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Topic: Alan Moore and the Rights to Watchmen (Topic Closed Topic Closed) Post ReplyPost New Topic
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Matthew McCallum
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Posted: 30 July 2010 at 9:37am | IP Logged | 1  

Even now, say "comic book" to most civilians, and they will expect something FUNNY.

On the plane to San Diego last week, I overheard a rather loud conversation between a gaggle of passengers who had evidently first met earlier in the airport lounge (thus helping to explain the loudness of the conversation). Their chat spread to some other passengers on the plane, who shared they were enroute to the big Comic Convention.

"Oh," was the surprised and delighted chirp, suddenly keenly interested. "That's, like, Seinfeld or something?"

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Jim Muir
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Posted: 30 July 2010 at 9:44am | IP Logged | 2  

<< Oh come on. WATCHMEN isn't an "entry point" for anyone. >>
   
PLUS

<<Exactly right. I know several people who read WATCHMEN and were inspired to seek out more material like WATCHMEN>>

EQUALS

If thats not an entry point, I dont know what is. The fact that the majority of graphic novels are crap is an entirely different argument.

<<No one picking up WATCHMEN as their first foray into superhero comics,of which it is, comes away wanting to read Spider-Man or Batman>>

I too have anecdotal evidence that disputes that. After Watchmen friends read that other 'groundbreaking' work Dark Knight Returns, then moved on to Batman:Hush, then Sandman... So whaddya know. It was like a... gateway.. or something.

Given that Watchmen is the only comics entry in the Times 100 book list, its not unreasonable to assume it would be many peoples first foray into the comics world. And if they liked it, theyd buy more.




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Knut Robert Knutsen
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Posted: 30 July 2010 at 9:46am | IP Logged | 3  

All I can say is that if Watchmen, taken as a whole, is "groundbreaking", then what Howard Chaykin did with American Flagg must be "earth shattering".

There are so many storytelling innovations in comics, from McCay to sterret, to Foster and Raymond to Sickles and Caniff, Crane, Kriigstein, Kurtzman and Elder, Eisner, Kirby, Wood, Steranko, Adams and on and on.

Yet Alan Moore restricts himself to a 9 panel grid, does a few voice-over transitions and shape-to-shape transitions (and I would think Gibbons gets some credit for it), uses some obvious fanfic stuff to make the characters more "realistic" (like: "wearing costumes and being heroic cures my impotence", "if I had Dr Manhattan's powers I'd clone myself and have a foursome with my girlfriend", "The way Silk Spectre dresses, she must want to be raped". "If I were the Queston or Batman, I'd kill the really bad villains" or "why don't superheroes create world peace?")

He does it very well, but it's not that innovative.  The one major advantage he had was that he got to do subplots that dobvetailed into the finale, but didn't make much sense before. Like showing "man on the street" sequences throughout the series. They flesh out the story, but they don't really have anything to do with the superheroes until the end.

If this were a monthly comic, the question would be "why are you wasting pages on some kid reading a pirate story when the superhero action ends up getting squeezed into a 9 panel grid. Use some splash pages, for chrissakes. "

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Matthew McCallum
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Posted: 30 July 2010 at 10:00am | IP Logged | 4  

Alan Moore is the Quentin Tarantino of comics.

Tarantino has made a career out of cobbling together the best bits of a lot of obscure films, adding a bit of shock factor and -- voila! -- he's made art.

Moore's had a somewhat similar career trajectory, to the point where he's become (for me) unreadable.

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Don Bohm
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Posted: 30 July 2010 at 10:03am | IP Logged | 5  

Quote: " I really hate this kind of snobbish, pretentious label that people who think they are too good for comics, or are too embarrassed to be caught reading "comics" use to make themselves feel better."
 
 Why attribute to malice what could simply be ignorance? The people who put the packaging and what not together may simply think that IT WAS a graphic novel. That 's possibly how it was described to them.
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Brad Krawchuk
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Posted: 30 July 2010 at 10:12am | IP Logged | 6  

Why attribute to malice what could simply be ignorance?

---

Because when you try to explain that it isn't, they claim to know better and that comics are for kids, while graphic literature is for more mature readers. 

Yes, I've had that conversation with about three dozen different people. 
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Brad Krawchuk
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Posted: 30 July 2010 at 10:14am | IP Logged | 7  

Oh yes, and I'm not making up the term "graphic literature" there either. I've heard it used to describe everything from Watchmen to Preacher to Sandman. All of which I own, all of which I enjoy, all of which I call comics. 

Yet people tell me I'm not a real fan because I don't recognize them as "more than comics."

That's not just ignorance, that's deliberate ignorance. Malice indeed!
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Don Bohm
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Posted: 30 July 2010 at 11:05am | IP Logged | 8  

 Of the people who market and advertise the products? The producers? Or just random folk?
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Matthew McCallum
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Posted: 30 July 2010 at 11:17am | IP Logged | 9  

I've always hated the term graphic novel because when you say graphic people think extreme before they think pictures, and because rarely are we dealing with novels in the pure sense of the term. In serial fiction, the central character does not undergo a profound change through the course of the book.

If movies can dress themselves up as film and cinema when they want to go out with the elite, surely comics can find an equally elegant name. We haven't quite got there yet with graphic novel, sequential art or picto-fiction. Too many syllables.

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Tim Farnsworth
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Posted: 30 July 2010 at 11:20am | IP Logged | 10  

 Laren Farmer wrote:
People who find Watchmen to be brilliant (aside from the artwork) lack knowledge of comic books and their history.

How very contemptuous of you.

I've often heard Raging Bull spoken of in lofty terms, but when I finally saw it it didn't register much for me. Haven't felt an impulse to speak of its fans with derision yet, though.

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Joe Hollon
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Posted: 30 July 2010 at 11:23am | IP Logged | 11  

I like "comics" as the term for all of 'em!

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John Byrne
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Posted: 30 July 2010 at 11:33am | IP Logged | 12  

People who find Watchmen to be brilliant (aside from the artwork) lack knowledge of comic books and their history.

++

How very contemptuous of you.

••

As contemptuous as is WATCHMEN for the superhero form?

Lauren's comment is not really contemptuous at all. Rather, it expresses something unfortunately true. Those who heap great praise upon WATCHMEN fall, in my experience, into two general groups.

First is civilians, who are quick to praise the work DESPITE the fact that it is a comic book. These are the ones who seek another term, in fact, and who demonstrate ignorance of the history of this industrial art form over the past thirty years or so. Tell them that many of the points for which they praise WATCHMEN were already addressed by Denny O'Neil and Neal Adams in GREEN LANTERN/GREEN ARROW, and your claim will be dismissed as instantly preposterous, since GL/GA was "just" a superhero comic, not something, like WATCHMEN, that transcended its lowly origins.

Second is that strata of fandom who are blissfully ignorant of that same history, and who are ferociously protective of their ignorance. I was shocked upon first coming online to discover how many people actually got ANGRY when I informed them -- politely, I assure you! -- that their views were based on a limited knowledge of what had happened BEFORE they started reading. This extended from those who accepted retcons as canon, if those retcons were already in place when they arrived, on thru those who knew little or nothing of the history of the industry, of who did what, when, where and why.

To these people, these two groups, WATCHMEN was astonishingly fresh and innovative. To me, with thirty years of reading the books twenty years of studying the history, under my belt, WATCHMEN was familiar territory, and tiresome after five issues.

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