How to Ruin Watchmen

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2020
  • You can find my glasses at GlassesUSA.com. Check them out here for a great offer & free shipping bit.ly/Quinton_GlassesUSA (Additional rules may apply, free shipping to US & CA)
    Watchmen: one of the most iconic comics ever made, and a story with many spin-offs. Comics, an HBO show, a Zack Snyder movie... Today, Quinton Reviews discovers what goes wrong with a select few of these.
    Get the Quinton Reviews plushie here: makeship.com/collections/feat...
    My Glasses:
    Muse Kylie - bit.ly/Quinton_MuseKylie
    Ottoto Silvestro - bit.ly/Quinton_OttotoSilvestro
    Ray-Ban 4340V - bit.ly/Quinton_RayBan4340
    GameSpeX Matrix - bit.ly/Quinton_Matrix
    Arnette 7148 - bit.ly/Quinton_Arnette7148
    Protech Sports - bit.ly/Quinton_Protech
    Blue Light Glasses - bit.ly/Quinton_BlueLight
    Batman guest voice: Ricky Downes III
    / rickydownesiii
    My Twitter ➱ / q_review
    My Patreon ➱ / qreview
    My Instagram ➱ / quintonreviews
    My Facebook ➱ / quintonreviewsthekitch...
    Aliens Don’t Like White People Merch ➱ www.pixelempire.com/collectio...
    My Tumblr ➱ / quinton-reviews
    Our Reddit ➱ / quintonreviews
    Our Lore Wiki ➱ quintonreviews.fandom.com/wik...
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 4K

  • @QuintonReviews
    @QuintonReviews  Před 3 lety +232

    You can find my glasses at GlassesUSA.com. Check them out here for a great offer & free shipping bit.ly/Quinton_GlassesUSA (Additional rules may apply, free shipping to US & CA)
    Get the Quinton Reviews plushie here: makeship.com/collections/featured/products/quinton-reviews

    • @BZ0905
      @BZ0905 Před 3 lety +2

      Thnx

    • @theCidisIn
      @theCidisIn Před 3 lety +4

      You need to get another sexxxxxxdoll sponsorship.

    • @ChurchOfThought
      @ChurchOfThought Před 3 lety +2

      Secksdoll sponsorship??

    • @Dexterdud
      @Dexterdud Před 3 lety

      Make a video on the watchmen tv show. I felt like the messaging was so muddled I need help unraveling it

    • @smith6752
      @smith6752 Před 3 lety

      nah

  • @W3irdWombat
    @W3irdWombat Před 3 lety +2700

    Next you’ll be telling me the superhero’s in “The Boys” aren’t good guys or Joker is someone I shouldn’t look up to.

    • @BuckROCKGROIN
      @BuckROCKGROIN Před 3 lety +64

      Batman's "edginess" in Batman v Superman clearly went way over his head.

    • @kdjets
      @kdjets Před 3 lety +177

      Dude, Homelander IS America! Without him, how would we ever hope to combat the super terrorists?! I will also have you know that the seven is highly inclusive! Did you know that three of them are female now? Plus Starlight is just pretty hot you know. My favorite was the Deep, the dude really inspired me, but I haven't seen him in any press recently. It's a shame, my little brother is a swimmer and really looked up to him. We got his autograph once. The little dude models his whole life after him. I caught him trying to talk to his goldfish just yesterday. God bless The Seven. God bless America.
      RIP Translucent. May you never truly vanish.

    • @Unquestionable
      @Unquestionable Před 3 lety +85

      Having read The Boys when it was originally releasing was a guilty pleasure but also fascination for how it could only be more edgy and lack substance more and more the story went on. Perhaps one of the worst things I've had the pleasure of experiencing in the medium.

    • @poweroffriendship2.0
      @poweroffriendship2.0 Před 3 lety +12

      The mixture of grounded realism with superhero elements is a lot more fascinating.

    • @theitfactorjameswheezer2852
      @theitfactorjameswheezer2852 Před 3 lety +11

      @@Unquestionable there’s actually a lot of substance in the boys. You just clearly misunderstood it

  • @multitudeofidols
    @multitudeofidols Před 3 lety +2817

    "I watched _Batman Begins_ and was disappointed that I didn't get to see a beloved character get raped in prison. I am a mentally healthy adult."

    • @th3rasave
      @th3rasave Před 3 lety +71

      @Kevineitor yes

    • @lucasmartinssaraiva1162
      @lucasmartinssaraiva1162 Před 3 lety +11

      Lol

    • @voctur
      @voctur Před 3 lety +131

      I think he also said that if he was the writer of The Dark Knight Rises he would have put a scene of Bruce being raped in prison.

    • @matthewschwartz6607
      @matthewschwartz6607 Před 3 lety +10

      He really said that?

    • @Matter-Dark
      @Matter-Dark Před 3 lety +65

      @@abuamaanpal Zack Snyder wishes he was Todd McFarlane.

  • @TheMatthewkastens
    @TheMatthewkastens Před rokem +664

    Rorschach at the end of the book is essentially “the worst person you know has made a good point” as a character. He’s not a good person by any means, but none of the characters are really. And in the end he doesn’t give in to Veidt’s plan and is killed for it. I think that’s ultimately why people like his character since he reacts the way most people reading the book react to the ending

    • @2PRO_4U_2NO
      @2PRO_4U_2NO Před rokem +37

      That.. Is the most accurate description of Rorschach ever!

    • @tomgu2285
      @tomgu2285 Před rokem

      No you are a retard if you like a fascist. You can say he is a good written character but he is not a good person you psycho 😂

    • @CoracaoAcidental98
      @CoracaoAcidental98 Před 8 měsíci +17

      From experience I get to know the other side of Rorschach fans, I met several guys who have this type of mentality that they are bad but they are trying to be good so they deserve some type of reward, despite the fact that they are not trying to be better, they think they are but they don't change their actions if you ask them nor try to think about themselves if is not victimisation, they have fantasies of fighting crime because criminals are suppossed to be the worst type of person, someone even lower than the insecure, petty and horrible person they are.
      Not every Rorschach fan is like that of course, I do know cool people that like him, also I don't really agree with the video that if you want Rorschach merch you're inherantly dumb about the subject, some people just like the iconographic of the character because he is kinda cool visual wise, same with people who have military miniatures, just because they have them doesn't mean they are ignorant or are pro-war or something.

    • @zabeerfarid7687
      @zabeerfarid7687 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Eh I’d argue the movie tries to make him seem really cool and bad ass

    • @bangeranginretroman3064
      @bangeranginretroman3064 Před 8 měsíci +7

      ​@zabeerfarid7687 it does, cuz Snyder and the writers didnt understand the character. But he talkin bout the comic

  • @jimmyjuice697
    @jimmyjuice697 Před 3 lety +978

    "I moved the Lantern six inches out of Allan Scott's reach." is way funnier than it should be.

    • @Stinkoman87
      @Stinkoman87 Před 3 lety +103

      It's like a teenager holding a piece of candy above their kid sibling's head and laughing as the kid keep jumping trying to grab it.

    • @thomasmanning2939
      @thomasmanning2939 Před 2 lety +40

      Batman doesn't get shit

    • @AlbinoTuxedo
      @AlbinoTuxedo Před 2 lety +22

      I bust out laughing when I watched it, it's genuinely such a funny line

    • @kateb6699
      @kateb6699 Před 2 lety +4

      "Die Bitchboy" - Dr. Manhattan

    • @nick6var
      @nick6var Před 7 měsíci

      Ask any woman--six inches can mean a big difference!😊

  • @reptilianstudios8994
    @reptilianstudios8994 Před 3 lety +1770

    I like to imagine that Batman regularly throws people into Arkham for disagreeing with him about movies.

    • @bibbitibob
      @bibbitibob Před 3 lety +141

      "Joker's back in Arkham, huh? What did he do this time?"
      "Gave Avengers: Endgame a 6/10."

    • @mateocrudele5343
      @mateocrudele5343 Před 3 lety +44

      What you dont like the newest Barbie movie, no problem you can think it again on Arkham boy

    • @jasonguarnieri4127
      @jasonguarnieri4127 Před 3 lety +45

      Zack Snyder's Batman definitely does that.

    • @christopherb501
      @christopherb501 Před 3 lety +14

      @@bibbitibob I'd actually assume that he rated it too HIGH in that case, because...well, you know, DC v. Marvel.

    • @utterfool2164
      @utterfool2164 Před 3 lety +11

      Bibbitibob THAT IS 100% SOMETHING THE JOKER WOULD DO JUST TO PISS OFF BATMAN

  • @TheThunderbirdRising
    @TheThunderbirdRising Před 3 lety +647

    TBH, Superman being such a good dude he teaches Dr Manhattan morals is a better understanding of Superman than most Superman media in the last decade

    • @YEs69th420
      @YEs69th420 Před 3 lety +81

      The problem is that it props Superman up further at the expense of completely destroying the point of Dr. Manhattan. They're reducing Watchmen to yet another fun lil comic.

    • @YEs69th420
      @YEs69th420 Před 3 lety +7

      ​@jack thursby It undermines and devalues Watchmen by totally forgetting the point of it. It can be interesting in regards to typical comic affairs, but it's far from what it was meant to be.

    • @skylarmelton319
      @skylarmelton319 Před 3 lety +72

      YEs I don’t believe it undermines it at all. If anything it’s the answer to the questions Watchmen leaves you with. The points Watchmen makes are unsustainable - as seen in the deterioration of its own world. Don’t misunderstand what I’m saying; Watchmen is deep, philosophical, and I believe, Perfect. However, it can be frustrating when people take its word for the only objective truth. Its not. In fact, I’d go as far as to say that it’s far from it. Not to say it’s wrong, but more that it’s a piece of a larger picture. I believe the primary error with this video, and in how people view Doomsday Clock, is how people forget the values these heroes are supposed to represent. People tend to see the Watchmen characters as the only ones with any philosophical value, and that’s just plain wrong. Another issue I hold with this video, is that he seems to forget the lessons learned by some of the characters in Watchmen. A few of them didn’t remain static. They grew. I was forgetting two main points when I said Watchmen’s meanings were unsustainable. Those points: Dan and Laurie, and Dr.Manhattan. Dan and Laurie’s choice to hold on to the things that matter to them -primarily each other- in an uncertain world is quite meaningful. And Manhattan’s restored value in people and the world at large is even more so. So, to say they changed Manhattan to a “DC” hero is almost ridiculous to me. They took him from where he left off and expanded on it. Doomsday Clock is actually an amazing arc for both Dr. Manhattan and Superman. Manhattan acting as the representative for the ambiguity of Watchmen, while Superman represents the hope and meaning a hero should represent. With the world being full of deconstructions, and the horrible “gritty” perspective of the likes of Zack Snyder; I cant help but appreciate the “old fashioned” stance of Doomsday Clock in showing the value of what these characters should represent. I’m not saying it’s perfect. It’s not. But I do believe it’s pretty damn good. I understand if people aren’t too crazy about the point of Watchmen being sort of “corrected” or “answered” by Doomsday Clock. However, moral ambiguities and muddied waters only get you so far. And in the end, moral values and objective truths have to be strived for if we hope to achieve anything. THAT is the point of Doomsday Clock. That is what it offers society. That is Superman.
      Anyways. Sorry for the book, man. Lol you don’t like it, that’s cool. to each their own.

    • @leysonmose
      @leysonmose Před 3 lety +8

      @@YEs69th420 Whats the point of it then? To feel superior in your imagined nihilism?

