Set in an alternate history where masked vigilantes are treated as outlaws, Watchmen embraces the nostalgia of the original groundbreaking graphic novel of the same name, while attempting to... Read allSet in an alternate history where masked vigilantes are treated as outlaws, Watchmen embraces the nostalgia of the original groundbreaking graphic novel of the same name, while attempting to break new ground of its own.Set in an alternate history where masked vigilantes are treated as outlaws, Watchmen embraces the nostalgia of the original groundbreaking graphic novel of the same name, while attempting to break new ground of its own.
- Won 11 Primetime Emmys
- 55 wins & 74 nominations total
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Summary
Reviewers say 'Watchmen' is a complex, ambitious series that delves into race, politics, and power, continuing the graphic novel's legacy. Praised for intricate storytelling, strong performances, and bold issue exploration, it faces criticism for deviating from the source material and political undertones. Cinematography, character development, and graphic novel integration are lauded, yet some find it confusing and inconsistent. Overall, 'Watchmen' is a divisive, compelling addition sparking debate among fans and critics.
Featured reviews
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I'm actually surprised by "Watchmen." Pleasantly surprised. It wasn't spectacular, but it was cohesive, relevant, and impactful.
"Watchmen" spans roughly 100 years but mainly takes place in current day Tulsa, Oklahoma. To set up some of the current day events, the show takes us back to 1920 and the destruction of Black Wall Street. In 1920 quite a few race riots occurred, but none more destructive than the one in Tulsa when angry white people razed the Black part of town.
Oh yeah; race, racism, and historical injustice is a big part of "Watchmen."
In current day Tulsa the police wear masks to hide their identity after a racist organization called the Calvary killed nearly every cop and their families in a coordinated attack. The Calvary are known for their extremist views and Rorshach masks. The main character is Angela Abar (Regina King), a Tulsa police officer who is in the center of converging storylines.
The show is very well written. It deals with a few delicate subject matters and doesn't stumble. The script was helped with the aid of veteran actors like Jeremy Irons, Louis Gossett Jr., Don Johnson, and Jean Smart. Also competently chipping in are Tim Blake Nelson and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II. The show has a few pleasant twists in it to keep it fresh and forward-facing. I'm almost glad they didn't continue the show because at least it finished on a high note.
Max.
"Watchmen" spans roughly 100 years but mainly takes place in current day Tulsa, Oklahoma. To set up some of the current day events, the show takes us back to 1920 and the destruction of Black Wall Street. In 1920 quite a few race riots occurred, but none more destructive than the one in Tulsa when angry white people razed the Black part of town.
Oh yeah; race, racism, and historical injustice is a big part of "Watchmen."
In current day Tulsa the police wear masks to hide their identity after a racist organization called the Calvary killed nearly every cop and their families in a coordinated attack. The Calvary are known for their extremist views and Rorshach masks. The main character is Angela Abar (Regina King), a Tulsa police officer who is in the center of converging storylines.
The show is very well written. It deals with a few delicate subject matters and doesn't stumble. The script was helped with the aid of veteran actors like Jeremy Irons, Louis Gossett Jr., Don Johnson, and Jean Smart. Also competently chipping in are Tim Blake Nelson and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II. The show has a few pleasant twists in it to keep it fresh and forward-facing. I'm almost glad they didn't continue the show because at least it finished on a high note.
Max.
A thoroughly entertaining, grippingly intriguing, beautifully complex and bizarre show
Absolutely gripping and intriguing. Exquisitely stylish, dark, gritty, violent and thought-provoking. This is an absolute binge-worthy show. The cinematography, use of lighting and color is masterful. The transitions are magical. The somber, ominous, mysterious-sounding electronic-tinged soundtrack from Trent and Atticus is beautiful. It sets the tone perfectly for the show and acts as a sort of character throughout the episodes. The use of music and audio design is excellent. As dark and bizarre as the show can be, it actually has moments that are pretty funny that lighten things up. Like Robert Redford being one of the 4 most important presidents. The world-building is immaculate and fascinating. It makes you wonder what our world would be like if history had turned out slightly different. The performances from everyone are undeniably flawless, it drives the show forward and keeps it engaging.
