<![CDATA[io9: dr. manhattan]]> http://tags.lifehacker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/io9.com.png <![CDATA[io9: dr. manhattan]]> http://io9.com/tag/drmanhattan http://io9.com/tag/drmanhattan <![CDATA[Get Psychoanalyzed By Rorschach]]> Warner Brothers has just released their 10-minute long interactive Watchmen trailer, where Rorschach asks you what you see on his ink-blot test. Plus there's a new Dr. Manhattan origins video.

6 Minutes To Midnight is pretty damn impressive - type in your name, and you're sent on Rorscach's journey to uncover the mysteries behind each of the film's characters. It also includes new pics and sounds from the film itself, behind each puzzle. But hurry up - the Doomsday Clock is ticking.

In other news NBC has a character video for Dr. Manhattan, which aired on National Treasure this week. Our Watchmen clip cup certainly runneth over. Here it is:

Watchmen is out in theaters on March 6, 2009.

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<![CDATA[9 Questions You May Have About Watchmen]]> You've seen the posters, the many trailers and featurettes and followed the lawsuit. But with Watchmen hitting screens on Friday, you may still be wondering what it's all about. Let us try to help.

We don't want to spoil the movie for those of you who haven't read the book, but there may be somethings that you need - or want - to know before you head to the theaters on Friday (or Thursday night, if you're very excited). So here are nine questions that you just might want some answers to, just in case. Click through to learn more.

What Is Watchmen?
Who Are The Watchmen?
Why Is Watchmen So Important?
Why Was Watchmen Supposed To Be Unfilmable?
Where Does It Take Place?
Who's The Giant Blue Guy?
What's With Characters With "II" After Their Names, Like Nite Owl II And Silk Spectre II?
What Is Tales of The Black Freighter, Anyway?
What's This About A Squid? (Spoilers, No, Seriously.)

The one question we're not answering yet? Whether we think you should go and see the movie... You'll have to wait for our review, coming early next week, for that one.

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<![CDATA[Who's The Giant Blue Guy?]]> That would be Dr. Manhattan. Yes, he spends a lot of the film naked; being transformed from an everyday nuclear scientist into what is essentially a glowing blue god with powers and perspective beyond those of normal human beings tends to make you less bothered about things like "clothing," apparently.

Manhattan - formerly Jon Osterman - is the only member of the Watchmen cast with superpowers; all of the others are, in their ways, mostly regular people in ridiculous outfits who fight crime with the help of technology and training... Batman, to all intents and purposes. Nite Owl is the most direct Batman-analog (complete with Batmobile-analog, the Owlship... although you can blame that one on Nite Owl's more direct inspiration the Blue Beetle), but both Rorschach and Ozymandias split well-known Batman traits between them (Rorschach gets the detective skills and obsessiveness, while Ozymandias is given the intelligence and faultless strategic-planning, as well as an element of the Bruce Wayne lifestyle); in comparison, Silk Spectre and the Comedian are more generic character types (Spectre in particular; Watchmen is a curiously male story) that owe less to superhero history and more to general popular culture archetypes.

That Manhattan becomes more than human is an important part of Watchmen; in plot terms, it alters the balance of power politically, allowing for America to become the particular dystopia that it is by the time the story takes place, but it also allowed Moore and Gibbons to step outside of the story to an extent and explore less immediate themes and more inventive storytelling techniques through the character's eyes. Manhattan's inhuman perspective also acts as an important counterpoint to the all-too-human failings of the other characters which drive the story. In many ways (and, perhaps ironically considering the emotional detachment of the character), Manhattan is the heart of Watchmen.

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<![CDATA[Where Does It Take Place?]]> Watchmen takes place in an alternate America of 1985, complete with Cold War references like the Doomsday plot and nuclear paranoia, along with more subtle changes. The history of Watchmen's world mirrors our own until the 1940s, when "costumed adventurers" - the book's name for superheroes - started to appear (This timeline follows our world's timeline for the emergence of superheroes in comics). In 1959, an accident transformed scientist Jon Osterman into Dr. Manhattan, a being with godlike power, permanently shifting the global power structure in the US' favor, leading to (amongst other things) Vietnam becoming the 51st state of the USA following a significantly different war in the 1960s. In Watchmen's 1985, Richard Nixon is still president, having used the Comedian to cover up Watergate successfully and repealed the 22nd Amendment to remain in power for five terms; the result, perhaps, of Alan Moore's own political pessimism about then-British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's successful third election.

Amongst the minor, yet interesting, changes in the world in this alternate timeline: Superheroes are, essentially, outlawed by a 1977 law introduced by Senator Keene, which banned "costumed vigilantism" as a result of riots following the police going on strike in protest to extreme methods used by superheroes. The few active superheroes remaining are either outlaws (Rorschach) or government agents (the Comedian); this idea was later recycled by Marvel Comics for their 2006 Civil War series and related comics.

