Synopsis
300's Zack Snyder brings Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons' critically acclaimed comic book Watchmen to the big screen, courtesy of DC Comics and Warner Bros. Pictures. Set in an alternate universe circa 1985, the film's world is a highly unstable one where a nuclear war is imminent between America and Russia. Superheroes have long been made to hang up their tights thanks to the government-sponsored Keene Act, but that all changes with the death of The Comedian (Jeffrey Dean Morgan), a robust ex-hero commando whose mysterious free fall out a window perks the interest of one of the country's last remaining vigilantes, Rorschach (Jackie Earle Haley). His investigation leads him to caution many of his other former costumed colleagues, including Dr. Manhattan, Night Owl (Patrick Wilson), Ozymandias (Matthew Goode), Sally Jupiter (Carla Gugino), and her daughter, The Silk Spectre (Malin Akerman). Heralded for bringing the world of superheroes into the literary world, Watchmen gave the super-powered mythos a real-life grounding that had been missing in mainstream comics to that point. The film adaptation had languished in one form of development hell or another for years after the book's release, with various directors on and off the project, including Terry Gilliam, David Hayter, and Darren Aronofsky, as well as Paul Greengrass, whose eventual dismissal stemmed from budget conflicts with the studio.
What Critics Say
A stunning, mind-bending, breathtaking, densely packed motion picture experience you may want to see again the minute it ends -- if you can figure it all out.
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Movie News
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Comic Con 2008: Watch Out for the 'Watchmen'
I’m not at Comic Con to stare--well, not completely. I’m here to see the first-ever preview of the highly anticipated Watchmen, the film adaptation of the dense graphic novel by Alan Moore, coming to theaters March 2009
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'Watchmen' Takes $25M So far
A pitch-perfect marketing campaign by Warner Brothers and a great release date enabled Watchmen to post some very impressive numbers.
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Early Reviews: Worth Watching 'Watchmen'?
The $120 million comic book adaptation 'Watchmen,' one of 2009's most eagerly awaited films, has had its world premiere in London, and early reviews cast the movie as classy but no classic, reports Reuters.
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Watch for ‘Watchmen’ in March!
The legal sniping between 20th Century Fox and Warner Brothers over the upcoming 'Watchmen' has come to an end, allowing Warner Brothers to release the big-budget comic-book movie about dark and damaged superheroes, reports 'The New York Times'.