Zack Snyder’s
‘Watchmen’, a ‘faithful’ screen adaptation of the deservedly iconic and
legendary graphic novel by comic book wizards Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons,
begins on a promising note. The camera zooms out of the traditional Smiley
badge and spreads its gaze on a greying, muscular man as he watches TV- first a
series of news broadcasts about the impending nuclear showdown with Soviet
Russia (this is 1985) and then about USA has the strength of nuclear-age man
Dr. Manhattan, a glowing blue superhero, on its side. The elderly man meanwhile
gets bored and switches instead to an erotic TV show and grins with pleasure.
Yeah, right, for us
fanboys, the people who pored over the pages of the massive source novel- who
still remember the quotability of Moore’s searing, non-linear, pulse-pounding
script and who still feel mesmerized by the sheer scale and arresting detail of
Gibbons’ flawlessly dramatic illustrations- that is the kind of introduction
that a character as twisted and terrifically amoral like Edward Blake, aka The
Comedian, rightfully deserves. So, maybe we got to hand it to Snyder and his
team for getting that at least right.
Alas, what follows next
ruins it all. Without warning, the film suddenly cuts to a lengthy and
time-consuming action scene; I forgot to say that it was rather relentlessly
gory as well with splashes of blood and breaking of bones, not to forget that
it ends with a freeze frame moment of Blake being hurled through a glass
window- taking a direct cue from the same illustration.
Really, is this how
Moore and Gibbons actually intended it to be?
People who watched
Snyder’s earlier outing, the shamelessly escapist ‘300’ which seems to have
encouraged other young jocks to come up with their own hopelessly sadistic
ventures based on some piece of historical legend, churning out historical junk
instead, will not really be surprised at how Snyder takes up the rest of the
film from that unendurably violent action scene- ‘Watchmen’ the film is every
bit bloated, messy, hammy and unpleasant as much as the original comic book is
gritty, lively, forbiddingly dark and heartbreakingly passionate.
Perhaps it should be
understood properly quite why is ‘Watchmen’ held in such high regard by comic
book junkies and the rest of the reading circles as well. Moore and Gibbons did
not just churn out a typical bash-em-up superhero comic strip; they unleashed
the opposite of it. Instead of typical clunky American patriotism embodied
through its costumed heroes, it offered a radical view of them- portraying them
as messed-up, flawed individuals trying to find some semblance of sanity in an
increasingly turbulent time. Blending blood-splattered brutality, unbridled sex
and uncompromising nihilism, it not only broke all the rules of comic books but
also used its fierceness to make pointed and acerbic commentary on the ultimate
American Dream, of peace, prosperity and security. It was not just a comic
book- it was a masterpiece.
So, maybe, Snyder, despite
all his innumerable flaws, deserves some credit for trying in his best to
capture at least some of the irrevocable sadness, poignancy, visceral violence
and passion at the heart of the twisted tale. Sure, some of it works, in bits
and starts and the film also does a good job of sticking to the comic book’s
neon-lit, nocturnal, moody style quite well. But maybe Snyder forgot what Moore
himself famously said of his own material- ‘It is unfilmable’.
The problem is not in
whether the film deviates from the novel’s plot or the characterization or
sticks loyally to them. When it comes to that, Snyder and his writers David
Hayter and Alex Tse have done a good job and for most part, the characters on
the screen reflect their true selves from the comic book. The Comedian is every
bit nihilistic and sarcastic as required; Ozymandias is every bit as wise and
worldly as the comic book had it; we can also clearly make out Nite Owl 2’s
disillusionment, Rorschach’s fascist violence and Dr. Manhattan’s stoic
indifference to human affairs. And save for a few tweaks in the plot, including
a dramatized, slightly modified and lengthy confrontation in the climax, most
of it stays as it is.
The thing is that
Snyder’s faith to his material goes little beyond that. He simply does not get
the essence of Moore’s fiery writing nor does he really understand the simple
and crystal clear genius of Gibbons’ illustrations.
The fundamental error
is in how the film treats its premise. Moore famously said that the opening
murder of The Comedian is a portal- as a sneak-peek into the world of the
superheroes and what it meant to be one in tough times. And that was how it
happened- with that murder, we see through the world through the eyes of the
remaining heroes- in their words, in their actions, we see their interpretation
of the political and social troubles of the time.
