Monday, March 9, 2009

Watchmen

Cast: Malin Akerman, Billy Crudup, Matthew Goode, Jackie Earle Haley, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Patrick Wilson, Carla Gugino; Director: Zack Snyder; Producers: ; Screenwriters: David Hayter, Alex Tse; Music: Tyler Bates; Editor: William Hoy; Genre: Sci-Fi/ Action; Cinematography: Larry Fong; Distributor: Warner Bros. Pictures, Paramount Pictures; Location: Vancouver, Canada; Running Time: 162 min.;

Technical Assessment: 3
Moral Assessment: 2
CINEMA Rating: For mature viewers 18 and above

The story is a film adaptation of the 1980s graphic novel by Allan Moore and Dave Gibbons. It opens in 1985 with the murder of Edward Blake (Jeffrey Dean Morgan), afterwhich the audience is taken into a historical journey from the 1940’s World War 2 to the Cold War of 1980s in the six-minute opening credits. The main story is set in America during the time when superheroes have retired since they have lost their favor with the public. Rorschach (Jackie Earle Haley), a vigilante, tries to investigate this murder and discovers that Blake was actually The Comedian. Rorschach believes he has uncovered a plot to eliminate super heroes and sets forth to earn his retired colleagues. Although burdened with their own issues, the retired superheroes once again don their costumes as they try to uncover the conspiracy to tip the balance of power and rid the world of superheroes.

Watchmen is a visual treat with a profuse with images of metaphors and symbolisms. The historical montage set to Bob Dylan’s “The Times Are Changing” is cleverly brilliant. The musical scoring is outstanding with a selection of 80s songs aptly reflecting the scene’s essence. The movie is quite long but watchable with Snyder’s meticulous direction and treatment. However, the performances are so-so and the storyline a little tedious as it bombards with too many details and sub-stories, especially for those unfamiliar with the comics version. The adaptation, a little too faithful to the original material, does not make an interesting translation to film. The narrative which shuttles from one era to another also becomes confusing.

The movie is both relevant and obsolete. Relevant because it contains observations on real issues like the Cold War, the Vietnam War, nuclear destruction, quantum physics, the peace movement, drugs and crime, power and violence. However, although these issues are legitimate, they are now considered out-dated. The heroes of Watchmen represent different moral choices one makes – Rorcschach strictly adheres to the letter of the law, Ozymandias will sacrifice himself for the good of the many, The Comedian prefers pleasure over what is good and what is right while Nite Owl always does what he feels is the right thing even if it is unlawful.

The movie is definitely not suitable for children and teenagers mainly because of the graphic and disturbing violence and explicit nudity and sex scenes.