Watchmen: The Ultimate Cut [5 Discs]
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$22.84
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Rating:
NR-
Language:
Eng Studio:
Warner Bros.UPC:
883929085781Year of Release:
2009Item Number:
WBD009986Release Date:
11/10/2009Genre:
Science Fiction –
Superhero Film
Format:
DVD
MOVIE DESCRIPTION:
Multi-disc set. Real-world super heroes must emerge from retirement to solve a murder of one of their own, in the shadow of nuclear armageddon. Directed by Zack Snyder (300). Watchmen: The Ultimate Cut is the version never seen in theaters, integrating the animated Tales from the Black Freighter into the Director's Cut of the film for a more in-depth experience, with 2 all-new commentaries by Zack Snyder and graphic novel Co-creator and Illustrator Dave Gibbons. Also includes over 3 hours of special features including Under the Hood, the entire Watchmen Motion Comics, and a Digital Copy of the Theatrical Version
DVD FEATURES:
- Region: 1
- Number of Discs: 4
- Audio: Dolby Digital 5.1
- Screen: Color
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
Cast:
Malin Akerman - Laurie Jupiter/Silk Spectre II
Billy Crudup - Dr. Manhattan/Jon Osterman
Matthew Goode - Adrian Veidt/Ozymandias
Carla Gugino - Sally Jupiter/Silk Spectre
Jackie Earle Haley - Rorschach/Walter Kovacs
Jeffrey Dean Morgan - Edward Blake/Comedian
Patrick Wilson - Dan Dreiberg/Nite Owl
Matt Frewer - Moloch
Stephen McHattie - Hollis Mason
Laura Mennell - Janey Slater
Rob La Belle - Wally Weaver
Robert Wisden - Richard Nixon
Gary Houston - John McLaughlin
James Michael Connor - Pat Buchanan
Mary Ann Burger - Eleanor Clift
John Shaw - Doug Roth
Jerry Wasserman - Detective Fine
Don Thompson - Detective Gallagher
Frank Novak - Henry Kissinger
Sean Allan - NORAD General
Garry Chalk - NORAD General
Ron Fassler - Ted Koppel
Stephanie Belding - Janet Black
Michael Kopsa - Paul Klein
William Taylor - Prison Psychiatrist
Chris Burns - Dumb Thug
Malcom Scott - Fat Thug
Danny Wattley - Huge
Nhi Do - Vietnamese Girl
Walter Addison - Lee Iacocca
Keith Martin Gordrey - Auto CEO
David MacKay - Child Murderer
Tom Stechschulte - NarratorDirector:
Zack SnyderProducer:
Lawrence Gordon, Lloyd Levin, Deborah Snyder, Zack SnyderScreenwriter:
David Hayter, Alex TseBook Author:
Dave GibbonsCinematographer:
Larry FongComposer (Music Score):
Tyler BatesEditor:
William HoyProduction Designer:
Alex McDowellArt Director:
Helen Veronica JarvisSupervising Art Director:
François AudouyCo-producer:
Wesley CollerExecutive Producer:
Herbert W. Gains, Thomas TullCostume Designer:
Michael WilkinsonSound/Sound Designer:
Jeremy PeirsonFirst Assistant Director:
Martin WaltersSound Mixer:
Michael McGeeCasting:
Michelle Allen, Kristy CarlsonVisual Effects Producer:
Tom C. PeitzmanMakeup Special Effects:
Greg CannomRe-Recording Mixer:
Chris Jenkins, Frank A. MontañoVisual Effects Supervisor:
John "D.J." DesjardinSupervising Sound Editor:
Scott A. HeckerSpecial Effects Coordinator:
Joel WhistScript Supervisor:
Kimi WebberPost Production Supervisor:
Andrea WertheimSecond Assistant Director:
Misha BukowskiIllustrator:
Dave Gibbons
REVIEW:
- Surely, one of the greatest quandaries faced by the modern film reviewer is the question of how much credence should be given to fanboys. In a period when adaptations of cult properties are at an all-time high, the inevitably nitpicky opinions of a comic's original fans are often loud enough to eclipse the general sentiment on a film -- even when they represent a tiny portion of the movie's overall viewership.
