As Nite Owl and Rorschach approach Ozymandias’ fortress, Adrian Veidt takes a walk back through his history, and our Watchmen podcast breaks down Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons Watchmen #11, “Look On My Works, Ye Mighty…” Plus, one of our hosts has seen the first episode of HBO’s Watchmen series and gives their spoiler-free impressions.
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The theme music for Watchmen Watch was written and performed by Jeff Solomon.
Plus, here’s a transcript of the episode for you to read through as you listen:
Alex: Who watches the Watchman and
who watches you watching the Watchman? We watch you watch the Watchman right
through your window like a bunch of creeps. I’m Alex.
Pete: I’m Pete, but your-
Pete: Your intro is getting creepier
and creepier, man. You got to figure something out with that.
Justin: So is Watchman. So is Watchman,
Alex: It is, and we got a lot of
episodes together. We got two episodes to go here on the comic, and then we’re
going to be jumping into the TV show and by the end, things are going to get
Alex: Yeah. that’s 100% truth.
Speaking of fucked up, I’m sorry to do this. Our fourth host, Alan Moore, the
landmark, the benchmark [crosstalk 00:00:42]-
Pete: Can you even call him a host at
Justin: What are you talking about? He’s
been here for a couple of the episodes.
Alex: Yeah, I remember he had some
good things to say about the last issue, I think.
Justin: Yeah, he really, really blew
himself up over that last issue.
Justin: It’s like, “Chill out dude.
We get it. You’ve Rowe Watchman. But anyway, so he just texted me and he was
like, “Hey, I was there 35 minutes ago.” So I don’t know if we missed
Alex: Well, I’ll tell you what, as
long as he recorded his part of the podcast, we’re doing this one over Skype. I
could just edit it in. I can edit it in afterwards, and I’m sure it’ll be
seamless. So, just throughout this podcast episode, let’s take incredibly long
Justin: Yeah, that’s true, and we’ll just
drop in some Alan Moore Bond Moe’s.
Alex: Yeah, oh, I thought you were
going to say beneas for some reason. I don’t know why.
Justin: Interesting, it’s two different
words. Bond Mose, means good words. Beneas means doughnut for rich people.
Alex: Speaking of doughnuts for rich
people, we’re going to be talking about chapter 11 and not going intellectually
bankrupt over it. As we talk about Look on my Works, ye Mighty the second to
last issue of Watchman by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons. As mentioned, the show
is premiering on October 20th. I don’t know if we want to get into this on this
podcast. I will mention we’re about a week out. We tape these episodes about a
week in advance, and we’ll probably catch up when we get to the show. I did see
the first episode [crosstalk 00:02:14] at Comic Con.
Alex: What? No, I did. I don’t know
if we want to talk about that at all on the podcast before we get into the
Pete: What was it like man?
Justin: Well it’ll be one side of the
conversation, but yeah, let’s do it.
Alex: Sure, I’m not going to spoil
anything for anybody because I do want us to talk about a clean and fresh on
the podcast itself, but two observations I will give you all your listeners.
The first one, so they showed off the first episode previously at TCA, the
Television Critics Association. I did talk to some coworkers and friends there
who had seen it, but generally that’s kind of mum, that’s a very private
situation for people watching that stuff. So this New York Comic Con, this was
thousands of fans inside the Javits Center.
Alex: It was the first time they
really publicly showing off Watchman, and Damon Lindelof came out on stage, and
I don’t want to ascribe too much emotion for him because I don’t know him personally
or anything like that, but he, in the sweetest way, seemed so nervous about
what was about to happen, which you don’t really expect from a show runner. You
expect somebody to come out, and usually expect them to come out and be like,
“what’s up y’all? We’re showing of Watchman. He came out-
Justin: But I think that’s makes sense to
me because these are the people … It’s like if someone were to come into your
home and be like, “Hey, I made home videos about you and your family. Here
you go.” Because the fans are that into it. They’re that rabbit about it.
It’s like something so close to their hearts like family.
Alex: Yeah, and you could see he was
carrying these handwritten notes, and you could see his hand shaking the entire
time while I was reading them, talking about how much Watchman meant to him
when he was growing up. How it was the first comics that his father had given
him. They told him it will change his life. And he’s told this story before in
the initial Instagram posts that he put up where he explained why I was doing
the project. He repeated a good chunk of that.
