Watchmen (TV Series)
From Iwe
- For the 2009 film, see Watchmen (film).
Watchmen | ||
Genre | Superhero Dystopia Action Drama | |
Created by | Damon Lindelof | |
Based on | Watchmen by Alan Moore | |
Starring | Regina King Don Johnson Tim Blake Nelson Yahya Abdul-Mateen II Andrew Howard Jacob Ming-Trent Tom Mison Sara Vickers Dylan Schombing Louis Gossett Jr. Jeremy Irons Jean Smart Hong Chau | |
Music by | Trent Reznor Atticus Ross | |
Country of origin | United States | |
No. of seasons | 1 | |
No. of episodes | 9 (list of episodes) | |
Production | ||
Executive producer(s) | Damon Lindelof Tom Spezialy Nicole Kassell Stephen Williams Joseph E. Iberti | |
Producer(s) | Karen Wacker John Blair | |
Production location(s) | United States Wales | |
Cinematography | Andrij Parekh Gregory Middleton Xavier Grobet Alex Disenhof | |
Editor(s) | David Eisenberg Henk Van Eeghen Anna Hauger | |
Running time | 52–67 minutes | |
Production company(s) | White Rabbit Paramount Television DC Entertainment Warner Bros. Television | |
Distributor | Warner Bros. Television Distribution | |
Release | ||
Original network | HBO | |
Original release | October 20 – December 15, 2019 | |
External links |
Watchmen is an American superhero drama limited television series that continues the 1986 DC Comics series Watchmen, created by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons. The TV series was created for HBO by Damon Lindelof, who also served as an executive producer and writer. Its ensemble cast includes Regina King, Don Johnson, Tim Blake Nelson, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Andrew Howard, Jacob Ming-Trent, Tom Mison, Sara Vickers, Dylan Schombing, Louis Gossett Jr. and Jeremy Irons, with Jean Smart and Hong Chau joining the cast in later episodes.
Lindelof likened the television series to a "remix" of the original comic series. While the series is technically a sequel, which takes place 34 years after the events of the comics within the same alternate reality, Lindelof wanted to introduce new characters and conflicts that create a new story within the Watchmen continuity, rather than creating a reboot. The series focuses on events surrounding racist violence in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in 2019. A white supremacist group called the Seventh Kavalry has taken up arms against the Tulsa Police Department because of perceived racial injustices, causing the police to conceal their identities with masks to prevent the Seventh Kavalry from targeting them in their homes following the "White Night". Angela Abar (King), a detective known as Sister Night, investigates the murder of her friend and the chief of the police, Judd Crawford (Johnson), and discovers secrets regarding the situations around vigilantism.
The series, originally promoted by HBO as an ongoing drama series, premiered on October 20, 2019, before concluding its nine-episode run on December 15. Lindelof left his role as showrunner after the first season, stating that he had completed his intended story. HBO subsequently confirmed there are no further plans for the show to continue without Lindelof returning in some capacity, and reclassified the work as a limited series with possible future installments.
The series received critical praise on its broadcast as well as commendation for highlighting the oft-forgotten 1921 Tulsa race massacre, which became poignant in the wake of the 2020 George Floyd protests. Watchmen received several awards, including 26 Primetime Emmy Award nominations, the most for any show in the 2019 television season.
Contents |
[edit] Premise
[edit] Cast and characters
- Main article: List of Watchmen characters
[edit] Main
- Regina King as Angela Abar / Sister Night, a Tulsa Police detective who wears a nun's habit and a balaclava. Faithe Herman portrays a young Angela Abar.
- Don Johnson as Judd Crawford, the chief of the Tulsa Police.[a]
- Tim Blake Nelson as Wade Tillman / Looking Glass, a Tulsa Police detective who wears a reflective mask. Phil Labes portrays a teenage Wade.
- Yahya Abdul-Mateen II as Calvin "Cal" Abar (né Jelani), Angela's husband who turns out to be a form of Jonathan "Jon" Osterman / Doctor Manhattan. Darrell Snedeger portrays Manhattan's original form and Zak Rothera-Oxley portrays a young Jon Osterman.
- Andrew Howard as Red Scare, a Tulsa Police detective who wears a predominantly red outfit and speaks with a Russian accent.
- Jacob Ming-Trent as Panda, a Tulsa Police detective who wears a full giant panda mask.
- Tom Mison as Mr. Phillips, a series of male clones of the original Mr. Phillips, who was originally created by Doctor Manhattan to serve as Veidt's servants.
- Mison also portrays the Game Warden, a mysterious and powerful clone of the original Mr. Phillips who keeps Veidt in line and serves as his archenemy.
- Sara Vickers as Ms. Crookshanks, a series of female clones of the original Mrs. Crookshanks originally created by Doctor Manhattan to serve as Veidt's servants.
- Dylan Schombing as Christopher "Topher" Abar (né Doyle), Angela's and Cal's adopted son whose biological parents, the Doyles, were killed on the White Night.
- Louis Gossett Jr. as Will Reeves, Angela's grandfather, formerly known as Hooded Justice, the first masked hero who inspired the Minutemen. Jovan Adepo portrays a young Will Reeves.
- Jeremy Irons as Adrian Veidt, a former businessman and the vigilante Ozymandias, the "smartest man in the world". He is now living as an aristocratic lord of a country manor that turned out to be on Europa.
- Jean Smart as Laurie Blake,<ref name="Cast&Crew"/> formerly the second Silk Spectre, who has since become an FBI agent and member of the Anti-Vigilante Task Force.
- Hong Chau as Lady Trieu, the owner of Trieu Industries, a corporation that bought out Veidt Enterprises following news of his death, and later revealed to be Veidt's daughter by artificial insemination.
[edit] Recurring
- James Wolk as Joe Keene Jr., a Senator and leader of the Seventh Kavalry who aims to become President. His father is responsible for the Keene Act banning masked vigilantism.
- Frances Fisher as Jane Crawford, Judd's wife who is a member of the Seventh Kavalry.
- Jessica Camacho as Pirate Jenny, a member of the Tulsa police who wears a pirate-inspired outfit
- Adelynn Spoon as Emma Abar, Angela and Cal's younger adopted daughter.
- Lily Rose Smith as Rosie Abar, Angela and Cal's older adopted daughter.
- Steven Norfleet as O. B. Williams, the late father of Will Reeves and great-grandfather of Angela Abar.
- Alexis Louder as Ruth Williams, the late mother of Will Reeves and great-grandmother of Angela Abar.
- Jolie Hoang-Rappaport as Bian, a young clone of Trieu's mother passed off as her daughter.
- Elyse Dinh portrays Trieu's mother, the original Bian as an adult.
[edit] Guest starring
- Dustin Ingram as Agent Petey, an FBI agent who joins Laurie in investigating a murder in Tulsa. He is secretly a vigilante known as Lube Man.
- Cheyenne Jackson as an actor portraying Hooded Justice on American Hero Story.
- Henry Louis Gates Jr. as himself, in the position of Secretary of the Treasury.
- Jim Beaver as Andy, Topher's grandfather.
- Lee Tergesen as Mister Shadow, a vigilante who is drawn out by Laurie Blake.
- David Andrews as Deputy Director Max Farragut, Laurie Blake and Dale Petey's superior.
- Michael Imperioli as himself, appearing in an advertisement for New York City.
- Chris Whitley as an actor who portrays Captain Metropolis in American Hero Story.
- Eileen Grubba as Cynthia Bennett, Wade's ex-wife.
- Paula Malcomson as Renee, a radiologist who is a member of the Seventh Kavalry.
- Jake McDorman as Nelson Gardner / Captain Metropolis, one of the founding members of the New Minutemen.
- Glenn Fleshler as Fred, a racist [[Shopkeeper}shopkeeper]] who runs afoul of Will.
- Danielle Deadwyler as June, Will's wife and Angela's grandmother who works as a reporter. Valeri Ross portrays an older June.
- Anthony Hill as Marcus Abar, the father of Angela Abar who is killed by a suicide bomber.
- Devyn A. Taylor as Elise Abar, the mother of Angela Abar who is killed by a suicide bomber.
- Ted Johnson as Joe Keene Sr., the Senator who passed the Keene Act, father of Joe Keene Jr., and member of Cyclops.
[edit] Episodes
No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Pro. code | U.S. vierwers (millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "It's Summer and We're Running Out of Ice" | Nicole Kassell | Damon Lindelof | October 20, 2019 | 101 | 0.799 |
During Tulsa's Black Wall Street massacre in 1921, a black child loses his parents O.B. and Ruth in the chaos and escorts an orphaned baby to safety. Ninety-eight years later, masked Officer Charlie Sutton is hospitalized after being shot by a member of the Seventh Kavalry. Chief Judd Crawford calls for retaliation to hunt down the shooter. Angela Abar hears of the shooting and hunts down a suspect under her secret persona, Sister Night. With help from another costumed police officer, Wade Tillman / Looking Glass, Angela elicits the shooter's location at a cattle ranch used by the Kavalry. Angela, Judd, and other officers hunt them down, instigating a shootout that results in the deaths of all Kavalry members present, including the shooter. Sometime later, Judd runs over a spike strip while driving to the hospital to visit Sutton. Angela receives a call from someone who instructs her to find something at a countryside tree. She heads to the location, where she finds an elderly black man in a wheelchair below a hanged Judd. Meanwhile, an old lord living at an unspecified country estate writes a play called The Watchmaker's Son and celebrates an "anniversary" with his two servants. | ||||||
2 | "Martial Feats of Comanche Horsemanship" | Nicole Kassell | Damon Lindelof & Nick Cuse | October 27, 2019 | 102 | 0.765 |
In World War I, O.B., a soldier in the American army, pockets a piece of German propaganda challenging their racial equality. In the present, Angela takes the elderly man she found under the tree to her hideout. He says his name is Will and claims to be her grandfather, which she later validates. The police round up several suspects from Nixonville on suspicion of Judd's lynching. Will warns Angela of Judd's duplicity, which she initially doubts. During Judd's wake however, while searching his house, she discovers a Ku Klux Klan outfit in a secret closet. She asks Will how he knew, to no avail, so she arrests him. As she places him in her car, a flying craft drops an electromagnet and takes the vehicle away with Will inside, dropping the propaganda his father had given him. Meanwhile, the lord watches his servants Mr. Phillips and Ms. Crookshanks perform his play: a retelling of Doctor Manhattan's origins. The lord incinerates Phillips as part of the play and names one of his other servants—apparent clones of Phillips and Crookshanks—the new "Mr. Phillips". | ||||||
3 | "She Was Killed by Space Junk" | Stephen Williams | Damon Lindelof & Lila Byock | November 3, 2019 | 103 | 0.648 |
After faking a bank robbery to draw out a vigilante, Agent Laurie Blake of the FBI's Anti-Vigilante Task Force is asked by both the FBI and Senator Joe Keene Jr. to investigate Judd's murder. Laurie tracks down the Tulsa police rounding up Kavalry suspects and learns about Judd's funeral, where she makes contact with Angela. A Kavalry member wearing a suicide vest attempts to seize Joe, but Laurie kills him while Angela saves the other attendees. Later, Laurie talks to Angela, discussing the wheelchair treads at Judd's lynching and Judd's secret closet; warning her not to protect Judd. That night, Laurie uses a special phone booth to tell Doctor Manhattan a "brick joke" while he is on Mars. As she leaves, Angela's empty car drops in front of her. She looks up, sees Mars, and laughs. Meanwhile, the lord unsuccessfully tests a protective suit with a Phillips clone. He hunts down a bison for its thicker hide, but is stopped by the "Game Warden", who later writes to remind him of the terms of his imprisonment. The lord responds in a letter acknowledging these terms, signing it as Adrian Veidt and goes out to hunt again in his Ozymandias outfit. | ||||||
4 | "If You Don't Like My Story, Write Your Own" | Andrij Parekh | Damon Lindelof & Christal Henry | November 10, 2019 | 104 | 0.707 |
