan, quite almost monkish, if you will, even though she's in this dazzling world. That's a really nice juxtaposition. At least, that's what we're trying to accomplish."

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As Roven mentioned, the scene calls for a younger version of Diana. Lilly Aspell, who played young Diana in the first film, returned to reprise the role, but she had to go through months of training for her part in the Olympics. "I've had five months of training, so it's been a lot of it," she recalled. "It's been every week I've had in the five months and it's been like all of the sequences here and there's more to do in Fuerteventura and Tenerife."

"I really enjoyed them," Aspell said of her stunts. "But there's one where I go up the -- the scene I was doing today -- where I run up the big bridge thing and then I jump off. That's probably my favorite one. Yeah, it's really fun."

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She even described a few of her action scenes, saying, "I run into a handspring into a hole, and I come out and I do the bars and a sequence and then I do a swing gain up off the bars, and then I do my pulls, and then I do my bridge backflip into the sea, and then I do my swimming, and then I do my horses and then I do the mountain thing and then I come down the mountain!"

Chris Pine, who plays Diana's love interest Steve Trevor, added that Cirque de Soleil acrobats and Olympic athletes were hired to play the Amazons participating in the games. "[Director Patty Jenkins] hires actual Cirque de Soleil, and actual Olympians to perform the stuff," he revealed. "She and I, I find are on a similar wavelength, I think, because the eye now is so immured to cataclysmic computer graphics explosion nonsense, that it's almost going to be just as kind of open and wide-eyed, and the revelation of seeing things actually happening on the screen, in-camera, which I think for eyes, will be just as spectacular."

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Production designer Aline Bonetto offered some details about the stadium's design, as well as the obstacles involved in the Games. "We have, again, three parts in this movie because we start with Themiscyra, which is really interesting because we start with a big contest," she explained. "So we did a big stadium. Of course, this stadium is huge, really technical, and so we will build a part for real. You will see some elements in the backlot, but of course, a big part will be CGI and another part we'll be shooting in Fuerteventura -- nice sun texture, nice light."

"The island is made and built with high technology. They are not just primitive girls, so their stadium is still built with that idea," she continued. "It's quite modern in a way... and some elements are really cultural that they will use for the contest. You will see in the middle of this stadium there is a kind of big sculpture, which is there because it's part of the element of the contest, and this will disappear -- at a moment, just disappear into the ground. So it's quite always elegant. I try to be always elegant and quite refined."

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"All of this, yes, all of this is elements of the obstacle course. So you will see there was first some spinners, which turn. This thing is really, really difficult to do. They are really amazing girls!" she added. "So it's really built in the way where it's like a little bit if you mix Olympic Games and [American] Ninja Warrior. So it's the idea of that, but in a beautiful sense, so everything is really designed to be part of the difficulty. So we'll work with, of course, stunt people to achieve something that they can use."

"After having been able to go through the spinner, run, climb through the mountains and make some amazing scenes on bar, they arrive to this diving board. They have to run as fast as they can, because yeah, there will be a log which is suspended and starts to swing. Of course, the board is narrow enough to not have a chance normally to stay on this board. So it is quite difficult. So you will see how the girls do with that," she concluded.

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Costume designer Lindy Hemming also revealed the complex work that went into designing the Olympians' uniforms. "The cream of the Amazon ladies, and they're in their triathletes suits," she said. "We're saying, design-wise, that they're made of leather and that, in honor of the goldenness of the games, and this golden theme really in this film, I suppose you could say."

"They treat the panels of animal skin, and which is almost like a wetsuit material, the finest wetsuit material that they can be," she continued. "And we've had it printed with different animal prints. So there's snake and there's crocodile and there's python and what have you. And then some of the panels are gilded. So it's a very complex process to make them. And the idea, of course, is that they are strong and sleek and that they are the peak of the Amazons."

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"Then... at the end of the games, there's a giving of a crown," she added.

Directed and co-written by Patty Jenkins, Wonder Woman 1984 stars Gal Gadot, Chris Pine, Kristen Wiig, Pedro Pascal and Natasha Rothwell. The film arrives in theaters Oct. 2.

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