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It's 1985 in an alternate reality. The Watchmen - comprised of the Comedian, Dr. Manhattan, Nite Owl II, Ozymandias, Rorschach and Silk Spectre II - are a disparate band of masked superheroes, modeled after the Minutemen, who were masked superheroes of a generation earlier, most of who are dead or afflicted by the ravages of life. The Comedian belongs to both groups. Despite the activities of the Watchmen leading to the west winning the Vietnam War which in turn has kept Jackie Earle Haley), which describes his views of society. The line is spoken fully in the film but had been altered for the trailer. It is a symbol representing a hydrogen atom: an electron orbiting a proton (although electrons do not "orbit" in the same way that planets do). The film (the theatrical cut, at least) doesn't explain why Dr. Manhattan creates this image on his forehead. The graphic novel and motion comic explain that the media was trying to make him more public-friendly, and initially they gave him his own costume (which Osterman disliked). With it was a helmet with a symbol of a generic crystal atom, however, Manhattan believed a hydrogen atom would be more proper (a symbol he could "respect.") When the media photographers pushed him to have a symbol, it was at this point that Manhattan burned the image of the hydrogen atom into his forehead, much to the delight of the photographer. This scene appears in the Director's Cut of the film but doesn't include the dialog from the graphic novel explaining it. This scene is based on Dan Dreiberg's dream sequence which appears in the graphic novel. It represents Dan's anxiety about the future, with the world on the brink of nuclear war, a prominent social issue of the 1980s. In the graphic novel, Laurie explains that she mistook the button for the cigarette lighter. The movie does not depict Laurie (Malin Akerman) smoking, likely due to Hollywood's increasing pressure not to depict protagonists as smokers, thus her reasons are never clearly explained; she merely claims to have "pressed the wrong button," with no indication of what the "right" button might have been. It could be inferred that she was simply curious as to what the button did and pressed it to see what would happen. Also, the buttons for the ship's lights and missiles are more clearly labeled, the one with the flame may have appeared ambiguous to Laurie, hence her curiosity. The second time it is pressed, when she and Dan are having sex, it's an accident. However, it is symbolic of an orgasm. As Laurie moans, fire bursts out of the ship. That scene is similar to the same scene in the book. Rorschach was born Walter Joseph Kovacs on March 21st, 1940. After he assaulted two kids who were bullying him, an investigation revealed the environment in which he lived (his mother being a prostitute who abused Kovacs physically and verbally and allowed her customers to mistreat him). He was taken away from his mother and placed into a foster home for problem children, where he lived until 1956. When he left the foster home they gave him a job in the garment industry, which he found "bearable, but unpleasant," as he had to handle female clothing. In 1962, a girl, who turned out to be real-life crime victim Kitty Genovese, ordered a dress made from a special fabric made possible by Doctor Manhattan. The fabric was made of viscous fluids between two layers of latex, sensitive to heat and pressure. The dress was never reclaimed because it was "ugly." Kovacs thought otherwise and kept the dress, after cutting it enough so "it didn't look like a woman anymore." In 1964, Kitty Genovese was murdered outside her apartment building. Several neighbors heard her scream and plea for help but didn't do anything. Such apathy disturbed Kovacs, who began to perceive mankind as rotten. After learning of the murder, Kovacs went home, took the remnants of Kitty's unwanted dress and created his mask, "a face [he] could bear to look at in the mirror." Though it is not explicitly stated, it is very likely Kovacs took up crimefighting as a reaction to the Kitty Genovese murder. But, as he admits in the comic, he was just "Kovacs pretending to be Rorschach." The Rorschach personality wouldn't materialize until 1975, during the Blair Roche kidnapping case.