Snyder’s film does not
get that. He, Tse and Hayter are all keener in jumping through the comic’s
crucially important subtext to stick more to the twists and turns in the plot.
So, barely do we have time to reflect on each of the heroes’ reflections on
their acquaintances with their now-dead comrade then we suddenly latch on
quickly to how Rorschach tries to unveil the mystery and suddenly, the film
shifts from nostalgia to noir thriller without warning.
It hurts a lot to a
fanboy to see some of the strongest parts of the comic excised in the favor of
crowd-pleasing compromise- I hated the fact how the Minutemen story explored in
Hollis Mason’s ‘Under The Hood’ is sorely ignored- Mason himself appears as
almost an extra in the background, when in fact, even some of the narration of
Mason’s account, could have added more insight and nuance to the characters and
milieu. What is even more damaging is how almost every other character other
than the heroes is ignored for some reason or the other. Bernie, the man at the
newspaper stand, who plays a fairly integral part through the comic book, is
regretfully sidelined as merely an extra (though in one of the deleted scenes,
one can see him in a fairly integral part) and that prophetic comic
book-within-comic book ‘Tales Of The Black Freighter’ is only given a fleeting
reference. In the original, Moore used that ghastly tale of bloodthirsty sea
pirates as a parallel to the ongoing chaos in the book and in many places, the
text of that book is beautifully and extraordinary interwoven by Moore with the
incidents of the plot, down right to the actions of the characters. But nah,
nothing of that is visible in the film at all.
Sure, it can be excused
that Snyder and his writers wanted to cut out some of the more material that
they must have thought as redundant. That might be excusable but what is worse
is how the film veers off Moore’s intended tone and tenor. The beauty of his
narrative and Gibbon’s illustrations lay in how they rooted the world of
‘Watchmen’ in the real, existing world around us. Sure, there were themes of
teleportation, alien invasion and there was quite a lot of gadgetry like an
Owl-shaped airplane and more but most crucially, they never shied from using
the violence and darkness of the story to give the book its shattering reality.
None of this is evident in Snyder’s film. While cinematographer Larry Fong and
production designer Alex McDowell do a fairly fabulous job of recreating
Gibbon’s famous drawings rather immaculately, most of the time, Snyder is
merely interested in nailing it as yet another sci-fi film with plenty of
action and effects and no real logic. The earthy feel is sorely missing.
Yes, right no logic. For
no reason does the film indulge into pointless action scenes which almost ruin
the entire gritty and unheroic essence of the comic. And even the action scenes
are anything but memorable. There is an excess of slow-motion shots, some
uninspired music choices (watch out the prison break scene and you will know
how Snyder messed up that quiet comic book scene with pointless wire stunts)
and as for that climax, it need not be really action-packed to be emotional.
All this pointless bashing around only ruins the comic book’s grittiness and
makes it all like a mockery. And for no point does it amp up the sex to keep
the adolescent jocks happy. Moore and Gibbons added the palpable sex for a
thundering emotional wallop to the already turbulent proceedings; Snyder merely
is delighted to show off some skin. Yeah right, Michael Bay, you found a rival
for yourself.
Add that to the
problems of the cast- most of the cast is simply chosen because they have some
facial resemblance or the other to the characters. Really, Snyder, do you think
that Moore and Gibbons only dreamt up cardboard cutouts? Each one of them
deserves a strong, mind-numbing performance of gravitas but what we mostly get
in the film is some good mimicry.
Malin Akerman, who for
some strange reason is billed first in the credits, is frankly miscast as
Laurie Juspeczyk aka Silk Spectre 2- I could have been happier if the role had
landed in Jennifer Connelly- and the actress does little to make it work. Her
body language, dialogue delivery and pretty much everything else lacks the
impatient, impulsive pluck of the original character and even as she weeps and
sobs in a chroma-keyed sequence (Snyder loves the technique clearly), we feel
little for her trauma. Matthew Goode seems to have been chosen simply because
he had blonde hair like Ozymandias and nothing else at all. The complex
character- a man who justifies his evil as righteous and for the greater good
and who exudes near-perfection in his personality- needed a stronger
centrifugal force; Aaron Eckhart, so damn good in playing twisted evil in ‘The
Dark Knight’, could have done it. Goode, looking more like a faded Edward Fox
rather than heroic and stately, instead brings a blandness that is not even
Nordic Aryan.