Alex: He did, I thought this was a
little weird to call out, but our fourth co-host, Alan Moore, he called them
out at the top of the presentation. He said, “I could reference one
person’s name. You know who I’m talking about, but I couldn’t do this without
him and this goes out to him and I hope we have honored you, even if your name
isn’t necessarily on this thing.”
Pete: That’s a classy move men.
Alex: Yeah, it was very sweet. I just
Justin: I read that report and when you
take your name off something, well how come you can’t even say his name? He
Pete: No man, he was being respectful
Alex: His name just doesn’t exist
anymore. Like anybody who does it… could you imagine if somebody just used
his name to promote their product? They’d be [crosstalk 00:04:59]-
Pete: Wait a second. Oh, come on guys.
Justin: He’s our fourth co-host. We’re not
Pete: Have you ever been hosting a
podcast and then you just realize you’re a part of a piece of shit podcast. Oh,
Alex: Jesus man, several times a week
Pete: It’s a heck of a ride.
Alex: Well, anyway, that was …
Damon Lindelof introduced it. I thought that was very sweet, and then we
watched the whole first pilot episode. I got to tell you, I loved it. I thought
it was really good. I’m very curious to talk about it with you guys here on the
podcast because there’s a lot to talk about, but my general impression overall
was even though, and we’ve talked about this from the very beginning, you don’t
need to continue Watchman. You don’t need to riff off Watchman. You don’t need
to do before Watchman in the comics or anything like that.
Alex: We talked about that back when
it was coming out of D.C., but if you are going to do it, I’m glad that it’s
good, and that’s what I thought about this pilot. It was clear that if nothing
else, they have put so much thought into every single frame of it and to me it
matched my hopes of what I wanted out of the show.
Justin: Wow. A greatness-
Alex: Being very vague about it. I
don’t want to spoil anybody’s experience, but I was very happy at the end with
the experience that I have. I’m very excited to watch it again because-
Pete: Would you say the first half was
good, but the second half wasn’t or-
Alex: I know you like to make fun of
me for doing that. No, it was good throughout. Regina King is amazing. The cast
Pete: She is a national treasure. That
Alex: It’s going to be a conversation
piece, that’s the other thing. People are going to talk about it quite a bit
because even when it honors, and echoes, and reverberates off of Watchman, the
comic that we’re about to talk about, it’s very much its own thing, and it’s
almost, in a certain way, in conversation with Watchman, the comic book. Again,
I know that’s being very vague, but it’ll make more sense when you watch it.
Justin: It’s in conversation.
Pete: You’re telling us to watch this
Watchman show? Is that what you’re saying?
Alex: Yeah. I’ll tell you what, I
know we were kind of waffling about this. Let’s [crosstalk 00:07:23].
Justin: Don’t waffle the Watchman.
Alex: But you buy our Watchman branded
waffle bakers made with our good friend, [Wildland Bore 00:07:31]. We sell them
Justin: Le Creuset. Excellent partner for
this Watchman themed waffle maker. Every nook and cranny is full of syrup and
Alex: Oh, there was one other thing
that I wanted to mention to you guys about the Watchman premier. So I went to
the Watchman party afterwards-
Pete: Men, you went on all Watchman.
Alex: I was all Watchman all the
time. Now, this was actually the thing that made me feel a little uncomfortable
about the whole monetization of the whole thing-
Justin: I’m sorry, the what?
Alex: Monetization of the whole
thing, where as opposed to the premiere where they were very respectful of
everything to go in and hear like a DJ blasting 90’s dance music and people
dressed in cosplay wandering all over the place, that was a little weird. But
the main thing I wanted to mention to you, which I was very excited about,
we’ve talked about previously in the podcast, they had Watchman theme drinks and
in fact, they had Doctor Manhattan.
Alex: Now, I know your recipe was a
Manhattan with big blue dick in it, right Justin?
Justin: No, I believe my recipe was
stirred with a regular dick. Didn’t have to be blue unless you happen to have a
blue dick and not naturally then ice-
Alex: I’ve been freezing my dick all
night just to make sure it’s nice and blue when I stir my cocktails [inaudible
Justin: You could just get a vasectomy.
Pete: I just want to back up the truck
Justin: It’s much cheaper to just stick it
in the freezer. What’s up Pete.