But, of course, part of the reason that old-school fans voice their concerns so loudly is that they have a good reason to be protective of their beloved source material. Case in point: 2009's big-screen version of Alan Moore's graphic novel Watchmen. Set in an alternate universe where, in 1985, the U.S.'s desperate search for Cold War security has Nixon presently serving his fifth term, the story sets up a multi-generational history of the superhero (known in this world as the "costumed adventurer"), wherein ordinary people with extraordinary skills, determination, and neuroses put on capes and masks to hit the New York streets and fight crime.
The first wave of adventurers rose to fame during the 1940s, but eventually fell from both effectiveness and public favor, marred by years of scandal, disgrace, and disaster. Obviously, the book is free to explore this area of the timeline as extensively as it wants, but the movie is limited by time, constraining most of it to the role of prefacing backstory, presented in what is, admittedly, one of the coolest credit sequences ever. The narrative then jumps into Gen 2 of the costumed adventurers, which includes an actual child of the first lineup, the ridiculously hot Laurie, aka Silk Spectre II (Malin Akerman). The rest of the group includes the humanity-hating Rorschach (Jackie Earle Haley), whose ever-changing ink-blot mask shifts like some kind of malevolent lava lamp; the soft-spoken Dan, aka Nite Owl II (Patrick Wilson), who dons the most effective pair of gigantic eyeglasses since Clark Kent; and the effete genius Adrian, aka Ozymandias (Matthew Goode), who rocks the best ambiguous smarty-pants accent since Julianne Moore in The Big Lebowski.
There's also the big, blue Dr. Manhattan (Billy Crudup), whose superhero presence spans the two generations, since he doesn't age. This would be because, back when he was a mild-mannered physicist named Jon, he got stuck in the middle of some experiment or other, the details of which are not really important. Forced to basically reconstitute a physical body for himself, Jon now essentially exists on a quantum level, where he doesn't interact with time and space the way the rest of humanity does. As the events of the story play out, his character brings both the narrative and the subtext full circle. The second-generation group, long since disbanded, must reunite on the pretext of investigating the murder of a first-gen member (The Comedian, played by an awesomely grizzled Jeffrey Dean Morgan), but more pertinently, regarding the anticipated upcoming nuclear holocaust.
The old Batman idea that this damn city is falling apart, and that it takes a tireless, slightly insane person to keep fighting the unrelenting tide of humanity's destructive nature is incredibly effective with the backdrop of Gotham expanded to include the whole world. We start to understand how the first generation of heroes inevitably fell from grace, how the battle against society's wickedness is a losing game, and how the Watchmen are just that: men (and woman). They aren't any more exempt from the vices of humankind than the punks they pick off the city's underbelly.
Except, of course, for Dr. Manhattan. He's the only hero with actual superhero-type powers, but in a Catch-22 that illustrates the story's overall thesis, wielding nonhuman abilities means becoming nonhuman -- and therefore lacking a hero's necessary sense of protectiveness over his brethren. By the time the film reaches its highest-of-the-high-stakes climax, Dr. Manhattan has become so removed from the most fundamental experiences of carbon-based life -- let alone humanity -- that he no longer feels the pull to fight for its survival.
This is where the strength of Watchmen's storytelling really becomes clear, because it gets us on board with both humankind's struggle and Manhattan's detachment. We get it: life is a tumult of inescapable brutality. But we still accept Manhattan's vexingly reasonable remoteness -- not to mention his computer-generated genitalia (thanks in no small part -- no pun intended -- to Crudup, whose compelling sense of otherworldliness somehow keeps us from giggling at his constant, earnest, blue-glowing full-frontal nudity). It may not include every nuance of the graphic novel, but it captures as much as any adaptation could -- which may not satisfy the fanboys, but it's probably more than enough for everyone else. ~ Cammila Albertson, Rovi
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