Sunday, March 08, 2009

Review: Watchmen

Watchmen - A graphic novel once labeled "unfilmable" finally arrives on the big screen. The result is breathtakingly good. It's not quite another Dark Knight, but it's easily one of the best films ever produced in the superhero genre.

In 1986-87, DC Comics published a twelve-issue comic book series called Watchmen, written by Alan Moore and drawn by Dave Gibbons. Later collected as a graphic novel, this series was a revolutionary and sophisticated take on superheroes with a heavy dose of social commentary. It also became the only graphic novel to be included on TIME Magazine's 2005 list of "the 100 best English-language novels from 1923 to the present." After several attempts to adapt it into a film by directors including Terry Gilliam (Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas), Darren Aronofsky (Requiem for a Dream), and Paul Greengrass (Bloody Sunday) all collapsed, it looked like it would never get produced. It was worth the wait.

After a retired superhero known as the Comedian (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) is murdered, the vigilante Rorschach (Jackie Earle Haley) believes that there's a conspiracy to eliminate costumed heroes, and soon the other retired Watchmen--Nite Owl (Patrick Wilson), Silk Spectre (Malin Akerman), Doctor Manhattan (Billy Crudup), and Ozymandias (Matthew Goode)--become involved as events begin to spiral out of control, threatening the entire planet.

Director Zack Snyder (Dawn of the Dead, 300) proves his critics wrong, myself included, by successfully translating difficult source material into such a strong film. He's always been a talented visual stylist, so it's no surprise that by using Dave Gibbons' art as a blueprint, Snyder has quite literally and vividly brought the world of Watchmen to life, allowing fans of the graphic novel to feel like they've stepped inside them. He transforms each action scene into a slow motion ballet of carnage, and the opening credits montage that reveals the backstory is brilliantly executed. What's surprising, at least to me, is that after 300's cardboard story and woeful acting, Snyder manages to tell a compelling story with good performances. Perhaps it's simply a case of rising to the level of the material he's working with.

The screenplay by David Hayter (X-Men, X2: X-Men United) and Alex Tse (Sucker Free City), with uncredited revisions by the team of Roberto Orci & Alex Kurtzman (Transformers, Star Trek), is largely faithful to the source material except for certain events at the end, but it's really only the method by which those events occur that has been changed rather than the events and their repercussions. The story that unfolds on the screen isn't as deep as in the graphic novel, but the social commentary in Alan Moore's works have always fared better on the printed page (see the film adaptation of V for Vendetta as another example). Still, the screenwriters deserve much credit for distilling such a complex tale into a two hour and forty-two minute film without losing the essence of the story or its characters, allowing it to be enjoyed by both fans of the graphic novel and a mainstream film audience. A three hour and ten minute director's cut will eventually be released on DVD.

The contributions of cinematographer Larry Fong (Lost, 300), production designer Alex McDowell (The Crow, Fight Club), and costumer designer Michael Wilkinson (Babel, 300) are very important to realizing the story's world on the screen. Fong's bold use of color and lighting achieves the dramatic effect required, McDowell's sets convey a sense of the real world with a twist in some scenes and a sense of the fantastic in others, and Wilkinson's costumes, designed with an assist by comic book artists Adam Hughes and John Cassaday, look quite convincing on the screen. The sweeping score by Tyler Bates (The Devil's Rejects, 300) captures the changing moods of the story, punctuated by several perfect songs (some of which were actually referenced in the graphic novel). The visual effects are outstanding, but rarely drown out the human aspects of the story.

Former child actor Haley (The Bad News Bears) dominates the film with his visceral and frightening performance as Rorschach. Crudup is chillingly aloof as Doctor Manhattan, a man transformed into a cosmic being and who seems to have lost his humanity, conveying so much through body language and subtle facial expressions. Wilson is a very believable Nite Owl, while former model Akerman is respectably solid as Silk Spectre. The Comedian is a nasty piece of work who, like many such people, is also superficially charming, and Morgan captures that perfectly. Although Goode isn't a match for how Ozymandias was portrayed in the comics, he's well-suited to the role of an arrogant genius for whom the ends justify the means.