    • @YEs69th420
      @YEs69th420 Před 3 lety +8

      @@leysonmose To provide a satirical lens for the superhero genre of comics, taking its tropes and trends to their logical conclusions in order to critique the unintended consequences of these ideas. It's not nihilism, and I am not nihilistic; don't assume, it's rude.
      Why, what did you think it's about?

  • @worlds1ep3enthusiast92
    @worlds1ep3enthusiast92 Před 3 lety +897

    There's only one true sequel.
    *Saturday Morning Watchmen*

  • @eronshabani692
    @eronshabani692 Před 3 lety +612

    "one of them is a centrist" is the single best line in the video

  • @SUNSHINE-t-m
    @SUNSHINE-t-m Před 3 lety +1009

    Quinton finally fulfilled his destiny and became Linkara

    • @RoyalKnightVIII
      @RoyalKnightVIII Před 3 lety +33

      Being the Garf-Czar wasn't enough for him!

    • @bjaanderson
      @bjaanderson Před 3 lety +6

      This is the day we've been waiting for boys. Proud of y'all 😢

    • @aeddiefarmer
      @aeddiefarmer Před 3 lety +28

      When he said he had a special guest I was going 'please be Linkara, please be Linkara' because I was going to enjoy guessing whether Linkara had seen Quentin's video about his movie or not.

    • @jamesmeow3039
      @jamesmeow3039 Před 3 lety +20

      THE LIGHT BRINGER

    • @BruceWayne-dr2zm
      @BruceWayne-dr2zm Před 3 lety +2

      It was bound to happen someday

  • @tigerkill420
    @tigerkill420 Před 3 lety +534

    Supermans parents are alive. Batman gets nothing.
    That made me laugh.

  • @oozekip
    @oozekip Před 3 lety +291

    Isn't the point of Manhattan's powers that he effectively exists in all times at once, not that he can see the future? He's simultaneously the most powerful being in existence but still powerless to change anything, his entire character is based around how he has no actual agency or free will because his path in life is already laid out from the moment he came into existence. How does the ending of Doomsday Clock make any sense in that regard?

    • @Kevinselasie
      @Kevinselasie Před 2 lety +8

      I'm surprised this dude didn't like Zach Snyder's take on watchmen.. that movie was a visual masterpiece and it asks very complicated questions about what happens to superheroes when given the power how they lose thier humanity.. it was made too early

    • @fort809
      @fort809 Před 2 lety +102

      @@Kevinselasie that’s the thing, what you described isn’t “Snyder’s take on watchmen”, it’s the entire point of watchmen period. Everything Snyder changed about watchmen when adapting it to the movie only server to water down that message, case in point the removal of aspect’s of Rorschach’s character to make him seem less evil and more of an “edgy badass”

    • @hydrocritical2268
      @hydrocritical2268 Před rokem +8

      @@Kevinselasie The only thing Snyder did wrong in that movie was make Ozzymandias a bad guy with little gray nuance. Rorschach is alright. If they could’ve made him less likeable and more bean eating scum then the ending would’ve been more powerful than it already was. It’s powerful that the most insane one in the group tries to tell the people of what really happened to new York. It was better than the comic imo(the ending) has Nite-Owl present for Rorschach’s death and the acting is impeccable. One last thing: Manhattan leaving the lie of him causing the explosions in New York undiscovered makes him better too

    • @anonymouslypseudonymous2060
      @anonymouslypseudonymous2060 Před rokem +19

      ​@@hydrocritical2268 the squid is infinitely better

    • @rachitgupta8345
      @rachitgupta8345 Před 8 měsíci +4

      ​@@Kevinselasieas a fan of the movie the cool action music and the fight scene serve to skewer the message, these guys dont get to have badass action scenes because watchmen also raises the question if superheroes belong in our society, the comic spends a lot of the time world building giving side characters some spotlight showing us how they are just guys playing dress up with lives and how manhattan is a game changer, in the end he has to make the conscious decision to leave or to not, in snyders version he just has to dip cuz he is public enemy

  • @Charredasperity
    @Charredasperity Před 2 lety +380

    I remember when the movie came out a ton of fans were talking about how "cool" Rorschach was and how they wanted to be like him, and when I read the actual comic it made it clear that he was supposed to be a a borderline-psychotic satire of Libertarianism, ultra-nationalism, and Puritanism all rolled into one, and that's obvious from ONE PAGE, and the fact he was seen as "relatable" after the adaptations prove they missed the point.

    • @mr.random8638
      @mr.random8638 Před rokem +44

      Yep. And when the show came out and portrayed Rorschach as the lunatic he was: People got mad. If the movie never came out, the reception of the show would’ve been waaay better

    • @riopato2009
      @riopato2009 Před rokem +33

      I think the movie obfuscated the character with the actor. Loved the portrayal of the character Rorshach, the actor who played him did an amazing job. The flaw in the movie was to make the character likable. As if he sacrificed himself for the greater good of exposing the truth. The whole point of Rorschach's death wasn't one of martyrdom, it was to expose the truth regardless of the outcome. Even if it meant ending world peace. The ambiguous morality of that moment and the subsequent epilogue of sending his journal to the press is a satirical commentary on how history can rewrite a garbage person into a hero. The movie left that open for interpretation as well as the book and it was up to the reader/viewer to decide what is that morality. Alan Moore was quoted as saying that his book wasn't adaptable for film. The tv series proves that he was right in ways that even Alan couldn't forsee.

    • @anthonyfernandez82
      @anthonyfernandez82 Před rokem

      Not very big differences between the two, except comic Rorschach is even more of a degenerate

    • @leafyishereisdumbnameakath4259
      @leafyishereisdumbnameakath4259 Před 8 měsíci +2

      ​@@mr.random8638yeah I remember watching a review that was surprised they portrayed him that way in the show.

  • @OptimisticAudience
    @OptimisticAudience Před 3 lety +1935

    I love Rorschach as a character basically because I found him interesting. I used to cosplay him the way some folks cosplay villains. And then I met other Rorschach fans. I don’t cosplay him anymore.

    • @slayertakim1
      @slayertakim1 Před 3 lety +60

      What was it like meeting other fans?

    • @Horatio787
      @Horatio787 Před 3 lety +30

      oof

    • @vumasster
      @vumasster Před 3 lety +234

      slayertakim1 probably stinky from all the canned beans they eat

    • @satansmascara9756
      @satansmascara9756 Před 3 lety +45

      Yeeeah i really wanna cosplay him cause it looks fun but I'm worried for the butthurt semi nazis 😬

    • @Puppy_Puppington
      @Puppy_Puppington Před 3 lety +301

      I thought Rorschach was cool when I was a kid but now that I know and understand his character I hate him. Still looks cool though lol. He’s insane. Sees the world in black and white and if ur in the black u deserve to die. But he’s a hypocrite because he picks and chooses. He doesn’t even follow his own code.

  • @cafeterialoca
    @cafeterialoca Před 3 lety +743

    I am so disappointed that you didn't bring up the "Before Watchmen" comics and the infamous line spoken by the Comedian: "It's Time to Shit!"

    • @lily91109
      @lily91109 Před 3 lety +21

      God that sounds like fun

    • @kyleforbes6048
      @kyleforbes6048 Před 3 lety +36

      He definitely should've talked about those comics instead of Doomsday Clock.

    • @deadpool630
      @deadpool630 Před 3 lety +11

      Only Minutemen had anything of value.

    • @gageansman295
      @gageansman295 Před 3 lety +10

      @@deadpool630 yeah I genuinely liked minutemen and think that it is a decent addition to the Watchmen story. Everything else on the other hand is not too good from what I remember.

    • @jesusramirezromo2037
      @jesusramirezromo2037 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@gageansman295Dollar Bill was fun

  • @nowhereman6019
    @nowhereman6019 Před 3 lety +123

    I've always found it very significant that guys like Alan Moore and Grant Morrison, dispite writing all these deconstructions of superhero comics and (in Moore's case in particular) have stated how much they dislike superheroes, still love Superman. I guess that he's just such a perfect embodiment of what superheroes and heroes in general are supposed to be that he's been given such love.

    • @Tuckbro
      @Tuckbro Před rokem +20

      Dude Grant Morrison never said anything about disliking superheros like in all of his superhero stuff its very obvious he loves these characters.

    • @jellophant9716
      @jellophant9716 Před 8 měsíci +34

      Alan Moore loves superheroes, he just hates that he does

    • @concept5631
      @concept5631 Před 8 měsíci +17

      Man even a hypocritical hack like Garth Ennis likes Superman. That's when you know he's timeless.

    • @KillahMate
      @KillahMate Před 7 měsíci +7

      @@concept5631 Garth Ennis can't write sincere superheroes for shit, because he hates them - except Superman. He can write a really good Superman, because _somehow_ he likes and gets Superman. It's weird.

    • @concept5631
      @concept5631 Před 7 měsíci

      @@KillahMate What stories has he done for Superman?

  • @pastabucket4174
    @pastabucket4174 Před 3 lety +168

    Cannot believe it took you 20 minutes to mention Ray William Johnson. Very disappointed

    • @Dogy0909
      @Dogy0909 Před 3 lety +8

      LMAO I was waiting for it too!!

  • @jacklindsey8400
    @jacklindsey8400 Před 3 lety +493

    I'm not sure I think people have trouble seeing heroes as always right, I think people have trouble with seeing protagonists as wrong. Protagonist centered morality is a big problem.

    • @DacodaNelson
      @DacodaNelson Před 3 lety +63

      When the only thing we're taught in school related to literary analysis is being made to write a four page expository essay on To Kill A Mockingbird, it's not surprising a majority of people can't comprehend writing outside of the rigid formula that's been pounded into their heads.

    • @rm2569
      @rm2569 Před 3 lety +47

      Yeah, thinking on villain protagonist stories i very often see people fully straight faced defending the protagonists actions and their reasoning, ignoring any number of reprehensible actions, and i think this is especially easy when things escalate, the story is in first person and you see the protagonists reasoning, and reading a story all at once instead of reflecting on where the story is going, compounded by a seeming complete unwillingness to applya ny sort of critical thought into the protagonists actions and you have people nodding along when the protagonists is killing babies 600 pages in or something.

    • @ixaix3218
      @ixaix3218 Před 3 lety +2

      I agree entirely.

    • @beancheesedip8337
      @beancheesedip8337 Před 3 lety +37

      I think that idea is so annoying. I mean, I can't tell you how often I hear "Protagonist is unlikable/not a good person" as a criticism, ignoring so much about the meat of the story. Character arcs mean more than just "hero is bad, then becomes good." Some of the most interesting stories are about protagonists that aren't good people. The Godfather, Goodfellas, Drive, Snowpiercer, The Watchmen (duh), all these stories are about flawed people that either end up in a worse point than they started, or never really get better. At best, they're about atonement, at worst, they're about a decent into madness. Despite that, the idea that a protagonist, especially a "hero," like those in Watchmen, could be considered anything but a hero is inconceivable. It's part of the reason I think people *[SPOILERS FOR THE LAST OF US 2 AHEAD]* got so angry when Joel was killed. Ignoring all the value judgements about the quality of its writing, people were so angry over the idea that Joel was killed, despite the fact that basically the entire story of the first game was about how Joel was a shitty person who deserved death, or if not you don't believe he deserved it, then at the very least, it was the only logical conclusion to his story because he was a broken, bitter man that murdered countless people and ultimately lied to his adoptive daughter about the outcome of everyone she'd ever known because he couldn't bear the trauma. *[SPOILERS OVER]*
      Tl;dr The term "protagonist" doesn't necessarily mean "hero of the story," it just means the main character. However, so much of our media is inundated with stories of heroes that I think a lot of people forgot how to consider that a story doesn't have to tell us about a hero, it can tell us about a human.
      Edit: I should also make it clear that I don't blame audiences for this mentality, I blame the corporations for feeding us the "Ubermensch" ideal power fantasy, i.e. the logical conclusion to the "good guy with a gun" argument that's been trotted out a million times over. I don't even blame writers, necessarily, as those are just individual people who grew up in the same society that inundated them with the exact same mindset. I blame the people at the top who decide what we like and what we want to see, where every story told has to be one where they're the ultimate victors. You have a nice self-contained story about the rich elite using their power to do whatever it takes to make themselves even richer? Well, obviously the ending has to be about how those were just the evil capitalists whose power is ultimately usurped the good capitalist that will do the good thing. Its neoliberal garbage.

