Watchmen
Watchmen, Dave Gibbons, Alan Moore, Zack Snyder, Terry Gilliam, Darren Aronofsky, Comedian, Comics
Branded "unfilmable",
Watchmen - the cult graphic novel about a group of retired, flawed superheroes - has finally made it to the big screen. From the second the opening credits roll, it is clear Watchmen is not your typical superhero movie.
An ageing vigilante,
The Comedian, is attacked in his high-rise apartment before being hurled 10 storeys to his death... in graphic slow motion. What follows is a two-and-three-quarter hour epic that centres on an outlawed group of deeply flawed former heroes as a Cold War
Doomsday clock inches ever closer to midnight and nuclear apocalypse.
First published in 12 parts by
DC Comics in 1986, Watchmen was written by the British team of
Alan Moore and illustrator
Dave Gibbons.
Numerous attempts to film the book, included by Time magazine in its list of the Top 100 books of the
20th Century, failed to get off the ground. Respected directors like
Terry Gilliam, Paul Greengrass and
Darren Aronofsky were all involved at various stages. And legal wranglings between rival film studios over the adaptation rights threatened to wreck the project altogether. So it has fallen to
Zack Snyder, the man who helmed 2007's surprise hit 300, to succeed where others have failed.
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Marcadores: Comics, Release, Watchmen
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3/10/2009 12:37:00 PM,
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