I don't know if I would really call Wonder Woman an example of PC. She's just one of those iconic DC superheros throughout the media. She's also hardly the first few DC superheros to earn a solo film, that been demanded for decades, right after Superman and Batman.
At least with WW, unlike the leads from Ghostbusters (2016), she always been a canon character for DC at the very beginning. There was no "Wonder Man" before her nor did she serve as a replacement/substitute/AU for a similar character. WW has her own origin story and such. GB was a gender flip remake of the 1984 movie that felt just unapologetically PC in some ways. The sad part there about the GB reboot is how the problem was not even with the four main cast being women, or at least would seem to be the least of that movie's problem if you're not a sexist.
I'm sure decent amount of critics gave it a better review than they normally would simply because they were afraid of how the media an feminists will react (maybe that explains why WW earned more domesticall than worldwide, but I digress).
That quote by the way sounds like a more apt description to the controversy surrounding Ghostbusters (2016) and how the director had even been acting.
Black Panther is also not the first big black superhero movie, but BP will become the first to debut for a long while. There were a few movies that took place long before, including Catwoman, like Blade, Spawn, and Steel. But most of them were duds. BP could become the first real successful one due to Marvel's decent track record on bring obscure properties to life. The character's appearance in Civil War also helped and got more people curious about his story. That one in itself could be a setup to introduce a BP movie soon anyhow, much like Spider-Man's appearance to Homecoming.
Plus in all fairness, BP is also an origin character for Marvel and has appeared in several Marvel crossovers comics since the "Golden Age" era from what I've understood.
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