The real life apathy displayed in the Kitty Genovese murder wasn't quite as shocking as Rorschach claims it to be in the comic. While initial reports, and subsequent popular culture, express the view that Rorschach took that "dozens" of people witnessed the attack and "did nothing" subsequent investigations have shown that this was exaggerated. Genovese was returning home from her job at 3:15 am March 13th, 1964 when she was attacked by Winston Mosely who stabbed her twice. Genovese called out for help and one neighbor shouted for Mosely to "leave that girl alone". Mosely left and Genovese stumbled off. Mosely returned ten minutes later and searched for Genovese, finding her collapsed in an exterior hallway of the apartment complex. He then proceeded to stab her several more times and raped her. Genovese died in the ambulance on the way to the hospital. While Rorschach insists that dozens of people saw the attack and that "some of them even watched" the actual events were less sensationalist. Since the attack took place in two location no one saw the entire sequence of events. The final attack, which took place in a hallway, wasn't observed by anyone. While a number of neighbors heard Genovese cry out after the first attack many of them did not realize that she was crying for help or the severity of the crime. It was a cold night and most residents had their windows closed. Many assumed that it was a quarrel between a couple and didn't realize a deadly attack had occurred until much later. According to Hollis Mason's book in the graphic novel, Captain Metropolis was decapitated in a car accident, while Hooded Justice vanished and was possibly killed by the Comedian shortly after. It's mentioned that this couple of masked adventurers were lovers. However, some people find a resemblance between the masked heroes and two background characters in the graphic novel, which could mean they faked their departures and are still alive in the time the story takes place. The Comedian continued being a crimefighter and worked for the US government. Night Owl and Silk Spectre retired. The Silhouette was murdered by an adversary seeking revenge. Dollar Bill was killed in a bank robbery after his cape got stuck in a revolving door. Mothman succumbed to alcoholism and unstable mentality and was sent to an asylum in Maine. All those situations are at least briefly shown or mentioned in the film (theatrical cut and the others). It was not specified in the movie, but the book states that Bubastis was a genetically-engineered lynx as a result of a experiment to create a fictional feline pet for Adrian. In the book, Bubastis had red fur with black stripes. The Comedian (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) is portrayed as a cynical, nihilistic and ruthless hero. There is little if any explanation to his actions in the comic. The closest it gets to giving a definitive answer is when a drunk Comedian tells Moloch: "When I started out, when I was a kid, cleanin' up the waterfronts, it was like real easy. The world was tough, you just [had to] be tougher." The most significant bits of information come from Rorschach, who says:
Blake understood. Treated [life] like a joke, but he understood. He saw the cracks in society, saw the little men in masks trying to hold it together... He saw the true face of the twentieth century and chose to become a reflection, a parody of it.
And Doctor Manhattan, who, reflecting upon his time with Blake in Vietnam, says:
Blake is interesting. I have never met anyone so deliberately amoral. He suits the climate here: the madness, the pointless butchery... as I come to understand Vietnam and what it implies about the human condition, I also realize that few humans will permit themselves such an understanding. Blake is different. He understands perfectly, and he doesn't care.
The book does at times imply that Blake's actions may be an attempt at testing the bounds of society: that he acts in despicable ways hoping that society stops him, which it ultimately never does. His involvement in the assassination of John F. Kennedy, as well as the deaths of reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, is implied to be part of his government-sponsored activities. He was in Dallas nominally as Nixon's "bodyguard" the day JFK died (and he is actually shown as the second gunman in the film), and it's likely Nixon ordered the deaths of Woodward and Bernstein to keep Watergate from becoming public, thus cementing his popularity after winning the Vietnam war and enabling him to be re-elected for five terms after a constitutional amendment rescinded the 22nd Amendment which limited a person to a maximum of two terms of office (4 years apiece). It's a theme that is also used in another comic series drawn by Dave Gibbons and written by Frank Miller called Give Me Liberty where the