Pete: You thought it was people who
look like they were going to a Comic Con were at the party that was for
Alex: No, what I mean by it is that
Watchman is a very particular thing, without being too snotty or gate keeping
or about it. It was just a regular Comic Con party where they were like,
“Here we go now, Here we go now oh, oh, oh.” And everybody’s dancing
around and getting drunk, and partying.
Pete: I like the way you’re putting a
tone on that. I think it’s a great song.
Alex: Oh, you’re missing my point
Justin: Wait, Alex, are you saying you
were bothered by the Alan Moore jalapeno poppers they were serving at the
Alex: Yes, can I give you the recipe
for a Doctor Manhattan then we’ll move on?
Alex: Okay, Doctor Manhattan,
according to them, is four roses bourbon, splash Curacao liquor, Bianca
vermouth, and orange bitters.
Justin: Well, the Curacao is horrible.
Pete: That’s sounds disgusting.
Justin: [crosstalk 00:10:04] makes it
Alex: I’ll tell you what, it made it
Pete: I could have told off from that
Justin: Curacao is a bad thing.
Alex: I’ll tell you what, I got drunk
and I made some very poor decisions there that night, extremely poor decisions.
Justin: When do we get into those
Pete: Yeah, when do we talk about
that? Which podcast is that?
Alex: Just very briefly then we’ll
move on. I bought a ticket to go see Joker. [crosstalk 00:10:29]
Pete: I don’t care what you say.
Alex: I was very drunk. We’ll talk
about this another time. Let’s jump into Look on my Works, ye Mighty, chapter
11 of Watchman. This is the big issue. This is the big one. Granted, some stuff
happens in the next issue as well, but this is really where it all goes down,
and for those of you who were, whatever reason, haven’t been reading to this
point, we know now that Adrian Veidt is the villain. He’s been masterminding a
plan. We don’t know exactly what that plan is. At night, Ellen Rorschach have
headed to Antarctica to his base to confront him.
Alex: Even though they put together
most of the clues, they’re still not quite sure why he’s done this or what
exactly is going on, and they want to find out more from him. So, this is very
much the Ozymandias issue. We’ve seen him a bunch throughout the comic, but
this is the first time we’re really getting inside of his head, and it’s pretty
huge. Before we get into a page by page or anything, any overall impressions of
the issue, things you taken away, themes, anything like that?
Justin: Well, it’s interesting. So when
Nite Owl and Rorschach head to Antarctica, they’re like, “Oh, Adrian Veidt
is responsible for The Comedian’s death perhaps and threatening the other
heroes.” But in the midst of this, they’re like, the world is probably
ending, but they’re heroes and they’re like, “Hey, the world’s ending, but
we should go investigate this murder our friend may or may not have
accomplished.” I think that’s interesting that it happened to work out as
we learn in this issue that they caught both problems at the same time.
Alex: Well, but I think, maybe I’m
not remembering correctly, but I believe they made that decision last issue,
Alex: They decided let’s tackle the
solvable, potentially solvable problem versus, hey, we’re going to stop nuclear
annihilation between the United States and Russia, right?
Justin: Right, but don’t you think … I
guess maybe that’s the point. Maybe that’s the like, oh, as humans we can’t
actually solve these larger problems, so let’s just do what we think we can
handle because I think that plays into a lot of the themes of this issue, which
is all about how we as humans set our own traps and end up causing our own
problems that come back and get us killed or ruin our lives basically.
Alex: Well, and the other thing that
is playing throughout the issue, that’s actually been playing throughout the
series, but really comes to bear here is just kind of the idea of knots. Every
issue has its own theme and that’s something that’s gets pushed very heavily.
The image on the cover and in the second paddle this time is these butterflies
and this fully age peeking through the snow. It’s in the shape of the stain on
The Comedians button. So it’s the same sort of thing, but it also kind of looks
like a rope tied together.
Alex: We’ve had the Gordian knot
locksmiths or Gordian lock, I think it was called, that’s popped up throughout
sort of that running joke about Dan Dry berg’s door keeps getting knocked open
and they keep coming back and fixing it. But throughout this, we get the idea
of knots, and what I took away from that is that we are all intrinsically tied
together, but often it’s hard to tell a knot from a tangle, if that makes
Alex: Well, I’m riffing a little bit
off of your point here, Justin, that everybody is so tied together. When you
look at it up close, Nite Owl and Rorschach are heading there and they’re like,
“okay, what is this small solvable thing? We can untie a knot,
right?” But ultimately they find that it’s this enormous bundle of rope
that is stretched all over the world.