    • @LimeyLassen
      @LimeyLassen Před 3 lety +20

      Walter White.

  • @Blarg14able
    @Blarg14able Před 3 lety +149

    "So that I know There's a general interest in (reviewing The Watchmen TV show)"
    Yes. Yes there is.

  • @bobsempletank5362
    @bobsempletank5362 Před 3 lety +109

    Ironically, the new Rorschach could've been an opportunity to explore this surface-deep exploration of these characters, and how someone follows and idolizes another's legacy, despite not really knowing what that legacy entailed. It could've been interesting if done correctly. Unfortunately, doing it correctly would shit on the piece of work it's actually being written in, so it had to be handled like how it was.

    • @tylersaez4095
      @tylersaez4095 Před 2 lety +8

      It's been a while since I've read the book but I think it does cover that stuff.

  • @syykik7986
    @syykik7986 Před 3 lety +308

    To me, owning merchandise of a character does not mean you look up to them, it just means that you like how the character is written or their design, for example, joker, at least in the golden age, joker was written well and his design is enticing therefor merchandise was made, same with Mr. Manhattan, he IS NOT someone you should look up to but his design and character are well made.
    Overall, a very good video quinton

    • @devforfun5618
      @devforfun5618 Před 2 lety +20

      his design is a naked blue man with a dot on his head, and the writting is "i dont care about anything, so i will only move a finger to comit atrocities, even thought i could fix a lot of the problems in the world at least for the people living in the moment"
      i like the story but manhatan is the last character i would have any merchandising

    • @rileydavidson180
      @rileydavidson180 Před rokem +8

      I like to think of it like this.
      Joker, Rorschach and Manhattan are interesting characters. But if someone says that any of them are their favourite character/s, you back away slowly.

    • @ROBERTJOHNSON020
      @ROBERTJOHNSON020 Před rokem +48

      I'm sorry, but DOCTOR Manhattan didn't go to medical school for six years just so you could call him Mr. Manhattan.

    • @smol-one
      @smol-one Před rokem +18

      @@ROBERTJOHNSON020 That was a lot funnier than it should have been.

    • @kirbth4769
      @kirbth4769 Před rokem +16

      @@rileydavidson180 saying a morality bad character is your favourite isn’t concerning it’s when someone Denies that they are bad

  • @jasonjacksn
    @jasonjacksn Před 3 lety +2383

    Warner Brothers really thought it was a good idea to put someone who hates comic books in charge of their comic movie franchise

    • @danielyoung6778
      @danielyoung6778 Před 3 lety +176

      I don't think that's a problem. I think a superhero property by people who hate superheroes is way more interesting than any actual unironic sueperhero property. The problem is getting a good writer who hates comics rather than Snyder who can't write for shit.

    • @jasonjacksn
      @jasonjacksn Před 3 lety +97

      @@danielyoung6778 that his movies were terrible and pften missed their chraters motivations and core valjues kinda proves you wrong

    • @danielyoung6778
      @danielyoung6778 Před 3 lety +62

      @@jasonjacksn I agreed with you that Snyder is a terrible writer in my comment. The man hasnever made a good film imo. Im saying a superhero film by a great writer disgusted by superheroes would be the only reason to have any excitement for one to me.

    • @jasonjacksn
      @jasonjacksn Před 3 lety +22

      @@danielyoung6778 that would make for a good original story. In fact has created some good original stories. Not if you're doing an adaptation though.

    • @jasonjacksn
      @jasonjacksn Před 3 lety +43

      @@danielyoung6778 in fact the biggest issue withcomic movis during the 90s and video game movies today is the lack of respect for the medium. Resulting in adaptations that both alienate existing fans and fails to attract new ones.

  • @loganshirley9058
    @loganshirley9058 Před 3 lety +751

    Someone should tell Snyder that there's a whole genre of film that's literally just people having sex

    • @petrfedor1851
      @petrfedor1851 Před 3 lety +96

      Even some violence can be found there.

    • @jinahardy7635
      @jinahardy7635 Před 3 lety +9

      i like this comment but i wont like this comment because it has 69 likes

    • @himikotogafanboythespacema5146
      @himikotogafanboythespacema5146 Před 3 lety +7

      And you could always make it violent but only certain people will like it

    • @nivaldowesley666
      @nivaldowesley666 Před 3 lety +17

      and he even can use the slowmotion! \^^/

    • @Metalbloodlord
      @Metalbloodlord Před 3 lety +1

      Dark and grim superheroes are awesome
      DC rebirth is trash for being a superhero reconstruction

  • @dr.limeade3035
    @dr.limeade3035 Před 3 lety +697

    Okay, anyone else thinks Rosharch would actually make a really good Batman villain?

    • @nixmilt3040
      @nixmilt3040 Před 3 lety +29

      Yeah he really would

    • @BostonMBrand
      @BostonMBrand Před 3 lety +120

      I mean given that he is essentially evil Batman (and yes I know Rorschach is originally based on the Question, leave me alone), he could be used to reflect on Batman similar to villains like Owlman, Hush, Talon, or Thomas Wayne.

    • @LuisMartinez-rw2lj
      @LuisMartinez-rw2lj Před 3 lety +21

      @@BostonMBrand whilst he looks like the question Moore said Rorschach is Batman in real life so you are right !!

    • @monty_coolmccool
      @monty_coolmccool Před 3 lety +41

      @@LuisMartinez-rw2lj Rorschach's objectivist nature was based on Question, but his morals (or lack thereof), insanity and "this city is afraid of me" is basically a parody of Batman

    • @ryanm.8720
      @ryanm.8720 Před 3 lety +6

      @@BostonMBrand Also, he'd be similar to a more cynical Anarky.

  • @noir-214
    @noir-214 Před 8 měsíci +18

    4:49 fun fact: night owl and rorschach are not based of batman they are based of the the two Charlton heroes blue beetle (ted kord) and the question and even the other heroes in watchmen are based of the other Charlton heroes like peacemaker, nightshade, captain atom and thunderbolt

  • @MadManW1thABox
    @MadManW1thABox Před 3 lety +209

    Man Quinton really took quarantine seriously and moved to Mars according to the location tags.

    • @dildonius
      @dildonius Před 3 lety +16

      He's hanging out with Dr. Manhattan on his glass superstructure out there.

    • @cerdon4076
      @cerdon4076 Před 3 lety +7

      Hes hanging out with Elon Musk in the internet historianverse

    • @MesaAufenhand
      @MesaAufenhand Před 3 lety +2

      @@dildonius where do you think glasses.usa got their glass...es?

  • @lavender.lemonade
    @lavender.lemonade Před 3 lety +256

    I feel like so many "edgy" things end up being stuck between people who get them and people who don't.
    -Watchmen
    -Rick and Morty
    -FilthyFrank
    - Any peice of Satire
    Like there are people who know how to actually analyze media and use iconology and the history and contemporary events to a peice of media being published because they know it's being edgy to make a point . And then there are edgelords with worms for brains.
    Addendum: Also yes please to a watchmen HBO video.

    • @antiestablishmentarianist
      @antiestablishmentarianist Před 3 lety +20

      i wonder if the writers understand this on some level and use it as a strategy to sell to both sides?

    • @SuperOssumPossum
      @SuperOssumPossum Před 3 lety +30

      To be fair, you have to have a very high IQ to understand Rick and Morty. The humor is extremely subtle, and without a solid grasp of theoretical physics most of the jokes will go over a typical viewer's head. There's also Rick's nihilistic outlook, which is deftly woven into his characterisation - his personal philosophy draws heavily fromNarodnaya Volya literature, for instance. The fans understand this stuff; they have the intellectual capacity to truly appreciate the depths of these jokes, to realize that they're not just funny- they say something deep about LIFE. As a consequence people who dislike Rick and Morty truly ARE idiots- of course they wouldn't appreciate, for instance, the humour in Rick's existencial catchphrase "Wubba Lubba Dub Dub," which itself is a cryptic reference to Turgenev's Russian epic Fathers and Sons I'm smirking right now just imagining one of those addlepated simpletons scratching their heads in confusion as Dan Harmon's genius unfolds itself on their television screens. What fools... how I pity them. 😂 And yes by the way, I DO have a Rick and Morty tattoo. And no, you cannot see it. It's for the ladies' eyes only- And even they have to demonstrate that they're within 5 IQ points of my own (preferably lower) beforehand.

    • @lavender.lemonade
      @lavender.lemonade Před 3 lety +12

      @@SuperOssumPossum I think this is my new favorite copypasta.

    • @Raggedyfink
      @Raggedyfink Před 3 lety +8

      I’ve been coming to a conclusion that most people’s personalities are wired in a way where they don’t understand subtleties until it’s either explained to them or they’re just THAT dense and that’s been the reason why so many people often misinterpret media to the point where it’s had very negative consequences on culture or even the world.
      I mean yeah it’s an admittedly judgmental conclusion that is pretty generalizing. If not most people’s personalities that are like this it’s at least a certain amount of the world’s population whose personalities have them Stan fictional far righters without any self awareness of who said character was meant to be a metaphor for.

    • @antiestablishmentarianist
      @antiestablishmentarianist Před 3 lety +19

      @@Raggedyfink nah, 90% of the population are morons that never question anything and aren't the slightest bit interested in understanding things on more than the most basic level. Anti-intellectualism is a real problem in America, and prob most of the world.

  • @Odd_Bin
    @Odd_Bin Před 3 lety +27

    Batman "you robbed a bank"
    "i was playing payday 2"
    "you're too dangerous, time to stay in Arkham asylum forever"

  • @jayrencemusic
    @jayrencemusic Před 9 měsíci +32

    Holy shit. You absolutely NAILED this video. It drives me crazy when people completely mis interpret this story. I was horrified by the end of watchmen. This story is fully a cautionary tale that is wildly relivent today. Not a super hero worship piece

  • @madisoncallihan2813
    @madisoncallihan2813 Před 3 lety +372

    And now we have The Boys which, original comic aside (since it's kind different and has its own issues), I think the show is an excellent followup to the spirit of Watchmen, commenting on a post 9/11 America instead of the Cold War era.

    • @louisduarte8763
      @louisduarte8763 Před 3 lety +58

      @@spiderjerusalem4009 So The Boys boils down to "Corporate-sponsored superheroes are EEEEEEEEVIIIIIIILLLLLLLLL!!!!! Brought to you by: Amazon."