sitting president, Erwin Rexall, has been in office for longer than eight years after pushing Congress to repeal the 22nd Amendment. In 1975, Richard Nixon (Robert Wisden) proposes a constitutional amendment to allow him to run for a third term and also has The Comedian assassinate Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, the two journalists who investigated the Watergate scandal that eventually lead to Nixon's resignation in 1974, preventing the information from being made public. The 22nd Amendment to the United States Constitution was adopted in 1951 and limited anyone elected president to two terms of office (4 years apiece). Franklin Roosevelt served as US president from 1933 to '45 and had just been elected to a fourth term in 1944 when he died of a cerebral hemorrhage early in 1945 (his successor was Vice President Harry Truman). About 6 years later, the 22nd Amendment was proposed and adopted. In 1975, in the alternate timeline of Watchmen, Nixon has somehow lobbied Congress successfully into adopting another amendment (the number is never given) that rescinds the 22nd and allows him to be elected and serve for more than 2 terms. It's a theme that's also used in another comic series drawn by Dave Gibbons (and written by Frank Miller) called Give Me Liberty where the sitting president, Erwin Rexall, has lobbied successfully to rescind the 22nd Amendment and has been in office for longer than eight years. The Comedian's assassin (Adrian) comes unarmed and kicks in the front door, rather than sneaking up quietly killing him. The reason Adrian decides instead to beat the Comedian half to death then toss him out the window is likely because Adrian hated the Comedian. In the one scene that shows any interaction between Adrian and the Comedian, the Comedian completely undermines Adrian's idea and is extremely rude to him. It can be assumed that there while the Watchmen were together the Comedian and Adrian had drastically different ideals and butted heads quite often. Also, it could be argued that Adrian wanted to give the Comedian (who was clearly the most violent and morally corrupt of the Watchmen) what he deserved. After he decided that the Comedian had to be killed in order for his plan to go smoothly, it was finally his chance to take on the Comedian in a man-to-man fight to the death. There's even a moment where Adrian has a hold of the Comedian's gun, but tosses it aside in favor of hand-to-hand combat. His face is not concealed to the Comedian when they fight (only to the audience) so it can be assumed that the Comedian knows who he is fighting—and that Adrian wanted him to know.
Another question arises however, which involves Rorschach. When Adrian reveals his scheme at the end of the film, he says he had to kill the Comedian because he was working for the government and was onto Adrian's plan. He also says that the one snag in his idea was Rorschach's conspiracy that someone is taking out all of the Watchmen. When Dan says to Rorschach that it was a burglar who killed the Comedian, Rorschach does not believe that any ordinary burglar could have killed him. So Adrian, beating the Comedian and overpowering him, only fueled Rorschach's conspiracy. The answer could be that Adrian never could have predicted that Rorschach would develop such a conspiracy. When Dan comes to warn Adrian of Rorschach's suspicion, Adrian tells Dan that Rorschach is a sociopath and that one murder doesn't indicate a pattern. And while Dan becomes convinced, Rorschach is too stubborn to change his mind. Also, in by the end of the film, Rorschach's conspiracy does not foil Adrian's plot and only ends up being a minor inconvenience. After Ozymandias' betrayal is revealed, he states that, by killing millions, he has saved billions. Because both Moscow and various cities throughout the world were destroyed, the USSR and the USA join forces to track down and hunt the real and supposed perpetrator—Doctor Manhattan—as his energy was found at the sites of the explosions. The others agreed to keep this a secret so global peace would be maintained. However, Rorschach refused to compromise and left to tell the world what really happened. Doctor Manhattan then decided to kill Rorschach in order to keep the world at peace. The final scene shows the editor of "The New Frontiersman" (a far-right newspaper) annoyed at having nothing worthwhile to print, telling a young employee to find an article from "The Crank File", a collection of crank letters, among which is Rorschach's journal. It is left up to the viewer to decide what effect, if any, Rorschach's account of events will have on the world. The first trailer features The Beginning is the End is the Beginning by the Smashing Pumpkins. The second trailer contains 3 songs. Prophecies and Pruit Igoe from the Koyaanisqatsi soundtrack by Philip Glass and Take a Bow by