After the success of 300, director Zack Snyder turns to another comic adaptation with WATCHMEN. The smart series from Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons centres on a group of masked heroes who find their talents banned in a fictional America. Someone begins to take down the former heroes one by one, and a strange character named .. Read more
| Starring | Carla Gugino, Billy Crudup, Malin Akerman, Patrick Wilson |
|---|---|
| Director | Zack Snyder |
| Genres | Action/Adventure, Audio Descriptive, Thriller |
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After the success of 300, director Zack Snyder turns to another comic adaptation with WATCHMEN. The smart series from Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons centres on a group of masked heroes who find their talents banned in a fictional America. Someone begins to take down the former heroes one by one, and a strange character named Rorschach begins to investigate.
| Starring | Carla Gugino, Billy Crudup, Malin Akerman, Patrick Wilson, Jack Earle Haley, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Matthew Goode, Jackie Earle Haley, Matt Frewer, Stephen McHattie, Laura Mennell, Rob La Belle, Robert Wisden |
|---|---|
| Director | Zack Snyder |
| Studio | PARAMOUNT HOME ENTERTAINMENT |
| Run time | DVD: 2 hrs 43 mins Blu-ray: 2 hrs 42 mins Watch now: 2 hrs 43 mins |
| Certificate | DVD: |
| Collections | 100 Most Wanted, Most Watched Trailers, UK top 50 weekly chart |
| Genres | Action/Adventure, Audio Descriptive, Thriller |
| Language | DVD: English, English Audio Description Blu-ray: English, English Audio Description Watch Online: English |
| Released | DVD: 27 Jul 2009 Blu-ray: 27 Jul 2009 Watch now: 04 Sep 2009 Production year: 2009 |
| Watch now | £3.49 |
| Format | DVD |
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After the success of 300, director Zach Snyder turns to another comic adaptation with WATCHMEN. The smart seri...
Bonus Features Include: The Phenomenon: The Comic That Changed Comics Real Superheroes, Real Vigilantes Me...
Don't believe the hype! Has Zack Snyder managed to capture the infamous 'un-filmable' comic book? read more »
So, it's finally here. After years in development hell, Zack Snyder finally delivers his take on Alan Moore's seminal graphic novel.
It's taken me two whole days to digest this movie, and I'm still wrestling with it. All I really know is this.
I love it.
Yet this is one that's going to plague me for a dozen repeat viewings - because I'm still trying to work out why I love it.
Calling it 'the Citizen Kane of superhero films' is a little rich. About halfway through I turned to a friend whom I watched it with and said 'This is the There Will Be Blood of superhero films.' Actually, I said 'This is There Will Be Blood with blue willies' but you get the point. The film's pace is one entirely of its own and I can fully see the criticism of it's too long, it's slow, it's episodic. It is all of those things, yes, but I never felt any of those were negatives. The traditional three act structure is negligable, too - the film feels very much like consuming the graphic novel in a single sitting.
High points? Where to begin. Well - at the beginning, with the astounding titles sequence set to Bob Dylan's The Times They Are A Changin' - a six minute sequence of real-life comic book tableau's and vignettes detailing the history of this alternate world that deftly sets up tone and character clues. Indeed, the music choices throughout give texture to the world and often combine to leave lasting impressions - Simon and Garfunkel's Sound Of Silence played over The Comedian's rainsoaked funeral; Philip Glass' Pruit Igoe & Prophecies scoring the flawless sequence detailing Doctor Manhattan's perception of time and exhile on Mars; Hendrix' All Along The Watchtower mirroring it's use in the book as Nite Owl and Roarscach pay the final visit to Antarctica.
Performances are uniformly excellent, subtle and nuanced in all the right places. Patrick Wilson's plays Nite Owl as the aging boyscout who always genuinely wanted to be a superhero and had it taken away from him. Malin Ackerman's Silk Spectre is a girl who never grew up, a surprising and believable take on the character. Billy Crudup's Dr Manhattan is austere, serene and stilted, having pretty much given up on the need for human communication, reflected in his voice and movements. Only Matthew Goode's Ozymandias doesn't quite hold up - he's a little too effete and distant at times, but he brings it when he has to.
