Snyder adapted the film faithfully, not missing a beat even though he was forced to cut out scenes or avoid sub-plots from the book. The direction of the movie shows he was the right choice, not skipping any minor detail that was on the pages. Small hints at items from the book, a joke only someone who has read it would get but he did it without confusing the casual movie fan who has not read the book. The montage that Snyder created for the opening credits over “The Times They Are A-Changing” was worth the ticket price alone. Aside from the one scene that could have been probably left out as it almost ruins your view on a certain character right away. Bringing us the history, albeit brief history, of the Minutemen and the way the path the world has taken since the dawn of the costumed hero era started in the 1940s.

Attempting to bring Dr. Manhattan to the big screen in his entire blue glory was probably the one thing I was worried wouldn’t work. Yet again, Snyder and crew make it work perfectly. Along with the stunning visuals was the soundtrack, which was taken from various artists in that era. While those songs may not have worked in other films, it works wonders for Watchmen. The soundtrack to the film reminded me of the Donnie Darko soundtrack. While the score for the film was almost forgetful, yet it worked well not overpowering the superheroes on the screen.
The ending has been changed, more of tweak from the book. Without giving it away, all I can say is the effect is the same. They just used a different means to get to the end. The only flaw I found within the movie was the lack of worry about the nuclear holocaust. Maybe it was because I knew the outcome of the book and assumed it was the same for the movie, but it came across as an empty plot just in the background. With more focus, it would require more emotion from the characters as well as the viewer if we were shown that a mass genocide was immanent
This film is a highly complex character study which is layered with everything from military posturing, politics, patriotism and asks the philosophical question of what is right and what is wrong. Sitting in the theatre after the credits roll, I still don’t know who was right as both sides have very valid arguments.
With the announcement of a really good chunk of footage being added to the DVD release I will have to do another review, as the movie will be much different. Until I can see those special features I will just imagine Snyder sitting with the cast and crew showing them storyboards, but really they are not storyboards. Just the graphic novel cut out and pasted in front of them, which is how faithful the movie really is. Alex Tse and David Hayter didn’t really write a screenplay, they just took Alan Moore’s graphic novel and typed it out word for word. Not to say they didn’t work on the script but, let’s be honest, Alan Moore wrote this film and Dave Gibbons shot it.
4 out of 5
Colin Enquist
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