Gary Whitta
Member
Lol what is that now, the third time this has been posted in this thread?sooperkool said:
Lol what is that now, the third time this has been posted in this thread?sooperkool said:
Wait... who now?VictimOfGrief said:Never read the graphic novel... never even heard about this until last year...
Went last night....
Was a good movie. Not what I expected in terms of story telling but it was actually kinda cool how they showed the history of all of them converging in the end. Will rent it again on Blu-ray but not one I need to own.
Kudos to Frank though as visually it was great as always.
Catalix said:Wait... who now?
traveler said:I was wondering about that. Frank, as in Frank Miller? Doesn't he know Gaiman wrote this? :lol
Gary Whitta said:Lol what is that now, the third time this has been posted in this thread?
Kastro said:Ozycatching bullets was stupid in the movie and book, but it was better executed in the book with Nite Owl asking him if he really could catch bullets and Ozy just responding with an i'm-a-fucking-badass grin from ear to ear. Plus in the book he wasn't even really sure if it would work, he was surprised when it did.
Catalix said:Wait... who now?
g23 said:Is this movie as mindless and violent as 300? I'm not into mindless brutality and gore, does this movie have excessive stuff like that?
Where 300 was mindlessly violent, Watchmen is mindfully violent.g23 said:Is this movie as mindless and violent as 300? I'm not into mindless brutality and gore, does this movie have excessive stuff like that?
polyh3dron said:Where 300 was mindlessly violent, Watchmen is mindfully violent.
g23 said:Is this movie as mindless and violent as 300? I'm not into mindless brutality and gore, does this movie have excessive stuff like that?
I loved all the little things in that intro. I would have extended it another minute or so. The classic hero flashback stuff is neat.DaMan121 said:Oh, whatever you think about the movie you have to admit that it has the best opening credits ever.
Link Man said:Just saw this, and I was blown away. I've not read the graphic novel, and I don't think I will, as I don't wish to depreciate the movie.
sooperkool said:
Guled said:is there something after the credits end?
Link Man said:Just saw this, and I was blown away. I've not read the graphic novel, and I don't think I will, as I don't wish to depreciate the movie.
quadriplegicjon said:i havent seen the movie yet, but.. how so?
Spoo said:I picked up the graphic novel a while back when the Watchmen hype started to reach high gear, and I wasn't dissapointed in the least with it -- but I didn't read all of it, either. I stopped a little before the ending, because I knew just from checking about that the ending would be changed. I didn't want that x-factor to be a deciding factor in loving or hating the movie, so I held back.
I saw the movie yesterday (and am going to see it again tonight). Without a doubt, I loved it. It was, in my opinion, an incredible filming of the unfilmable, and -- try as I did -- on my drive home I couldn't think of one thing about the movie I disliked.
I was blown away by Newsweek's review, in which the reviewer complained about Watchmen being soulless because it followed the graphic novel too closely.
...er, what?
Sorry, I just don't understand people, I guess. If it wasn't a recreation of the graphic novel, it'd be hated. Watchmen fans would cry foul, as blame would be placed on Snyder for adding his own influence or what have you. Given that it is extremely close, I thought people would be happy (as I was). I guess that's too much to expect from critics. Only Ebert remains a source of sound reasoning in his review.
Kikujiro said:Uhm, The Shining is not faithful to the source material and it's a masterpiece that will be remembered forever (more than the book).
The problem for a lot of critics is that Watchmen (like Sin City, 300, The Spirit) is a bad movie because it forget to be a movie. Movie's time are different than comics' time, and we are talking about different medium. The narrative is different, especially in Watchmen where Moore has experimented with the language of comics like Kubrick has done with the movies. The fact is that Snyder is nowhere a good director, sure, I recognize his passion for the comic, but it's not sufficient to make a good movie. All he knows is making 'coolness' with overused slow-motion and some MTV music clip, the kind of things you can see anywhere on Youtube.
Dear Link Man, sorry to say that but you are part of the problem.
Link Man said:Just saw this, and I was blown away. I've not read the graphic novel, and I don't think I will, as I don't wish to depreciate the movie.
Kikujiro said:Uhm, The Shining is not faithful to the source material and it's a masterpiece that will be remembered forever (more than the book).
The problem for a lot of critics is that Watchmen (like Sin City, 300, The Spirit) is a bad movie because it forget to be a movie. Movie's time are different than comics' time, and we are talking about different medium. The narrative is different, especially in Watchmen where Moore has experimented with the language of comics like Kubrick has done with the movies. The fact is that Snyder is nowhere a good director, sure, I recognize his passion for the comic, but it's not sufficient to make a good movie. All he knows is making 'coolness' with overused slow-motion and some MTV music clip, the kind of things you can see anywhere on Youtube.
I hate to say it, but it seems you can't appreciate something for what it is, and for this I pity you.Kikujiro said:Dear Link Man, sorry to say that but you are part of the problem.
Link Man said:I hate to say it, but it seems you can't appreciate something for what it is, and for this I pity you.
Link Man said:Just saw this, and I was blown away. I've not read the graphic novel, and I don't think I will, as I don't wish to depreciate the movie.
andymcc said:in the original book, i don't believe night owl or silk specter ii would of brutalized people in the way the did in the movie. it's hard to empathize with those two as the true heroes whenever they themselves were so excessively violent. rorschach was way too calculated and cool to have flipped and murdered someone like he was in a slasher film. the way he offed the murderer in the book was perfect to his character.
It is.Flynn said:If only that were true.
FTWer said:MEH What the hell do you want? a street fight is a street fight. You either bloody the guy up or get bloodied up.
...and for Rorschach!going crazy at the murder made sense, the one thing that pushed him over the edge that he could never come back from. Not necessarily better or worse, just like the ending, but made complete sense to the characters & fit perfectly
FTWer said:oh BTW anyone find it funny that a movie set in 1980's sure had a lot of music montages from the 70's? :lol
SwitchBladeKneegrow said:ALright....I was JUST informed that now my wife's sister and one of their friends is going with us as well. So it's me and 3 chicks that have no clue whats in store for them.
Anything I should tell them? I'm kinda pissed at my wife for doing this...
So it's me and 3 chicks that have no clue whats in store for them.
Scullibundo said:Tell them to shut the fuck up and not talk in the movie. Also that there is a naked man and to prepare themselves now so that they don't go into wild bouts of hysteria like children.
ten5ive9ine said:Scullibundo, you're welcome to like this film, but can you get off Synder's dick for a minute.
SwitchBladeKneegrow said:ALright....I was JUST informed that now my wife's sister and one of their friends is going with us as well. So it's me and 3 chicks that have no clue whats in store for them.
Anything I should tell them? I'm kinda pissed at my wife for doing this...
You were mistaken. In the book the mask(s) are made from a Manhattan-age material that had been used to make a designer dress. When the woman who had ordered the dress decided she didn't want it after all Rorschach helped himself too it, experimented with it, and ended up with the inkblot mask. In my recollection there is no indication that the material responded to human emotion as a dress or as a mask. That would sort of defeat the purpose- the theory behind the Rorschach inkblot test is allowing the human mind to create patterns out of random shapes, and the nature of those patterns informs the clinician about the state of the viewers' mind. Rorschach's mask is the face of senselessness- any meaning is provided by the people looking at him. His own feelings are completely obscured.Kastro said:was anyone else confused by the portrayal of rorshach's mask in the film? I was always under the belief that the mask changed form based on his facial expressions, not that it was some kind of living, sentient being..
there was a logic to his choosing of the mask in the book, whereas in the movie it seemed supernatural.