Lorekeeper wrote:Skowl wrote:I laugh everytime I see the tagline "based on the most celebrated grahpic novel of all time". Yeah, the most celebrated graphic novel that I never heard of until now.
For me, the whole thing reaks of another crappy superhero movie. Oh, and Rorsharch sounds exactly like Batman...
As for the characters' resemblance to other super heroes... that's INTENTIONAL. Watchmen uses the familiar archetypes to create a one-off of the familiar worlds of DC (and Marvel?... more DC, certainly.)
When I saw Pixar's The Incredibles, I felt like I was seeing Watchmen for kids.
You're pretty much right. Alan wanted to use the newly acquired Charlton Comics characters as the cast of Watchmen. But DC had plans for some of them and they wouldn't be usable after Watchmen, so they asked him to create analogue characters instead.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watchmen#Characters
And now that you mention it The Incredibles is Watchmen for kids.
Ironhidensh wrote:Skowl wrote:
I laugh everytime I see the tagline "based on the most celebrated grahpic novel of all time". Yeah, the most celebrated graphic novel that I never heard of until now.
Then appaerently you've never once in your entire life stepped into a real comic book shop, or talked with a fan of comics over the greatest of works.
People who don't even like comics have heard of, and respect, the literary greatness that is Watchmen.
I just wanted to quote this because I can't stress this enough with the fair weather and bandwagon comic book fans. Watchmen revolutionized the comic book industry. It proved that comics could in fact be aimed at adults and do mature realistic stories. So the next time you pick up Ultimate X-Men, a MAX title, or a Vertigo title thank Alan Moore. Because without him and Watchmen you wouldn't be reading mature comic books. You'd be reading about the Joker stealing sand castles instead.