Lady Trieu buys out the farmland of an Oklahoma couple just moments before an object from space crashes onto their property to claim ownership of it. Angela learns about Will's parents at the heritage center, when she hears her car crash outside and meets Laurie, finding a pill bottle inside. Later, Angela leaves the pill bottle and Judd's KKK outfit with Wade, and fails to capture an unknown vigilante who witnessed her dispose of Will's wheelchair. Laurie finds Will's fingerprints in Angela's car, as well as a connection to Trieu's facility at the Millennium Clock. Trieu provides them with a list of people with access to new lightweight drones, and in Vietnamese, tells Angela that Will wonders if she got the pill bottle. That evening, Trieu talks to Will about being upfront with Angela, but with events to come to a head in a few days, he would rather she figure it out herself. Meanwhile, Veidt collects fetuses from a lake to grow new clones of Phillips and Crookshanks after killing off all of the existing ones. With their help, Veidt launches the dead bodies with a catapult to test the limits of his prison. | ||||||
5 | "Little Fear of Lightning" | Steph Green | Damon Lindelof & Carly Wray | November 17, 2019 | 105 | 0.752 |
Wade suffers PTSD as a survivor of Veidt's 1985 squid attack. Laurie bugs Wade's desk, and learns that Angela asked him about the pills. Wade's ex-wife, Cynthia, tells him the pills are Nostalgia, which contain other people's memories. The Kavalry lure Wade to a warehouse, where they are testing a teleportation portal. Joe explains both he and Judd are Kavalry members trying to keep them in check. Joe coerces Wade's help to learn what Angela knows about Judd's death after showing him a video Veidt made a day before the 1985 attack and addressed to future President Redford, explaining his long-term plan; shaking Wade to his core. At the station the next day, Wade gets Angela to state that her grandfather was behind Judd's death. Laurie hears this and arrests Angela, but not before she ingests the pills. Wade returns home after work and Kavalry members arrive with guns. It is revealed that Veidt's prison is on a moon of Jupiter as he arranges servants' frozen bodies to spell out "Save Me" so they will be visible to a passing space probe. However, he is pulled back into the prison and arrested by the Game Warden. | ||||||
6 | "This Extraordinary Being" | Stephen Williams | Damon Lindelof & Cord Jefferson | November 24, 2019 | 106 | 0.620 |
Laurie tries to get Angela to agree to treatment before the Nostalgia kicks in, but the latter starts experiencing her grandfather's memories. In 1938, Will joins the New York Police Department, which is rife with racism. After discovering a plot called "Cyclops", his fellow white officers beat him and hang him from a tree, cutting him down at the last moment to warn him not to interfere in white affairs. While walking home, he dons a mask and hood to fight off men attacking a young couple. He is called a hero the next day and supported by his wife June; taking on the persona of "Hooded Justice". Will is invited to join the Minutemen by Captain Metropolis and begins an affair with him while June becomes pregnant. When Will finds that "Cyclops" is a plan by the KKK to hypnotize black people to incite riots among themselves, Will asks for the Minutemen's help in foiling the plot, but Captain Metropolis refuses. Enraged, Will dismantles the operation on his own, killing all involved. June, shocked by Will's consuming anger, leaves him and takes their son "home" to Tulsa. In the near-present, Will uses a modified form of the hypnotic technology to make Judd hang himself. Angela wakes up in Trieu's quarters, who has been treating her for the Nostalgia. | ||||||
7 | "An Almost Religious Awe" | David Semel | Stacy Osei-Kuffour & Claire Kiechel | December 1, 2019 | 107 | 0.779 |
Angela continues to be treated for the Nostalgia as her memories of losing her parents and her grandmother June in Vietnam mingled with Will's. She also learns that the Manhattan phone booths supposedly connected to Mars route to Trieu's facilities before Trieu herself tells her Manhattan is actually on Earth, in Tulsa, disguised as a human. After learning of the Kavalry's plan to capture and destroy Manhattan to become like him, Trieu plans to activate the Millennium Clock within the hour to save the world. Angela breaks free, rushes home, and tells Cal she loves him as a husband – calling him by the name Jon – before she bashes his head in and pulls out a small disc shaped like Manhattan's symbol, causing his body to glow blue. Laurie goes to speak to Jane Crawford about her husband's death, but falls into a trap door and is taken to the Kavalry's headquarters, where Joe reveals their plan to capture Manhattan to restore white supremacy. Laurie's partner Petey tries to track down Wade, finding his fallout shelter filled with dead Kavalrymen, but no sign of him. Meanwhile, Veidt is put on a year-long trial by the Game Warden, which he treats as a farce. | ||||||
8 | "A God Walks into Abar" | Nicole Kassell | Jeff Jensen & Damon Lindelof | December 8, 2019 | 108 | 0.822 |