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<![CDATA[Who Are The Watchmen?]]> This is kind of a trick question. In the original comic, there isn't actually a group of people who call themselves the Watchmen. The superheroes all belonged to teams called the Minutemen, named for Paul Revere's militia during the American Revolutionary War, or the Crimebusters. The comic takes its title from the phrase "Who Watches The Watchmen?" (which appears at various points during the book, including as graffiti in the background of scenes), a translation of the Latin "Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?," from Plato.

Essentially, "Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?" is a distillation of one of the main themes of Watchmen; namely, who will protect us from our protectors. Plato's response is that the protectors must police themselves, and should be taught that they are better than us so that the protect us out of a sense of obligation and duty. Moore and Gibbons' story not only shows us the heroes policing themselves through Rorschach's investigations (and ultimate discovery), but also at least two heroes who believe that they are better than us (Dr. Manhattan and Ozymandias).

In the movie, "Watchmen" becomes the name of the superhero team, because Latin-based allusions don't always fare well with mainstream audiences. Insert your own joke about Hollywood patronizing its audience here.

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<![CDATA[Watchmen's Axis Of Evil Has A Dangerous "Package"]]> New stills from Zack Snyder's Watchmen are popping up all over, and the movie's minor bad guys are looking pretty crazy, nothing says evil like a giant swastika. Plus check out Nite Owl's snow gear.

Thanks to Total Film, we can now get an better look at the villains from Zack Snyder's Watchmen movie that we only had mere video glimpses of before. I only wish there was more of these crazy looking baddies. Plus Empire Magazine has a round up of character images, including one non-blue face Dr. Manhattan. Oh yeah and holy hell those outfits are tight (thanks for pointing that out guys)

To view additional new Watchmen stills check out Empire Magazine and Total Film.

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<![CDATA[Dr. Manhattan's Blue Man Bits Now In HD]]> We reported about the great lengths that director of the Watchmen comic book adaptation Zack Snyder went to keep Dr. Manhattan's blue downstairs tasteful yet accurate for viewers. Heck, we've even blogged the almost wang exposing moments where you got to see Billy Crudup (Dr. Manhattan's) "manness" in the Watchmen diaries and making of Manhattan moments. But finally we're bringing you the full Dr. Manhattan in HD no less. Obviously NSFW.

The new trailer for Snyder's Watchmen that was played at this years Scream Awards was later released on HD and low and behold there was Dr. Manhattans blue wonder.

One of the many things I'm loving about the Watchmen live action movie is that they're embracing Dr. Manhattan's "character." Good on you Zack.

Watchmen will open on March 6.

[via Newsarama]

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<![CDATA[New Watchmen Diary Almost Flashes Us Dr. Manhattan's Goods]]> The latestWatchmen journal is out, and this time we get a behind-the-scenes look at the cinematography, and how the team tried to make every scene symmetrical and exactly like the set-up of the graphic novel. Plus new images of Dan Dreiberg as the second Nite Owl and Billy Crudup all blued-up in his Dr. Manhattan green screen-wear, coming within a few millimeters of a full exposure. [IGN]

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<![CDATA[io9 Analyzes Three Leaked Scripts for Watchmen]]> While Director Zack Snyder is working away feverishly to complete his live-action adaptation of Alan Moore's seminal Watchmen graphic novel, we decided to take a look at the three versions of the film's script floating around on the etherwebs. This project has had several stalled-out development attempts since 1986, and reading through some of these it's easy to see why. Check out the breakdown of the top three below.



Note: hit the links to read these suckers for yourselves. The Alex Tse draft was out there at one point (we saved an older copy), so you might be able to find it by sifting the web. Or you could just put David Hayter's draft in a tumbler and give it a couple of shakes, it's roughly the same experience.

Sam Hamm, 1989: Hamm is probably best-known for writing Batman, also in 1989, so it's probably no small wonder that studios suits thought he'd be perfect to adapt Watchmen for Joel Silver at Fox. However, the resulting script is pretty much utter trash.


  • In the opening scene, the Watchmen try to foil a terrorist scheme in the Statue of Liberty, although it results in the death of their teammate Captain Metropolis, and Lady Liberty gets blown up. Cue the government's war on "masks" and superheroes.

  • The opening credits are described as dozens of watches floating around the screen. Lame.

  • Adrian Veidt has developed smokeless cigarettes that are supposedly non-cancerous, while "cleaning your lungs at the same time." A far cry from the glass pipes in the original, plus it turns out Veidt was actually giving them cancer. Evil.

  • Veidt has also created "Nostalgia," which isn't a perfume like in the comics, but rather an "anti-aging" Dick Clark-esque skin cream.

