Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Watchmen: Alan Moore and David Gibbons

I have never read any comics until I picked up "Watchmen."

After hearing all the hype - about that graphic was the most important comic of all time, about how the ideas in that book espouse truths and insights in modern western society that before then have not been spoken of - I just had to give it a shot.

Aesthetically, the Watchmen novel is a book within a book, within another book (Watchmen --> Under The Hood --> Tales of the Black Freighter). All this combines into an interweaving story that illustrates the vigilantes of old and new with the Black Freighter serving as an allegory to the bigger Watchmen universe.

A lot can be talked of how Gibbons' artistic renderings of Moore's plot is just as important as the story itself. Gibbons' use of color and shadow to depict the destruction of New York, his imagination that led him to create Dr. Manhattan's creation on the moon show the true marriage of pictures and text. But as time as an issue, I will focus more on the literal themes of Watchmen that Moore espouses.

The story starts off with the death of a once powerful superhero which signals the end of the hero era. This theme is reminiscent of Nietzsche's "Jesus on the Cross" in which the moment of crucifixion starts the rise of post-modernity/nihilism. The death of the superhero in the Watchmen starts off a wave of an anti-superhero sentiment that spreads across America - the rise of post-modernity, the rise of the ego/individual that negates the powers of the almighty, or in the case of the Watchmen, rejects the eyes of the watchers.

Moore's take on the concept of peace is one that can only be brought through a mutual enemy. The novel is set in the Cold War period in which the world is at a stand-off between two nuclear powers that are prepared to play a zero-sum game. To deter those two countries from destroying one another and in result annihilate the world, another superhero creates an enemy that's out of this world in hopes that the two opposing Cold War states would bind together to destroy the alien enemy.

Read the book before you watch the movie. For a genre that's always placated as one that's for kids and teenagers, Watchmen is definitely a graphic novel for adults with its heady themes and gruesome images.

No comments:

Post a Comment