A director with more subtlety.
Such as who?
A director with more subtlety.
Michael Bay!![]()
In my opinion, this movie shows the folly of being almost faithful to the source material. If you're going be faithful and use that to as a selling-point for your movie, then you should be completely faithful (within reason of course). You don't do it for 90% of the movie and then make up so much of the last 10%. Because it's that last 10% which is often the most important and memorable part to the fans. It is, after all, the climax of the whole work. I'm just saying, it undermines the rest of that 90% if all of a sudden you're trying to do your own thing for arguably the most essential part of the story.
Michael Bay!![]()
I can see where you're coming from, but there's really no way that they could have done the ending as originally conceived and make it presentable to a post-9/11 audience, who have seen how little the world changes when New York is under attack.
I always thought that Watchmen was tailored made for Oliver Stone.
The heavy use of flashbacks
A complex conspiracy
Vietnam
Richard Nixon
John F Kennedy
1980s Corporate villain in Veidit
Some thoughts on some of the film's missteps:
1. I never pictured the opening scene being a big fight like that. Blake had discovered the truth and it broke him. I have a hard time picturing him fighting for his life like that when he knew what was coming.
2. Laurie's hatred of Blake was largely excised, which made the revelation of her paternity flat and pointless.
3. The violence was amped up too much, which made scenes that should have been horrible less so (Blake's attack on Sally, for instance).
4. Characters without powers seemed superhuman and that clouded the issue somewhat.
5. The whole Keene Act was brushed by much too quickly and it wasn't apparent why there was a police strike: the cops were sick of these costumed weirdos messing in their business.
6. The effects of "Manhattanization" were minimized. Sure, he was still winning wars and being a nuclear deterrent, but where were the other effects? They shifted that to his working with Adrian on some new cheap power source. As such, it lessened his impact on the day to day world.
7. The score. Weeeak.
8. Nixon. The makeup was terrible. The performance was cartoonish.
9. Cutting away from things too fast so they don't register with the audience. Blink ad you'll miss how Laurie got the gun. Don't know to look and you won't a long enough look at Kovacs on the street to realize that Rorshach is him when he gets unmasked.
10. A lack of connection of the kid in the title sequence to Kovacs/Rorshach. Without that connection, why bother showing it in the titles?
Two people I know hadn't read the book before seeing the movie. They both found it somewhat predictable but were confused on the smaller details, probably due to all that cutting.
Michael Bay doesn't equal subtlety. Not to be condescending, but I thought it was so obvious that people would understand I was joking.
Interesting. I feel the opposite about this. I think it would or at least could have been very effective with a post-9/11 audience since I feel that the world has changed a lot due to the attacks as well as what followed.
I'm assuming what you're getting at is that the world has not changed in a way many people would have wanted or expected it to, i.e. in a more positive way. Suffice it to say I think that potential was there but squandered.
I saw the book as a deconstruction of the "superhero comic book " and the movie as a deconstruction of the "superhero movie". That (to me) explains the emphasis on action, as well as the nipples on Ozymandias' costume.The movie, it seemed to me, played much more as a science fiction story, almost entirely lacking the subversion of the superhero concept that made the book such a big deal in the comic book world. This falls entirely to the direction, which made a huge misstep in playing up the action fight scenes, tremendously heroicizing the superheroes visually, and thus completely undercutting the issues that made the book a radical deconstruction of the concept of the superhero.
One thing I've realized is that it's harder for Watchmen comic book readers to objectively evaluate this film. I knew exactly what was going on because I already had the book in my head. In some ways, that's a positive and in some ways a negative.
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