All right. I'm done.

Moderators: sgt.null, dANdeLION
I gotta agree more with dAN. Watchmen was too ambitious in all the wrong places. The only part I really liked was the title sequences and Dr. Manhattan's back-story, which was true to the comic but also had its own gravity and promise to it that I'd have loved to seen extended to the rest of the movie.sgt.null wrote:en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zack_Snyder
had no idea who you were talking about. i thought Dawn of the Dead was excellent, 300 brilliant and Watchmen ambitious and great at times.
It is/was a challenge, no doubt, but the parts they got right convinced me of this: why not do the rest that way? Plus, the LOTR films did a heck of a job with something that took more than a decade.sgt.null wrote:Watchmen could never hope to be as good as the comic book series. a two hour movie vs a year long series?
you lose way too much back story, side stories, depth.
dANdeLION wrote:There was another FF movie, one that makes the other two look wonderful in comparison.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Fantastic_Four_(film)
Miller wrote Sin City, not Moore.Hashi Lebwohl wrote:I haven't seen anyone mentioning Sin City (novel by Moore, movie by RR)
Couldn't get into the movie. It bored me. In my opinion, Wanted was a terrible movie (bored me)... haven't seen The Spirit.dANdeLION wrote:Miller wrote Sin City, not Moore.Hashi Lebwohl wrote:I haven't seen anyone mentioning Sin City (novel by Moore, movie by RR)
The destruction of only one city in the graphic novel creeped you out more because of the detailed drawings of all the people killed, piled up in heaps on top of each other. Also, even though you--the reader--knew that it was only a story and the punchline was explained to you in detail before it actually happened you, yourself, still couldn't believe it. How could he be certain that it would actually work without ever testing a prototype?Orlion wrote:Couldn't get into the movie. It bored me. In my opinion, Wanted was a terrible movie (bored me)... haven't seen The Spirit.
My main problem with adaptations of any kind is that whoever is in charge doesn't 'get it' usually. This happened with Watchmen, Beowulf (not a graphic novel, but proves my point) and Dawn of the Dead. Whoever makes these movies miss the point and focus on something that doesn't matter. Zack Synder does this continually. For example in Watchmen, he focused on how when it came out, its grittiness was 'shocking' to the populace at the time, so he was going to one up it so that modern audiences would feel that same shock. As a result, he botched the movie with unnecessary gore and an awkward (and ultimately lame, cliched) sex scene. Hell, how is it that in the bookand I was more creeped out by that than I was when in the movieSpoiler
only one city is destroyed? Seriously, in the movie my reaction was 'huh, will that's interesting.'Spoiler
every major city is blown up