Aug 28 2008
Apparently Everybody Will Be Watching The Watchmen
I’ve been reading the Watchmen comic books, since there’s a movie coming out soon. I saw the trailer during “The Dark Knight” last weekend, and had no idea who any of the characters were. Apparently, I took a hit to my geek cred because I’ve never read the series, which collectively is regarded as one of the best graphic novels ever. Time Magazine even recognized it as one of the “100 Best English-Language Novels”. Not bad for a comic book!
I’m about three issues into the twelve, and it’s an interesting story. Watchmen may have been the first title to delve into the human flaws that exist in people, especially costumed avengers (a common practice among today’s anti-heroes in comics). If masked adventurers protected the public, wouldn’t it be possible that one or two would be alcoholics or sociopathic killers? Watchmen goes into these details, across two generations of heroes, while contrasting them against the changing times of America over the decades.
I especially like the metafiction that accompanies each chapter. The first three end with printed excerpts from the memoirs of the first “Nite Owl”, previously retired. His book, “Under the Hood“, is a tell-all of the personal lives of his crime-fighting group, the “Minutemen”, which disbanded in 1947. He describes his childhood and upbringing, then his break into crime-fighting outside of the law. This helps to flesh out the character beyond the confines of the plot of the comic.
“Under the Hood“, fictional in real life but non-fictional in the Watchmen universe, also outlines how the political climate of America changed over time. It goes from loving costumed heroes in the 40’s to loathing them as vigilantes in the 50’s, how it loops back again to the point where new crime-fighters appear in the 60’s. And then back again when declining public sentiment causes the government to outlaw them in 1977. Oh, and America won the Vietnam war and Nixon served five terms as president.
Now that I’m caught up on the back story, I’m looking forward to seeing the Watchmen movie when it comes out in March of 2009. I’m also looking forward to finishing the series. I’ve always enjoyed comic books, so I’m surprised that I’ve never read this one. Probably because it was a DC title and the characters were not included in an ongoing canon (that would make them easy for me to skip). Similar to “300″, I’d like to see how they adapt this comic to the big screen, and by that I mean IMAX.
Posts