Justin: Yeah, I mean, to take that as a
larger metaphor for this whole issue, like this issue is crazy complicated.
There’s so much exposition. All the Black Freighter stuff, when I was younger
reading this, I was like, “Okay, let’s get back to the story.” But I
feel like maybe it’s a sign of maturity or growing up or being interested in
different things anyway, is that’s the stuff that is so intense here. The
metaphor of that is so great juxtaposed against both the people at the news
stand, and the crime that happens there, and then the larger story of Adrian
Veidt Rise from being just a rich genius to having this plot to save the world
by killing half of New York city.
Alex: Well, I just want to mention,
to get back to the thing that you said about the Black Freighter stuff, I agree
with you as the same sort of thing. I basically skimmed it the first time I
read it when I was younger. So yeah, going back now when we’re really delving
into it, it certainly makes a lot more sense, but there’s a very funny exchange
towards the middle/end of the issue when Bernie, the news stands dude, finds
out that the dude has been reading the Black Freighter the entire time is also
Alex: He says, what we’ve all been
thinking, the dude on the ground, he says, “Why do you keep coming back
here for weeks and reading that over and over?” And the younger Bernie
says, “Because they don’t make sense man. That’s why I got to read them
over.” And I think a, that’s a very funny exchange. B, it ties into that
whole knot thing of him trying to unravel what’s going on with the Black
Freighter, but I think that also points to exactly what you were saying is that
divide between youth and older. Not that Bernie, the newsman, has any real idea
what’s going on, but the younger Bernie is just like looking at as a kid and
it’s like, “I don’t know why these pirate comics are like this.” And
that it isn’t until later that you really get them.
Justin: Yeah, it is funny that the Bernie
character there also, he’s young and he also doesn’t read it. Just like we also
didn’t really read it when we were meeting this comic. Man, Alan Moore gets it,
except for showing up on time for a podcast.
Pete: I mean overall it starts kind of
real interesting, tying stuff in but the ending is so massive. That ending blew
me away so much that I was like…. that’s when I went back and started
rereading stuff and the interview at the end of this, I read that all the way
through. That’s the first time. That ending was so bad-ass and that was such an
amazing villain monologue thing that I was like, “Oh my God, this comic
just went from being really interesting and beautifully drawn, and well done to
a whole different level of respect.”
Justin: I mean, I agree with you, the
level of just mastery of the art form to pull off telling a story this complex
with all these crazy details in it, and also making the end reveals truly
shocking and have a great fight sequence in the middle. This revelation about
Adrian fight and he kills his assistance through boredom mostly, I think, is
great. It’s just such a great issue and it does so much.
Alex: I don’t know if you’re talking
about reading this time or the first time you read it, Pete, but I got to tell
you, I knew exactly what was going to happen. But when you get to that final
line of Adrian Veidt where he says, “I did it 35 minutes ago,” I
cackled when I read it, this time too, because it’s so good. Even if you know
exactly what’s coming, the way-
Justin: It still gets you.
Alex: … the way the word bubbles
are paced out too it just hits it at a perfect rhythm. It’s amazing.
Pete: Yeah, it really does.
Justin: And he’s a cocky motherfucker.
He’s a cocky motherfucker, this guy.
Alex: So, the other thing that we’re
touching on a little bit here that we should mention, and then I guess we
probably, we’ll page-by-page a little bit, but there’s two things that are
going on in this issue. We’re following Nite Owl and Rorschach as they are
approaching Adrian Veidt to the palace, fortress, whatever you want to call it,
and confronting him. Ultimately him laying out his whole history, and plan, and
exactly what’s been going on the entire time, cresting in this I did a 35
minutes ago. And then we’re watching what’s going on the street corner with the
new stand as every single regular human character we’ve encountered over the
course of the past 10 issues all come together at exactly the same time,
Alex: But it isn’t until later that
we realize that we’ve been watching what happened to the past. We’re watching
35 minutes ago through this entire thing. You can tell if you look at the
clocks, but they’re off to the side in such a way that it’s not immediately
clear until for Nite Owl and Rorschach, it’s far too late.
