Summary

  • Watchmen is a "meditation on power", with each major superhero character representing a different form of power, and the series overall foregrounding question about authority and coercive influence.
  • With Watchmen, Alan Moore aimed to ask questions about power that other superhero stories wouldn't.
  • Moore's ability to provide new perspectives on old character archetypes and elevate longstanding subtextual uestions directly into into the text is a large part of what made Watchmen groundbreaking.

Writer Alan Moore calls his genre-defining series Watchmen "entirely a meditation about power," to the extent that each of its major superhero characters represents a different form of power. Though readers have long understood the series as being critical of power – who craves it, who wields it, and what effects it has on those without it – Moore's comments provide insight into how this project informed each character's creation.

"We were thinking about how each of these characters, to some degree, represented different sorts of power," Alan Moore explained to the BBC, about the creation of his infamous Watchmen superheroes.

In an interview with the BBC for the Comics Britannia documentary series, Moore provided insight into the development of Watchmen's iconic roster of flawed, tragic superheroes. Though most readers know that Moore originally based his characters on the old Charlton Comics heroes owned by DC, the additional details provided by the author in his Comics Britannia interview make it clear what drove their evolution once the series became detached from this starting point.

Watchmen, the first and only meeting of the Crimebusters

Moore's desire to ask questions about power that other superhero stories wouldn't, or couldn't, ultimately lead to the characters as they appeared in the pages of Watchmen.

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Alan Moore Crafted Watchmen To Interrogate All Forms Of Power

 from Watchmen, Night Owl and the Comedian doing riot control

"We were thinking about how each of these characters, to some degree, represented different sorts of power," Alan Moore explained to the BBC, about the creation of his infamous Watchmen superheroes. Moore also noted that an entirely different form of "superpower" is integral the backdrop of the story, as a nuclear confrontation between the global superpowers of Soviet Russia and the United States of America adds to the constantly rising tension of the series, and provides the urgent impetus for Ozymandias' plot to unite the world against an outside enemy, which culminates in the series' final issue.

"To some degree, if you're talking about superheroes, it's very likely to become a meditation on power," Moore noted, as the question of what it means for an individual to wield incredible power is baked into the DNA of the genre, influencing all superhero narratives to one degree or another. With Watchmen, Moore's innovation was less about doing something shocking with his characters, and more about using them to make these inherent genre questions overt, bringing them to the readers attention in a way that irrevocably informed not just the book's narrative, but the comic industry as a whole.

Watchmen Offered A New Perspective On Old Character Archtypes

 from Watchmen, featuring the earlier incarnation of the Crimebusters superteam

"When you look at these familiar characters from a new perspective," Alan Moore said, calling back to Watchmen's Charlton origins, "you can suddenly see things that have actually been true of the characters right from their very inception...that nobody had applied. A political interpretation, or a sexual interpretation." Rather than subtext, Moore elevated these interpretations into the text of Watchmen. As much as its narrative thrill ride, its literary prose, and its visual density, this is part of what makes the series as groundbreaking as it has proved to be.

Despite his provide guidance for aspiring writers makes interviews, such as his Comics Britannia appearance and his BBC Maestro online course incredibly, valuable for all potential creators. Watchmen is, of course, a near-endlessly re-readable work of fiction, and Moore's comments on the text as a "meditation about power" is yet another reason to return to it.

Source: Comics Britannia (BBC)