    • @Joseph_Lambert
      @Joseph_Lambert Před 3 lety +5

      @@louisduarte8763 yes that’s the show and the comic. mostly just ignore this verse and enjoy watchmen

    • @lildufflebag
      @lildufflebag Před 3 lety +1

      Every now ant then I want to watch The Boys but then I remember that I've heard about the gill scene

    • @RJRedtail
      @RJRedtail Před 3 lety +28

      ​@@louisduarte8763 Corporations run everything, so that's unavoidable. It's ironic for sure, but what can you do? You can create art that's critical of corporations but that only way to get funding and a platform is through them. Even crowdfunding sites are owned by corporations that take a cut of the donations. It's basically in the same vein of critiquing the fossil fuel industry while owning a car.

    • @BifronsCandle
      @BifronsCandle Před 3 lety +44

      @@louisduarte8763 "You criticize society, yet you live in it? Most curious."
      That's what you sound like.

  • @olleronn616
    @olleronn616 Před 3 lety +434

    I love it when I stumble over Zack Snyder quotes. Hearing him talk makes it so funny to think that people consider him a cinematic genius.

    • @aeddiefarmer
      @aeddiefarmer Před 3 lety +80

      Yeah the quote from him in this is pretty horrible. Why do men like casually referencing other men getting raped, especially in prison?

    • @EddieDubs
      @EddieDubs Před 3 lety +43

      I don't believe there's a respected critic alive who thinks he's any sort of genius.

    • @peterstangl8295
      @peterstangl8295 Před 3 lety +64

      This is my first time actually hearing a quote of his. I never considered him any kind of genius, but i do/did enjoy some of his movies in a dumb, mindless kind of way. But damn. That quote just gave me a sad, new perspective. Suddenly everything makes a lot more sense now!

    • @sudevsen
      @sudevsen Před 3 lety +5

      Zack is so alike his fans it's truly amazing.
      One of us! One of us!

    • @captaincomic8678
      @captaincomic8678 Před 3 lety

      Dude, you're not even a regular genius.

  • @Nolan65775
    @Nolan65775 Před 3 lety +13

    There is a difference between 'Dark' and 'Edgey'. 'Dark' is when you include mature or serious subject matter because you want to tell a story that people can learn something or at the very least make a statement about something. Examples of 'Dark' graphic novels are Alan Moore's Watchmen, Kentaro Miura's Berserk, Art Spiegelman's Maus. 'Edgey' is when you include mature or serious subject matter because you think it's cool and will make people stop and gawk like it's such a shocking twist of events. 'Edgey' examples are the DC Snyderverse, Sonic OCs, and Doomsday Clock.

  • @RevOwOlutionary
    @RevOwOlutionary Před 3 lety +50

    Alan Moore and Vermin Supreme need to have a wrestling match to decide who gets to be called anarchist grandpa.

    • @ericb.4313
      @ericb.4313 Před rokem

      On the one hand, one will show me his literal magic cave. On the other hand, free pony. Who do I root for?

    • @star3catcherSEQUEL
      @star3catcherSEQUEL Před 10 měsíci +2

      No, they should get married and both get to be our anarchist grandpa.

  • @Exigentable
    @Exigentable Před 3 lety +336

    I can't believe snyder said that batman could possibly get raped in his movie lol

    • @dinosaysrawr
      @dinosaysrawr Před 3 lety +7

      Wait, wasn't that the point of Batman vs. Superman, though? Because it, um, succeeded.

    • @lingy69
      @lingy69 Před 3 lety

      @@dinosaysrawr not really as much as Warner bros wouldve hoped and it turned everyone off of justice league

    • @dinosaysrawr
      @dinosaysrawr Před 3 lety +14

      @@lingy69 , oh, I meant it was successful at raping Batman, Superman, and other beloved DC characters, if that was Snyder's objective. :D

    • @mabusestestament
      @mabusestestament Před 3 lety

      Well... he didn't actually have Batman raped in prison, right? 🙂

    • @aztroboy1450
      @aztroboy1450 Před 3 lety +1

      Well at least It didn't happen in the movies right guys?

  • @alexhemsworth1961
    @alexhemsworth1961 Před 3 lety +85

    Quinton with the cat on his lap looks like a villan trying to make us belive that we need to rebell agains our superheros ^^

  • @someguyinazoo
    @someguyinazoo Před rokem +29

    I love Rorschach because he’s an incredibly interesting character. It truly scares me how some people thinks he’s actually someone to look up to and idolize,yes Rorschach does some good things but anyone who thinks a homophonic creep who never showers and breaks into freinds homes is cool needs therapy.

    • @someperson9999
      @someperson9999 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Well, I was in thereapy. But my doctor gave me a referral and a restraining order after I broke into his house and ate his food.

    • @TextosyGraficos
      @TextosyGraficos Před 8 měsíci +3

      I think it's more bc they only know the movie

    • @someguyinazoo
      @someguyinazoo Před 8 měsíci

      @@TextosyGraficos agreed

    • @sabersin7694
      @sabersin7694 Před 7 měsíci

      Some people, despite thousands of years of philosophical teachings, still really cannot comprehend the idea of separating fiction from reality.

    • @dannyboy5008
      @dannyboy5008 Před 5 měsíci +4

      Idk, people here acknowledge that the characters in watchmen are complex, but also try to remove rorschach's complexity in order to "own" the rorschach fans.
      Yes, hes hateful. Yes, he enjoys killing criminals. Yes he doesnt shower. Yes, he breaks into peoples homes and eats their beans.
      But hes also one of the only characters in the story who wouldn't compromise. When superheroes were told to unmask and retire, he refused. When Veidts plan finished and everyone was prepared to let it all go to keep the lie, Rorschach refused. Even when a god like being was prepared to kill him, he refused.
      His black-and-white, objectivist view of the world (at least how Alan Moore interpreted it) also made for interesting comparisons with the other characters of the book, even when there are a few instances of him looking the other way for certain individuals. In a sea of grey morality, a black-and-white moralist can be refreshing, as is true for the reverse.
      There are also brief moments where we see that Rorschach is capable of empathy and care. He was the only character that seemed to care that the comedian died, and when he thought other masks might be in trouble, he tried to warn them. And then there was the whole landlady scene where he lets her go when he sees her crying children.
      Hes certainly vicious and ruthless, but its abundantly clear in the comic that the world in which he lives is equally vicious and ruthless. He wasnt a superhero for the fun of it like most of the other characters, we actually see he had a horrible childhood and was surrounded by horrible people who did shitty things, and therefore he genuinely wanted "justice" (that is, his own twisted form of justice)
      Theres plenty of things in his character that at the very least make him interesting with a few redeeming qualities so I dont really care if people find him cool.

  • @ultrazeptimus7529
    @ultrazeptimus7529 Před 2 lety +5

    It sucks cause the idea of Superman and Dr. Manhattan just... talking is a really cool one. A purely neutral omnipotent force and a purely good omnipotent force. You could make a lot of stuff about that. Like how we mentally reject the grey morality of our own world and make supermen who always find the right thing to do. Or how we reject absolute options in life and choose the morally grey option because the good option is so much harder. This could be an interesting conversation, an interesting series to see. But nah they had to mess it up.

  • @cmmosher8035
    @cmmosher8035 Před 3 lety +371

    So I have a totally different take on the end of Doomsday Clock, I thinks it's the writers middle finger to Snyder's idea of Superman. They were just willing to sacrifice the watchman for that goal.

    • @thewerdna
      @thewerdna Před 3 lety +119

      Yeah. I'd say this about Doomsday Clock: its a pretty good Superman story. Its not a very good Watchman sequel.

    • @U1TR4F0RCE
      @U1TR4F0RCE Před 3 lety +11

      At least when the first two issues came out the way I heard people in the comic sphere talk about it was it was to continue with the DC Rebirth movement and bring back the Justice Society of America which does have a bit of a fanbase from bronze age comic fans as well as the writer of the Doomsday Clock who made a short but fairly popular comic series involving them in the 2000s.

    • @Ultimataco
      @Ultimataco Před 3 lety +2

      @@U1TR4F0RCE yeah but due to the amount of delays doomsday clock had they ended up coming back first in a random issue of justice league.

    • @U1TR4F0RCE
      @U1TR4F0RCE Před 3 lety +4

      @@Ultimataco That was part of why I said at first. I really wonder if things would have worked better if there was someone in charge to try and make sure Gary Frank and Geoff Johns stick to a schedule.

    • @amaze2173
      @amaze2173 Před 3 lety +3

      It’s a pretty terrible watchmen sequel, sacrifices everything that made them interesting and was badly written

  • @zetsubanned4308
    @zetsubanned4308 Před 3 lety +83

    That Space Ghost bit is a piece of happy driftwood I'm clinging to in the wreckage of 2020.

  • @AllHailTheKang
    @AllHailTheKang Před 2 lety +34

    For the show: I think they did a pretty good job with it, it certainly does the “Dr Manhattan trying to learn how to be good” thing way better than doomsday clock, and what I think they did a well enough job at continuing the movie/comics too.

  • @johnnyth440
    @johnnyth440 Před rokem +10

    I can't wait for a comic where Homelander travels to an alternate universe, meets Superman, learns a lesson and he becomes just like him.

  • @ScrewedTimeLord
    @ScrewedTimeLord Před 3 lety +74

    4:15 I don’t know if it was intentional but saying “is a representation of The Question” while panning up to Rorschach is top tier
    For those who might not know, the superheroes in watchmen are based off/parodies of I believe charlton comics. So, Captain Atom -> Doctor Manhattan, Blue Beetle -> Night Owl, and The Question -> Roarschach

    • @Sandra_aschenbach_doyle
      @Sandra_aschenbach_doyle Před 3 lety +1

      I thought nightowl was supposed to batman.

    • @jonathaneilbeck2263
      @jonathaneilbeck2263 Před 3 lety +8

      Well DC had acquired those characters from Charlton and at the time DC had let a bunch of British writers go hog wild on do interpretations on some obscure characters, Alan Moore and Dave Gibbon's original pitch was going to use those characters, but... well most of them wouldn't be usuable so they had to make there own.

    • @Sandra_aschenbach_doyle
      @Sandra_aschenbach_doyle Před 3 lety +2

      @@jonathaneilbeck2263 ah. i was lead to believe that the mainstream dc characters were the original pitch. thx

    • @jonathaneilbeck2263
      @jonathaneilbeck2263 Před 3 lety

      @@Sandra_aschenbach_doyle Yeah, some major DC characters were from rival companies that they later bought, like Shazam was once owned by a company named Fawcett or Plastic Man was originally owned by Quality.

    • @PizzaRollExpert
      @PizzaRollExpert Před 3 lety

      @@jonathaneilbeck2263 Didn't know this but if fits really well given that most of Moores early career was just taking British characters in weird and subversive directions

  • @akap
    @akap Před 3 lety +34

    According to Moore, prior to being given Superman, and subsequently writing the phenomenal "For the Man Who Has Everything," he wanted to write about Martian Manhunter, and his struggles as an alien, the last of his kind, a pyrophobic detective, etc. I wish he'd been given the chance.

    • @charles-hubertroger5957
      @charles-hubertroger5957 Před 3 lety +5

      I had no idea he wanted to do Martian Manhunter, if he had the chance, the character would probably be completely different.
      At least he could do another green character, Swamp Thing, and he changed it for the better, but I'm really curious at how he would have handled Martian Manhunter.