Justin: Yeah, and the fact that seeing the
Hiroshima lovers shadow here and the fact that that’s the blast point where
that hits, everything starts to resonate for us backwards as well. That this is
the flash point where this disaster happens and all of these characters are the
victims of it. I feel like it just … We get to live like Dr. Manhattan
because we retroactively feel so bad for these characters that we’ve been
following their sort of boots on the ground story this whole time.
Pete: Also a lot of people are like,
“Oh, why do you like Rorschach?” This right here is a moment that I
really like Rorschach where even though he’s beaten, he still keeps getting up
and trying to win. He does that move behind his back to block Rorschach and
that to me, I love the fact that he’s not willing to accept this and is still
fighting to the bitter end.
Alex: I got to say he uses a fork,
right? Are you sure he’s not trying to eat Ozymandias because he’s so hungry?
Justin: He’s been in the snow for so long
Alex: He’s only had a sugar cube tea.
Justin: Yeah. And let me ask you, Pete. In
this story, in this issue specifically, what character do you want to be or
Justin: Alex, what about you?
Alex: What character do I want to be?
Justin: What character are you like, I’m
Alex: Oh, I’m having a little trouble
wrapping my mind around it. In the real world, I’d probably be one of the
assistants that dies in the snow.
Justin: Come on dude, that’s the saddest answer
Pete: It’s honest though. It’s honest.
Justin: One of the assistants who dies in
Alex: Yeah, or maybe the lesbian
who’s getting beaten up by her lesbian lover.
Justin: Wow, jeez. Alex, be best.
Alex: Okay, [Bu Bust 00:21:31]. Maybe
Alex: Wait what about you? What are
you getting at here? What’s your game Justin?
Justin: There’s no game. I just think it’s
Pete: Are you the villain monologue in,
Justin: Yeah. I’m Adrian Veidt.
Alex: I knew it. Well, what I thought
you were getting at was the idea that you touched on Justin, either a podcast
or two back about the idea that, sure, we look at Adrian Veidt as the villain,
but maybe he actually is the hero of this story. Is that where you’re getting
Justin: No, definitely. In technically if
the way … I mean, the next issue we technically don’t know what happens in
that because we’re reading this issue, but if the story continues, and we’re
going to find out in the TV series, he saved the world from nuclear disaster.
So he is really the hero in that way even though he murdered half a million
people or half of New York city, and killed a bunch of heroes and all this
other stuff. It radiated a bunch of people. But I also think like this issue
sets him up in that way because he’s talking about how the ills of the world,
how humans just are built to kill each other and kill the environment, and
these things resonate so hard with our current life and politics and global
disasters. It’s crazy how this series was written so long ago and feels so
Alex: I completely agree with you of
that. I would argue that this issue makes a very strong and not completely
subtle case that Adrian Veidt is a psychopath, like unrelenting-
Alex: Sociopath, yes. So, just to
walk through this a little bit because I do want to talk about that. Actually,
I’ll mention a couple of things that come to mind in terms of Adrian Veidt that
I think you could certainly read into it. When he’s telling his story to his
assistants, he tell his backstory, explains that he was raised rich by his
parents. They died when he was 17. There’s a shot of him, I believe, sitting on
one of the graves, and the implication that I took away from that is he
probably killed his parents.
Pete: Yeah, he murdered them.
Justin: I agree with you.
Alex: Yeah. [crosstalk 00:23:53] says
particularly because Rorschach says he’s never killed anybody, which contrast
very directly with, yeah, but he probably has been killing people as long as he
has had the capacity to kill.
Justin: Yeah, I mean, I think he’s someone
who doesn’t value other humans lives, the lives of other humans, and that’s
true sort of especially through this story. Then, again, at the end when we
realize what he’s done because he thinks of himself as this person, the man
Alex: Right. There’s also the other
thing that’s running through Ozymandias’s backstory is his rivalry with The
Comedian that plays out through this issue, which very much straddles the line
in terms of how you interpret it. Extensively on the surface, he talks about
the first meeting between Ozymandias and The Comedian. It’s something they
revisited in the back matter, which seems like this very classic heroes fight
before they team up type thing, but they’re very clear about the fact that The
Comedian beats Ozymandias, which, again on the surface, if you wanted to read
The Comedian as hero, he’s actually beating a villain in that case and once
again that paints Ozymandias as a villain, except for the fact that as we know
throughout reading this comic book, comedian is a pretty awful dude himself.
Justin: Well, I think they see each other,
or at least this is mostly from Veidt perspective, but they’re both still
sociopath’s in the way they value other human lives. I think the fact that
Adrian Veidt is using The Comedians… his whole plan is inspired by The
Comedian and is basically a joke or as he calls it a prank. So, I do think he
kills him to prove that he’s the better man but The Comedians sort of POV or
philosophy is what Adrian Veidt actually just sort of steals and uses to
Alex: Yeah, should we walk through
this issue? Should we go a little page by page or two over here?
Alex: All right, so we do start off
on that first page where he is laying everything out about his philosophy. I
swore I wasn’t going to use this word again, but there is some really nice juxtaposition
on this page as it goes, [crosstalk 00:26:12]-
Alex: Let get something that I wanted
to throw by you guys. So, he’s watching everything on his monitors. Bu Busts is
walking next to him and he’s saying some very cheeky stuff about, of course,
the ice they’re skating on is slippery and thinner that it looks. Let’s hope
they don’t become reckless and overstep themselves. Let’s hope they know where
to stop, and of course they don’t stop. They do keep coming. We had talked about
in the last episode that part of Adrian Veidt plan was leading them here,
luring them here and then laying everything out for them. Do you think there’s
a part of him that thinks maybe they won’t make it, maybe they will turn back?
Justin: Yeah, and I think he’s the kind of
guy who’s like, oh they’re still coming? Oh great. I’ll get to talk to them
about my plan. My former partners in arms like this is a nice brotherhood, that
I can really brag about what I’ve done in front of them. So I think, he takes pleasure
in it a little bit and he doesn’t feel threatened in the least.
Alex: Yeah, neither should he. What
were you going to say Pete?
Alex: Nice, so then they decided to
go out anyway, and we get Adrian reaction to that, realizing that he has to go
forth with his plan. He can’t put off things any longer. We get a very clear
shot of the clocks in Tokyo, London and New York, so we know exactly what time
it is, and there’s a large panel where he says, no time like the present
playing off of those clocks. Also playing off of the very large picture of, I
believe, it’s Alexander the great who I was named after. I don’t want to brag
Pete: Did you just drop that in?
Alex: I mean, it’s not a big deal.
Don’t even worry about it.
Justin: Your middle name is Alex… Your
name is Alexander like the fine?
Alex: Yeah, my name is Alexander, the
beat up lesbian. [crosstalk 00:28:07]. It’s very sad.
Justin: Is that a family name, a family
Alex: Yeah, it’s from my grandfather.
So, then another very interesting secret, we see Adrian walking through. He
says to Bu Bust not coming any further. No, fair enough. Wait here. This won’t
take a moment. Why do you think Bu Bu stats who’s basically just a giant cat
doesn’t want to come into this chamber and watch Ozymandias know what’s going
Justin: He’s worried about getting blamed.
Justin: He’s like, let me chill out. I
don’t want to be named in the court documents. I’ve got a life.
Pete: He knows where the dead bodies
are. He doesn’t want anything to do with that place.
Alex: I don’t know. I agree with
Justin. If you see a bunch of broken stuff on the floor, you’re immediately
blaming the cat, not the smartest man in the world.
Justin: Yeah, exactly. That cat is like,
oh, I actually like New York. I have some friends who are in the musical cats
and I don’t want to be part of this.
Alex: Yeah. Now, two other things
that I want to point out on this page. One, it’s so clear when you look back at
it, but there’s a closeup shot if him pressing the button at 11:25 PM, which is
exactly the 35 minutes ago. So if you’re paying attention to any of the clocks
where they show up at New York, if you’re paying attention to any of the clocks
in the actual scene, you know that it’s already happened. But then there’s the
panel right after that, which doesn’t become clear until the next issue, but
Ozymandias seemingly looks directly at us, the reader, and is bathed in a blue
light before he turns back and finishes what he’s doing. It’s pretty clear
there that Dr. Manhattan is showing up, right? I think?
Justin: I don’t know, interesting. I mean
I hadn’t thought of that. I love this sequence. I mean we talked about the
pacing in this a lot. That to me feels like that moment where you’re like,
“Oh, what’s he doing? God, this feels important. I don’t know what he’s
doing. I wish I could find out what he’s doing.”
Pete: Also, I agree with Alburn. It
does look like the blue is like a nod to Dr. Manhattan.
