Sandman138
Avenger
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Won't argue that. But I will argue that at least in terms of the journals, there is a reason for their omission. Their obvious impact on screentime.
But the journals are all exclusively voice over going on while screen time is already being taken up by action. Hayter understood that and was able to keep much of Rorschach's journal entries intact.
Hardly, as the scene where Ra's Al Ghul asks Bruce to kill a man and then go back to Gotham and destroy and "Ducard's" obedience to Ra's lets us know who was morally in the right.
I forget, did we agree that Batman Begins wasn't nearly as deep and morally ambiguous as it was touted to be?
Only because you are thinking simply. A man dying does not erase the issues surrounding his actions.
It does when the man who dies and the man who kills him are wearing super suits. Hell, in every script I read the confrontation goes something like this:
Veidt: Why would you sacrifice utopia?
Dan: Because it's the right thing to do.
Veidt: I'd like to say you're making a mistake, but the truth is I was just going to kill all of you in the morning.
That is so morally ambiguous.

Because again, if Nite Owl kills Veidt, not only can we argue over whether or not Veidt was right or wrong, you can argue over whether Nite Owl was right or wrong.
Does anybody argue whether Batman was right to stop Ra's? Their motivations were similar. I remember *****ing for a long time about how Batman leaving Ra's to die was hypocritical and the response was always "What did you want him to do? Let a dangerous man like Ra's live?" The hero kills the villain by convention in this type of story.
Unfortunately, not everyone who sees the movie is going to know the significance of Richard Nixon still being President.
I'm only 21 and I know it. All my friends who took American History and Civics know it too. None of us were alive for his presidency.
Again, I understand the overt "historical significance", but this could be any character fitting this theme. Does Nixon fit it? Yes. But it could be any presidential character acting as such, and the theme's relevance would remain intact.
No, it couldn't. You treat the historical context of Watchmen as insignificant, but it is fundamentally tied to the story.
You're missing the point. It need not be JFK. It need not by ANY real President, and they wouldn't even have to be reelected time after time after time, as long as the themes of Dr. Manhattan being America's secret weapon and The Comedian being a darker reflection of that are kept intact.
You're the one that is missing the point. The point is not that Dr. Manhattan and The Comedian are America's secret weapon, the point is how that fact effects America.
Why couldn't a fictional President work in the same context? How does a theme have no real weight in relation to politics?
This isn't the real world, so you can't cite real world relevance. In the real world, Nixon didn't have a Dr. Manhattan, and even if he did, he wouldn't neccessarily have sicced him on all of America's enemies.
That's exactly what you should be doing. Noticing how the emergence of superheroes has changed this world from the one that we know. In the real world the 22nd Amendment was never repealed, but here it was? Why? Because, in large part, we won Vietnam. But I guess since this isn't he real world, Vietnam isn't essential to the story. It could have been an East Asian Hydra that we fought on a lunar base... so long as the themes were the same.
Yes, you have:
Viedt dying at Nite Owl's hand is the continuation of the black hat/white hat showdown morality that goes against everything Watchmen is about.
What WATCHMEN is about, at least the encompassing theme, is the interpretive nature of meaning. It has everything to do with interpretation of things, and situationality, and our points of view in relation to the meanings we derive. The entire graphic novel makes allusions to this. The plot fits into it.
I disagree. Certianly, that is a major theme just by the nature of a story with at least five perspectives. However, I believe that the main overriding theme of Watchmen is the deconstruction of the hero myth to reveal the political institution behind it. Rorschach, for all his moral absolutes is a jingoist driven by the same vein of patriotism as The New Frontiersman. Dr. Manhattan, a literal god, is turned into nothing more than a tactical weapon. The Comedian is made into a hero of Democracy while at the same time covertly assassinating political targets and maintaining the status quo. Ozymandias uses his image in a similar manner as the government, profiting off of it enough to shape the world through avenues ranging from the stock market to a final subversion of a Star Wars style apocalypse. Dan and Laurie are both impotent because heroes don't derive their authority from doing the right thing, they derive it from institutions. The Senate Subcommitee Meetings on Juvenile Delinquency do not go after comic books in Watchmen because the government steps in since they have superheroes on their payroll, later they pass the Keene act and make sure that these heroes can only work under their authority. Dr. Manhattan lets the US win Vietnam and empowers the hawks to continue fighting the USSR in a series of proxy wars that end up pushing us closer to a nuclear holocaust than ever, but they do it anyways because that same moral myth makes the policy legitimate and the people that perpetuate that myth make the policy.
The politics are extremely important. Because we still haven't learned the lessons we should have from the Cold War, and now we are fighting an enemy born out of the Cold War by the same rules. Remember when President Bush met Captain America and Spider-Man at a rally? That is why I am so concerned about this movie. In an age when superhero movies are the newest culture shaping myth, I think it's incredibly important to examine that myth.