culture

Liveblogging the Watchmen Movie

By Lev Grossman on March 6, 2009

OK, I'm not actually liveblogging the Watchmen movie. I saw it like three weeks ago. But I've held off writing about it till now, ensuring that by the time I did there would be so many reviews already out there that the whole idea of reviewing Watchmen is totally passé. (Time's review is here. My official musings on the adaptation, from the mag, are here.)

But I took a lot of notes during the screening -- in my special I-can't-see-what-I'm-writing handwriting -- and I'm going to use them to reconstruct what went through my head while I was watching the movie, in chronological sequence. I guess you could call it deadblogging. Oh, and spoiler alert.

-- Opening/death of the Comedian: Oh man oh man oh man. This is pretty much the most beautiful thing I've ever seen. Boom: right through the countertop. There should be a law that all fight scenes must be filmed like this.

-- Opening credits. No, this is the most beautiful thing I've ever seen. I wish I were in on the phone call when Snyder pitched Dylan to get the rights to this song. (Snyder: "And then there's this awesome thing where Ozymandias is talking to Bowie outside Studio 54 ... " Dylan: "Pay me." )

-- You can see how Snyder is trying to recreate the pastiche-y feel of the original comic in film. Where Moore wrote in different prose genres -- memoir, police files, newspaper clippings, comic-within-a-comic, etc. -- Snyder seems to be jumping between video genres -- talk show, newsreel, etc. Hope he can keep it up. Tall order.

-- Rhorschach. That ever-shifting mask is cool, but kinda distracting at the same time. And I never did understand how Rhorschach made it. He's a low-tech dude, and that thing looks high-tech. Maybe Nite Owl whipped it up for him.

-- Dr. Manhattan. His skin is all shimmery. From the comic I always pictured him as almost translucent -- like he was blown from blue glass. I wonder if he's meant as Moore's critique of Superman: if there ever was a being powerful enough to solve all our problems, such a being probably wouldn't care enough to do it.

-- 99 Luftballoons! It's like he's raiding the iPod I didn't have in 1985. Also "Ride of the Valkyries." I forgot how good Snyder is with music. Remember Johnny Cash singing about Revelations over the opening credits of Dawn of the Dead?

-- Why do all political protests look the same in every single movie ever made ever? That dude climbing up on the car looks like he's worried he's gonna muss his hair. First thing I've seen so far in Watchmen that looks fake.

-- "What happened to the American dream?" Poor Nite Owl, always the straight man. Still, it's awesome to hear Alan Moore's language spoken.

-- There's one thing that's working here better than in the comic, and that's the Comedian. That dude is great, whoever he is. He looks like your mildly sexually abusive uncle. I get that character more now than I ever did.

-- Lee Iacocca and Ozymandias -- together at last! Hard to say who has the weirder name. I just wish Ozymandias weren't so skinny. I kind of pictured the optimal human as having more meat on him. And that crown looks hella uncomfortable. Still, the sheer physicality of it when he takes out that would-be assassin with ... is it an ashtray? You can practically feel the crunch. Awesome. Basically people in this movie should never stop fighting.

-- Nite Owl. I wish they weren't trying so hard to make him The Relatable One. I get it, he's nerdy and paunchy. So am I. We are one.

-- If they were looking for something to cut -- and they were -- I wish they'd cut Rhorschach's origin sequence. Jackie Earle Haley's performance is good enough that we get the character already, we don't need to see him cleaver open some dude's head. And that bit with the dogs eating the little girl -- that was too much to take even in the comic.

-- 80's music moment #2: "Everybody wants to rule the world ... " Awesome. I think the last time I heard that was over the closing credits of Real Genius!

-- [I wrote the words "goggles -- ugh" in my notes. I must not have liked that scene with Silk Specter and Nite Owl, in his basement, but now I forget why. This is followed by an indecipherable note about somebody's hair, which I evidently had a problem with too. This may have been about Silk Specter's hair, which would be way too long to take into a fight.]

-- 80's music moment #3: Leonard Cohen! They really spared no expense.

-- I'm convinced that the fat guy whose arms get sawed off in the prison sequence was the same guy who had blades for arms in 300. Sort of a self-homage Easter Egg dealio. [But IMDB disagrees. Damn.]

-- Nice use of the old-school floppy disks in Ozymandias's office. At first I railed against the password business as typical bad movie tech, but nope, it's actually in the book. You'd think the world's smartest man could come up with a stronger password than RAMSES II.

-- 80's music moment #4: Jimmy Hendrix, "All Along the Watchtower." Or that was probably the 1960s. Guess there was no getting around that one.

-- Nope, no squid. It doesn't bother me, especially. Though the disaster isn't nearly as lurid as it was in the comic. Everything is very neat and tidy. Doesn't feel as disastrous as it should, somehow.

-- I have in my notes that they changed the name of Bubastis, Ozymandias's pet lynx. But I can't find confirmation online, and I can't remember what they changed it to. Maybe "Boob-ass-tis" just sounds too funny when you say it out loud.

-- Dr. Manhattan: "I can change anything -- but I can't change human nature." That doesn't sound like Moore to me. I sort of wish Snyder was working with writers who are as brilliant with words as he is with all the rest of it.

-- 80's music moment #5: what's that song over the closing credits? PIL? Sounds like Johnny Rotten, anyway.