  • The whole premise is built on the fact that the creation of Dr. Manhattan changed the world forever, so Veidt spends his time and millions trying to create a wormhole in time and space so he can kill Jon Osterman before he becomes the good doc. Dr. Manhattan stops him, but realizes he was right and goes back in time to prevent himself from existing, thereby changing the future.

  • This "new world" (actually, our own present-day New York City) shimmers into existence around Dan (Night Owl), Laurie (Silk Spectre), and Rorschach, leaving them confused and wondering what happened. Fin.

  • Lamest moment: EXT. SEAPORT - THAT MOMENT - DUSK
    Ground level. From the midst of the bewildered CROWD we watch as the OWLSHIP and the CTU talk some serious trash:

    NIGHT OWL OVER OWLSHIP LOUDSPEAKER— "or we'll BLOW YOUR ASSES OUT OF THE SKY!"

    CTU LOUDSPEAKER — "UNREGISTERED CRAFT. IDENTIFY YOURSELF."

    OWLSHIP LOUDSPEAKER — "BABY . . . WE'RE A BLAST FROM THE PAST."

  • David Hayter, 2003: Hayter was tapped to write the script once the project ended up at Paramount in turnaround from Fox. Hayter, who also wrote X-Men and X-Men 2 (and plays the voice of Snake in the Metal Gear Solid video games) stayed much closer to the source material than Hamm did, but he took some liberties as well.

  • Dr. Manhattan is much more godlike in this script, creating a "magic mirror" for Laurie that can allow her to see any point in her past. This only seems to serve as a plot device so that we can see her fighting with The Comedian in the past.

  • Dr. M also uses his abilities to give Laurie one of the lamest superpowers since Jubilee: she can now shoot a blue ball of energy from her fingers, slingshot-style.

  • She uses this power to try and stop Adrian, but he catches the ball and pummels her. Not quite as dramatic as catching a bullet, is it?

  • Instead of a vat-grown alien-tentacled telepath, Veidt fires a concentrated beam of radiation at orbital mirrors which reflect into New York City, killing 20 million people.

  • Night Owl and Veidt square off in the end, and although Veidt beats the crap out of him, Night Owl still wins by tricking Veidt with an Owl-o-rang and killing him. Yes, really.

  • Lamest moment: ADRIAN — "Why an Owl? I mean, assuming your intention is to intimidate the criminal element... What's so frightening about an owl?"

    DAN — "I don't know, really. I guess it's because... No matter how hard you listen, you never hear them coming."

    Dan DUCKS. Having circled the room, the OWL-WING ZOOMS OUT OF THE DARKNESS, OWL-FACE SCREECHING INTO FRAME —

    — And STRIKES ADIAN THE IN THE CHEST, KNOCK HIM OFF HIS FEET. Adrian SLAMS to the ground, THE BOOMERANG'S LEFT WIND IMBEDDED IN HIS SOLAR PLEXUS. He wheezes blood.

  • Alex Tse, 2006: Novice writer Tse was hired to come in and work on David Hayter's draft, which remains mostly intact. He changes a few things, but it still seems like it's mostly Hayter's script.

  • Dr. Manhattan is seen as the "peacekeeper of the world," keeping all of the world's government in check, for better or for worse.

  • Rorschach busts in on an army officer with a hooker, beats the crap out of him (and her) and takes his uniform. Later, he disguises himself as the officer, so he can enter Dr. Manhattan's army lab and tell him about The Comedian's death.

  • Veidt impersonates Dr. Manhattan, and fires beams of concentrated... er, "big blue energy clouds" into key cities around the globe, killing three million people.

  • Dan and Veidt square off again, but this time Dan crashes the Owl-Ship via remote control into Veidt, wounding him badly. You think he might survive, but as Laurie flies the ship out, she sets his body on fire. Whoops.

  • Lamest moment: ADRIAN — "I have to say, I've always thought your choice of an owl was quite juvenile."

    DAN — "Really? I've always liked owls..."

    Adrian sees that Dan has pulled one last item from his belt. Adrian STEPS on Dan's WRIST, bones crunching. Dan's hand falls OPEN, revealing the OWL-SHIP REMOTE.

    DAN (cont'd) — "... because you can never hear them coming."

    BEHIND ADRIAN: FLOODLIGHTS BLAZE, targeting Adrian as the OWL-SHIP CRASHES THROUGH THE WINDOW and into Adrian and Dan.



Thankfully, both Hayter's and Tse's scripts keep Rorschach as the central character, complete with his journal voiceovers, his origin backstory told to the police psychiatrist, and the fateful envelope sent to The New Frontiersman offices. Also of note is that none of these scripts feature "The Tales of the Black Freighter," which Snyder is filming, although they do feature shots of a kid reading comic books near a newsstand.

At any rate, we'll be watching these Watchmen.

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