Curiosity Inc. wrote:
Finally saw it.
My big problem is that the Black Freighter clips may as well have been commercial breaks for how much they contributed to the pacing and content of the story. One of the reasons that Black Freighter worked so well in the comic is that the main narrative continued over the comic with juxtaposing voice-overs, like the Dr. Manhattan interview did with the alley fight (both in the movie and in the comic). Without that two-way commentary, Black Freighter just isn't firing on all cylinders.
It doesn't have to. It works without the real time commentary.
Curiosity Inc. wrote:
Moreover, the TotBF short ended with the captain very harshly condemning himself and detailing all the ways in which he went wrong. On its own, that works as a nice commentary to tie the cartoon to the main narrative. In the Ultimate Cut, it's just too much. The captain spends at least a full minute chastising himself while Ozymandias is trying to justify his actions and that pretty much destroys the moral ambiguity factor.
To be fair, most of the lines with captain were lifted directly from the book.. The only difference is where it is was placed.Sure the movie loses a bit of it's moral ambiguity but it does a better job getting the anti-superhero themes across. Hell, when the movie came out in the theaters, most people I talked to, thought the moral of the story was that Veidt was right, and Dr. Manhattan made a "noble' sacrifice for the greater good. Even with the new TBF before the destruction of NY, it's still pretty morally ambiguous. If you were a first time viewer, after the TBF and NY scene, Veidt's actions are shone in a positive light all the way through-out the movie until the last shot of Rorschach journal, which might cast a little bit of doubt on Veidt, but then again if you were a first time viewer you wouldn't even think of that.
Curiosity Inc. wrote:
As for the Bernies -- and believe me, it breaks my heart to say this -- I felt that they were grossly underutilized. The Bernies were always meant to be a kind of Greek chorus, giving their thoughts on the comic's events from a "man on the street" point of view, but they just didn't have the screen time to do that here. Additionally, I didn't realize until now just how much time our heroes spend talking about the incoming holocaust. That was nice for the TC and DC, but it leaves very little for the Bernies to talk about in the UC.
Well they were only meant to help segue in and out TBF. In the movie, the Bernies with TBF wouldn't have made any sense, since most of the scenes revolved around TBF.