Alan Moore is a Dick
Mar. 7th, 2009 07:21 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Just back from seeing The Watchman, and have a few thoughts. Warning: massive spoilers beneath the cut.
I went into the movie with low expectations. I'm not an Alan Moore fan. However, the movie proved to be very entertaining. The director has created a well-made film that tells a coherent story. Tone is always appropriate. This is not a piece of trash like The Spirit was. The cast, with one major exception, was quite good (the actor playing Ozymandias was very disappointing. Weak performance and bad diction). The major problem was the director followed the original source material rather than tossing it out like the garbage it was.
In short, Alan Moore is a dick.
For a man who's made his name in comic books, he sure hates heros. Moore refuses to imbue any kind of hero with competence. He seems to revel in presenting heros that are so flawed that they become impotent.
marthawells pointed out he wants to present super heros like they would actually be in real life. What Moore clearly doesn't understand is that we don't want heros as they would be in real life. Moore is just incapable of telling a story unless the hero is so fucked-up with his problems he can't function properly. Look at The League of Extroadinary Gentlemen. In the comic, Alan Quartermain was an opium addict who spent most of the first series dealing with going cold turkey. Thank God the movie version threw out the comic and did something better (yes, I know that's comic heresy, but I thought the movie was far superior to the first comic. Only the second one, dealing with the War of the Worlds, was interesting). In From Hell, the comic follows Jack the Ripper as the main character, thereby removing any hint of suspense. Inspector Aberline, a historical character, was thoroughly slandered as, guess what, an opium addict, something the historical Abberline was far from. But no, we just can't have anyone threatening to act with intelligence and without cippling neurosis.
Does this mean I think heros have to be perfect? Hell no. The most interesting one of all is Batman, especially when written to show he's an obsessive fucked up person. The thing that makes him so fascinating is that in spite of his myriad problems, he's still competant at doing his job. Batman is interesting when he's shown to be a repressed, emotionally fucked up person, Superman is interesting when it's brought out he's jealous of Clark Kent because people like Kent because of who he is, not because he has super powers (and yet, Kent at times riles at being treated as everyone's hapless schmuck just because he's a nice guy).
In the Watchman, most of the heros are jerks at best and range to sadistic murdering rapists. It's no surprise that my favorite character was Night Owl, because he was one of the few genuinely nice people. The best part of the film was when he and Silk Spectre decide to hell with the law and suit up and go for a late night crime fighting spree in Archie, Owl's flying ship. It was one of the few decent themes in the story: people remembering why they liked being super heros and once again finding joy in their life by doing what they have been called to do.
I do have to admit, there was a brilliant scene where Rorshach is in prison, and he yells "They didn't lock me up with you, they locked you up with me!" It's very reminiscent of Batman Begins when Bruce is in a Chinese prision. In fact, Nite Owl and Rorshach are very much Batman split into two characters: Nite Owl with a Batman style costume and all the gadgets, and Rorshach with that driven almost pyschopathic intensity to do the dirty work that others won't do.
The main theme of the film, which I'm sure isn't intended, is that all the problems are caused by Dr. Manhatten having the emotional maturity of a junior high kid. His girlfriend leaves him so he runs away to Mars to sulk. The ending is quite lame. Ozymandias should have been dragged back to stand trial for murder and genocide, and I pity the life in another galaxy that's created by whiny sulky Manhattan.
Watchman is touted as being a brilliant deconstruction of superheros and the genre, and yet, Frank Miller did it first with Dark Knight Returns starting in Feb 86, where Watchman premiered in Sept 86 (not that latter was a copy, as both had been in planning stages for a good while before being published). Watchman comes off as pretentious in it's attempt to delve into the gritty underlayer of of being a superhero. Batman: The Dark Knight is much more successful in it's look of realism and showing what happens to a society with a super hero.
Finally, the Watchman leaves us with an ending that's weak and unsatisfying, except for the lone glimmer of hope in seeing Night Owl and Silk Spectre continuing as a couple both as heros and in private (yeah, I'm a romantic. I like a happy couple at the end of a film). In Dark Knight, we are shown that Batman is a hero not because of his abilities or his special equipment, but because he is willing and able to make the personal sacrifice of not being seen as a hero so that Gotham can have a hope of survival.
Bottom line: well made film, quite entertaining at times, weakened by poor source material.
I went into the movie with low expectations. I'm not an Alan Moore fan. However, the movie proved to be very entertaining. The director has created a well-made film that tells a coherent story. Tone is always appropriate. This is not a piece of trash like The Spirit was. The cast, with one major exception, was quite good (the actor playing Ozymandias was very disappointing. Weak performance and bad diction). The major problem was the director followed the original source material rather than tossing it out like the garbage it was.
In short, Alan Moore is a dick.
For a man who's made his name in comic books, he sure hates heros. Moore refuses to imbue any kind of hero with competence. He seems to revel in presenting heros that are so flawed that they become impotent.
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Does this mean I think heros have to be perfect? Hell no. The most interesting one of all is Batman, especially when written to show he's an obsessive fucked up person. The thing that makes him so fascinating is that in spite of his myriad problems, he's still competant at doing his job. Batman is interesting when he's shown to be a repressed, emotionally fucked up person, Superman is interesting when it's brought out he's jealous of Clark Kent because people like Kent because of who he is, not because he has super powers (and yet, Kent at times riles at being treated as everyone's hapless schmuck just because he's a nice guy).
In the Watchman, most of the heros are jerks at best and range to sadistic murdering rapists. It's no surprise that my favorite character was Night Owl, because he was one of the few genuinely nice people. The best part of the film was when he and Silk Spectre decide to hell with the law and suit up and go for a late night crime fighting spree in Archie, Owl's flying ship. It was one of the few decent themes in the story: people remembering why they liked being super heros and once again finding joy in their life by doing what they have been called to do.
I do have to admit, there was a brilliant scene where Rorshach is in prison, and he yells "They didn't lock me up with you, they locked you up with me!" It's very reminiscent of Batman Begins when Bruce is in a Chinese prision. In fact, Nite Owl and Rorshach are very much Batman split into two characters: Nite Owl with a Batman style costume and all the gadgets, and Rorshach with that driven almost pyschopathic intensity to do the dirty work that others won't do.
The main theme of the film, which I'm sure isn't intended, is that all the problems are caused by Dr. Manhatten having the emotional maturity of a junior high kid. His girlfriend leaves him so he runs away to Mars to sulk. The ending is quite lame. Ozymandias should have been dragged back to stand trial for murder and genocide, and I pity the life in another galaxy that's created by whiny sulky Manhattan.
Watchman is touted as being a brilliant deconstruction of superheros and the genre, and yet, Frank Miller did it first with Dark Knight Returns starting in Feb 86, where Watchman premiered in Sept 86 (not that latter was a copy, as both had been in planning stages for a good while before being published). Watchman comes off as pretentious in it's attempt to delve into the gritty underlayer of of being a superhero. Batman: The Dark Knight is much more successful in it's look of realism and showing what happens to a society with a super hero.
Finally, the Watchman leaves us with an ending that's weak and unsatisfying, except for the lone glimmer of hope in seeing Night Owl and Silk Spectre continuing as a couple both as heros and in private (yeah, I'm a romantic. I like a happy couple at the end of a film). In Dark Knight, we are shown that Batman is a hero not because of his abilities or his special equipment, but because he is willing and able to make the personal sacrifice of not being seen as a hero so that Gotham can have a hope of survival.
Bottom line: well made film, quite entertaining at times, weakened by poor source material.