Upon its publication in the mid-1980s, the 12-issue graphic novel Watchmen earned a reputation for being the Citizen Kane of comic books. Thats not just hyperbole: Both works feature multiple narrators trying to piece together an enigmatic death, although in Watchmen, the ensemble happens to be former masked heroes, sleuthing against a backdrop of impending nuclear war.
Like Orson Welles, Watchmen writer Alan Moore and illustrator Dave Gibbons drew on seemingly every stylistic innovation in their respective media and shot them with lightning, raising the bar for a popular but increasingly sophisticated art form.
Zack Snyders long-awaited film adaptation of Watchmen is not a classic worthy of Citizen Kane. Thankfully, its not a bomb on a par with Howard the Duck, either. It comes close to being something like A Clockwork Orange for superhero movies a dystopian satire marked by meticulous craftsmanship and sluggish pacing, of incongruous music and horrific violence, of heavy-handed sermonizing and astonishing imagery.
Snyders ingenious opening credits montage, played to Bob Dylans The Times They Are a Changin, sets the context of Watchmens alternate America, in which real, costumed crime-fighters emerged at the same time Batman comic books were first published. Initially a World War II-era lark, superheroes change history when a nuclear accident turns physicist Jon Osterman (Billy Crudup) into Dr. Manhattan, a sapphire-colored superman who can rearrange matter in every imaginable way, but cant arrest his estrangement from humanity. Dr. Manhattans presence turns the United States into a fascist superpower, secretly abetted by a former hero-turned-government-hit-man called the Comedian (a thuggishly charismatic Jeffrey Dean Morgan).
When an unknown assailant hurls the Comedian through a skyscraper window, a psychotic vigilante/crank called Rorschach (Jackie Earle Haley) suspects a vendetta against former masks. The revelation that Dr. Manhattan may cause cancer lends fuel to Rorschachs conspiracy theory, destabilizes the global balance of power, and threatens the humanitarian ambitions of an idealistic industrialist nicknamed Ozymandias (Matthew Goode). In one of the films head-spinning highlights, Dr. Manhattan ruminates on his origin while getting away from it all. On Mars.
Snyder offers an obsessive re-creation of Watchmens dialogue and artwork: For fans, Patrick Wilson looks amazingly like Dan Dreiberg, a middle-aged pudge who used to be a Batman-style crusader named Nite Owl. Snyder has a flair for replicating comic book panels as potent, data-packed cinematic frames, which explains why last summer's Watchmen trailer and his 300 adaptation caused such sensations with audiences. Images such as the Comedians blood-spattered smiley face button, Rorschachs shape-shifting face mask, and Dr. Manhattans appearance as a nude, blue giant, or multiple copies of himself, cling to the memory.
Stanley Kubrick crafted similarly powerful tableaux, and though Watchmen includes some visual puns on Dr. Strangelove, Snyder doesnt have Kubricks command or control. Ideas that were acceptable when confined to the page, like lines such as What happened to the American dream? prove nearly unspeakable on the big screen. And why hire actors to put on unconvincing make-up as, for instance, a fifth-term President Nixon, when such momentum-killing moments could be easily replaced with brief shots on Ozymandias bank of TV screens? Watchmen feels like the unrated, ultra-violent, 160-minute directors cut of material that would benefit from a leaner, sharper focus. Snyder gives you Moore, but youd rather have a little less.
Fortunately, Watchmens concussive action scenes dispel the doldrums. While the supporting players tend to be weak and arch, the six leads emerge as distinctly weird personalities, and we look forward to see how theyll play off each other. Malin Akerman, playing Laurie Jupiter, aka Silk Spectre, offers a sympathetic portrayal of an adrenalin-junkie crime-fighter reduced to Dr. Manhattans neglected girlfriend. Haley and Crudup poignantly play polar opposites one too emotional, one not emotional enough doomed to be societys outcasts. Even the normal ones like Dan and Laurie have some serious issues with sex and violence. Watchmen suggests that if superheroes really existed, theyd be mentally ill, in contrast to today's ubiquitous feel-good superhero flicks.
Its one of Watchmens ironies that Snyder crafts a fanboy monument to a graphic novel that mercilessly deconstructs and discredits the whole idea of superheroes. Watchmen takes place in the comic books original year of 1985 and features plenty of witty period-specific references. Despite such cleverness, the film shows little consideration of how the books ideas resonate today, except for some intriguing implications about 9/11 that dont get fleshed out. Watchmen almost feels like a work stuck in the past as it looks back at the comic book pioneers and the Cold War terrors of the 1980s with equal nostalgia.
Watchmen 3 stars Directed by Zack Snyder. Stars Billy Crudup, Jackie Earle Haley. Rated R. Opens Fri., March 6. At area theaters.
(Photo courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures)
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