  • @barak363363
    @barak363363 Před rokem +6

    This video is full of mistakes and biases

  • @llYossarian
    @llYossarian Před 2 lety +26

    Dude... this crystallizes the issues w/ the Watchman adaptation and the state of comic book movies and the general public's confused relationship w/ them to the same level I felt The Phantom Menace Review did for the Star Wars prequels. I really liked this. Thanks.

  • @teddybeer6206
    @teddybeer6206 Před 3 lety +259

    How to ruin Watchmen? By milking the crap out of it, of course! 😃
    The comic was clearly meant to be self-contained.

    • @Givemepeacealone
      @Givemepeacealone Před 3 lety +8

      It’s like the least milked comic book series

    • @Hastur_Carcosa
      @Hastur_Carcosa Před 3 lety +7

      Originally it was supposed to be a send off comic involving the Question and a few other Charlton Comics characters. You can see this when comparing Question, his worldview, and Steve Ditko’s perspective to Rorschach. DC wouldn’t let the writers use the characters, so the Watchmen were born.

    • @thegroove14
      @thegroove14 Před 3 lety +4

      Rorschach = The Question
      Dr. Manhattan = Captain Atom
      Nite Owl = Blue Beetle/Ted Kord

    • @teddybeer6206
      @teddybeer6206 Před 3 lety

      @@Givemepeacealone and it was STILL too much

    • @rodney2x48
      @rodney2x48 Před 3 lety +4

      Icba Luv What? It’s constantly getting special edition versions, definitive editions and so on. It got prequels and TWO sequels, and now it’s getting a spin-off and it’s elements have been added to the main comics canon. Fucking BATMAN AS DR. MANHATTAN is a thing now.

  • @germanmanuellopezdurazo3579
    @germanmanuellopezdurazo3579 Před 3 lety +204

    Zack Snyder sounds like a edgy kid who writes creepypastas.

    • @gregoriomassa8529
      @gregoriomassa8529 Před 3 lety +6

      The snyder fanbase men , they are worst than the belivers

    • @nicolerichwine5767
      @nicolerichwine5767 Před 3 lety +6

      He's just one of those that never moved on.

    • @danield.8233
      @danield.8233 Před 3 lety +1

      He's pretty cool, he clearly loves his work and he always tries to make the fans happy.

    • @crazydud3380
      @crazydud3380 Před 3 lety +1

      @@gregoriomassa8529 You mean the same fanbase that has raised a lot of money for mental health charities?

    • @MigIgg
      @MigIgg Před 3 lety +1

      @@gregoriomassa8529 Lol I am pretty sure snyder haters are alot more toxic than his fans, there is even a snyder hate page in fb where people are making rape jokes about his dead daughter

  • @zinnia1333
    @zinnia1333 Před rokem +4

    One of I think the most important lines that has stuck with me from the original watchmen is “Nothing ever ends,” and jesus fucking christ taking that and changing it to be “Everything ends,” is a goddamn travesty.

  • @MrLucasD123
    @MrLucasD123 Před 3 lety +28

    Dr. Manhattan isn't simply "good" or "bad." He sees all of time, but not in a linear way. He is so powerful and omnipotent, that the concept of one person dying is seen as minuscule.

    • @dankwarmouse6248
      @dankwarmouse6248 Před 3 lety +7

      Yeah I think Quinton doesn't understand the determinism that Dr. Manhattan is aware of.

    • @Dogy0909
      @Dogy0909 Před 3 lety

      I’ve never read Watchman but he seems more a neutral yet destructive force a la other nuclear bomb substitutes in fiction like Godzilla

    • @dankwarmouse6248
      @dankwarmouse6248 Před 3 lety +11

      @@Dogy0909 I'm not sure I'd really call him either of those, though it's not unfair to. He's neutral in the sense that he recognizes the meaninglessness of human conflict when compared to the scale of other events in the universe, but he still takes sides -- at first as an apathetic tool of the government, and later, as a detached being with some ethical consideration of life. And of course, he's clearly destructive since that is how he was used by the government, but he never actually caused destruction outside of the wars he participated in.

    • @Dogy0909
      @Dogy0909 Před 3 lety +1

      DankWarMouse THATS a good analysis,Thank you! I really should read the comic especially if it’s so easy to get ahold of

    • @dankwarmouse6248
      @dankwarmouse6248 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Dogy0909 It's really phenomenal, I definitely recommend it!

  • @frankclark2208
    @frankclark2208 Před 3 lety +57

    I still have nightmares of you ripping up a copy of watchmen to recreate the =3 wall.

  • @reversecollision
    @reversecollision Před 3 lety +226

    I disagree that if somebody buys merch of something, that they idolize it unquestionably, which is your point (or should I say your 'plush' avatar's) with Watchmen merch. Enthusiastic nerds buy merch of things so they can show it off, meet other people that know what it references, bring back good memories, all kinds of reasons. It shows a love of it the media, not necessarily an an unquestionable adoration that suggests they think that said character should be an aspiration or something. Obviously, there will be a high overlap, but to assume somebody didn't 'understand' something because they induldge in comic book merch (that is the norm in that hobby) is just being baselessly judgemental. Like don't get me wrong, I agree DC revisiting Watchmen cheapens or misses the point for that sweet merch dollar, but comic books revisiting brilliant ideas until they're brain dead is sadly the model in that medium.

    • @marvelprince
      @marvelprince Před 3 lety +25

      Agreed. I don’t find Dr Manhattan a hero or someone to idolize but I would get a Manhattan plush. I also would of Hannibal too actually now that I think of it

    • @HOTD108_
      @HOTD108_ Před 3 lety +19

      Yeah, I own a glow in the dark Dr. Manhattan adult toy which I display on my night table, but that doesn't mean I support the ideals, or lack thereof, the character displays.

    • @maiwu3187
      @maiwu3187 Před 3 lety +39

      That's probably the norm for the average comic book fan, I think in this case Quinton is just referencing people where the nuance of the characters fly right over their head. i.e Unironic Joker worship via Joker merch, cosplay, and FB quotes

    • @richardnixonpog9925
      @richardnixonpog9925 Před 3 lety +13

      And furthermore, I completely disagree with what he said regarding "the fans don't get it" because he specifically stated the majority, which I think is just blatantly disingenuous. Granted he said "Most, not all" but that still implies that this is, in fact, the majority. Well think about it. He brought up Marvel/DC movies as an example so I think it's fair to apply it here. Do Marvel/DC fans misinterpret their respective franchises
      (for dc just count the nolan flicks + Shazam and Joker)?
      I would say absolutely not, because those movies stand on their own outside of the comics. A film should be able to do what it likes with the material as long as it UNDERSTANDS THE MATERIAL. The Dark Knight sure as hell isn't representative of the storyline it gets it from, but it's still a good movie. The fandom getting the point isn't the issue here, the issue is how the makers of the media interpret it, because that's going to A. Bring in new parts of the fandom
      And B. Give the impression of what that source material was like under the lense of a different medium.
      That's why Zach Snyder's movies sucked, not because "fandom dumb". Don't fault the way people think just because the media they got it from reinforces there ideas that the director had.
      Put quite simply, criticize the fandom for dumb shit they do, not because they enjoy a property and maaaaaybe don't want to think that much about it.

    • @friendlytalbot4050
      @friendlytalbot4050 Před 3 lety +17

      I found it disingenious as well, he likely talks about a small subsect of the fandom who unironically adores these characters as 'heroes', but the majority knows and understands they're crappy people. Watchmen became popular because people do like flawed heroes as much as they like idealistic heroes.
      A lot of people also love the Joker, but most people also know that he's a crappy person, and don't endorse his behaviour as something to look up to. I mean, Joker is one of my favourite DC characters, but in no way would I ever want him to exist in the real world. I don't look up to him, but I take delight in his nerfarious personality, because he is exactly a fictional character, and me liking the character is NOT a statement of my real world beliefs. Same with the Watchmen.

  • @THATGuy5654
    @THATGuy5654 Před rokem +7

    The DC universe keeps having its reality rewritten every few years in some catastrophic event. I like to imagine there was some guy born in 1978 who has been leading a completely normal life, not noticing or being effected by any of these crisises, except that every time they happen, he has a couple of minutes of intense nausea. It's technically a super human ability, but as far as he's concerned, it's a mysterious medical issue that barely effects his quality of life.

  • @dylanv.4932
    @dylanv.4932 Před 3 lety +51

    tbf doomsday clock was supposed to be meta commentary about how watchmen made comics pessimistic and darker after it became mainstream. So the real goal was more or less to make a statement about how comics should include more hope/optimism. Superman representing hope and the watchmen were more of vehicle for just a negative counterpoint to superman, which is somewhat true in the history of comics. I don't think the goal was to make the same kind of commentary about society, it was more just about the meta of comicbooks.

    • @writershard5065
      @writershard5065 Před 2 lety +6

      But then it's criticizing the wrong crowd. Watchmen never set out to claim that superhero comics should be pessimistic. It just created a demand for them that comic book publishing companies didn't understand, and decided that dark, edgy themes was what they needed everywhere now. That isn't Watchmen's fault.

    • @CayeDaws
      @CayeDaws Před 2 lety +5

      @@writershard5065 yeah, from what I found out the dark age of comics was a result on Marvel trying to mimick what DC was doing at that time [Watchmen to the Long Halloween Continuity and the death of superman arc] by hiring complete hacks like Rob Liefeld and whoever made the transformers g2 comics, along side the new companies being directly responsible for comics crash by telling everyone that saving your comics can make you rich. DC back then was actually doing pretty well even if Frank Miller made DK2.

  • @evanhunter2571
    @evanhunter2571 Před 3 lety +223

    Quinton: All women are QUEENS
    Rorschach: If she breathes, she’s a THOOOT!!

    • @satansmascara9756
      @satansmascara9756 Před 3 lety +22

      Isn't that just his relationship with nite owl lmao

    • @user-iy6rp1zt1l
      @user-iy6rp1zt1l Před 3 lety +8

      Interesting is that in the all women are queens video, the if she breathes guy looks a lot like Quinton. To me anyway

    • @Dogy0909
      @Dogy0909 Před 3 lety +1

      低端辛吉德 I didnt know that phrase came from a video. Is it the Quartering? They look slightly similar

    • @worlds1ep3enthusiast92
      @worlds1ep3enthusiast92 Před 3 lety

      *duel of the fates begins*

  • @Takeoverthebank
    @Takeoverthebank Před 3 lety +135

    I don’t really see the purpose of them keeping continuing watchmen the story ended perfectly and no one was complaining wanting more.

    • @5Detective
      @5Detective Před 3 lety +22

      Money

    • @theexcogitatoris837
      @theexcogitatoris837 Před 3 lety +5

      Plata

    • @sorryifoldcomment8596
      @sorryifoldcomment8596 Před 3 lety +4

      The executives are the ones complaining, for more money. More!!

    • @krime2001
      @krime2001 Před 2 lety +1

      Because the VAST majority of living humans haven't read the comic book... Myself included. TV show was dope though!

  • @Captain8ball
    @Captain8ball Před 8 měsíci +8

    If you were a part of the Comics community during rebirth/doomsday clock era Everyone was extremely confused and extremely excited, but also recognize that this is probably the last creative idea that they’ll have for the next decade.

  • @dadefrost2059
    @dadefrost2059 Před 3 lety +12

    I need the "DO NOT DATE ME" tshirt more than I've ever needed anything.

  • @johnterrencesmith2148
    @johnterrencesmith2148 Před 3 lety +645

    Rorschach isn’t a parody of Batman he’s a parody of Steve Ditko’s writing of his creations The Question and Mr. A.

