| Directed
by
Zack Snyder -- Starring
Malin Akerman, Billy Crudup, Matthew Goode, Jackie Earle Haley, Jeffrey
Dean Morgan, Patrick Wilson, Carla Cugino |
BOTTOM
LINE:
Long winded and meandering
while simultaneously melding dark dramatic sequences with stupid looking
costumed superheroes, “Watchmen” is a mixed bag of strong
themes, incredible visuals, overall mediocrity and silliness.
THE GOOD:
Hollywood is on the comic book/graphic novel bandwagon,
turning to a vast array of published material for new films. Much
like The Spirit
which came out last year, “Watchmen” occupies an uncomfortable
ground between maintaining the tone of the source material and creating
great cinematic entertainment. Director Zack Snyder has certainly
created a feast for the visual senses, forging an alternate reality
on screen where President Richard Nixon continued to serve in to
the 80s after being aided by a band of superheroes to win the Vietnam
War. The enigmatic and god-like Dr Manhattan (Billy Crudup) is capable
of bending matter and energy to his will, serving America but becoming
increasingly detached from the human race as his vast knowledge
and power grows. The other superheroes are a mixed range of good
natured souls such as Nite Owl (Patrick Wilson) and Silk Spectre
(Malin Akerman) to the darker vigilante Rorschach (Jackie Earle
Haley) and the immoral Comedian (Jeffrey Dean Morgan). The concepts
in the film are certainly fascinating, least of which being an alternate
take on history with America and Russia now on the brink of nuclear
war in the 80s and the Watchmen who can potentially stop it all
from happening. Cold war motifs run rampant, as do themes of annihilation
and human endurance in the face of such catastrophe. The superheroes
are not themselves immune from the darkness, with the smartest of
them all, Ozymandias (Matthew Goode) hatching a plan which may save
the world but destroy the Watchmen in the process. The second half
of the film is where all of this comes to a head and makes for some
more intelligent viewing than what you might expect from a film
like this. “Watchmen” is a unique in its creation of
an alternate reality with its original visual and storytelling sensibilities.
THE
BAD: Although it is not nearly
as bad, “Watchmen” has much in common with last year’s
The Spirit in
that the conventions of the graphic novel do not seem to translate
as well in to the realm of cinema. The first half of the film jumbles
together a myriad of storylines to introduce all the characters, and
they all appear to have different tones and styles which do not adequately
advance the storyline that well. The dark, internal monologue style
of the Rorschach storyline that in many ways embodies a “Sin
City” style tone does not meld comfortably with the almost silly
60s comic book like quality of the Nite Owl and Silk Spectre characters.
The Dr Manhattan storyline appears to spring right out of a 50s B-movie
sci-fi film, and the immoral antics of the Comedian seem to negate
the whole reason why these guys are heroes in the first place. Ironically,
the Richard Nixon character seems the most comic book of them all
with his over the top nose extension to accentuate his iconic facial
outline. Zack Snyder has not really given us a way in to these characters
given the first hour is so long and meandering. The second half of
the film becomes more interesting, but by the end of the two hour
and forty minute run time, you are left wondering whether or not forty
minutes could have been cut out of the film to give it more focus.
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