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[personal profile] eumelia
I want to be excited about Watchmen, but I'm just not managing.

The Trailer is very cool, visually beautiful, though I'm not sure why Dr. Manhattan is so shiny and Silk Spectre has this whole half naked thing going on... strange, no?

It would seem that Mr. Moore (as in Alan Moore, the one who wrote the bloody graphic novel!) has requested that his name be removed from the credits and wants to disassociate himself from the movie, which is only natural... seeing as adaptations tend to not be similar to their original medium - this is notorious when it comes to Alan Moore comic and their movie adaptations.

I love V for Vendetta, as you know; kind of hard to miss V's introductory speech posted on the side bar (also Vox Populi, Vox Dei, right :). I love the book - which can leave you speechless - and the movie - which makes you run out and read the book! Having read V4V before I saw the movie I went in there with quite low expectations and was not disappointed.

Watchmen is one of those life changing books. You come out of it different than when you went in. Very few books have the power to alter your perspective on things.
I became a comic book reader quite late in life, at around 15 and it started with Neil Gaiman - Sandman is another of those life changing stories - and when I began to delve deeper into the genre and its history you can't not find the Daddy of the Modern Age and read him.
I always think how much more appreciative I would have been of Gaiman (whose power comes from creating a meta level in the stories themselves) if I'd discovered and/or read Moore before hand (whose power comes from completely recreating the foundation of sequential story telling, beyond meta and deconstructing itself).

Watchmen takes the classic comic book genre (super heroes) and completely turns it on its head. After Watchmen heroes could no longer be Good and villains could no longer be Bad. It made no sense for things to be that way anymore.

The ethical questions raised in the story (and answered in one of the most gruesome and brilliant, sequences ever written and drawn) are questions we tend to not ask ourselves, they are too big and most likely not something we think about on a conscious level.
In any event it is a book of great philosophical and social commentary on the simplest of levels, so a deeper reading can be mind blowing.

I'm not excited about the movie. I thought I would be. I want to be. But I really can't imagine what a director like Zack Snyder will be able to get out of it. Especially since his directorial record leaves much to be desired in my opinion: Dawn of the Dead didn't live up to the original and 300 couldn't have been good since the source material was an overrated, indulgent, racist, testosterone laced excuse of Effing Frank Miller's self-congratulatory wank fests.
And so was the 300 the movie.

That's not to say I won't go see it when it comes out, but my expectations that it manages to even capture the atmosphere of the book are pretty much non-existent.

The trailer is cool though:

Date: 2008-07-24 03:09 pm (UTC)
sabotabby: raccoon anarchy symbol (V for great justice)
From: [personal profile] sabotabby
I too got into comics at around 14 or 15 by reading Sandman. Heh. It makes sense, too; I always thought that comics were all masturbatory superhero fantasies for 14-year-old boys, and then I encountered these graphic novels that weren't like that at all and weren't muscled men and women with huge boobs and no brains and had a very delayed "SQUEE!" Sandman is a better comic book gateway than Watchmen because to truly appreciate Watchmen, one has to have some background with the tradition it deconstructs.

Anyway. I can't help it; I'm excited by the movie. And worried, because I think that the director might be tempted to take the book literally. I sort of go back and forth on the trailer—I like the song, don't think it's appropriate; like the visuals, think they look too polished. When I saw it on the big screen, though, I got really psyched. I'm sure I'll be as disappointed by it as I was by V for Vendetta in the end; you can't really make a comic about comic books come to life as a movie, after all. But I'm still looking forward to it.

Date: 2008-07-24 11:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] aesiron.livejournal.com
I'm interested in seeing it but am not excited for it. Vince is salivating at it, though.

Date: 2008-07-25 02:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lilacsigil.livejournal.com
I read Watchmen after about 5 years of sporadic comic reading and 5 years of serious reading, and it was mindblowing. I'm concerned, though, that the director isn't making a Watchmen movie, he's just putting the story from the comic up on the screen. Yes, it's a cool story. No, that's not what the comic is about.

Due to the wonders of channel surfing, I have seen a few bits of 300 and laughed myself silly. I'm not hopeful for the movie, but it may well be pretty, if I call it something else in my head.

Date: 2008-07-26 11:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gonzo21.livejournal.com
It will be interesting to see if the Director can buck the trend of his past work to make something worthwhile out of the Watchmen... But I suspect there might be a reason why so many people declared the comic to be unfilmable.

Watchmen was the comic that got me back into reading comics as an adult, after my teenaged phase with them.

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Eumelia

January 2020

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V and Justice

V: Ah, I was forgetting that we are not properly introduced. I do not have a name. You can call me V. Madam Justice...this is V. V... this is Madam Justice. hello, Madam Justice.

Justice: Good evening, V.

V: There. Now we know each other. Actually, I've been a fan of yours for quite some time. Oh, I know what you're thinking...

Justice: The poor boy has a crush on me...an adolescent fatuation.

V: I beg your pardon, Madam. It isn't like that at all. I've long admired you...albeit only from a distance. I used to stare at you from the streets below when I was a child. I'd say to my father, "Who is that lady?" And he'd say "That's Madam Justice." And I'd say "Isn't she pretty."

V: Please don't think it was merely physical. I know you're not that sort of girl. No, I loved you as a person. As an ideal.

Justice: What? V! For shame! You have betrayed me for some harlot, some vain and pouting hussy with painted lips and a knowing smile!

V: I, Madam? I beg to differ! It was your infidelity that drove me to her arms!

V: Ah-ha! That surprised you, didn't it? You thought I didn't know about your little fling. But I do. I know everything! Frankly, I wasn't surprised when I found out. You always did have an eye for a man in uniform.

Justice: Uniform? Why I'm sure I don't know what you're talking about. It was always you, V. You were the only one...

V: Liar! Slut! Whore! Deny that you let him have his way with you, him with his armbands and jackboots!

V: Well? Cat got your tongue? I though as much.

V: Very well. So you stand revealed at last. you are no longer my justice. You are his justice now. You have bedded another.

Justice: Sob! Choke! Wh-who is she, V? What is her name?

V: Her name is Anarchy. And she has taught me more as a mistress than you ever did! She has taught me that justice is meaningless without freedom. She is honest. She makes no promises and breaks none. Unlike you, Jezebel. I used to wonder why you could never look me in the eye. Now I know. So good bye, dear lady. I would be saddened by our parting even now, save that you are no longer the woman I once loved.

*KABOOM!*

-"V for Vendetta"

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