I love how they tease things throughout the show via foreshadowing. The way that everything is presented and the way the story is told makes for a very entertaining and intriguing watch. The storytelling is impeccable. A show that cleverly covers topics like racism, segregation, law enforcement, government, legacy, wealthy elites and conspiracy theories. It's also a satire on superheroes. Attention to detail is insane. It's a pretty bizarre show that gets weirder and weirder as it unfolds. It can be a bit cynical in a comedic way, but then again the show covers serious and relevant subject matter on our socio-political climate. The ideas they come up with for this show are out of this world, they're thought-provoking. The black and white episode was a masterpiece, incredible storytelling and an insightful origin story. I love how they give backstory as well to some of the other characters like Looking Glass, Sister Nite, Dr. Manhattan and Ozymandias.
The characters, the lore, the story, the world-building - everything is fantastic. You can't help but become consumed by the show. The further you get into each episode, the more layers start to unfold, the more the world starts to open up and the more you learn about everything that's going on. The best part is seeing how everything and everyone is connected. It's a beautiful mix of Sci-Fi, Mystery, History, Action and Drama. Watchmen is thoroughly entertaining, grippingly intriguing, beautifully complex and bizarre. A show that's masterfully put together and brilliantly told. This one definitely deserves to be watched.
I love how they tease things throughout the show via foreshadowing. The way that everything is presented and the way the story is told makes for a very entertaining and intriguing watch. The storytelling is impeccable. A show that cleverly covers topics like racism, segregation, law enforcement, government, legacy, wealthy elites and conspiracy theories. It's also a satire on superheroes. Attention to detail is insane. It's a pretty bizarre show that gets weirder and weirder as it unfolds. It can be a bit cynical in a comedic way, but then again the show covers serious and relevant subject matter on our socio-political climate. The ideas they come up with for this show are out of this world, they're thought-provoking. The black and white episode was a masterpiece, incredible storytelling and an insightful origin story. I love how they give backstory as well to some of the other characters like Looking Glass, Sister Nite, Dr. Manhattan and Ozymandias.
The characters, the lore, the story, the world-building - everything is fantastic. You can't help but become consumed by the show. The further you get into each episode, the more layers start to unfold, the more the world starts to open up and the more you learn about everything that's going on. The best part is seeing how everything and everyone is connected. It's a beautiful mix of Sci-Fi, Mystery, History, Action and Drama. Watchmen is thoroughly entertaining, grippingly intriguing, beautifully complex and bizarre. A show that's masterfully put together and brilliantly told. This one definitely deserves to be watched.
Well worth watching
The source material is a masterpiece, bold, uncompromising, subtle, witty, imaginative with very unique characters and an immersive world. Albeit one that is near-unfilmable, with the themes, the huge amount of content and the amount of depth needed. Also really liked the 2009 film version, flaws and all, by far Zack Snyder's best film and the only one to be close to being very good. So expectations were high for 2019's 'Watchmen', which is more a continuation set in an alternate universe than a direct adaptation.
'Watchmen' is well worth watching. It is not for everybody and it needed to get going quicker than it did and have a stronger finish for me to call it a masterpiece. There are though so many brilliant things, so in general to me the critical acclaim 'Watchmen' got is very much deserved. Even if the show didn't do much for me it would have been given at least a 4/10, and it doesn't deserve the extreme and very over the top negativity it got from the first episode alone from those that missed the point of what the show was trying to do. It goes very well with the film, as long as it's judged on its own terms (actually like them very much equally in their own way), and at its best it is as great as prime-'Lost' (that Damon Lindelof was also responsible for) and prime-'Game of Thrones', HBO's crowning jewel. The lesser episodes also to me still managed to be a lot better than the whole of the last season of 'Game of Thrones' and quite a lot better than lesser episodes of most shows (am including 'Lost' here too).
Is it perfect? As said, no. The first two episodes "It's Summer and We're Running Out of Ice" and "Martial Feats of Comanche Horsemanship" see 'Watchmen' at its weakest. While they are stylish, well-acted, intriguing and do a great job with its world-building and immersing one into those worlds, they are also quite slow-going and not always easy to follow. So yeah, the show was a bit of a slow-starter.
