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Title:
Watchmen: Director’s Cut: Digital Copy Special Edition Blu-ray Disc DVD Sets
Media:
Blu-ray Disc & DVD (Sold Separately)
Blu-ray
Disc Region: A/ DVD Region: 1
Genre:
Graphic Novel Inspired Science Fiction Mystery Drama
Stars:
Malin Akierman, Billy Crudup, Carla Gugino, Jackie Earl Haley, Jeffrey Dean
Morgan, and Patrick Wilson
Writers:
David Hayter and Alex Tse
Based
On The Graphic Novel Co-Created By Dave Gibbons
Director:
Zack Snyder
Feature
length: 186 minutes
Blu-ray
and DVD Extras: The Phenomenon: The Comic That Changed Comics: The Original
Graphic Novel’s Groundbreaking Impact Documentary, 11 Watchmen Video
Journals, My Chemical Romance Desolation Music Video, Digital Copy
For Portable Media Devices
Blu-ray
Disc Extras And Exclusives: Immersive Maximum Movie Mode With Director Zach
Snyder, Real Super Heroes, Real Vigilantes Documentary, Mechanics:
Technologies Of A Fantastic World Featurette, Blu-ray Disc Live Extra
Features, Which Can Now Be Shared On Face Book
Blu-ray
Disc Languages: English DTS-HD MA 5.1 Surround Sound and French (Dubbed In
Quebec) Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound
DVD
Languages: English and French (Dubbed In Quebec) Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround
Sound
Subtitles:
English Subtitles For The Deaf And Hearing Impaired and French and Spanish
Language Subtitles
Blu-ray
Disc Packaging: Three Disc Elite Blue Case
DVD
Packaging: 2-Disc Amaray Keep Case
Chapter
Stops: 44
Sound:
DTS-HD MA 5.1 (Blu-ray Disc Only) and Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound
Year
of Theatrical Release: 2006/Blu-ray Disc Release: 2008
Theatrical
Distributor: Warner Bros. Pictures
Home
Video Distributor: Warner Home Video
MPAA
Rating: R
Reviewer:
Mark A. Rivera
After
24 years since it’s original publication as a limited series by D.C. Comics,
Filmmaker Zack Snyder (the 2004 remake of Dawn Of The Dead, 300)
bought the most acclaimed graphic novel of all time to the big screen utilizing
state of the art technology and a few lessons he learned from his big screen
version of Frank Miller’s 300 graphic novel. The impact of the book
changed the entire medium of how comics are perceived to a general audience and
enabled other people in the comic book industry to take well known characters
and do things that had never been done before while perhaps one of the biggest
things to come out of the book series’ publication and subsequent unification
of the individual issues into the one graphic novel that most associate Watchmen
now is simply, it portrayed masked avengers in an adult manner and explored the
psychology of what drives heroes to do what they do and the sociology of the
society that at once embraces them and vilifies them at the same time.
For
some the effect of seeing Watchmen left them depressed because they were
not interested in seeing a film where the heroes are flawed and in many cases
more flawed than the audience watching them and for some the effect of Watchmen
did not live up to the graphic novel’s reputation because the reality is it
has been more than twenty years since the book was published and themes explored
in the book have been explored in a similar fashion in many films, TV shows, and
books in various genres. None of this is Zack Snyder’s fault. In fact even for
those who might not have liked certain changes made in the film, myself included
with one piece of dialogue that unfortunately I cannot go into because of
potential storyline spoilers, but overall I think the movie was very faithful to
the book and in the end, the graphic novel still exists and nothing in the film
can change that.
Warner
Brothers wisely released Watchmen in March of 2009, which is a good
period of time when people can appreciate something more serious than the
holiday theatrical releases and yet a bit more fantastical than the typical fall
dramas that are released as Oscar bait by the distributors. If Warner Brothers
had released Watchmen in July of this year to parallel last year’s big
screen hit The Dark Knight, I do not believe the film would so as well
because as famous as Watchmen is, it is not an icon of American culture
like Batman and it never will be. So March was the perfect release month
for the film and has been a good luck charm for Zack Snyder in the past since 300
and the remake of Dawn Of The Dead were both March releases and both were
hits when they were released that have had a profound impact on their respective
genres and other ones alike.
I
personally had no problem with any of the casting for the film, though I think
actor Danny Woodburn, who was hired to play Big Figure was not menacing enough
for me to take seriously that this is a crime kingpin with enough connections in
jail to command others. Perhaps someone less recognizable would have been
better. Standouts in the film go to Jackie Earl Haley as Rorschach, Patrick
Wilson as the second Night Owl, Jeffrey Dean Morgan as The Comedian, Stephen
McHattie as Hollis Mason AKA the original Night Owl, and Matt Frewer is just a
terrific character actor in everything he does. While some people wrote
negatives comments about Mathew Goode’s performance as Adrian Veidt AKA
Ozymandias, I liked his characterization because he brought a certain subdued
smugness to his character that I have seen sometimes in certain people who may
be gifted or not, but feel they are somehow entitled more than others.
