Long-Awaited Adaptation of Graphic Novel an Underwhelming
Disappointment
Watchmen
Rated R for full frontal nudity, sexuality, profanity and
graphic violence.
Running time: 163 minutes
Studio: Warner Brothers
Film Review by Kam Williams
Fair (1 star)
It’s hard to imagine how Hollywood in 2009 could possibly
continue to crank out such satisfying, comic book hero
adventures one after another as it did in 2008, a year when we
were treated to a quartet of outstanding offerings, including
Iron Man, The Amazing Hulk, Wanted and The Dark Knight.
Unfortunately, that impressive string comes to an abrupt end
with the release of the Watchmen, an underwhelming splatter
flick bound to be as well remembered for its casual display of
male genitalia as for its ubiquitous gore.
Based on the popular DC Comics series of the same name, this
eagerly-anticipated adaptation was directed by Zach Snyder, who
had followed his spellbinding debut, Dawn of the Dead, with an
equally-compelling sophomore effort, the critically-acclaimed
300. Here, however, he takes a giant step backwards with an
overambitious production plagued by a plethora of characters and
a convoluted plotline that takes almost three hours to
introduce, thicken and resolve tidily.
Part of the confusion comes from the backdrop of the story,
which is set in 1985 in an alternate reality where Richard Nixon
is still president. Furthermore, America and the U.S.S.R. are at
odds and teetering on the brink of mutual nuclear annihilation.
The point of departure is the mysterious murder of The
Comedian (Jeffrey Dean Morgan), a retired member of the
Watchmen, a confederation of superheroes who once worked for the
U.S. government. His body is discovered by Rorschach (Jackie
Earle Haley), a former colleague who sports a mask with a
constantly changing symmetrical ink blot. Rorschach decides its
time to reassemble the old gang in order to get to the bottom of
the crime, unaware that this endeavor will, in turn, embroil
them in a subplot to save the planet from extinction.
Most notable among the motley crew coming out of mothballs
are brainiac Ozymandias (Matthew Goode); techno-wiz Nite Owl II
(Patrick Wilson); curvy Silk Spectre II (Malin Ackerman); her
lover Dr. Manhattan (Billy Crudup); and her mother, Silk Spectre
(Carla Gugino). One can’t help but notice two things about the
scene-stealing Manhattan: that he’s blue, and that he’s always
naked. And the latter distraction tends to overshadow his
amazing superhuman ability to bend matter with his mind, the
result of the proverbial exposure to radiation in a lab
accident. For, whenever the camera shoots him below the waist,
we’re treated to the shocking sight of his dangling family
jewels in all their glory.
Equally jaw-dropping is director Snyder’s tendency to up the
ante in terms of gratuitous violence. For instance, in the comic
book, Rorschach killed a kidnapper simply by handcuffing him to
a pipe, setting the house on fire, and calmly walking out. But
in the screen version, Rorschach has inexplicably morphed into a
sadistic vigilante who takes glee in hacking away at the same
sicko’s head with the cleaver.
A morally-ambiguous parable designed to tap into homoerotic
urges while satiating the bloodlust of the sanguine, post-Pavlovian
Cyber Generation.
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A trailer for Watchmen: