in the land of do as you please
As to be expected, things have to be adjusted for film; things left out, things inserted where they weren't before, people seemingly older than they're supposed to be, and so on. With that said, I was satisfied with the film. Natalie Portman's English accent isn't as appalling as Drew Barrymore's, though far from perfect. Hugo Weaving's hidden face keeps us from saying "Mr. Anderson" to ourselves every time he comes up on screen. We know his voice, but it isn't the same one in The Matrix, thanks to his acting ability. John Hurt on the giant closed circuit TV made me think of him in his role in the film version of 1984, but mostly I kept thinking, are those his real teeth or were they meant to look like they're rotting at the gum line?
In all, I liked the dramatic flare (although slow in parts due to exposition); the beating music to signal the rise in tempo of the events to follow as thousands of masked citizens plough through riot police and convene at the House of Parliament (rather than 10 Downing Street) to watch the Fifth of November go down as it should have 400 years ago. The stuff of revolutions - when either lack of fear or stupidity cause you to face armed guards with nothing but your ideas and mask of anger and defiance to bring down the powers that be. It is by no means a revolutionary film, but it will help us remember that we are merely fed stories (and ideas) and it is up to us to decide whether there is truth in them or not. We'll see how Watchmen fares.