Vegasadelphia wrote:
Nice review, but there's an inaccuracy. Zack Snyder didn't direct "Sin City"--Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller did (with Quenten Tarantino directing the scene where Bencio Del Toro's corpse talks to Clive Owen in the moving car). Snyder's only film before "300" was the remake of "Dawn of the Dead."
jolly_magpie wrote:
I'd like to see 300 because I loved Sin City.
Unfortunately I think Watchmen is unfilmable and should be left alone.
I disagree. This is the very mentality of the people who said "Sin City" was unfilmable! And "Spider-Man!" And "Lord of the Rings!" And look at those wonderful adaptations. How is "Watchmen" any different?
It would have to be a long film, yes, but it's not unfilmable. Zack Snyder, the director of both it and "300," says that it will likely be a 3 hour film. There's almost nothing in it that couldn't be put into a movie somehow, and I for one found the stylings of the graphic novel to be quite cinematic. The film would probably have to skip a few details for the sake of running time, but many of those details could have been cut in the first place for more efficient storytelling.
Plus, there's no law saying you must see the film of "Watchmen." If you can't imagine it being at all decent, just don't see it. Or do see it and do your fanboy duty and rant like hell about it, and then read the book again and remember how awesome it was in comparison. For example, I was really pissed about some of the changes made to "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire"--most notably the handling of the Quidditch World Cup and the handling of the Veela, including a Fleur that was horrendously un-sexy--but that doesn't mean that the book is any less good. (Though, it's not the best analogy because I wasn't 100% fond of the "Goblet of Fire" book either. Heh.) A film will only hurt the source material if it's really sh***y as a movie, and no matter how much they change, as long as it works as a standalone film it will still make the ignorant go and seek out that source material. And I think that regardless of how much Snyder cuts from "Watchmen," he'll make it a good film--he's proven himself to be a talented director, he's obviously very passionate about "Watchmen," and he clearly understands that it's closer to "Dr. Strangelove" than "Fantastic Four." (Indeed, he's spoken about how he's been trying to explain this to studios.)