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Chris Pine’s memorable line from Wonder Woman reminds us that choosing to act in the face of injustice is a responsibility, not a choice. Image rights (Instagram).
Chris Pine is having one of the busiest and most diverse periods of his career. The romantic drama Carousel, in which he plays a single father whose life is turned upside down by the return of his high school ex, opened the 2026 Sundance Film Festival in January to strong reviews, with IndieWire writing that his work in the film lands on the strength of the discovery.
He is currently in talks to star opposite Emma Stone in a romantic comedy. He’s also set to helm the thriller “Yeti” and the alien invasion comedy “Alpha Gang” alongside Cate Blanchett and Dave Bautista, and is in pre-production on the action film “Run the Night,” according to The Cinema Holic.He also made headlines this year when he told reporters about a new “Star Trek” movie being developed without him, and dispatched him with characteristic Pine ease, saying simply: “Enjoy, good luck, live long and prosper,” according to Variety.
Through all this momentum, the line he delivered nine years ago as Steve Trevor in Wonder Woman is still the line people keep coming back to.Today’s quote reads, “If you see something wrong happening in the world, you can’t do anything, or you can do something.”
Meaning of Quote of the Day by Chris Pine
Chris Pine stars in this scene as Steve Trevor in Wonder Woman, directed by Patty Jenkins and released in 2017. This moment comes when Trevor explains to Diana, who has never left her island, why he wants to return to the war that actually broke him, why he simply cannot turn away from the horror of what he witnessed, and why inaction is no longer a real option for him.
It’s one of the quietly most powerful passages of dialogue in the superhero genre, and it arrives the way it does precisely because Pine delivers it with an effortlessness and simplicity that makes it sound like something a real person would say rather than a scripted line.
In a genre that often celebrates the grand gesture and astonishing act of heroism, this line places bravery in a quieter place.
In the private decision, made before anyone is watching, to stop looking away. To stop waiting for someone else to act.
Chris Pine: The actor who keeps choosing something
What has defined Payne’s career in the years since has been a consistent and sometimes surprising willingness to move away from the safety of the franchise toward riskier, more personal work. 2016’s “Hell or High Water,” in which he played a desperate Texas bank robber trying to save his family’s land, earned him the strongest dramatic reviews of his career and brought a steadier, more volatile quality to his screen presence.
“Wonder Woman” arrived the following year, with Steve Trevor becoming one of the most respected supporting performances in the superhero genre, winning particular praise for exactly the quality that the dialogue reflected: a human specificity that made the character seem real rather than functional.
Chris Pine’s Early Life and Road to Hollywood
Christopher Whitelaw Payne was born on August 26, 1980 in Los Angeles, California, into an acting family; His father, Robert Payne, and his mother, Gwen Gilford, were well-known actors, according to IMDb.
He studied English at the University of California, Berkeley, and spent one year at the University of Leeds in England, before training at the American Conservatory Theater in San Francisco. He made his feature film debut opposite Anne Hathaway in 2004’s The Princess Diaries 2, followed by small television roles before he was cast in the role of James T.
Kirk in the 2009 Star Trek reboot, a role he played in three films that made him an international star.
The character he played in Wonder Woman had never really tried anything, and found it inadequate. The actor who played him, on the evidence of his choices over nearly twenty years, came to the same conclusion. He keeps choosing something. Different things, more serious things, quieter things. But always something. This, more than any single role, is what makes him worth watching.
