I can't help but wonder, Miguel, did you happen to make the mistake of taking your kids to the movie?
I was watching a History channel or AMC special on comic books a couple of years ago. They were talking the mythology of comics, the history, the niche in culture, etc. The editor-in-chief of DC said something quite simple to observe, yet for some reason I had never personally thought of. He said not only have comics been shaped to draw in adult readers, the majority of comics today are not for children. Well if you can point to an event in comic history that was the start of that shift, it was 1986 and publication of Watchmen.
The movie was dark, subversive, sexual, smart, gluttonous, and engaged in socio-political themes that reflect the worst of society and the director had no choice in the matter. For if Snyder had any hope of translating the iconic Watchmen graphic novel to the screen, he had to remain faithful. Otherwise why take on this particular material if your intention is to make a generic, broad-appeal, superhero blockbuster.
I thought the style and characterization were excellent. The exposition was overlong at times but reflected Moore's writing style. Pacing was an issue with the movie but they crammed a 12 issue story into 2 hours and 42 minutes. Had the filmakers had the patience and the studio had the guts, they probably should have made a two movies, maybe a trilogy. The strongest performances were Jackie Earl Haley (Rorschach), Billy Crudup (Dr. Manhattan), and Jeffrey Dean Morgan (The Comedian). Malin Ackerman (Silk Spectre) and Patrick Wilson (Nite Owl) gave measured performances. Matthew Goode was overwhelmed by Ozymandias although admittedly had the toughest role. The Art direction was supreme! Much like there was a concious effort for Dave Gibbons/John Higgins (the original artists on the comics) to use secondary colors (Purple, orange, green) instead of the general primary colors (Red, Yellow, Blue), you could tell the directors stayed faithful to that scheme.
You could say that with such well-known source material, the weight of the pressure to stay true may have crushed the filmmakers in the end. Personally I admire and applaud the effort and had quite an enjoyable movie experience. This is one DVD that is definitely going to be in the collection.
A-