Postscript: As somebody who makes his living as a critic, I usually have a rock-solid sense when I leave a movie whether I liked it or not. Three weeks down the line, I still don't know how I feel about Watchmen. There were moments of perfect unalloyed genius in it -- absolute genius. And there were bits that kinda curled my toes. I don't know how to knit all that into a coherent opinion. But I do want to see it again.

Comments (8)

Post a Comment »

  1. In the previews I've seen, (I've opted against seeing Watchmen in theatres)Manhattan's voice really bothered me. I kinda pictured him having a Morgan Freeman-type voice. You know what I mean, the voice God would have.

    walkinghbomb

    Mar. 6, 2009 18:59:pm

    at 18:59:pm

  2. I like your notes. Too many reviews are trying to get all Pulitzer on us. That or the writer is downing the movie for being

    1. Too close to the comic and not visionary enough.
    2. Too far from the comic and way to visionary.
    3. Not enough like super hero movies.
    4. Too much of a super hero movie.

    and lots of other stupid excuses to tell people it was crap and don't see it.

    Your notes were what I felt while watching it. Little things that made me go "wow" or "lol" or "well that wasnt the book...but ok"

    This had to be the closest adaptation for booktomovie I've ever seen. I enjoyed it so much that I went to see it at the midnight release and THEN went to see it at the IMAX in chicago less that 12 hours later. It was tiz'ight both ways, but I rec finding an IMAX nearby and seeing it there.

    walkingbomb-Manhattan's voice seems odd at first, but then think. He is above all concerns humans have. He doesn't care about or fear anthing in even the smallest amount. So his voice is a reflection of that. A soft, calm, tone that moves like it isn't a part of the actual conversations, but outside looking in. You get used to it very fast.

    farsig

    Mar. 7, 2009 08:58:am

    at 08:58:am

  3. As someone who's never read the book, it didn't work for me at all. It felt like 2 hours of character profiles and then some overall plot thrown in at the end. Mind you, the character profiles were fascinating and beautifully done, and each piece was lovingly crafted. There was just nothing that pulled it all together into a cohesive unit for me. It's like 85% of the movie was, "Here is what you need to know so that the last 15% of the movie will make sense." It felt almost like a documentary.
    .
    I'm going to read the graphic novels, then watch it again.

    masurix

    Mar. 7, 2009 14:54:pm

    at 14:54:pm

  4. I missed Moore's dialogue alot. But the movie was really really good. "80's music moment #5: what's that song over the closing credits? PIL? Sounds like Johnny Rotten, anyway." That was Desolation Row by My Chemical Romance. I thought it was a nice transition from then to now. Bob Dylan wrote the opening song and the closing. Very clever. Now I'm looking forward to the DVD so I can get the rest of the story. The comic book in a comic book I think is supposed to be a feature of the DVD.

    cucumberly

    Mar. 7, 2009 21:09:pm

    at 21:09:pm

  5. I'm still thinking about it, but I almost wish that Snyder had trusted himself more and spent more time coming up with new ways to interpet the story for film rather than just spending so much time trying to recreate the panels from the comic book. The opening credits were one of the best parts, and this showed them really stretching the concept. (And this does make two awesome credit sequences for Snyder with the whole Johnny Cash-meets-zombies Dawn of the Dead opening.)
    .
    And Alan Moore and the purists will wish a painful psyhic squid death upon me for saying this, but I thought the new ending may have made more sense. The idea that Ozy would scapegoat Doc M. with a weapon based on his powers for a global attack plays much better to me than the whole idea of a squid with a cloned psychic brain attack. I do agree that they should have spent more time on showing the aftermath of the attack. It felt too... bloodless somehow.
    .
    @ Lev. The story about how Rorschach got his mask is in chapter 6. It's part of the story that Kovacs tells the shrink in prison. The whole Kitty Genovese dress story when he worked for a garment maker.

    Kemper

    Mar. 7, 2009 21:13:pm

    at 21:13:pm

  6. Changed the rape scene, but left all other references to the birth being a product of the rape in the movie.

    siamese71

    Mar. 9, 2009 11:08:am

    at 11:08:am

  7. Saw it. Liked it.

    New ending is a bit tighter in the explanation of what's frakin' with Dr. M, so I can see why they went there. OTOH, they introduced a whole energy-scarcity thing that was answered by getting the Dr. M power. Which solved that whole problem. So the Eighties elements feel tacked on. Or vis versa. (Also, Bubastis is somewhat nonsensical in this context.)

    INSANELY faithful in parts. Laurie brushing dust off Archie's window is in the fraking book (I had to go back and look.) Gibbons must have creamed himself.

    I give it a four out of a possible five.

    Church

    Mar. 10, 2009 15:41:pm

    at 15:41:pm

  8. RE the weak password: I haven't reread Watchmen for a while, so I may be wrong, but I have the impression that Ozymandias meant for them to find that information. Just sayin'.

    And I myself was kind of bothered by Rorschach's origin scene as well (THERE IS NO THIRD H), though for different reasons: hacking the murderer's head to pieces makes him seem so... uncontrolled. Rorschach may be seriously messed up in the head and prone to extremely violent measures, but his extremely violent measures aren't done from passion...

    sojournerstrange

    Mar. 16, 2009 20:59:pm

    at 20:59:pm