The 15 Best Gal Gadot Roles
Gal Gadot has built a filmography that moves comfortably between action franchises, superhero epics, globe-trotting capers, and character-driven dramas. From early appearances on Israeli television to star turns leading major studio releases, her roles often thread together combat training, multilingual dialogue, and an international production footprint. This list pulls together films and shows that showcase that range—superheroes, master thieves, elite operatives, and more.
Below you’ll find fifteen of her most notable roles across movies and television. Each entry notes who she plays and highlights concrete details—directors, co-stars, source material, distribution, franchise context, and production insights—to give you a quick, useful snapshot of where the role fits in Gadot’s career and in the project itself.
‘Wonder Woman’ (2017) – Diana Prince / Wonder Woman

Patty Jenkins directs this DC film centered on Diana, an Amazon warrior who leaves Themyscira to intervene in a world war after encountering Steve Trevor. The production mixes location work in Europe with studio photography and introduces the DCEU version of Themyscira, the Lasso of Truth, and the Bracelets of Submission as key story elements.
The film ties into the larger DC franchise while standing alone with an origin-story structure. Warner Bros. handled distribution, with a score by Rupert Gregson-Williams, fight choreography that blends sword-and-shield techniques with wire work, and an Amazon cast that includes Connie Nielsen and Robin Wright.
‘Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice’ (2016) – Diana Prince / Wonder Woman

Directed by Zack Snyder, this crossover brings Batman and Superman into conflict before revealing a larger threat. Gadot’s Diana appears in civilian settings before revealing her Amazon identity in the climactic battle, establishing her as part of the DCEU ensemble ahead of her solo film.
The movie integrates artifacts like a shield and sword recovered from her mythology and features an original electric-cello theme for the character by Hans Zimmer and Junkie XL. Her role intersects with Lex Luthor’s metahuman surveillance thread, setting up later team-up installments.
‘Justice League’ (2017) – Diana Prince / Wonder Woman

This ensemble DC film assembles Batman, Wonder Woman, Aquaman, Cyborg, and the Flash to confront Steppenwolf after the death of Superman. Gadot’s character helps recruit team members, appears in museum and Themyscira sequences, and participates in multi-location battles involving the Mother Boxes.
Produced and released by Warner Bros., the movie combines footage from principal photography and subsequent reshoots. It features a mix of practical armor and updated costume design for Diana, along with expanded dialogue that references her past alliances and leadership among the Amazons.
‘Zack Snyder’s Justice League’ (2021) – Diana Prince / Wonder Woman

This alternate version restores Snyder’s original cut with extended scenes, different tonal choices, and restructured character arcs. Gadot’s Diana gains additional exposition, including longer Themyscira sequences and more investigative material tied to ancient conflicts with Darkseid.
The release premiered on streaming with a distinctive 1.33:1 frame and chaptered structure. It features new VFX passes, a revised score by Tom Holkenborg (Junkie XL), and sequences that alter battle geography and dialogue, giving Diana more screen time in the film’s expanded narrative.
‘Fast & Furious’ (2009) – Gisele Yashar

Introduced in this franchise entry, Gisele is an ex-Mossad liaison connected to a drug cartel’s operations along a cross-border smuggling route. Her scenes establish firearms familiarity, riding skills, and connections to high-end logistics, placing her on the periphery of Dominic Toretto and Brian O’Conner’s crew.
The production re-energizes the series’ original cast and sets up future heist-style installments. Gisele’s background is left intentionally sketchy here, creating space for later films to expand her skill set and relationships within the team.
‘Fast Five’ (2011) – Gisele Yashar

This Rio-set heist film brings together an ensemble of returning characters to target a corrupt businessman. Gisele joins the central crew in planning and execution stages, demonstrating reconnaissance, safe-cracking support, and tactical motor work during the climactic vault sequence.
The movie marks a shift in the franchise toward team-based heists and international settings. Gisele’s interactions with Han Seoul-Oh become a key character thread, and her role integrates motorcycles, small-arms handling, and multilingual exchanges used during intel-gathering scenes.
‘Fast & Furious 6’ (2013) – Gisele Yashar

The crew is recruited to stop a mercenary organization conducting precision vehicle assaults across Europe. Gisele operates as part of the team’s advanced reconnaissance, leveraging military-adjacent training and working alongside Han in runway and urban set-pieces.
The film uses large-scale practical stunts combined with digital enhancements, with Gisele participating in sequences that connect the franchise’s timeline to events depicted in later installments. Her arc here influences motivations and alliances referenced by returning characters down the line.
‘Red Notice’ (2021) – Sarah Black / The Bishop