    • @googleacount3611
      @googleacount3611 Před 3 lety +60

      Yeah no , like off of design yes but he is still a obvious parody of bat man

    • @havelyntherockelyn1576
      @havelyntherockelyn1576 Před 3 lety +37

      @@googleacount3611 Nope.

    • @jonathancampbell5231
      @jonathancampbell5231 Před 3 lety +167

      He's both.
      Alan Moore started off Question and Mr A, but he has said in interviews that he thought of Rorsach as "If Batman was a real person, he'd be a nutjob".

    • @creed8712
      @creed8712 Před 3 lety +3

      GOOGLE ACOUNT he’s a parody of a version of Batman that was just recently introduced at the time

    • @BlindedBraille
      @BlindedBraille Před 3 lety +57

      @@googleacount3611 It's all three. Most people don't even know Mr. A, but that's really the character Rorschach is based on. That character is all about objectivism and black/white morality. Batman doesn't have a black/white morality and if anyone believes so hasn't read enough Batman to know.

  • @miguelalejandrocorado7175
    @miguelalejandrocorado7175 Před 3 lety +40

    “A Bat Branding-Iron?!” Classic bat credit card humor Quentin. So glad I caught that. Honestly made my day.

  • @VampPhoenix99
    @VampPhoenix99 Před 2 lety +35

    I definitely disagree about the purpose of merchandise from the perspective of fans and collectors--I have plushies of characters approximately as bad as Hannibal Lecter and I can assure you it's not for lack of seeing the bad. Sometimes emotional attachment and idealization are separate. Not always--I know plenty of fans miss the point of characters so as to not feel bad for liking them--but sometimes.
    That's all I want to say. Good video.

    • @GacMan47
      @GacMan47 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Sounds like you have a plushie of Dexter or Joker.

  • @Tuckbro
    @Tuckbro Před rokem +3

    I just love this mans Dr Manhattan voice lol

  • @angrybrony
    @angrybrony Před 3 lety +59

    minor note about the watchmen characters: none of them, to my knowledge, are based on original dc charater, they were based on characters from Charlton Comics, a comic company DC bought up. owlman is based on the charater blue beetle (the comic even has owlman in a slimier air craft BB used called "the bug"), rorschach is the question, Manhattan is captin atom ect. ect.

    • @creed8712
      @creed8712 Před 3 lety

      Iafiv Iv that’s literally how Cena described Peacemaker whom he was based off

    • @angrybrony
      @angrybrony Před 3 lety +1

      @Iafiv Iv yeah but my point still stands tho. like Rorschach is just with paint on he's make and a worse attitude.

    • @coltonruscheinsky7863
      @coltonruscheinsky7863 Před 3 lety

      @Iafiv Iv Rorschack is somewhat based on Batman but moreso based on Steve Ditko's Mr. A.

    • @YggdrasilAudio
      @YggdrasilAudio Před 3 lety

      @Iafiv Iv If you read the Watchmen 19 suplementary material, they've actually created a fake psychological way of classifying different types of masked vigilantes. It is, of course, called the Wertham Spectrum.

    • @angrybrony
      @angrybrony Před 3 lety

      @Iafiv Iv i think the funniest part is when that time that guy got his face deed fried.

  • @TitaniusAnglebard
    @TitaniusAnglebard Před 3 lety +90

    "If you want, I could make another standalone video about it"
    Quinton, this is extortion. You are just using us for views!

  • @josephmatthews7698
    @josephmatthews7698 Před rokem +3

    The fact this video has at least three ads and is hocking merch constantly on top of it hilarious considering its about the merchandising and dumbing down of watchmen. Don't forget to buy night owls glasses.

  • @gamerman360
    @gamerman360 Před 3 lety +5

    It honestly makes me smile when my favorite youtubers have their OWN ads in the video. It means they're getting paid directly. Get that money!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @grapeshot
    @grapeshot Před 3 lety +105

    I've just always noticed how Dr. Manhattan is so much more overpowered than his teammates. Like on the movie when he was in Vietnam. Vaporize people to the soundtrack of Ride of the Valkyries.

    • @LauraGrrrr5370
      @LauraGrrrr5370 Před 3 lety +51

      He's the only one with actual superpowers. The others are just costumed vigilantes who know how to fight.

    • @grapeshot
      @grapeshot Před 3 lety +7

      @@LauraGrrrr5370 True

    • @aaronsoto1346
      @aaronsoto1346 Před 3 lety +6

      Just like Superman in the Justice League

    • @sumanoskae
      @sumanoskae Před 3 lety +24

      And yet he is powerless. Manhattan suffers from the determinism problem; in a purely rational, predictable universe, a sufficiently advanced intellect could predict everything that would ever happen, even below a subatomic level. For such a mind, their own motivations and the results of their actions would be equally obvious; they would know themselves well enough to predict their own behavior in every situation.
      This effectively means that the omniscient mind is a mere observer, a passive prisoner who can merely observe a universe who's form is singular, eternal and unchanging. This is Dr. Manhattan, and it's one of the most horrific fates I've ever seen put to print.

    • @sewershaman3280
      @sewershaman3280 Před 3 lety +2

      yeah thats the point

  • @ntrpk7296
    @ntrpk7296 Před 3 lety +49

    Nerdsplaining: Dr. Manhattan's precognician couldn't see past "the incident", his powers making him unable to relate to humans is the point.

  • @pyrazine
    @pyrazine Před 3 lety

    would love to see more watchmen content from you! great analysis, i really enjoyed

  • @HappyGingerWolf
    @HappyGingerWolf Před 3 lety +28

    The bat brand in BvS was so out of touch with batman that I assumed it was luthor framing him until I saw him actually holding it

    • @sarafontanini7051
      @sarafontanini7051 Před 3 lety +2

      and people expect the man who allowed Batman to do this to make a better Justice League movie...

    • @eliaskouakou7051
      @eliaskouakou7051 Před 3 lety +1

      @@sarafontanini7051 and it was better.

    • @sarafontanini7051
      @sarafontanini7051 Před 3 lety

      @@eliaskouakou7051 yeah well, given the man's track record, didyou expect me to think otherwise?
      PLus it still had the issue of the Justice League being very....murdery.

    • @belloutdoors5217
      @belloutdoors5217 Před 3 lety +1

      @@sarafontanini7051 if you think batman doesn't kill you are clueless

    • @sarafontanini7051
      @sarafontanini7051 Před 3 lety +4

      @@belloutdoors5217 while there are POSSIBLY exceptions to the rule, that is depending on the writer, and by and large Batman REFUSES to take a life, as he does not want to be anything like the man who killed his parents. He is JUSTICE, he merely stops the schemes of criminals and helps the police.
      If Batman were to take a life it would haunt him, tarnish his name and ruin his standing with the people of Gotham, and thus he REFUSES to kill, even if it's someone like the Joker.
      Oh but, go on, tell me how I'm wrong, without using the movies as examples.

  • @rockisheaven
    @rockisheaven Před 3 lety +20

    The Saturday Morning Watchmen satire by Harry Partridge understands the comic more than Snyder’s film or Doomsday Clock ever did.

    • @wppb50
      @wppb50 Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you for reminding me that exists.

  • @SamDotGov
    @SamDotGov Před 3 lety +38

    The thing about watchmen's inclusion in the Doomsday clock event was because, during Dc's relaunch into the new 52, most creators wanted to go into a very dark and gritty direction similar to Watchmen and having Dr. Manhatan as the villain by manipulating the reality of DC was a metaphor for writers drastically changing characters to fit into that watchmen mold, it wasn't made as a commentary for society as a whole but instead a criticism of the state of Dc Comics.

    • @deenydude7
      @deenydude7 Před 3 lety +16

      This. Quinton missed so much of the subtext of DClock it's honestly upsetting. The story was always intended to be a meta-commnetary about the practices of tentpole superhero comics. But his talking points sound like they came from an article on AiPT or Newsarama or something. Just talking points that show me that he only bought the book, barely read it, and didn't bother ACTUALLY analyzing it.

    • @SamDotGov
      @SamDotGov Před 3 lety +6

      @@deenydude7 Maybe but I could understand the point of view of going into Doomsday clock and expecting a Watchmen sequel as opposed to a Grant Morrison esc story. But it's super frustrating that he doesn't really go into depth or give context to why Doomsday clock was created

    • @TheRichandmighty
      @TheRichandmighty Před 3 lety +7

      Well my reading is that Quinton isn't a comics guy, he just happened to like Watchmen. Reading that way makes it so that he can get Watchmen because he's seen Marvel movies but he won't get Doomsday Clock because he's not an avid DC comics reader.

    • @SamDotGov
      @SamDotGov Před 3 lety +3

      TheRichandmighty I don’t even think you have to understand Dc continuity in order to get the message of Doomsday clock sure it helps and gives the story more nuance but you could still get it

    • @atosm8300
      @atosm8300 Před 3 lety +3

      Honestly, can we blame them? Imo the commentary was really poorly done, with even some other comics youtubers, such as Chris from Comic Tropes, not really liking the story.

  • @johnathanargow4762
    @johnathanargow4762 Před 3 lety +11

    I was already listening when you are speaking, but i decided to just fold my clothes while listening.
    Then i hear batman impersonation and jesus you hit the right notes for that character God damn

  • @joju997
    @joju997 Před rokem +15

    In rewatching this it feels like you gave Doomsday Clock too much credit. It’s been a while since I’ve read it and hearing the ideas “someone else tries to be Rorschach, realized how fucked up he is, but then tried to be better” and “Doctor Manhattan has some recognition of ethics” sound like good story ideas. And then I remember how badly Doomsday Clock fumbles.

  • @DarkxxPixie
    @DarkxxPixie Před 3 lety +41

    I find it very amusing that you talked about comics media avoiding real world parallels over the title sequence of the Justice League intro, a cartoon with multiple, explicit parallels to second bush term America

  • @MateusDrake
    @MateusDrake Před 3 lety +55

    I loved DC Fandome's trailers and interviews, but the moment Zack Snyder said Dr. Manhattan was his favorite superhero because he has "cool powers" kinda broke my heart.
    This video reminded me of that moment, but extended to several minutes, almost torture.
    Pretty good video, even though I don't agree with everything.

    • @GeorgeNoiseless
      @GeorgeNoiseless Před 3 lety +1

      A penny for your thoughts? This is a fertile ground for discussion.

    • @billbutton8468
      @billbutton8468 Před 3 lety

      Dr. Manhattan is my favorite cause he has cool powers too. I don't see the big deal with that.

    • @creed8712
      @creed8712 Před 3 lety +1

      ryne green isn’t the entire story of Dr Manhattan about how his power effects him?

    • @creed8712
      @creed8712 Před 3 lety

      ryne green I guess then you’re getting mad at him for something you assumed he meant which is stupid. He very well could have meant how it affects him since the powers of a character almost always inform their character. Superman is a great example but doctor Manhattan being able to see everything and being able to do virtually everything is a cool power and it’s interesting to see how it’s used

    • @officerspider7996
      @officerspider7996 Před 3 lety

      I mean I like Spider-Man cause he’s Cool. I love The Batman who Laughs cause he looks cool. No problem in liking something that’s Cool

  • @Dappis
    @Dappis Před 3 lety +5

    Daily reminder that there are people who unironically thought Rorschach was a hero

    • @jalcobo
      @jalcobo Před 3 lety +1

      Only white republicans (nazis) would think that. I hate republicans.