Alex: Well, it might be, even if it
isn’t specifically Dr. Manhattan showing up and I honestly do not remember from
the next issue, it could just be based on the fact that for all of his smarts,
for all of his planning, everything that he has is really based on dr Manhattan
and dr Manhattan’s technology.
Alex: Exactly, he is. He’s stealing.
He’s using other people’s works in order to do what he himself is just saying
Pete: So you’re saying he hooked it up
so when he presses the red button, a blue light goes off as like a F you to Dr.
Alex: No, I mean I think that’s …
Again, I think we’re going to probably find out where we’re about in the next
issue, if I remember correctly. But I do think it’s firmly indicating that no,
this is not Ozymandias doing whatever is happening right now, it’s Dr.
Manhattan, even if he would want it to be himself.
Alex: So then we get everybody
coalescing on the same area as we get some of the tales of the Black Freighter.
We do meet the girlfriend who also, she’s part of the Knot-tops. This gang that
we’ve touched on now and again, that’s another knot reference in the issue.
Then also we get the big revelation of the tales of the Black Freighter, which
we kind of already knew from reading the previous issue, but the character
himself realizes the classic, “Are we the baddies moment,” where he
comes in and he’s beating up what he thinks is a pirate and it turns out he’s
kicking the shit out of his wife in front of his kids.
Alex: In her, he realizes he’s become
the evil that he thought was coming for him and coming for his family. Same
sort of thing that’s going on with everybody in the world. They are becoming
the evil that they thought was coming for them. And then we cut back to
Ozymandias in his big dome entertaining his three assistants. Now, you
mentioned that he’s being an asshole earlier, Justin. I think this is an
Egyptian thing. He says, “You’re buried with your attendance, right?”
So, instead of burying them in sand, he’s burying them in snow by the end of
Justin: Yeah, but he’s not like, oh, I’m
going to die too. He’s like, “Sorry dudes, you die. I’m going to go do
Alex: I mean, that’s the curious
thing about it, right? Like you would think if he really was following this
philosophy, he was really believing what he’d say like Alexander, he would die
young. I know he says that he wasn’t planning on doing that throughout the
issue, but also if he was following Ramsey’s in the Egyptian tradition, he
wouldn’t plan on making it out of this, right? So he’s a hypocrite beyond
Pete: Also I’m really disappointed in
a place that cool they don’t have HR. Like tell HR to let them go. They’ll do
it a lot nicer. It will be … They’re not such a big thing. I don’t
Justin: No, this is the best way to be
Alex: When you said cool, I thought
Pete: Cool, like pretty chill.
Alex: Yeah, pretty chill.
Justin: I mean it’s, especially fucked up
that the last thing these three dudes have to hear is another boring story from
their boss, and then the one dude’s got butterfly all over his face, like, come
Alex: I don’t know. That happened to
me once in the Museum of Natural History. A butterfly landed on my head, very
Pete: I’m glad you didn’t die at that
Alex: Who knows? This could be some
horrible dream that I’m experiencing right now. So dudes do die. We get this
shot of him sitting on the tombstone with hay, or whatever it is, grass in his
mouth. He’s kind of smoking it a little bit, and we start to get his archer
story. He says that he divested all of his money, traveled the world. It’s not
quite here, but we do get a shot of him. It’s actually two pages from there, as
he’s continuing to talk to his assistants where he’s standing in front of the
stars completely naked. He is bathed in red and it almost to me, I take it as
the opposite of Dr. Manhattan.
Justin: Yeah, I think that makes sense,
and he’s just had some hashish and he’s like going into that mental state where
you can really become a true sociopath.
Alex: Right, the other thing that
I’ll mention just in terms of the coloring is throughout the sequence he is a
silhouette. He doesn’t exist. He’s not there. He’s the absence of things. We’ve
certainly seen that with the Hiroshima Lovers and other things. I don’t know if
necessarily there’s a connection there. The main way that I took it was that he
is not yet the person that he wants to be, and it isn’t until he becomes
Ozymandias that he is colored.
Justin: Oh, that’s interesting. I liked
that a lot. I took it as he’s a void. He’s part of the abyss. He doesn’t
contribute anything, he just draws energy and everything into him because he’s
Pete: Yeah, I thought it was like he
had been changing into the villain that he wanted to be.