In contrast, Jackie
Earle Haley impresses as Rorschach, bringing the right amount of menace and
emotional fierceness to the proceedings. But the film makes the mistake of
keeping him almost forever confined to the mask and the outfit. Sure, the
gravelly voice and agile body language work wonders but what about some more
scenes outside the mask? Still, the talented actor makes sure that we remember
Rorschach the most, which is pretty much also saying that everyone else fades
away in the front of his blistering presence. It is his ruthless backstory and
his bloody misadventures in prison that make for most of the memorable moments
in the film, though it also gives Snyder a sick excuse to indulge in some more
blood-letting.
As for the rest,
Patrick Wilson does a fair job of being Nite Owl 2, with the correct mix of
geeky meekness and a clear-minded vulnerability that makes him quite endearing.
Billy Crudup has the most interesting role of them all and originally his
character Dr. Manhattan has some of the best lines from the comic but the way
he plays it hardly makes any difference- for most part, he is not even Crudup
but actually a CG-generated man made up of various parts- a simple man painted
all in blue or wearing a blue-skin could have been more effective, helping us
to see the tortured man inside his logical ramblings of jargon but no, the CG
version of Manhattan is simply for spectacle purpose. And finally, Jeffrey Dean
Morgan is simply chosen to play The Comedian for the simple reason that Robert
Downey JR does not have that kind of brawn. Ron Perlman, though, would have
been better.
Of course, there are
still things to like. There is of course the film’s visual style, orchestrated
sometimes as smoothly as the comic book- for whenever Rorschach sneaks, leaps
and prowls through New York’s alleys and ghettoes, we feel as if those same
unforgettable comic book moments have been resurrected. Some of the CG moments
work quite spectacularly as well- like Dr. Manhattan’s glass-ship on the Red
Planet, him calmly walking through the jungles of Vietnam, exterminating the
Vietcong with his vaporization powers with Wagner’s memorable ‘The Ride Of
Valkyries’ playing in the background, referencing obviously the greatest
Vietnam film of all time, ‘Apocalypse Now’. When it comes to the visuals
though, it would be better if you revisit Gibbon’s painstakingly illustrated
panels of street gangs in New York and the napalm smoke in Vietnam. Moore’s quotable lines have still survived
thankfully and they still make an impact even when spoken by uninteresting
actors with tone-deaf voices. And there is an unforgettably melancholic opening
credits medley- charting the adventures of the Minutemen in a series of
stunning, operatic montages with Bob Dylan’s suitably epic ‘The Times They
Are-A Changing’ playing as a lament to the alternately dark and radical times
of the country- from Hiroshima bombings to Cold War, from Andy Warhol to the
Zapruder Tape to Flower Power and so on. All memorable bits, that are in fact
more memorable than the whole movie.
Yes, that is the
immeasurably sad part. For Snyder, his writers and his cast did have the chance
to prove the great Moore wrong by creating a perfect ‘Watchmen’ movie. What
they create is merely a bad imitation, done by someone who is merely awed by
the book’s sheer breadth and scope, its relentlessness and grungy poetry,
without really understanding how they all served a function, to bust genres and
to break hearts.
I don’t know about those, who are tired of Marvel’s
kid-pleasing ventures and desperate to see some more darkness in the superhero
genre (I am one of them too). For them, I would recommend better films by
better makers like Christopher Nolan, Guillermo Del Toro and Matthew Vaughn.
For the rest, I would only say that you can continue reading Moore’s
rubber-tight narration and drooling over Gibbon’s textured, atmospheric and
ingeniously interwoven panels. For Snyder’s film, even with all its effort, is
merely yet another action movie for adolescents, which is happy with lurid skin
show and explosions of what Rorschach memorably called ‘Human Bean Juice’.
1 comment:
I think this was one of the best adaptations ever made, especially considering the complexity. Substituting Dr Manhattan as the focus of Veidt's plot was an excellent and logically way to streamline. Loved the visual style as well, but agree that some of the action scenes were overwrought - It didn't occur to me at first, but many of the Human characters display fighting ability at low superhuman levels, and while the same could be said about many iterations of Batman, these characters were not intended to be on that level.
Now that the Directors and Ultimate Cut have restored the Hollis Mason scene and the Tales of the Black Freighter, how do you feel about the movie now?
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