The Music of Watchmen
By trying to be true to the graphic novel and reach a wider audience, the soundtrack is merely adequate.
Tyler Bates 'Watchmen: Music From the Motion Picture' -
When director Zack Snyder originally professed his desire to stay as true to the Watchmen graphic novel as possible, in some interviews he also extended it to the music choices as well. The much lauded source material uses a lot of musical cues throughout, so it stands to reason that some would find their way into the film's soundtrack. The first, and most hard hitting of those songs, is Bob Dylan's epic "Desolation Row," a song whose 11-minutes of lyrical poetry might even be more formidable than Zack Snyder's task of bringing Watchmen to the big screen. Now at midnight all the agents
There are a few other songs that are true to the original, one of which is Billie Holiday's "You're My Thrill," famously blasted from the Owl Ship (see above panel) as a sort of foreplay for Night Owl and Silk Spectre II as they take part in a spontaneous rescue mission (which also, interestingly enough, acts as a form of foreplay). In the movie version, all this superhero foreplay leads to a Leonard Cohen climax of "Hallelujah", making the song both a cliché and party to what amounts to a cheap joke. Simon & Garfunkel's "Sound of Silence" gets the cliché treatment as well, sombering up a funeral. Meanwhile, the most entertaining portion of the film is the opening montage, which utilizes the Bob Dylan tagline for Ozymandias' Nostalgia Perfume ("The Times They Are a-Changin'"), which shows that you can be true to the source and build upon it. Playlist: Songs from the Watchmen Graphic Novel
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