“I wanted to ramp that tension as much as possible, and unfortunately, we didn’t have it,” she told The Hollywood Reporter in a cover story interview. “That scene was just a slightly tense scene of them walking. I was like ‘I need her to see some brutality.’ So, we added her seeing the horses being whipped. It was actually something that had been in the script originally.”

In an industry where endings are rewritten, requiring weeks of reshoots (think Rogue One), and entire third acts are scuttled in postproduction in favor of one that makes sense (like World War Z), this counts as a pretty minor tweak. Allan Heinberg wrote the screenplay.

“We replaced that one scene with a reshot scene, and we didn’t change the order of a single scene,” Jenkins said. “So what you saw is exactly the movie that we were always making.”

Wonder Woman's debut marked the biggest opening ever for a female director. The film cost just under $150 million to make.