  • @lordofthebuckets2676
    @lordofthebuckets2676 Před 2 lety +51

    I feel like I’ve never seen a Zack Snyder quote that made me think he was a smart person.

    • @syafiqjabar
      @syafiqjabar Před rokem +1

      Which really makes me worry about people. Zack Snyder makes me movies that are so obviously looking up to superheroes and some of the most left wing or liberal someone has tried to make superheroes recently, and people don't notice that. Zack Snyder movies are the equivalent of someone writing down 1+1=2 and the response to it can be like people trying to tell us 2 is a stupid number.

    • @concept5631
      @concept5631 Před 8 měsíci +6

      ​@@syafiqjabar I think Snyder just isn't as smart as his fans want everyone to believe. Shoving in garbage about leftism or liberals didn't add to your point at all and detracted from it.

  • @anonymousdratini
    @anonymousdratini Před 3 lety +336

    Conclusion: The Boys is a better Watchmen sequel than most Watchmen sequels

    • @Metalbloodlord
      @Metalbloodlord Před 3 lety +21

      The Boys is fucking awesome

    • @spiderjerusalem4009
      @spiderjerusalem4009 Před 3 lety +52

      Because the boys's show doesn't follow its source material.
      The source material doesn’t seem to be as effective as the show at showing how evil corporate America could be using the superhero.
      Garth ennis tried so hard to make the readers hate superheroes but instead it was just constantly showing his hatred.
      The comic always came off as trying way too hard to be edgy and shocking, and it just had to shove down your throat so much shock value it got old really fast.
      The TV show is more layered, characters are more developed, the conflict is way more interest, and it actually has something similar to a narrative focus. The Seven are a surprisingly human bunch instead of being a bunch of one-dimensional awful people that are 100% awful with no redeeming qualities. I got honestly surprised at how the flipping Deep actually turned out to be a human with actual feelings. The Homelander doesn't act like an adult-sized baby and is actually someone who knows what the hell he's doing and is a threat outside of the realm of his flying brick-ness. Starlight and Hughie are both more well-rounded and active characters overall, and grow out just having everyone dump on their faces for I-don't-know-how-many-issues. Butcher too, is less of an asshole and more of a sympathetic jerk (in the good sense). Overall, just a much improved version of the story with good characters that actually capitalizes on its premise.
      and also Certain things like The Boys not having powers from the start, the elimination of the dog as Butcher's sidekick, Homelander being more stupid than a wet coast while in the show, he's been written way better, the changes to Homelander's character to make him more sympathetic (and to be honest there is a lot more ambiguity shown between the actions of Butcher & Homelander which if done well could be really great), changes to some characters (the deep is fucking hilarious), they did a hell of a lot right.
      One reason I think it works is that The Boys (comic) is a satire on Superhero comics while The Boys (TV) is a satire on Superhero movies/tvshows. The base premise is the same and there are enough similarities to the source that it still feels true to the comics without needing to be a pure conversion.
      thx god I don't need to see Terror fuck some old lady’s dog
      Not to mention a lot of unimportant dialogues, Queen maeve having sex with a small grown man, Hughie shitting on the floor, and a Superhero feeling the need to fuck everything including animals and inanimate objects... and of course children, & Teenage kix having sex and changing women which is done every night, etc.
      WTF? And also not to mention THE ENDING,
      The boys's comic's ending is so terrible, it probably makes into top 5 worst ending of all time.
      Doesn't even get to top 7 or 8 Ennis's work.
      Only pervert edgelords Ennis's diehard fans would say that the comic's better.

    • @DorkN313
      @DorkN313 Před 3 lety +18

      eh... The Boys is better than Watchmen sequels, but it still misses a lot. Watchmen is a genius deconstruction of the genre, The Boys is "what if superheroes=bad and superheroes=edgy?". I love The Boys, but Watchmen is a lot more

    • @thatguy8637
      @thatguy8637 Před 3 lety +25

      God Almighty please oh god tell me this was sarcastic

    • @nowhereman6019
      @nowhereman6019 Před 3 lety

      Why does nobody who talks about The Boys talk about the comic? The comic is fucking fantastic, more people should read it.

  • @lautaromedina6158
    @lautaromedina6158 Před 3 lety +147

    Oh boy, I can't wait for the angry Rorschach fanboys and Snyder cultists

    • @commentmanwhoeatsgahbage3022
      @commentmanwhoeatsgahbage3022 Před 3 lety +48

      B-but my sexist alt-right vigilante is based right? Right????!

    • @JohnathanJWells
      @JohnathanJWells Před 3 lety +28

      I love Rorschach, but I think anyone who sees him as a "good guy" is messed up. He's meant to be single minded, stubborn, and literally autistic. I think people who deny the depth of the character are missing out on as much as those who think he's a "righteous badass".

    • @MiloKuroshiro
      @MiloKuroshiro Před 3 lety +8

      @@JohnathanJWells depth don't justify a character. Being a shitty horrible psychopath isn't the opossite of complex.

    • @michaelmoroney423
      @michaelmoroney423 Před 3 lety +9

      @@JohnathanJWells How's he meant to be autistic?

    • @Matter-Dark
      @Matter-Dark Před 3 lety +3

      Michael Moroney He could be. He has trouble with social cues and communicating with others in general.

  • @joshcarr2356
    @joshcarr2356 Před 3 lety

    Definitely please make that watchmen series video. You’re my new favorite CZcamsr by far

  • @afrothekobold
    @afrothekobold Před rokem +5

    the more I hear about Alan Moore and his work, the more I'm convinced that his Galaxy Brain is simply too big for our smooth brains to fully comprehend

  • @NoGoodNik1
    @NoGoodNik1 Před 3 lety +44

    I was going to go on a long and passionate diatribe about how early-to-mid 20th century super hero comics can be seen as an aspect of Eastern European Jewish-American culture and how this is important this can be to understanding the genre, but I'm very tired so I'm just gonna tell you all to read The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay and get some rest.

    • @ianbyrne465
      @ianbyrne465 Před 3 lety +8

      *Looks at a framed picture of Jack Kirby*

    • @captaincomic8678
      @captaincomic8678 Před 3 lety +1

      I'm not sure that diatribe could have made you sound any more pretentious than your brief summary of it already did. Not sure if that's an achievement to be proud of, but hey.

    • @NoGoodNik1
      @NoGoodNik1 Před 3 lety

      @@captaincomic8678 honestly? that's fair

  • @noasundqvist7090
    @noasundqvist7090 Před 3 lety +265

    I really have to disagree on merchandising, I don't think merchandise is comparable to its media as an exercise of understanding, buying a manhattan statue like you say doesn't mean that you haven't taken in the themes, it means he's got a really cool design which looks quirky. Now if the media itself is explicitly anti merchandising then yeah, fair point. But the point of watchmen is that you shouldn't idolise these people, buying something for its aesthetics doesn't mean yiu idolise it.

    • @ChangedMyNameFinally69
      @ChangedMyNameFinally69 Před 3 lety +13

      Dunno about that, are statues not idolatrous?

    • @clauhasavtuberaddiction3583
      @clauhasavtuberaddiction3583 Před 3 lety +18

      Your argument is "What if i like it because it just looks cool" if you need something cool in your place just find something that is just cool and doesn't have the kind of meaning that you want to excuse yourself from.

    • @ChangedMyNameFinally69
      @ChangedMyNameFinally69 Před 3 lety +1

      @@clauhasavtuberaddiction3583 Ooh get em

    • @W3irdWombat
      @W3irdWombat Před 3 lety +58

      Agreed. Maybe I have a statue of Marvel’s Carnage.
      Does that mean I condone hideous acts of violence? No. It just means I thought the character was cool and having a statue of it is a way of reminding me of the cool story arcs.
      Dr.M is a fascinating character and one of the most iconic characters in Watchmen and comics in general. Maybe you just want a cool statue of him since he was really well written and is synonymous with Watchmen. Doesn’t mean you agree with the fictional characters ideals. Just that you enjoyed his character and comic.

    • @Battfro
      @Battfro Před 3 lety +4

      I feel buying a statute could be argued to be idolatry. Someone buying a Doctor Manhattan statute is Someone who knows a lot about them and wants an idol, another way of referring to a statute, of them.

  • @Milliethepumpkin
    @Milliethepumpkin Před rokem +3

    It’s funny cause snyders description of watchmen is the exact thing watchmen mocking.

  • @seanwalsh6417
    @seanwalsh6417 Před 3 lety +7

    There's just so many little things in Watchmen you can't really replicate. I'm sure it's not common, but the biggest example for me is that it took 3 readings to realize the end is near guy was Rorschach

  • @jays.6843
    @jays.6843 Před 3 lety +104

    The DC/Watchmen crossover was weirdly solid. It didn't act like they were the best people. In fact, it actively showed all the members to be borderline villains.
    It also mocked Rorschach fanboys.
    I'm not going to act like it was as good as the original, or that it was the most coherent, but it did say "listen, Watchmen was dark, but DC shouldn't always be, and it should be it's own thing, because injecting super dark shit into DC is what started The New 52, and that was iffy at best".
    It doesn't detract from the original and uses it contextually to make a statement about the state of modern comics that want to be Watchmen without understanding what it was about.
    So I really feel like Quentin used the right formula for the wrong answer here. I also think he entirely misread the ending.
    Manhattan didn't save the world, he decided that he wasn't fit for the task because he's an asshole and gave the powers to a baby, committing suicide in the process. The baby was going to be raised by a loving family, and the baby's name was Clark.
    Manhattan literally just aped the DC universe, just like the DC universe aped Watchmen. That was the point. He never became a hero because he was never anything like God, which he constantly said. He just came to the realization that he also shouldn't be. He came from a hot garbage world where heroes basically couldn't exist, and found one where they could, and he started fucking it up because he felt like there was something inherently wrong with that concept, and to me, that's a statement.

    • @ArchiveTheMyth
      @ArchiveTheMyth Před 3 lety +11

      I thought it was a pretty good crossover honestly. Taking two universes with inherently different character morality, a gritty grey and the typical positive world of normal DC. I'm not sure it was meant to put too much into the superhero good trope.

    • @g.a.2997
      @g.a.2997 Před 3 lety +10

      I agree with you as well. I feel like if Zack Synder is a film maker misinterpreting a comic's point. Then, Quinton is a video maker misinterpreting a comic's point. I mean that in a respectful way. I feel like Quinton has a more causal knowledge of comics, I maybe wrong. I also did think he was going to talk about the watchmen property like how he talked about the back to the future property; all encompassing. The Thumbnail is titled, "watchmen sequels". Analyzing doomsday clock and Zack Synder's watchmen are easy picking. But analyzing Lindeloff's watchmen and Darwyn cooke's minutemen is harder because they are genuinely good story. Honestly, I feel like Darwyn cooke's minutemen is really slept-on because of the whole watchmen situation. It sucks because it's the last things he worked on before his passing. Both Lindeloff and Cooke give background characters more complexities and tragedies.

    • @tristancarroccia9900
      @tristancarroccia9900 Před 3 lety +6

      Yeah this. I just don't entirely agree w his take. Yeah some stuff was dumb but overall I feel like this is a valid entry in the DC canon. It seemed like the only realistic arc Manhattan could go through. He realizes his faults and the effect hes had and is like k ill make someone like superman because he is cool. Maybe it's me but having this kind of optimism isn't inherently bad.

    • @Ale_LSH
      @Ale_LSH Před 3 lety +2

      @@g.a.2997 Cooke's minutemen is mostly slept on because of the bad rep of the rest of the Before Watchmen series, a shame honestly because it is really is a good entry.