The
story takes place in a parallel universe where masked crime fighters are not the
stuff of comic books, but are real and collectively they have had a major impact
on world history. It is now 1985 and Nixon is still in the Whitehouse in his
fifth term as President and Vietnam is the fifty-first state in the Union. The
arms race has moved America and the Soviet Union closer to Armageddon and since
the 1970s, outside of two heroes who work for the US Government, masked heroes
who are not contracted directly by the Federal Government have been declared
vigilantes and as such are subject to imprisonment as criminals. One masked
avenger named Rorschach has never quit his crusade against those who break the
law and he is relentless in his quest as well as considered by many to be
insane. However Rorschach is investigating the murder of a fellow masked hero,
The Comedian, which he feels could be the beginning of a wave of violence
against other former masked crime fighters. Thus he continues his investigations
while warning the rest of the group of what could be happening. As scientists
push the doomsday clock ever closer to midnight in light of rising Cold War
tensions, the real threat could be even more horrifying than everyone realizes.
Watchmen
was released on Blu-ray Disc and DVD in July as a Director’s Cut that restores
a few scenes from the graphic novel that help to provide greater scope to the
world of the film while adding a bit more gore and exaggerated violence. The
film is now three hours long. The Blu-ray Disc version features a stunning VC-1
encoded 1080p/24fps depending on the resolution and capabilities of your own
home theater set up. Warner Home Video has provided a dynamic English DTS-HD MA
5.1 Surround Soundtrack and a French (Dubbed In Quebec) Dolby Digital 5.1
Surround Sound mix as well. The DVD features the standard MPEG-2 16 by 9
enhanced widescreen presentation along with an English and French (Dubbed In
Quebec) Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Soundtracks. Obviously the Blu-ray will have
the advantage over even an upconverted DVD, which looks washed out compared to
the BD, but on the merits of standard definition in a native 480i/p resolution,
those who have not upgraded to Blu-ray will not be disappointed by the DVD
version. The reality is though once you get into Blu-ray, you will not watch
your old DVDs quite the same way again, and I mean it is like getting a
prescription pair of eyeglasses if you are nearsighted. You think everything is
clear until you put the glasses on and then you wonder how you ever got along
without them. The scope aspect ratio recreates the theatrical experience as
close as possible for home video users. English Subtitles for the Deaf and
Hearing Impaired as well as French and Spanish Language Subtitles are encoded
onto both media versions of the film as options.
Both
the Blu-ray Disc and DVD feature the documentary The Phenomenon: The Comic
That Changed Comics: The Original Graphic Novel’s Groundbreaking Impact
(28:45), which is in 16 by 9 HD on the Blu-ray, but letterboxed on the DVD. The Watchmen
webisodes covering The Minutemen (3:33), Sets & Sensibility
(3:54), Dressed For Success (3:03), The Ship Has Eyes (4:20), Dave
Gibbons (3:21), Burn Baby Burn (2:12), Shoot To Thrill (3:14),
Blue Monday (2:59), Attention To Detail (2:53), Girls Kick Ass
(3:03), and Rorschach’s Mask (3:38) are presented on the Blu-ray Disc
as focus points that can be viewed individually or accessed while watching the
film as picture-in-picture material and are in widescreen high definition, but
DVD they only appear in standard definition letterboxed and are only accessible
separately on the second disc. The My Chemical Romance music video for
their song Destination Row (3:15) is also included on both the Blu-ray
Disc and DVD versions along with a standard definition digital copy for portable
media players.
Exclusive
to the Blu-ray Disc edition is Warner Bros. Maximum Movie Mode, with
Director Zack Snyder as the host viewers get access to interactive content while
watching the movie that includes the picture-picture option noted above as well
as side-by-side comparisons of the graphic novel and the film, timeline
comparison between our world and the alternate parallel Earth of the film, photo
and sketch galleries, and Zack Snyder appears on screen with scene analysis. Two
more featurettes are included on the BD version as well and are presented in HD.
These include Real Super Heroes, Real Vigilantes (26:17), which explores
the fascination and psychology behind real-world vigilantes and even includes
people who actually don costumes to make themselves appear as masked avengers
while they try and fight crime. The Technologies Of A Fantastic World featurette
(16:48) explores the scientific consultation that went into the making of the
film and explains what would be plausible and implausible too. Finally the disc
features BD Live enhancement for those with compliant machines and high-speed
internet access to sample bonus content online that can be shared via Face Book
and has already seen a group screening via BD live with Q&A with Director
Zack Snyder at this past month’s San Diego Comic Con.
The
seamless menus on the Blu-ray Disc work fine while the DVD version has an
animated opening menu with subsequent standard still frame interactive menus and
all are easy to navigate. Watchmen:
Director’s Cut: Digital Copy Special Edition
Blu-ray Disc DVD sets are available now, but sold separately at retailers on and
offline courtesy of Warner Home Video.
©
Copyright 2009 By Mark A. Rivera
All Rights Reserved.


Buy Either The Blu-ray Disc or DVD Versions
By Clicking On The Respective Icons Below!