Hey Guard,I was reading back through this thread, and I really liked where our debate was going so I'd like to resurrect it if you don't mind.
Sandman138 said:
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.
Hayter included some of it. He cut a lot of it, too.
I don't mind trimming the fat. What I mind is changing it and what I mind especially is getting rid of Rorschach's progressive syntactic regression. I would point you to Christopher McCandless, whose journal entries became little more than one word statements during the final stretch of his fatal journey into the Alaskan wilderness. How does Rorschach see the world, and how does he adapt to this vision of reality? A big clue to that is his voice and his journals.
The Guard said:
Sandman138 said:
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.
Not when Veidt's reason for killing them is to cover up what he did, and maintain world peace. How is it any worse than when Veidt kills his assistants, or his "assassin", or any of the people who worked on his "monster" project?
It's not.
Oh come on! We are not talking about the ending to Breathless or Apocalypse Now. This is not a death to contemplate over a strong cup of British tea in your study. It's a nice Superhero show-down, complete with heroic one-liners, mustache twirling, and a blockbuster death where the inglorious bastard dies in a gruesome enough manner that we all feel comfortable that he got his just dessert. That is all Veidt's death could ever be because if they change it, it will have been to fit a formula. We all know this. It is the way producers operate. The kind of money they are throwing around does not come without some assurance that it can at the very least be paid back to the film's financiers, and going with what has historically put people in seats always seems like the safest option. Here though, that ruins everything about Watchmen because Watchmen is, in part, a commentary on that formula.
The Guard said:
Sandman138 said:
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.
With all due respect, you are not "everyone".
Well, thank you. However, I believe that there are enough people that will be able to understand these political significances. Be they critics, college professors, college students, or the rare kid who either payed attention in high school history and civics or just read up on her own. I know this because I have frequently found intelligent and informed historical and political discussions in venues ranging from friends I grew up with, to UMass keg parties, to internet forums.
The Guard said:
The Sandman138 said:
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.
I kind of thought that was implied. Again, to see how the "secret weapons" affect America, you don't have to have Nixon as President in the 80's.
Sandman138 said:
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.
To a point. I'm not saying that real world elements shouldn't be cited, I'm just saying the same themes and relevance could exist without doing so.
As for the main theme, yes, the politics are extremely important. But that is not the overarching theme of WATCHMEN. It's more a background element, a way to make the heroes relevant.
But you can't because Moore makes such a point of intertwining the politics with superheores. Indeed, superheroes have always been paragons of the state.
And Moore is examining this relationship every step of the way. The Comedian fights in the Pacific during WWII, and as a result he is the only hero who survives public scrutiny during the beginning of the McCarthy era. Meanwhile, the Silhouette is exposed as a lesbian and murdered along with her lover. Hooded Justice is dissapeared, most likely by the Comedian who has been groomed into America's hero while he has also become a political assassin. This saves Captain Metropolis from scandal should anybody find out about his sexual relationship with the deceased and he is able to slide on his own record as a Marine. The rest of them either retire with some semblance of grace or destroy themselves.
Already, we have a model of the superhero's relationship to political and military institutions. With the discovery of the atomic bomb there is the birth of a foreign policy that is expansionist, we also see a Republican controlled congress institute the twenty-second amendment. The Korean War is a costly stalemate and Truman is no longer favored in a world where the communists have the atomic bomb. But what if we had a better bomb?
Flash forward to November, 1959. The Kennedy/Nixon race is only a few months away, and on a military research base Dr. Manhattan comes into the world. Bold new frontier indeed. In 1961 Stan Lee and Jack Kirby solidified the silver age by creating a new universe of superheroes spawned by atomic energy. Paragons for the nuclear state. Manhattan is completely out of touch with reality, evidenced by the fact that he lets Kennedy get assassinated. However, Nixon has the balls to try and wield the "American God".
Because we have the better weapon and it gets in the hands of the self-proclaimed "mad bomber" we not only contain the soviets, we push them to a standstill. The Comedian assassinates Woodward and Bernstein so Watergate never happens and the 22nd Amendment gets repealed. And then that brings us back to this:
Sandman138 said:
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.
All of it is so intertwined. This is the characters world and it influences them as much as they influence it. Now this is a layer to the story, just like your layer of interpretive nature of meaning arises from the competing points of view ending in a stalemate. Now you don't need the politics to appreciate it at your layer, but that doesn't make the politics insignificant. At a very superficial layer Watchmen is a whodunnit and I think we can both agree that at that layer it is dull and hardly challenging at all. Watchmen is a layered story and all those layers are of consequence to the meaning of the whole. It is possible for films, even films about comics, to be layered. I point in the direction of A History of Violence.
It is easy to dismiss a story about a completely fictional world. What makes divergent history such a great form of science-fiction is that it allows for a commentary on the present by forcing us to face assumptions we have about how we got here. By comparing the world of Watchmen to our own world, a critique emerges not only of superhero comics as a cultural artifact but of American foreign policy that drives that culture. Which brings me to a point that you didn't address last time.
Sandman138 said:
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.
And on a final note, what makes you think Tse can write anything close to that sophisticated of a critique? The draft I read was banal and pedestrian even without comparison to the source material. If you have a more recent draft, I would love to see it.
The Guard said:
Sandman138 said:
One final note: The only way Rorschach can deal with the reality of the situation at the end of the book is to remove his face, the black and white, right vs. wrong lens through which he views the world.
That's debatable, as he never abandons his black and white view.
Surely you would not deny the power of visual symbolism in Watchmen; to say nothing of the semantic power of a man, his "face" in his trembling hands and tears in his eyes
accepting his death.