The rest of the cast is solid, including Carla Gugino as the original Silk Spectre, Matt Frewer as retired villain Moloch, Stephen McHattie as the retired original Nite Owl, Robert Wisden as President Nixon, Frank Novak as Henry Kissinger, Danny Woodburn as Big Figure, and Eli Snyder (the director's son) as a young Rorschach.

Watchmen the film lacks some of the complexity of Watchmen the graphic novel, but I suspect the former comes as close as possible to realizing the latter on screen as one could hope for. As a film, it's excellent, offering a compelling story, quality acting, incredible visuals, and a visceral experience. Highly recommended. I watched it on an IMAX screen. If you have an opportunity to see it in IMAX, I recommend it.

Note to parents: yes, I know it's based on a comic book and has costumed heroes, but Watchmen has an R rating for a very good reason. The film has graphic violence, profanity, nudity, extended sex scenes, and a violent attempted rape. Be aware of this before deciding to take your children to see it.

[4.5 stars out of 5]

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Tuesday, December 30, 2008

What happens when you cross werewolves with Sex and the City? The FOX network is developing a television show about four female friends in the big city who happen to be werewolves. The title? Bitches. The creator of the show is X2 and Superman Returns co-writer Michael Dougherty, with former Pushing Daisies writers/producers Gretchen Berg and Aaron Harberts also involved in developing it.

After a court ruling that 20th Century Fox owns the film rights to Watchmen, the planned March release of the film is in question because it was produced by Warner Bros. Fox wants an injunction against the film being released by WB. I'm sure at some point a settlement will be reached giving cash and a cut of the profits to Fox, but I don't know how much of a delay that will create.

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader looks like it won't get made any time soon after Disney pulled out its financial backing. This year's The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian was deemed a box office failure after it brought in only half of what 2005's The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe did. Walden Media will try to find another studio to back the third film.

For once it's not director M. Night Shyamalan's twist endings that are making people upset. His live action film Avatar: The Last Airbender is being criticized for replacing the Asian characters in the original animated series with an all-white cast.

The National Film Registry of the Library of Congress added several genre films to its list of culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant films meriting preservation: 1933's The Invisible Man (directed by James Whale), 1957's The 7th Voyage of Sinbad (special effects by Ray Harryhausen), and 1984's The Terminator (directed by James Cameron).

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Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Dr. Horrible's Sing-Along Blog will be released on DVD on December 19th only through Amazon.com. I've pre-ordered a copy.

I'm going to see the remake of The Day the Earth Stood Still next week. I'm not keen on remakes, particularly of classics, but the visual effects look outstanding. The new cinema that opened nearby has an IMAX screen that the film will be showing on, which I think will make the visual spectacle even better. The first trailer for X-Men Origins: Wolverine is also attached to the film.

The Day the Earth Stood Still director Scott Derrickson and co-writer Stuart Hazeldine have an ambitious plan to adapt John Milton's poem Paradise Lost into a film. Derrickson is consulting with Guillermo del Toro (Pan's Labyrinth) about how to visualize such a production. It seems folly to even consider making a mainstream film based on the work.

Bill Willingham's award-winning comic book Fables may be coming soon to a television screen near you. The ABC network has ordered a pilot to be written by Six Degrees creators Stuart Zicherman and Raven Metzner, and directed by David Semel (a veteran of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, and Heroes). If it's well received, the network will commission a full series. I think it'll be difficult to adapt, but ABC proved with Pushing Daisies that it can handle a quirky fantasy property (at least as long as it gets good ratings).

The cast of Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland has grown to include Alan Rickman as the Caterpillar, Anne Hathaway as the White Queen, Crispin Glover as the Knave of Hearts, and Christopher Lee and Stephen Fry in unknown roles. They join the already announced Mia Wasikowska as Alice, Johnny Depp as the Mad Hatter, and Helena Bonham Carter as the Red Queen.

