Wonder Woman star Gal Godot has reportedly refused to sign on for a sequel unless accused sexual harasser Brett Ratner is removed from the franchise.

Ratner, who has been accused of sexual harassment by six women in recent days, helped finance the summer blockbuster, and took home a sizable stake of the $412million box office gross.

Ratner's production company Rat-Pac Dune co-financed the hit movie in an agreement with Warner Bros., and now Godot is insisting that the studio buy out his stake, Page Six reports.

'She's tough and stands by her principles. She also knows the best way to hit people like Brett Ratner is in the wallet,' a Warner Bros. insider told the outlet.

'She also knows that Warner Bros. has to side with her on this issue as it develops. They can't have a movie rooted in women's empowerment being part-financed by a man ­accused of sexual misconduct against women,' the insider continued.

Wonder Woman star Gal Godot (left) has reportedly refused to sign on for a sequel unless accused sexual harasser Brett Ratner (right) is removed from the franchise

Israeli-born Gadot (center) starred in the $412million-grossing summer blockbuster, but is said to be refusing to participate in a sequel unless Warner Bros. buys out Ratner

'Brett made a lot of money from the success of 'Wonder Woman,' thanks to his company having helped finance the first movie,' the source said.

'Now Gadot is saying she won't sign for the sequel unless Warner Bros. buys Brett out [of his financing deal] and gets rid of him,' the insider said.

Ratner, through his attorney, has vehemently denied the allegations against him, but that made little difference to the Israeli-born Godot, according to the source.

A Warner Bros. rep told Page Six the story was 'false' without elaborating, and reps for Godot and Ratner did not comment.

Ratner, the high-profile director of the Rush Hour series and X-Men: The Last Stand, is the latest in a slew of Hollywood heavy hitters to become ensnared in sexual misconduct allegations.

Ellen Page (left) has accused director Brett Ratner (right) of 'outing' her as a lesbian at 18 as well as being derogatory about women on set saying one woman had a 'flappy p****'

On Friday, actress Ellen Page came out with a slew of allegations against Brett Ratner for outing her as a lesbian and saying degrading things about women such as commenting that a woman on set had a 'flappy p****'.

Page, 30, also said she has been fondled by a director and sexually assaulted by a crew member- both when she was 16-years-old.

The Juno actress took to Facebook in a lengthy post with a slew of allegations against not only Ratner, but others she came in contact with throughout her career.

She alleges Ratner outed her during a cast and crew meet and greet for X-Men: The Last Stand when the actress was 18-years-old.

'He looked at a woman standing next to me, ten years my senior, pointed to me and said: "You should f*** her to make her realize she's gay.'''