Posted: 05 February 2007 at 6:05pm | IP Logged | 4
|
|
|
JB: 'The Outer Limits" did a big chunk of it without "superheroes".
And, PS, making everybody neurotic or psychotic is not the same as depth of character.
****
I haven't seen the Outer Limits episode that WATCHMEN resembles, but I still see the work as fundamentally a superhero story. It is not generally positive or upbeat (though the ending seems inclined that way), but it is one writer's vision of what "real" superheroes could be like.
JB, I agree with your postscript-- though I wonder if Dan Dreiberg was sexually neurotic before or after he gave up being Nite Owl? Laurie doesn't seem to be psychotic, but she has mother issues. And Dr Manhattan seems to have passed beyond our ability to call his state of mind psychotic.
The more I think it over, the more I believe (regarding WATCHMEN) that being a costumed crimefighter carries strains (or traumas) that manifest themselves in strange and terrible ways. The Minutemen DIDN'T seem to be psychotic, at first, though several did have serious issues (and I don't think Hooded Justice and Capt. Metropolis being gay counts as issues). Eddie Blake, though... okay, he was pretty horrible from the beginning, but he displayed several facets through the course of the story.
Hollis Mason, for one, didn't seem troubled at all. Sally Jupiter was a woman in a bad marriage-- but she wasn't crazy.
Were they troubled people who became costumed crimefighters or did their vigilante careers drive them toward breakdown? Many police officers, particularly those in high crime urban areas, suffer what we'd think of as post-traumatic stress disorder-- the job causes them psychological damage, just as it broke Rorschach. I can't claim this was one of Moore's primary theses in the book but I think it's a possibility.
And I still think Rorschach made a heroic choice. He was crazy, true, but he was capable of understanding the scope of a moral choice and what the cost of that choice would be; he chose to fight evil regardless, knowing his choice meant that Dr Manhattan would have to kill him. Fighting evil-- even up to one's last breath-- is heroic whether the person is otherwise insane or not. If it isn't, why would any of us celebrate Ted Kord's defiance of Max Lord at the cost of his own life?
Edited to fix a typo that completely changed the sentence's meaning!
Edited by Andrew Bitner on 09 February 2007 at 6:26pm
|