This globe-hopping art-heist caper pairs Gadot with Dwayne Johnson and Ryan Reynolds in a story about competing thieves and an FBI profiler chasing three legendary artifacts. Gadot plays a master con artist who manipulates both adversaries through double-crosses and misdirection.
The production filmed across multiple international locations with stand-ins and sets for museums, prisons, and palaces, then released on streaming. Action beats include hand-to-hand combat, pursuit sequences through confined spaces, and choreographed escapes that use environment-driven gags.
‘Heart of Stone’ (2023) – Rachel Stone

In this spy thriller, Gadot portrays a covert operative embedded with a team while secretly working for a global peacekeeping network that relies on a powerful predictive system. The plot follows attempts to secure or sabotage that system as competing agencies and hackers close in.
The film features alpine chases, airborne stunts, and close-quarters fights designed around the character’s agility and improvisation. It was produced for streaming, with international settings, a supporting cast that includes Jamie Dornan and Alia Bhatt, and a narrative built around surveillance technology and access control.
‘Death on the Nile’ (2022) – Linnet Ridgeway-Doyle

Based on Agatha Christie’s novel, this ensemble mystery follows Hercule Poirot investigating a murder aboard a luxury river steamer. Gadot plays a wealthy heiress whose marriage and social circle create multiple motives and alibis for the central crime.
Kenneth Branagh directs and stars as Poirot, with production using locations and sets replicating period architecture, fashion, and rivercraft. The film’s structure revolves around interviews, timelines, and staged re-enactments, positioning Linnet at the heart of the investigation’s cause-and-effect chain.
‘Ralph Breaks the Internet’ (2018) – Shank (voice)

In this animated sequel, Gadot voices Shank, a skilled driver in an online racing game that becomes a pivotal setting for Vanellope’s character growth. Shank introduces racing mechanics and behaviors that contrast with the arcade-style rules of the original game world.
Voice sessions were recorded to match character animation and in-game cinematics inspired by open-world driving titles. The character contributes to an action sequence involving a viral video montage and plays a mentoring role in scenes that explore player communities and digital platforms.
‘Keeping Up with the Joneses’ (2016) – Natalie Jones

This suburban action-comedy follows a couple who discover their new neighbors are elite government operatives conducting a sensitive operation. Gadot’s character works as part of a married spy team, engaging in surveillance, covert entries, and extraction tactics during escalating neighborhood chaos.
The production balances domestic set pieces with gadget-driven action, pairing Gadot with Jon Hamm as her on-screen partner. Scenes include undercover social events, chase sequences through office parks, and an operations van setup that anchors the film’s espionage framework.
‘Triple 9’ (2016) – Elena Vlaslov

Set within a criminal-police nexus, this crime thriller centers on a planned “999” diversion—an officer-down call—to mask a major heist. Gadot appears as part of the Vlaslov family network linked to a Russian-Israeli crime organization, intersecting with plotlines involving corrupt officers and gang enforcers.
Directed by John Hillcoat, the film uses practical effects for armored-car ambushes and urban assaults. Gadot’s scenes connect to character motivations across rival factions, and the story’s structure emphasizes overlapping loyalties, surveillance pressure, and time-boxed operations.
‘Mannequins’ (2007–2008) – Miriam “Mika” Weiss

This Israeli drama series explores the fashion industry’s backstage maneuvering, focusing on models, agents, and family dynamics. Gadot’s recurring role threads through career decisions, personal relationships, and conflicts tied to brand campaigns and agency politics.
Produced for Israeli television, the show gave Gadot one of her earliest sustained screen roles. Episodes rotate between runway events, contract disputes, and domestic storylines, providing a serialized framework that established her on-camera presence before international film work.
‘Kicking Out Shoshana’ (2014) – Mirit Ben Harush

An Israeli sports-comedy set in Jerusalem’s soccer scene, the film follows a striker coerced into a public deception that spirals into team and community fallout. Gadot plays the love interest connected to the protagonist’s personal and professional turmoil.
The production features cameos from local media personalities and uses stadium, training-ground, and neighborhood locations. Dialogue includes Hebrew and slang specific to Israeli football culture, and Gadot’s character ties together threads involving sponsorships, locker-room dynamics, and press attention.
Share your pick for Gal Gadot’s standout role in the comments!


