Movie disappointing. Never compromise.
If it didn't compromise, it'd be out in the theatre for a week, they would actually lose money, and we would never even see a film attempt to get close to what snyder at least tried to pull off. so would it be worth it? because the hundreds of people that worked on the film should have made it just for you and us fans? it's a bit of an ethical quagmire, but so is the end of the watchmen.
exactly he was crying because he was cracking under the pressure of what he knew Adrian was gonna do.The list is explained aswell it is the list of people under Pyramid Transnational.
That's still kinda irks me a lil bit,
AS a normal viewer who did not read the book,
How can SOMEBODY LIKE The Comedian, gets upset as something like that, surely with his Nihilistic nature and experience as a sociapath, why would Ozy's actions disturbed someone like The Comedian to even make him cry???
hurm. just watching the movie again last night, attempting to divorce as much as possible my knowledge of the comic so that I could watch it as just a film, I noticed two things. Veidt isn't noticeably villainous to begin with. To the layman, Veidt probably just blurs into the backdrop. In fact, the scene with the oil and auto-moguls seemed to do a decent job at making him seem like he was one of the sanest of the bunch.
As far as the Comedian goes, I noticed a lot of 'pathos' from the beginning. Almost every scene he's in, it seems like he's trying to hold himself up as the Comedian, as the nihilist/prankster (captain america meets moore's Joker), with a considerable amount of effort. Of course we can see that he derives pleasure from the atrocities he commits, but during a lot of the dialogue, we can see him hesitant, 'bitter' as Dr. Manhattan says, to which he responds, "no, i think it's hilarious." There's a bit of uncertainty there, it seemed a bit forced. And when he screams 'medic!' after shooting the pregnant vietnamese woman, he throws over the table and storms out. That hardly conveyed a sense of detached, nihilistic humor. With these things in mind and to watch for, it makes perfect sense (once again, considering the film alone) that he breaks down in Moloch's.