Nadie se imaginaba que WATCHMEN pudiera ser adaptado al cine... al menos, no en una buena película. Y entonces llegó el director Zack Snyder y sorprendió al mundo con la asombrosa 300 , una buena película que además era tremendamente fiel al cómic original. Cuando anunció que WATCHMEN sería su nuevo proyecto, todos pensaron que solo él podía lograr un buen resultado, y ya se ha convertido en la película más esperada del año.
Multitud de fotogramas y fotografías del rodaje. Entrevistas a Zack Snyder y el equipo técnico y creativo. Entrevistas a los actores principales. Comparativa entre el cómic y la película.
A former naval officer, Peter was already a published author in the rather disparate realms of Scandinavian archaeology and pen-and-paper role-playing games when he was tapped to pen the books Watchmen: The Art of the Film, Watchmen: The Official Film Companion, and 300: Rise of an Empire: The Art of the Film. His most recent movie book is Chappie: The Art of the Movie, based on the film by District 9 director Neill Blomkamp. His extensive background in Viking culture and history served him well when writing The Unofficial Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard Companion, due out from Ulysses Press in September, 2015. He also scripted the narration for the PSP game 300: March to Glory, and was responsible for the stories and screenplays for the games Watchmen: The End is Nigh and The Guardians of Ga’Hoole. His horror/thriller feature film (co-written with and directed by Clay Staub, produced by Scott Mednick), Devil’s Gate, is in post-production.
The large format picture book format lends itself to glossy photos and great presentation tedchniques but the proof is int hje writing. there are in depth interviews with all the main film cast and creative designers, FX experts etc and the writer obviously knows his stuff. Not just on the film but on the original comic book, the background detail added is not in the movie and hopefully will encourage readers to go back to the source.
I was pleasantly surprised by this book, and it's worth shelving next to your copy of the graphic novel. It goes beyond what a "making of" book can be. I actually read the whole thing, not just flipped through and looked at the pictures (which were also effectively presented). I really liked the section on Dave Gibbons, particularly where they showed where he signed the physical New York City street set.
"Las relaciones humanas son un mundo caótico cuyas reglas uno descubre a base de experiencias desagradables."
Repiten un poco mucho lo que ya te sabes, pero todas las curiosidades están muy guays. Also, el libro cada 2x3, se sienten solos, omg es que están tan solos wth.
11 stars ✨ the best! But DANNNNG the length of the movie (which is amazing start to finish) is just TOO loooooong. Wish it were broken up to 1/2 or 1/2/3… like LOTR etc. So yea the movie 4 stars for that. Lol …
Peter Aperlo, Watchmen: The Film Companion (Titan Books, 2009)
Very pretty, though as shallow as expected, book that straddles the line between “behind-the-scenes interest” and “marketing device”, not always successfully. (It should be noted I was a big fan of the movie, and so I'm not really unbiased about this in any way; your mileage may, and probably will, vary.) Despite my regular speculation that this was nothing more than a surprisingly expensive publicity campaign, and my wanting a great deal more about the actors who portrayed the characters, it's a breezy, picture-packed read that will look decent on your coffee table and appeal to fans of the film. And isn't that what books like this are all about? *** ½
A solid behind-the-scenes tie-in to the film, with good photography and better text, including many brief interviews with pretty much all of the principal cast and crew.
A little difficult to follow. Not my favorite, but I can understand the cult appreciation and following. Multiple moments that had me saying “what the fuck?” So if that’s for you, go for it.