Although very entertaining and intriguing (with some of the show's most memorable moments), the Adrian Veidt/Ozymandias storyline at first was too much of a disconnect with everything else and his role only start to get clearer in the twist (which was basically confirmation of what the viewer was speculating all along, and this was even before the show aired) in "She Was Killed By Space Junk".
Despite actually liking "See How They Fly" on the whole, to me it did end on an anti-climactic note that is crying out for a second season (have actually heard and seen varying accounts as to whether there is going to be one) and the episode was on the over-stuffed side at times.
However, so much is done right. 'Watchmen' looks fantastic for a start. Incredibly stylish and atmospheric, almost cinematic quality. Really loved the interiors and exteriors of Veidt's castle. Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross provide another winner of a music score, being someone that loves their score for 'Gone Girl', very haunting and adds to the unsettlement complete with clever use of sound. There is some inspired use of pre-existing music, and none of the choices and placements are questionable. No awkward use of Leonard Cohen here like there was in the film.
Every one of the nine episodes were clearly produced and directed with a lot of passion, especially evident in "This Extraordinary Being" and "A God Walks Into Abar" (containing some of the best television in recent years). This was clearly done by people that had clear love for the source material. The writing is throughout witty and thought-provoking, with a fair share of grit as well. Complete with some great references and inside jokes that are both knowing and affectionate. One of the funniest and strangest moments of the show being Veidt's trial. Once 'Watchmen' got going, the storytelling was very compelling, even if it was not a direct adaptation of the source material it always captures the spirit of it, more so than the film perhaps.
It is very bold and uncompromising in tone throughout, as ought, the themes in the source material carry over and are expanded upon. As well as done in a way that's relevant today and done with a lot of force in a way not for the easily-sensitive, which has been the source of the show's divisiveness here and online. Found the characters fascinating, the development of Looking Glass in "Little Fear of Lightning" being one of the most striking examples. All the performances are on point. Regina King is a commanding lead and Jean Smart is every bit her equal. Tim Blake Nelson kills it as Looking Glass, his performance in "Little Fear of Lightning" is a tour de force, and Jeremy Irons is a big improvement over Matthew Goode in the film (far more of a charismatic presence, a lot more enigmatic and energetic and he actually looked as if he was having fun).
Overall, very very good and nearly great, started off uneven for a few episodes but it became pretty much superb after that so well worth sticking with. 8/10
'Watchmen' is well worth watching. It is not for everybody and it needed to get going quicker than it did and have a stronger finish for me to call it a masterpiece. There are though so many brilliant things, so in general to me the critical acclaim 'Watchmen' got is very much deserved. Even if the show didn't do much for me it would have been given at least a 4/10, and it doesn't deserve the extreme and very over the top negativity it got from the first episode alone from those that missed the point of what the show was trying to do. It goes very well with the film, as long as it's judged on its own terms (actually like them very much equally in their own way), and at its best it is as great as prime-'Lost' (that Damon Lindelof was also responsible for) and prime-'Game of Thrones', HBO's crowning jewel. The lesser episodes also to me still managed to be a lot better than the whole of the last season of 'Game of Thrones' and quite a lot better than lesser episodes of most shows (am including 'Lost' here too).
Is it perfect? As said, no. The first two episodes "It's Summer and We're Running Out of Ice" and "Martial Feats of Comanche Horsemanship" see 'Watchmen' at its weakest. While they are stylish, well-acted, intriguing and do a great job with its world-building and immersing one into those worlds, they are also quite slow-going and not always easy to follow. So yeah, the show was a bit of a slow-starter.
Although very entertaining and intriguing (with some of the show's most memorable moments), the Adrian Veidt/Ozymandias storyline at first was too much of a disconnect with everything else and his role only start to get clearer in the twist (which was basically confirmation of what the viewer was speculating all along, and this was even before the show aired) in "She Was Killed By Space Junk".
Despite actually liking "See How They Fly" on the whole, to me it did end on an anti-climactic note that is crying out for a second season (have actually heard and seen varying accounts as to whether there is going to be one) and the episode was on the over-stuffed side at times.
However, so much is done right. 'Watchmen' looks fantastic for a start. Incredibly stylish and atmospheric, almost cinematic quality. Really loved the interiors and exteriors of Veidt's castle. Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross provide another winner of a music score, being someone that loves their score for 'Gone Girl', very haunting and adds to the unsettlement complete with clever use of sound. There is some inspired use of pre-existing music, and none of the choices and placements are questionable. No awkward use of Leonard Cohen here like there was in the film.
