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Watchmen (2009)
Director: Zack Snyder
Movie review
From Time Out London
The most celebrated graphic novel ever written, ‘Watchmen’ takes place in an alternate 1985 teetering on the brink of nuclear Armageddon, as a group of retired superheroes reunite to track down mysterious masked assassin. The graphic novel by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons was a self-reflexive comment on the entire genre and explored the fine boundary between the masked vigilante, the dirty civil servant and the dictatorial fascist. It has long been thought unfilmable: a direct translation, it was argued, would be overlong, punishingly bleak, bewilderingly convoluted and wildly uncommercial.Which is exactly the film '300' director Zack Snyder has delivered. With the exception of an altered (and, it must be said, slightly improved) denouement, Snyder and his screenwriters have changed almost nothing from the original text. Costumes, sets, visual effects, the framing of shots and sequences, all the choicest lines of dialogue, even the music selections come directly from the novel. With all of these decisions taken out of the director's hands, what's left for Snyder to do?
Snyder's biggest impact is felt in the action sequences, which are also the film's weakest scenes: overstylised, repetitive and pornographically violent. Violence is the major theme of Moore’s book: it’s questionable efficacy in solving global problems, the conflicted, animalistic thrill of crushing one’s enemies. Snyder rides roughshod over such subtleties: 'Watchmen' may be the nastiest blockbuster ever devised. It luxuriates in snapping bones and literal explosions of gore. It's here that the gulf between comic and movie becomes most clear: Gibbons's drawings were often shocking, but they served a purpose. Snyder employs violence for the rush, and while this approach is sometimes brutally effective, it's also deeply crass.
The casting throws up mixed results: Patrick Wilson is agreeably vulnerable as Nite Owl, while Jackie Earl Haley makes for a supremely effective, unsettling Rorschach. But these two seasoned professionals stand out in a cast chosen for their physical similarity to Gibbons's drawings. Thankless female figurehead Silk Spectre demands an actress of real grace and vulnerability: Malin Akerman’s bland, soap-opera performance barely scratches the surface, while Matthew Goode's vacuous portrayal of the power-hungry Ozymandias suggests annoyed playboy rather than World's Smartest Man. But they can hardly be blamed: Snyder repeatedly fluffs the film's emotional peaks, blundering through on his way to another action setpiece.
But, try as he might, Snyder can't sabotage the sheer majesty of the source material. The breadth and grandeur of Moore’s globe-spanning narrative still astounds, and to see Gibbons’s iconic images writ vast and messy across the screen packs an undeniable sentimental punch. Like the book, there’s an impressive visual and narrative density here, cramming a bewildering amount of information into already overloaded scenes. The characters may be undermined by Snyder’s glib, hasty approach, but they still resonate, as do the overriding themes of power, corruption and human frailty.
But 'Watchmen' is still going to be the ultimate tough sell: there will be those who view the film as a bewildering mishmash of underexplored themes, thinly sketched characters and noisy, excessive violence. They're probably right: any work of popular art which demands prior knowledge must be deemed a failure. And yet, there’s something admirable about the entire enterprise: its ungainly size, its unrelenting weirdness, its willful, challenging intensity. Neophytes should probably steer clear, but for longterm fans of the source work this will be a hugely pleasurable, if ultimately unenlightening experience.
Author: Tom Huddleston
Time Out London Issue 2011, 5 – 11 March, 2009
User reviews of this film
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- Rorschach said...
- Posted on Mar 04 2009 03:51 As a long term fan of the comic I was extremely happy with the faithful representation offered by Synder. The changes, except the ending, felt respectful and somewhat necessary. The omissions felt ...well...missing. I am unsure just what people lacking knowledge of the original work will feel about what must seem a overly long and confusing film. Do not let that put you off if you don't know the world of Watchmen though, just try to forget expectations and enjoy the peek at an unparalleled masterpiece exploring human nature and the very meaning of life. And remember it ain't a bat it's an owl!
- Report as inappropriate
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- Roy said...
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Posted on Feb 27 2009 13:51
Watchmen may be this decades answer to David Lynches Dune, generally it's not something that needed an answer it just has one anyway.
I got to see this with 3 freinds only 1 of which was unfamiliar with the original comics, that person was the one happiest with the film though she fully expected there to be more exploration of the main characters in the sequal, the movie industry being what it is the movie may even get a sequal .
Generally the film looks like Watchmen but doesn't really feel like watchmen, understandable given the state and weight of expectation that's been generated by this movie.
Over all it's not a bad film it could have been much mich worse, I mean we've had the Spirit show how to really mess up a promising idea.
As already commented the two male leads are quite strong against a cast that frankly shows its inexperience in comparison and the film concentrates rather too much on the violence as if the director was on home territory so he was going to milk every moment of it fo rall he was worth, none of which alters that for the sci fi or comics fan this is a must see film. - Report as inappropriate
Cast & crew
Director: Zack Snyder
Cast: Carla Gugino, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Malin Akerman, Billy Crudup, Patrick Wilson, Jackie Earle Haley, Matthew Goode, Stephen McHattie, Matt Frewer, Laura Mennell, Rob LaBelle full cast
Genre(s): Action/Adventure, Drama
Rated: 18
Duration: 162 mins
UK Release: Mar 6 2009
US Release: Mar 6 2009
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