Watchmen TV Series Casting News & More

by Kimberly Melchor
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HBO has recently announced that there will be no less than six cast members for Damon Lindelof’s Watchmen comic book TV series pilot. In the years since Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons released their landmark Watchmen comics, the property has gotten both a prequel comic book miniseries (Before Watchmen) and a sequel comic series (Doomsday Clock), neither of which involved Moore or Gibbons. Watchmen was also adapted for the big screen in 2009 under Zack Snyder’s direction, and is now making its way to the small screen as a live-action show for the first time.

Lindelof, who previously co-created The Leftovers for HBO, posted a five-page statement to social media, claiming that Watchmen is a ‘remix’ of the property that will neither reboot nor reproduce the events of Moore and Gibbons’ comic book story. It’s not clear yet how many of the characters that survived the original Watchmen comic book saga will return in the TV show either, with Lindelof teasing that there will be several “New faces [and] new masks to cover them” on the series. However, we do now know at least some of the actors that will be appearing in this small screen iteration.

It is being reported that Regina King will play a lead role in Watchmen and will share the screen with seasoned TV veterans Don Johnson and Louis Gossett Jr. (from the original Miami Vice and Roots, respectively). The Watchmen TV show pilot will further include Adelaide Clemens (Rectify) and Andrew Howard (Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., Hell on Wheels), as well as the ever prolific movie and TV character actor Tim Blake Nelson (famous for his roles in films like O’Brother, Where Art Thou?).  King is almost certainly playing Angela Abraham, an “independent and intelligent [cop who’s] also a realist“.

It appears the Watchmen TV show will take place in the present, albeit the present-day version of the alternate universe in Moore and Gibbons’ original comics. In that world, the U.S. actually won the Vietnam War thanks to the involvement of costumed superheroes – especially that of Jon Osterman aka. Dr. Manhattan, a being with god-like powers and an allergy to clothes – and Richard Nixon was still the country’s president well into the 1980s. Lindelof has confirmed that Moore and Gibbons’ original twelve issues of Watchmen are canon to the show, meaning the series will (presumably) examine what happened in the aftermath of Adrian Veidt a.k.a. Ozymandias’ horrific attempt to bring about world peace through the slaughter of millions.

In a very long Instagram post the writer details his almost life-long history with Watchmen. The original story is something the famous showrunner feels is very sacred. It’s for this reason that he feels his TV story “must be original.

Day 140.

A post shared by Damon (@damonlindelof) on

The whole project sounds incredibly ambitious, weird and just a tiny bit confusing. Yet that’s exactly how a Watchmen adaptation should sound. The only way the series is really going to make any amount of sense is when it’s released and fans have a chance to pick apart and dissect every frame.

There is no release date set as of yet, but as soon as one is released, we will let you know.

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