    • @kyleforbes6048
      @kyleforbes6048 Před 3 lety +3

      You. You get it. Mad props to you.

  • @mattosmith400
    @mattosmith400 Před 3 lety +55

    The best watchmen sequel is harry Partridge’s Saturday morning watchmen. Although Doomsday clock looks like an unironic version of that.

  • @ramoncarrasco2208
    @ramoncarrasco2208 Před 3 lety

    great vid! watchmen is my favorite comic and growing up reading it at different points in my life have made me experience it in all the ways you mentioned in the vid.

  • @Jaspertine
    @Jaspertine Před 3 lety +21

    17:30 To be fair, though, at least one of the TV adaptations of The Tick was pretty overt in its use of Superheroes as a metaphor for LGBT people. There was even an episode where Arthur was forcefully sent to a "superhero rehabilitation centre" by family members that clearly mirrored so-called "conversion therapy" centres.

    • @akiraeatsguitarpicks491
      @akiraeatsguitarpicks491 Před 2 lety +2

      Idk man that sounds actually interesting. Also X-men has been doing the same thing for decades dummy

    • @riopato2009
      @riopato2009 Před rokem

      interesting perspective to associate conversion therapy for superhero rehabilitation center. The book always portrayed this as an insane asylum with the emphasis on split personality disorders. The entire satire of the book revolved around the Tick being an escaped mental patient and suggested that his adventures were in his head. But in reality, the reader couldn't tell if he was a super powered human or not. Authur being committed was more akin to concerns of losing his mind or having an addiction. If the newer tv show tried to angle this as conversion therapy, no wonder the series went nowhere.

  • @EpicGamerWinXD69
    @EpicGamerWinXD69 Před 3 lety +44

    Good to see some on the internet mention the tick, that show is seriously underated

  • @iowars8592
    @iowars8592 Před 3 lety +244

    Great video, but I think you misunderstand Doomsday Clock. What Geoff Johns, as well as Grant Morrison and Mark Waid before him wanted to do was to criticize how, in their view, Watchmen had ruined superhero comics. Their point was that the industry was endlessely chasing Watchmen's success by trying to make every comic like it, and in doing so made comics too grim and too dark, disconnecting them from their roots of escapism.
    The ending of Doomsday Clock isn't Geoff Johns not understanding Watchmen, it's his deconstruction of it. In his mind, superhero comics are the realm of imagination and fantasy, where realism has no place. As Grant Morrison once put it : “Adults...struggle desperately with fiction, demanding constantly that it conform to the rules of everyday life. Adults foolishly demand to know how Superman can possibly fly, or how Batman can possibly run a multibillion-dollar business empire during the day and fight crime at night, when the answer is obvious even to the smallest child: because it's not real.”

    • @MILDMONSTER1234
      @MILDMONSTER1234 Před 3 lety +11

      This

    • @CayeDaws
      @CayeDaws Před 3 lety +26

      But how were those bad comics the fault of Watchmen? Watchmen didn't kill comics captitalism did.

    • @rubberoid2501
      @rubberoid2501 Před 3 lety +2

      This, but this message was better in Final Crisis

    • @rubberoid2501
      @rubberoid2501 Před 3 lety +1

      @@abuamaanpal bruh, it’s literally stated in comic, and Morrison’s hate to Watchmen is known thing

    • @CayeDaws
      @CayeDaws Před 3 lety +22

      @@abuamaanpal what I mean is that blaming Watchmen for tbe dark age of superhero comics in the 90's is just fucking childish and petty. And what Geoff Jones did was essentially made a superhero comic trying to deconstruct a graphic novel that served as a deconstruction of superhero comics. If you can't see what is wrong there then the problem is you.

  • @th3rasave
    @th3rasave Před 3 lety +8

    28:11 holy shit, that's actually one of the best Kevin Conroy impressions I've ever heard

  • @CaptRuffino
    @CaptRuffino Před 3 lety +219

    Doomsday Clock is a meta story about comics itself. It’s not literally a sequel to Watchmen, it serves as a reconstruction of superhero comics and stories after comics have tried to emulate the original Watchmen’s deconstruction for thirty years.
    Dr. Manhattan is proof that if you gave humans god-like powers that they would become apathetic. Superman by contrast is absolved from human moral failings because of his moral upbringing and that he is not human and lacks humanity’s “original sin” so to speak.
    Instead, god-like powers provide Superman the ability to affect change in the world for the better. Clark would rather save people and reach out to them rather than fight. Superman gives humanity an ideal to strive toward, and that philosophy is what changed Dr. Manhattan’s mind.
    This was supposed to signify a fundamental change in the ongoing DC comics series, turning away from cynicism and toward giving readers a fun, light hearted heroes who represents ideas to strive towards.
    This can also be enhanced in Tomasi’s Superman ongoing series that came out around the time of Rebirth and Doomsday clock, where the original Superman (think Christopher Reece) came back into the main DC universe where the New 52 Superman (think Cavill) died.
    This original Superman was married to Lois and had a son named Jonathan with her. His ongoing book became about this family, and Superman becomes a father figure again. Giving his son and the audience a moral ideal.
    Basically I said all that to say Doomsday Clock is less a sequel to Watchmen and more of a meta story about where comics should go now in the wake of 30 years of either responding to or copying Watchmen. Now that Geoff Johns is out at DC, this whole direction and outlook is basically moot anyway. Sorry to ramble on, but Doomsday Clock does work a lot better in the context of DC Rebirth in general.

    • @alejotomasortega547
      @alejotomasortega547 Před 3 lety +44

      Completely agree. I dont see it as a watchmen sequel but more of a love letter to superman. If they would've wanted to make a Watchmen sequel, then they wouldn't have put Johns as a writer (because it's not his writing style). It was an actually cash grab for doomsday clock to have all that watchmen iconography.

    • @gregoriomassa8529
      @gregoriomassa8529 Před 3 lety

      Jhons is out? What happpend?

    • @alejotomasortega547
      @alejotomasortega547 Před 3 lety +7

      @@gregoriomassa8529 he stepped down of his position as a creative director? I can't remember which position was. He's working on Warner I think and writing for dc. You should Google some info to be properly informed, I can't remember correctly sorry hahaha

    • @Metalbloodlord
      @Metalbloodlord Před 3 lety

      @@alejotomasortega547 Doomsday clock is trash

    • @Metalbloodlord
      @Metalbloodlord Před 3 lety

      @@gregoriomassa8529 Doomsday clock sucks

  • @Bozionjr
    @Bozionjr Před 3 lety +27

    Holy shit the Ray William Johnson bit is amazing

  • @AllisonIceGirl
    @AllisonIceGirl Před 2 lety +2

    2020 Quinton: "Yeah I wanted to keep this video under 40 minutes"
    2021 me: "Oh... oh Quinton, oh... oh no. Oh no, Quinton. Quinton, no. Oh. No, no n o"

  • @zoevandongen4550
    @zoevandongen4550 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Stealing my girlfriends account to say MAKE THE HBO WATCHMEN REVIEW VIDEO

  • @BugsyFoga
    @BugsyFoga Před 3 lety +72

    I got to admit , out of all Zack Snyder's comic book films , Watchmen seemed like the closest one where he somewhat knew what he was doing ( that and 300) .

    • @theoneandonlymichaelmccormick
      @theoneandonlymichaelmccormick Před 3 lety +39

      Well, that’s because he didn’t need to try very hard in terms of direction.
      He just used the comics as a storyboard. Dave Gibbons and Alan Moore did all the work for him.

    • @jercoxthealmighty
      @jercoxthealmighty Před 3 lety

      I agree about Watchmen, at least, but in retrospect, it feels like he just achieved that by just straight-up copying so much wholesale that he managed to get at least some of the point across without realizing it. Still feels like an overly simplified, less nuanced take on it, though. I mean, Rorschach's almost not an asshole anymore, for instance. Also, he lucked out in that the stuff he cut out didn't completely ruin the point either, though the above-mentioned white-washing of Rorschach, despite him being well-enough acted, cut it close.
      Also there's still a lot of little misunderstandings that bother me, and HERE THERE BE SPOILERS! Again to bring up Rorschach, in the original comics, in the flashback to his investigation of the kidnapped child, it's murdering the dogs who the kidnapper had fed the child to that caused Walter to snap. My own interpretation of it was always that he knew that the dogs were just trained to do their master's bidding, but at the same time, had played a role in the death of an innocent child, so he had to become a harder, uncompromising person to justify his cutting them up, and doing this took a permanent toll on his mental health. This was reflected by his lengthy monologue in the present to his prison shrink about it. Compared to that, killing the actual murderer goes rather smoothly. In the movie, the killing of the dogs is more or less glossed over, and the monologue about the dogs in the comic is instead given about his killing the murderer instead. I always felt the monologue made more sense for the dogs, primarily because killing the child murderer, even as brutally as he did, is simply a much less morally gray action than the dogs. It makes more sense for butchering the dogs to be this defining moment for him, that made him go from "I fight crime and stop criminals" to "I punish evil, lethally if I can"
      But yeah, even if the movie hits the right notes broadly, and is nice enough to look at, and the actors did the best they could with what they were given, I feel like little inconsistencies such as the one I over-described in the paragraph above drag it down a little, and show how the director and others involved with the movie did not truly understand the source material, however high their affection for it was.

    • @vivclaire1933
      @vivclaire1933 Před 3 lety +2

      Dude 300 is so fucking homophobic (even with the insane homoeroticism), ableist, racist, and fascist, and all those things are presented as badass.

    • @theoneandonlymichaelmccormick
      @theoneandonlymichaelmccormick Před 3 lety

      Clay Because Frank Miller is the worst and Zach Snyder is similarly the worst.

  • @GenerationWest
    @GenerationWest Před 3 lety +697

    The Watchmen TV show was in production before Doomsday Clock started (For Two Years), and ended before the final issue dropped, because major delays... And still was the best Watchmen sequel.
    AND ANOTHER THING, why was every major DC character okay with Dr. Manhattan dong?

    • @satansmascara9756
      @satansmascara9756 Před 3 lety +68

      I mean if you come face to face with an omnipotent god idk if you'd care about his clothes (or lack thereof). A younger or sidekick character may have quipped about it idk.

    • @astick4510
      @astick4510 Před 3 lety +41

      Yeah I'm sorry the show was awful

    • @urilaf8598
      @urilaf8598 Před 3 lety +49

      XoCustoms it really wasn’t bad. It’s amazing but they fumbled the ball HARD with how dr Manhattan looks. Just finished it again. It’s the best sequel possible

    • @2012Zyle
      @2012Zyle Před 3 lety +16

      I like the TV show, but I hate that it is supposed to be a sequel to Watchman. I like the plots around Hooded Justice and Ozymandias, but that’s about it.

    • @robbr8932
      @robbr8932 Před 3 lety +54

      I loved the watchmen show! Anyone who says they hated it without a reason probably just watched a video on CZcams about why it sucked without actually watching the show. I really liked that it didn’t just adapt the source material. It dared to do something different but with themes that were appropriate for watchmen, and it took some of the things we were already familiar with to interesting new places.

  • @salamander8736
    @salamander8736 Před rokem +3

    Worst detective ever who literally outsmarted everyone in the comic lmao

  • @Takeshi357
    @Takeshi357 Před 3 lety +1

    When you said you were going to introduce a special guest, I was expecting it to be the cat.