Muse. There are additional trailers that feature the song Angel by Massive Attack. The tracklist of the OST goes as follows: (1) Desolation Row (My Chemical Romance), (2) Unforgettable (Nat King Cole), (3) The Times They Are A-Changin' (Bob Dylan), (4) The Sound Of Silence (Simon & Garfunkel), (5) Me & Bobby McGee (Janis Joplin), (6) I'm Your Boogie Man (KC & The Sunshine Band), (7) You're My Thrill (Billie Holiday), (8)Pruit Igoe & Prophecies (Philip Glass), (9) Hallelujah (Leonard Cohen), (10) All Along The Watchtower (Jimi Hendrix), (11) Ride of the Valkyries (Budapest Symphony Orchestra), and (12) Pirate Jenny (Nina Simone). Though not found in the official soundtrack, the movie also features Nena's 99 Luftballons, Waylon Jenning's Clyde, a "musak" version of Tears For Fears' Everybody Wants to Rule the World and Leonard Cohen's First We Take Manhattan. It does not feature, however, Pirate Jenny, which is used during the end credits of the animated adaptation of "Tales of the Black Freighter". • Unforgettable (Nat King Cole) (Nostalgia commercial and The Comedian/Edward Blake's death)
• The Times They Are A-Changin' (Bob Dylan) (Opening Credit Sequence)
• 99 Luftballons (Nena) (Laurie/Silk Spectre enters Rafaels to meet with Dan)
• The Sound Of Silence (Simon & Garfunkel) (The Comedian's funeral)
• Ride of the Valkyries (Budapest Symphony Orchestra), (Dr. Manhattan and the Comedian fighting in Vietnam)
• Me & Bobby McGee (Janis Joplin) (Vietnam bar with The Comedian and Dr. Manhattan)
• I'm Your Boogie Man (KC & The Sunshine Band) (Keene Act riots)
• You're My Thrill (Billie Holiday) (Laurie and multiple Dr. Manhattans having sex)
• Prophecies(Philip Glass) (Dr. Manhattan's flashbacks on Mars)
• Pruit Igoe(Philip Glass) (Dr. Manhattan's flashbacks on Mars)
• Prophecies(Reprise) (Philip Glass) (Dr. Manhattan's flashbacks on Mars)
• Everybody Wants to Rule the World (Tears for Fears) (Muzak version) (Veidt's foyer just as Roy Chess attempts to assassinate Veidt)
• Hallelujah (Leonard Cohen) (Laurie and Dan having sex)
•Intermezzo from Cavalleria rusticana(famously referred to as Theme from Raging Bull (1980)) (Pietro Mascagni) (Hollis Mason/Nite Owl's death scene) (Director's Cut only)
• Clyde (Waylon Jennings) (Rorschach's interrogation in Happy Harry's)
• All Along The Watchtower (Jimi Hendrix) (Rorschach and Dan arrive in Karnak)
• Requiem: No. 1 Introitus and Kyrie: Requiem and Kyrie (Mozart) (Dan and Laurie leave Karnak)
• Desolation Row (My Chemical Romance) (End Credits)
• First We Take Manhattan (Leonard Cohen) (End Credits) (not in IMAX version) In the Uncut Extended Trailer for 300 (2006) (2006), in a flash of white at 1 minute and 52 seconds in, right after a sword fight shot, is a test shot of Rorshach holding The Comedian's button. This first official image from director Zack Snyder features that film's associate producer, Wesley Coller, wearing a makeshift mask in front of a composite Manhattan backdrop. It was created as an experiment by Snyder to establish the mood and look of his proposed Watchmen project. Snyder's wife, Deborah Snyder, bet him $100 that no one would discover it, while he was convinced that someone would find it almost immediately. He won. To quote Alan Moore from an interview with Bill Baker: I'd never really been interested in having my work adapted for film. So I decided that the only thing that I could do that would be taking the high ground on the issue would be to refuse any future payments for films that were made of my work. This is for the films such as Watchmen and V for Vendetta [also for Constantine], things that were owned by companies and which I no longer owned, and where I didn't have a say whether they were filmed or not. In the instance where they were filmed, I would not be accepting money for them, and I would be asking for my name in consequence to be taken off of the films. The Theatrical Cut is more loosely based on the book than the Director's or Ultimate Cuts, while still being very close to the source material as it is. However, the Ultimate Cut is the most slavishly faithful, going so far as to include the "Tales of the Black Freighter" News stand subplot that took up a good portion of the comic book.
A few of the additions to the Director's (and, subsequently, Ultimate) Cut are actually scenes that were not in the graphic novel in the first place, most notably Rorschach's initial encounter with two cops at Blake's apartment. This scene, however, does not contradict any major plot points, and merely serves as character development.
A few other, minor changes include:
-The police investigation of Blake's murder & subsequent dialog between the two detectives that opens the 1st chapter of the graphic novel is reduced in favor of a scene depicting the fight between Blake and his attacker.
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