Every one of the nine episodes were clearly produced and directed with a lot of passion, especially evident in "This Extraordinary Being" and "A God Walks Into Abar" (containing some of the best television in recent years). This was clearly done by people that had clear love for the source material. The writing is throughout witty and thought-provoking, with a fair share of grit as well. Complete with some great references and inside jokes that are both knowing and affectionate. One of the funniest and strangest moments of the show being Veidt's trial. Once 'Watchmen' got going, the storytelling was very compelling, even if it was not a direct adaptation of the source material it always captures the spirit of it, more so than the film perhaps.
It is very bold and uncompromising in tone throughout, as ought, the themes in the source material carry over and are expanded upon. As well as done in a way that's relevant today and done with a lot of force in a way not for the easily-sensitive, which has been the source of the show's divisiveness here and online. Found the characters fascinating, the development of Looking Glass in "Little Fear of Lightning" being one of the most striking examples. All the performances are on point. Regina King is a commanding lead and Jean Smart is every bit her equal. Tim Blake Nelson kills it as Looking Glass, his performance in "Little Fear of Lightning" is a tour de force, and Jeremy Irons is a big improvement over Matthew Goode in the film (far more of a charismatic presence, a lot more enigmatic and energetic and he actually looked as if he was having fun).
Overall, very very good and nearly great, started off uneven for a few episodes but it became pretty much superb after that so well worth sticking with. 8/10
An incredibly brilliant reimagining of a legendary comic masterpiece.
Not only is it an incredibly well-crafted series on all the best fronts of cinematography, story, effects, editing and acting performances, the way it spun the original Watchmen storyline around itself was mesmerizing. New, interesting characters combined with old favorites, and even a few shadows of their ghosts.
The performances by Regina King, Don Johnson, Time Blake Nelson and Yahya Abdul-Mateen III just to name a FEW of the outstanding roles, were award-worthy across the board.
Jeremy Irons, Jean Smart, Hong Chau, Louis Gossett, Jr...these were revelatory performances. Now a weak link among them.
Like a good book, I couldn't put it down and it left me wanting more. If you haven't seen it, you don't know what you're missing. I'm gonna go rewatch the series for a fourth time now.
The performances by Regina King, Don Johnson, Time Blake Nelson and Yahya Abdul-Mateen III just to name a FEW of the outstanding roles, were award-worthy across the board.
Jeremy Irons, Jean Smart, Hong Chau, Louis Gossett, Jr...these were revelatory performances. Now a weak link among them.
Like a good book, I couldn't put it down and it left me wanting more. If you haven't seen it, you don't know what you're missing. I'm gonna go rewatch the series for a fourth time now.
Entertaining
I absolutely loved Watchmen! It's a thrilling dramatic series that will absolutely keep you entertained throughout the series with its powerful storytelling! It's just a shame that they're only limiting it to one season. I know it was only suppose to be a one season limited show to begin with but you would think with how good the ratings were, how good all the reviews were, and all the awards it's won they would've tried for a 2nd season anyway. I mean this show broke records for how many award nominations it got including 26 Emmy nominations (it won huge awards such as Best Limited Series, Best Actress, Best Supporting Actor, Writing, etc., etc.). Oh well, we were lucky to have such an incredible show even if just for the one season.
Did you know
- TriviaSecond attempt at a Watchmen TV series. Terry Gilliam attempted an adaptation in the early 90s, but could conceive the epic story being possible only on television. Gilliam's vision went into pre-production with HBO and cast Robin Williams as Rorschach, Jamie Lee Curtis as Silk Spectre, Gary Busey as the Comedian and Kevin Costner as Nite Owl. The project ultimately dissolved after HBO failed to provide a large enough budget for Gilliam's vision. Gilliam himself later claimed afterwards that an adaptation would've been "unfilmable" anyway.
- GoofsNumerous characters say "calvary" instead of "cavalry" when referring to the Seventh Kavalry.
- Crazy creditsEach episode title appears onscreen as a sign or in the background of a scene.
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- 1h(60 min)
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- 1.78 : 1
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