Originally posted by: toekramp
that was a miserable movie experience. and i have not read the book.
Originally posted by: Alex C
...the end of the book is amazing and really comes out of nowhere...
Originally posted by: Platypus
I went into it cold, having never read the graphic novel, and I thought it was great.
I saw the ending coming though, but I do have one question..
*spoiler*
If John can see his future (despite that one scene where he said his vision was clouded of the future), why doesn't he realize what Ozy is doing the entire movie until the very end? Is that one scene I mentioned supposed to explain that?
And what was different about the ending in the book versus what they did in the film?
Originally posted by: ducci
But then it had very whimsical and fantasy scenes that weren't done well at all. Most of the scenes with Dr. Manhattan were done this way and it was completely uninteresting. To top it off, the soundtrack to the entire movie was ridiculous and felt completely out of place. It was like they just licensed some songs from that era and threw them in wherever.
Originally posted by: ducci
And as I mentioned before - the sex scenes were awful - particularly the one between the Silk Spectre II and the Nite Owl II in the ship. Yes, she's naked! Great. Big deal. It was tacky and done in poor taste. It completely contrasted (and not in a good way) the rest of the movie. And to top it off, the ridiculous ending of the scene - with the fire shooting out of the ship - I would have loved to been in the storyboard meeting for that one where everyone agreed that would be a good idea. If that was detailed in the book, then it was either one of those things that works in print but doesn't translate well into film - or more likely, was just as absurd in both forms.
Originally posted by: ADDAvenger
Also, there was very little foreshadowing in the book, the ending was much more of a surprise there than in the movie.
Originally posted by: ducci
I didn't read the book.
The movie was mediocre.
The soundtrack was terrible.
The sex scenes were terrible.
It just seemed like the movie didn't know what it wanted to be. It had some really gritty moments which were done great. Rorschach in particular was very interesting. His scene in the prison was probably the highlight of the movie - from the interview with the psychiatrist to his encounters with other inmates. Very well done.
But then it had very whimsical and fantasy scenes that weren't done well at all. Most of the scenes with Dr. Manhattan were done this way and it was completely uninteresting. To top it off, the soundtrack to the entire movie was ridiculous and felt completely out of place. It was like they just licensed some songs from that era and threw them in wherever.
And as I mentioned before - the sex scenes were awful - particularly the one between the Silk Spectre II and the Nite Owl II in the ship. Yes, she's naked! Great. Big deal. It was tacky and done in poor taste. It completely contrasted (and not in a good way) the rest of the movie. And to top it off, the ridiculous ending of the scene - with the fire shooting out of the ship - I would have loved to been in the storyboard meeting for that one where everyone agreed that would be a good idea. If that was detailed in the book, then it was either one of those things that works in print but doesn't translate well into film - or more likely, was just as absurd in both forms.
It felt long. It was long. But it was decently entertaining. I would like to have seen Frank Miller direct this. I think he has a better grasp of the comic film-noir genre.
Originally posted by: torpid
Low marks in metacritic, mediocre on RT, but Roger Ebert gave it 4 stars, if that still means anything. A lot of the mediocre reviews indicated that it's dense and less enjoyable if you haven't read the graphic novel, which I have. I'll be seeing it early Sunday morning.
Originally posted by: dbk
The camera work was terrible..constant zooming out and all the cgi slow mo stuff.
What the hell was the deal with Ozymadias' dog?
What about Rorschach's hood/mask. It was constantly changing, but how?
Originally posted by: UpgradeFailure
Originally posted by: dbk
The camera work was terrible..constant zooming out and all the cgi slow mo stuff.
What the hell was the deal with Ozymadias' dog?
What about Rorschach's hood/mask. It was constantly changing, but how?
Yeah I don't know why they didn't explain those things. I can't recall ozy's animal thing (Just think science and weird experiments made it) but about the mask. When Rorschach was younger he worked at a womans garment shop and a famous lady ordered a dress with a new material Doc Manhattan made with liquids in it that would mix but not combine. The lady didnt like the dress so she just left it there, then later on she was murdered and it helped show Rorschach how bad the world was. He took the dress home and made a mask out of it
Originally posted by: dbk
Originally posted by: UpgradeFailure
Originally posted by: dbk
The camera work was terrible..constant zooming out and all the cgi slow mo stuff.
What the hell was the deal with Ozymadias' dog?
What about Rorschach's hood/mask. It was constantly changing, but how?
Yeah I don't know why they didn't explain those things. I can't recall ozy's animal thing (Just think science and weird experiments made it) but about the mask. When Rorschach was younger he worked at a womans garment shop and a famous lady ordered a dress with a new material Doc Manhattan made with liquids in it that would mix but not combine. The lady didnt like the dress so she just left it there, then later on she was murdered and it helped show Rorschach how bad the world was. He took the dress home and made a mask out of it
I really need to read the comic then watch this again...
Hopefully a director's cut...jeez
Originally posted by: dbk
Originally posted by: ducci
I didn't read the book.
The movie was mediocre.
The soundtrack was terrible.
The sex scenes were terrible.
It just seemed like the movie didn't know what it wanted to be. It had some really gritty moments which were done great. Rorschach in particular was very interesting. His scene in the prison was probably the highlight of the movie - from the interview with the psychiatrist to his encounters with other inmates. Very well done.
But then it had very whimsical and fantasy scenes that weren't done well at all. Most of the scenes with Dr. Manhattan were done this way and it was completely uninteresting. To top it off, the soundtrack to the entire movie was ridiculous and felt completely out of place. It was like they just licensed some songs from that era and threw them in wherever.
And as I mentioned before - the sex scenes were awful - particularly the one between the Silk Spectre II and the Nite Owl II in the ship. Yes, she's naked! Great. Big deal. It was tacky and done in poor taste. It completely contrasted (and not in a good way) the rest of the movie. And to top it off, the ridiculous ending of the scene - with the fire shooting out of the ship - I would have loved to been in the storyboard meeting for that one where everyone agreed that would be a good idea. If that was detailed in the book, then it was either one of those things that works in print but doesn't translate well into film - or more likely, was just as absurd in both forms.
It felt long. It was long. But it was decently entertaining. I would like to have seen Frank Miller direct this. I think he has a better grasp of the comic film-noir genre.
You hit it on the nail.
Originally posted by: SarcasticDwarf
* There were odd plot gaps where it seemed you had to have read the book to understand what was going on
Originally posted by: SarcasticDwarf
* The Veidt character was just developed...wrong
Originally posted by: SarcasticDwarf
* The sex scene was just too long. Halfway through it you were thinking "Am I supposed to masturbate because this is a frigging porno?!"
Originally posted by: SarcasticDwarf
* WHY did the guy go back into that chamber? There seemed no real logical reason for it...
Originally posted by: Aikouka
Originally posted by: SarcasticDwarf
* WHY did the guy go back into that chamber? There seemed no real logical reason for it...
I mentioned why he did this in the comic earlier. His father was a watchmaker by trade and Jon wanted to follow in his footsteps. When the atom bomb was developed, Jon's father refused for him to be a watchmaker and told him he had to become a nuclear physicist, because that was the future and not watches. That time when they were out at the carnival getting their photo taken, Janie's watch strap broke, the watch fell onto the ground and a fat guy stepped on it. Jon fixed it for her after a couple weeks. When she inquired about it, he realized he left the watch in his lab coat, which was in the chamber. He went to go get it and the thing locked him in.
During that part of the comic, there's a lot of talk about causality and how the fat man stepping made him that way... how the watch made him that way, etc.