It looks like Watchmen's running time will be around two hours and thirty-five minutes, with an extended three hour and ten minute director's cut planned for later release on DVD. I don't know why they can't just release the director's cut theatrically, since The Lord of the Rings proved films of that length can be very successful.

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader remains in pre-production. Several reports indicate that it won't be greenlit for production unless the budget can be cut, perhaps by as much as half, due to the disappointing box office results of The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian.

Remember John Carpenter's cool 1980s sci fi B-movie, They Live? Universal Pictures wants to remake it. Is there anything that isn't being remade?

We're two months away from the debut of Dollhouse, the new Joss Whedon-created series. Whedon insists the poor time slot on Fridays and massive network creative interference aren't problems, but I think he's simply being too nice about it. Former Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Battlestar Galactica staff writer Jane Espenson has joined the writing staff, though. If the show can survive long enough, I think her presence can only help.

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Sunday, November 16, 2008

New Watchmen Trailer

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Thursday, July 17, 2008

Watchmen Trailer

Watchmen Trailer

As awesome as it looks, so did the trailer for the director's previous film, 300, which turned out to be a film that I strongly disliked. Zack Snyder still hasn't proven himself capable of anything more than spectacle and eye candy visuals, which isn't surprising considering his background in television commercials. The Watchmen graphic novel was about ideas more than spectacle, so on that point I can't get too excited based on the trailer.

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Wednesday, March 19, 2008

With the fourth and final season of Battlestar Galactica set to begin airing in two weeks, it was announced that a prequel called Caprica has been greenlighted. Set five decades before BSG, it will reportedly be a drama about the rivalry of the Adama and Graystone families, and the development of the technology that created the original Cylons. Caprica will be a two hour telefilm that if successful could lead to a full series.

A report on SCI FI Wire indicates that the Bionic Woman has been canceled, even though it hasn't been officially announced by the network. Executive producer David Eick said, "the conditions under which we were making that show never really came to fruition in such a way that I felt like we could make the show well." I stopped watching after three episodes, so it's not like I'm going to miss it. May Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles soon share its fate!

It was rumored last year that actor-turned-director Peter Berg (Friday Night Lights, The Kingdom) was being considered to helm the latest attempt to bring Frank Herbert's Dune to the screen. That rumor is now fact, and with a director aboard the production is now looking for a screenwriter. Will the third time be the charm? Previous attempts have been far more compelling visually than dramatically, and it's perhaps simply the case that Herbert's novel is unfilmable.

I re-read Watchmen a few weeks ago. It's as brilliant as ever, but it makes me even more worried about the upcoming film adaptation. Alan Moore hasn't been treated very well by Hollywood, after all. From Hell and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen were wretched adaptations. V for Vendetta was entertaining on a surface level but replaced Moore's substance with the Wachowski Brothers' style. Moore at his best is a challenging writer, and if there's one thing Hollywood likes to avoid, it's challenging an audience to think. I have my doubts about Watchmen director Zack Snyder. His previous films, the Dawn of the Dead remake and 300, were mixed efforts. The former was entertaining while the latter was the worst film of 2007. Neither showed an ability to manifest an intelligent film.

Here is the first photo of Benicio del Toro in full makeup from the currently in production remake of The Wolf Man. Awesome. The original 1941 film was the last of the classic Universal horror films. The remake is being directed be Joe Johnston (The Rocketeer, Jumanji) from a screenplay by Andrew Kevin Walker (Se7en, Sleepy Hollow) and David Self (Road to Perdition).

Speaking of Universal horror, my dream project would be Tim Burton directing remakes of Frankenstein and Bride of Frankenstein (or possibly combing them into a single film) with Johnny Depp as the Monster, Helena Bonham Carter as the Bride, and Ian McKellen as Dr. Pretorius. Please, someone, make this happen!

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