The standouts are Jackie Earle Haley's Roarshach and Jeffrey Dean Morgan as The Comedian. The film's darker characters, both are sociopaths of a different breed. Roarschach is the son of a prostitute, led down dark paths during his life and finally forged during a missing-child investigation, an event that flips a switch in his mind and sets his moral compass to black and white, pure and simple. Evil is evil, crime is crime, and all must be punished - one broken finger and meat-cleaved head at a time. Haley makes the character utterly convincing and terrifying, and you're constantly left in the uncomfortable state of having to decide whether he's right or wrong. Much of the film is spent with him masked, but once it comes off in prison and you finally get a look in those eyes, no matter how brief, Haley sells every moment. Morgan, likewise, brings an odd humanity to a murdering rapist, particularly in the scene where he spills his heart out to a former enemy.
Changes? Yes, there are some, but none that I feel detract from the experience. In fact, and this sentiment was mirrored by several of those I saw the film with, the new ending to the film feels like an improvement over the book. It makes greater thematic sense, gives more character resolution and dammit, the squid was just plain daft. The outcome isn't different, but the means are.
Problems? The only thing that bugged me was the unnecessarily cheesy sex scene, which caused more titters than tittilation amongst the audience. Scored to Leonard Cohen's Hallelujah, it's a late-night soft core rub fest that I can see the intention of - to show the fetishistic nature of dressing up in latex, while offering a potent payoff for a character - but it didn't need as much bare-ass thrusting.
The other 'problem' with the film is that it's so staggeringly uncommercial that I would be totally unsurprised if this flopped. Non-fans of the book are going to have a difficult time absorbing so much information because it doesn't offer the standard tropes of the genre - there are very few action sequences, the heroes are flawed, the moral outcome foggy and ambivalent. The film, much like the graphic novel, offers up the story and says 'That's it. Now deal with it.'
And that's where I am now. Dealing with it. I've never had a film experience quite like this - and I know this will be a film I treasure each repeat viewing of, dissecting it and deciding what each scene means. It feels like a multi-layered complex experiment, and I love it all the more for it. Chances are I'll back with a new review every time I see it.
Having never laid eyes on a graphic novel and knowing nothing about the Watchmen before seeing the film, I have to say I was pleasantly surprised.
I can't compare it with the novels but I think in a sense it shouldn't be, it'a film not a comic strip, (although the visual artwork is very much influenced by the story's roots.)
Synder has commented that to make the film it had to be cut down and include only the important bits and what connects them so it makes sense. Having seen all two and a half hours of it, its a much better attempt than other adaptions of comics I've seen. It does for superheroes what 'The Dark Knight' has done for Batman...made them scary and celebrated, not idealised heroes.
The structure and special effects of the film are brillant and if you liked 'Sin City' or 'The X-Men' i'd doubt that you would be dissappointed.
With all superhero dramas comes the dilemma of whether they should interfere with society and the fact that society cannot be saved without superheroes. So maybe a bit of acting does fall short of the expectations of the characters and their problems. And maybe the true exploration of the film - human nature, individually and collectively- is not totally covered. Overall, to adapt 'the most celebrated graphic novel of all time' into a compelling and action-packed couple of hours is an achievement. If you love superheroes (as in not the incredibles) a bit of violence (sin city style) and an awesome amount of special effects, then go check it out, the trailer after all, is just a snippet.
In the third and final part of our Watchmen interview, we talked to Billy Crudup and Matthew Goode, AKA Dr Manhattan and Ozymandias. Dr Manhattan is the only one of the Watchmen who has superpowers after an experiment gone wrong turned his alter ego the mild-mannered scientist Jon Osterman into a bright blue - and very naked - being able to bend matter to his will. Ozymandias is an ex-Olympic gymnast turned hyper-successful 80s businessman thanks to his reputation as "The Smartest Man in the... Read more