In Vietnam 2009, Doctor Manhattan approaches Angela and convinces her that he is not an impostor by creating an egg out of thin air. He attempts to convince Angela to have dinner with him the next night, as they will fall in love later. Angela is highly skeptical, but Manhattan, after explaining his non-linear experience with time, explains that he had been creating life on Europa since 1985, and that in 2019, he will fall in love with her just as he is about to be taken by the Seventh Kavalry. He explains how he took up the identity of Cal to blend in, and used a device created by Veidt to give himself amnesia about his true identity until it was necessary for Angela to remove it. At Veidt's request, Manhattan transported him to Europa, and also visited Will to encourage him to help Angela in 2019. Angela, speaking to Manhattan in 2019, asks him to ask Will in 2009 how he knew of Judd's secrets, but realizes she gave that idea to Will just now. As the Kavalry prepare to attack, Angela goes to protect Manhattan, who sees this as the moment he fell in love with her, and helps her fend them off; knowing one last Kavalry member remained alive to use a tachyon cannon to capture him. In 2009, Angela accepts Manhattan's dinner proposal. In a post-credits scene, the Game Warden gives a captive Veidt another anniversary cake. Veidt finds a horseshoe baked inside and gleefully starts digging an escape tunnel. | ||||||
9 | "See How They Fly" | Frederick E.O. Toye | Nick Cuse & Damon Lindelof | December 15, 2019 | 109 | 0.935 |
Veidt, having written "Save Me Daughter" on Europa, is picked up in Trieu's spacecraft. Trieu wants her father and Bian, a clone of her mother, present when she activates a machine she developed to steal Manhattan's power for herself. The Kavalry, working with the Cyclops leaders, capture Manhattan while Joe prepares to take his powers. Laurie discovers Wade is alive, disguised as a Kavalry member. Just as the Kavalry activate their system, Trieu teleports the setup to downtown Tulsa, finding Joe has dissolved into ooze, and kills the Cyclops leaders. Before Trieu kills him, Manhattan uses the distraction to teleport Veidt, Laurie, and Wade to Karnak, where Veidt reworks his squid-rain system to send frozen squid to pulverize Trieu's device; killing Trieu in the process. Angela takes shelter in the theater where Will and her children are, where Will explains Manhattan had worked with him to bring about this necessary conclusion. Laurie and Wade bring Veidt to justice using a copy of the 1985 video. While cleaning up eggs from the night before, Angela recalls Manhattan's statement about transferring his powers through an organic medium. Finding one unbroken egg, Angela eats it and attempts to walk on water as she saw Manhattan do the night before. | ||||||
[edit] Production
[edit] Development
[edit] Writing
[edit] Casting
[edit] Music
[edit] Filming
[edit] Marketing
[edit] Continuation
[edit] Broadcast and distribution
[edit] Reception
[edit] Critical response
[edit] Ratings
No. | Title | Air date | Rating (18–49) | Viewers (millions) | DVR (18–49) | DVR viewers (millions) | Total (18–49) | Total viewers (millions) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "It's Summer and We're Running Out of Ice" | October 20, 2019 | 0.3 | 0.799 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
2 | Martial Feats of Comanche Horsemanship" | October 27, 2019 | 0.3 | 0.765 | N/A | 0.704 | N/A | 1.470 |
3 | "She Was Killed by Space Junk" | November 3, 2019 | 0.2 | 0.648 | 0.3 | 0.732 | 0.5 | 1.381 |
4 | "If You Don't Like My Story, Write Your Own" | November 10, 2019 | 0.2 | 0.707 | 0.3 | 0.721 | 0.5 | 1.429 |
5 | "Little Fear of Lightning" | November 17, 2019 | 0.3 | 0.752 | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD |
6 | "This Extraordinary Being" | November 24, 2019 | 0.2 | 0.620 | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD |
7 | "An Almost Religious Awe" | December 1, 2019 | 0.25 | 0.779 | 0.17 | 0.509 | 0.42 | 1.288 |
8 | "A God Walks into Abar" | December 8, 2019 | 0.28 | 0.822 | 0.19 | 0.527 | 0.47 | 1.349 |
9 | "See How They Fly | December 15, 2019 | 0.33 | 0.935 | 0.17 | 0.575 | 0.50 | 1.510 |
[edit] Audience viewership
[edit] Accolades
Year | Award | Category | Nominee(s) | Result | class="unsortable" | Ref. |
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[edit] Notes
- a. ^ Johnson is credited with the main cast in the first and sixth episodes and is credited as a guest star in episodes two and seven.
[edit] References
[edit] External links
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