Road to 'Watchmen': From Book to Big Screen

By Scott Huver, Special to Hollywood.com | Wednesday, March 04, 2009
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Darren Aronofsky in the press room at the 2009 Film Independent's Spirit Awards. Santa Monica Pier, Santa Monica, CA. 02-21-09
Darren Aronofsky
Creative clashes moved the project from Universal to Revolution Studios, with who Gordon and producer Lloyd Levin had success with in bringing Hellboy to the screen. But that was a brief transition and Watchmen subsequently landed at Paramount Pictures in 2004, where a director was finally attached: Darren Aronofsky, who’d established himself as a creative visualist with Requiem for a Dream and a comic book fan who’d been stymied in his prior attempt to adapt Frank Miller and David Mazzuchelli’s Batman: Year One to the screen (with Christian Bale attached as the lead).

Aronofsky eventually chose to pursue his passion project The Fountain instead, but Watchmen gained even more momentum when director Paul Greengrass, who had steered The Bourne Identity and its sequel to huge successes, signed on. Suddenly the film was entering a bona fide pre-production mode, targeted for a summer 2006 release after planned filming at England’s Pinewood Studios. Several stars were eyeing the project with great interest, including Joaquin Phoenix as Dr. Manhattan and Simon Pegg as Rorschach, with Daniel CraigJude Law and Sigourney Weaver also under consideration for roles. But a 2005 shakeup amongst Paramount’s executives left Watchmen in turnaround yet again. Sigh.

“We were fully crewed up, and had stages in London,” Gordon told Hollywood.com. “There was a change of regimes in the studio and the new regime couldn’t even get through the script.”

300 Movie Still
300 Movie Still
Finally, the film found its way back to Warner Bros. in 2005, just as the studio was getting back into the superhero game following the dramatic box office returns for film properties from DC’s rival Marvel Comics. Warner was high on director Zack Snyder (Dawn of the Dead), who’d created an unexpected blockbuster for the studio with 300, a stunning, visually inventive adaptation of the non-superheroic comic book series by Frank Miller. After two weeks of soul searching, Synder decided that if HE didn’t direct Watchmen, someone else would, and he set to work storyboarding and assembling a new script from two of Hayter’s drafts with screenwriter Alex Tse (with some uncredited polishes by Robero Orci and Alex Kurtzman, the scribes of Transformers and the forthcoming Star Trek film).

“My hope was to have the movie in some ways do what the book did to me,” Synder told Hollywood.com, “and what the book did to a lot of people who read it not knowing what it was and just thinking ‘It’s a comic book…These are characters I’m not totally familiar with but they’re going to go on the same types of adventures that I’m used to.’ That was the feeling I got that I expected from the book. And then, as you get into it, you realize that it’s something else.”

The alternate-1985 setting -- which had been reluctantly swapped for a modern day setting by Hayter at studio behest -- was restored, an R-rated approach was approved, and Snyder opted to use Hayter’s more streamlined ending, enlisting no less than Gibbons himself to draw the new ending in the same style as the original comics to give the director a near-authentic blueprint to work from. Moore remained aloof, however, critical of Snyder’s approach to 300 (words like “sublimely stupid” were uttered) and so adamantly disinterested in the effort after displeasure with prior Hollywood iterations of his works (V for VendettaFrom Hell and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen) and with DC Comics in general as to cheerfully sign over all film and licensing royalties to his colleague Gibbons.

Zack Snyder
Zack Snyder
Additional comic book artists – Adam Hughes (Justice League, Ghost) and John Cassaday (Planetary, Astonishing X-Men) – were brought on to visualize slightly updated superhero costumes that would resonate with audiences now familiar with the superhero milieu. And while A-listers like Tom Cruise and Jude Law expressed interest in roles (both were considered for Ozymandias, though Cruise fancied Dr. Manhattan), the film ultimately went forward, shooting on sprawling, Gibbons-esque New York street set build on a Vancouver lumberyard with a cast of lesser-known but respected actors, including Oscar-nominated Jackie Earle Haley (Rorschach), Billy Crudup (Dr. Manhattan), Patrick Wilson (Nite-Owl II), Malin Akerman (Silk Spectre II), Jeffrey Dean Morgan (The Comedian), Carla Gugino (Silk Spectre I) and Matthew Goode (Ozymandias).

Of course, it wouldn’t be Watchmen if there weren’t one last little bit of nail-biting drama as the clock hand ticked closer to midnight. Twentieth Century Fox filed a copyright infringement suit in February 2008, claiming that it still held the rights to produce or at least distribute the film, while Warner Bros countered that Fox had failed to exercise its rights over subsequent incarnations of the project. As production on the film continued unencumbered, the two titans battled it out in court until a judge ruled in Fox’s favor at the end of the year, just months before the March 6, 2009 release date. Fox announced its intention to block the film’s release. Finally, a settlement was reached, with Fox giving up any future ownership of the film in exchange for millions in development and legal fees and a small percentage of the worldwide gross.

And finally, nearly 23 years after the first issue hit the stands and caught Hollywood’s eye, Watchmen is opening at a theater near you. Ask Lawrence Gordon, who’d been on the ride since the beginning, what the magic ingredient was that finally made this dream project a reality after so many false starts and he has a succinct and definitive answer.

“Zack Snyder, Zack Snyder, Zack Snyder,” said Gordon. “That’s what made the studio make the movie, in my opinion. They never would have made the movie otherwise.”

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Photo(s) by Dave Edwards- © 2009- DailyCeleb.com- All Rights Reserved

Photo(s) by Hollywood.com Staff- © 2007- Warner Bros.- All Rights Reserved

Photo(s) by Dave Edwards- © 2007- DailyCeleb.com- All Rights Reserved

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