Print Article
>> Back to the article
March 6, 2009
Watchmen sequel unlikely

LOS ANGELES - FANS should plan to savour every visual morsel when Watchmen swoops into movie theatres because the subversive superheroes of the landmark comic book series may never return to the big screen.

'There's no way I would be involved in a sequel or prequel,' said director Zack Snyder, who turned the graphic novel 300 into a 2007 blockbuster.

'Will they make one? I have no idea how you would. The work is the work. This movie is about ideas. Anything else you would do, if you did a sequel to it, misses the point entirely of what Watchmen is,' he said.

It's unclear whether Warner Bros would ever take a cue from Dr Manhattan, the blue-hued superbeing played by Billy Crudup who smoothly proclaims in the comic and the movie that 'nothing ever ends'. Jeff Robinov, president of Warner Bros production, declined to be interviewed for this story.

'Contractually, we are obligated,' Crudup said. 'I will do it. I just don't know what it is we would do.'

Unlike superheroes with superhistories like Batman or Spider-Man, decades worth of Watchmen source material doesn't exist.

In the 1980s, illustrator Dave Gibbons and writer Alan Moore (who has said he doesn't want to be associated with a Watchmen film) crafted only 12 chapters of the comic book-turned-graphic novel.

The nearly three-hour movie is faithful to the original novel, leaving almost nothing on the cutting room floor except Tales of the Black Freighter, a comic-within-the-comic woven throughout Watchmen. It will be released March 24 on DVD as an animated short film along with Under the Hood, the tell-all memoir from Watchmen. -- AP

Copyright © 2007 Singapore Press Holdings. All rights reserved. Privacy Statement & Condition of Access
S M T W T F S
07 08 09 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
Best viewed at 1152x864 resolution with IE 6.0 or FireFox 2.0 and above Copyright © 2008 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Co. Regn No. 198402868E | Privacy Statement | Terms & Conditions