Alex: Yeah. So regardless though, as
we mentioned, he does kill the assistants. He buries them in snow instead of
the sand. Here’s a thing we should probably touch on, the whole Ozymandias of
it all, why he’s called Ozymandias. “Look on me, my works, ye
mighty,” the rest of that is and despair. But the way that I always
interpreted that poem and the way I think you interpret that poem, is they come
on this broken statue of a man and there’s nothing around him. It says,
“Look on my works,” and there’s no works around except for this
broken statue of Ozymandias. How does that connect with the Ozymandias and the
book? How does that connect with what he’s doing? I bring that up here because
he’s clearly causing the destruction not just of New York, but of his Antarctic
hideaway base at the same time.
Justin: I think he’s romanticizing the
term. He likes the idea, I think, that he’s this super villain who is created
this whole thing in his secret plan to save the world, and no one will ever
know the true source of it. Because he does have plans, I think after this to
continue his business and go back to his life as Adrian Veidt the hero
businessman. But the Ozymandias side is you’ll never see my works because I
have erased it from the earth myself.
Alex: I thought it was an interesting
thing you just said, Justin, in terms of him stealing from everybody and not
making anything on his own, that essentially he is this parasite on the entire
world because if you think about it, he hears all of Alexander’s things and he
goes and travels that journey and it’s like, “How can I do this better? I
want to do this better.” He hears about Ramsey and he wants to do it
better. Dr. Manhattan, but he wants to do it better. He takes all of that, The
Comedian, he wants to do it better. That might be the same thing, taking on the
name Ozymandias being like, “Yeah, but that won’t be me. I’m going to do
better than the guy that said, look on my works of despair because you actually
will look on my works and despair because they will last forever.”
Justin: Yeah, I think that’s totally
valid. He definitely has that taking credit for other people’s actions while
never being that creative force on his own.
Pete: I just think the guy’s a super
Justin: Or that. That is what Ozymandias
Alex: Well thank you. You speak
fluent Greek, I believe, Latin.
Justin: Oz is super and manias is douche.
Alex: So then we do get a page of the
newsstand, the wife of the therapist/psychiatrist who’s helping out [inaudible
00:38:19]. Comes around, is looking for him, is wondering if they’ve seen her
around. There is a uncomfortable/comfortably hilarious exchange where the guy’s
like, “Oh, why don’t you go to the Negro watchmaker up the street?”
And she’s like, “Do you think we have a club? What are you talking
about?” And he’s like, “Oh, I’m sorry, I’m so sorry.” But what’s
happening throughout this page is this exchange is interspersed with the man in
the Black Freighter story. Seeing the Black Freighter itself and swimming
towards it. I think what’s pretty clear is all of these people, as we see by
the end of the issue, they’re all embroiled in this enormous fight. They’re
swimming towards their own destruction, right? They’re swimming towards their
Justin: Yeah, and to follow the Black
Freighter line as he swims closer, trying to track down the answer to this
mystery that’s plagued him, he realizes when he gets there, “Oh, I’m just
joining this badness. All this time I’ve been fighting against this and I’m
actually a part of it,” and he’s welcomed aboard and becomes one of the
pirates of the Black Freighter.
Alex: Yeah. Now I want to talk about
your favorite dude for a little bit, Pete, Rorschach, because then we get to
the scene of Nite Owl and Rorschach sneaking into the hideout, touring through
everything we’ve seen before. I think it’s pretty clear, at least to me, that
Rorschach realizes how out of his depth he is almost immediately, and
specifically I’ll call out two lines. As they’re outside, he says, “Palm
trees buried in snow doesn’t make sense.” And then later on Dan is trying
to open the door. He’s trying to open it with this laser, and is having a
little bit of trouble the Rorschach says, “Nervous?” But Dan isn’t
actually nervous. He’s fine. This is the sort of thing that he’s kind of used
to. He’s just trying to figure it out, but I think Rorschach actually is nervous.
I think he is scared of what’s going on because this is so much bigger than he
ever could have imagined.
Justin: I 100% agree. In the last couple
issues Rorschach has been so chatty. He’s been so verbose when they break into
Adrian’s penthouse and find out all this information. He’s like talking for
panels and panels, and in this section he is only speaking in sentence
fragments, just like random little bits. I think he is terrified and I love the
subtle way they present that.
Pete: I don’t know if it’s terrified,
if he’s just kind of like taking it all in because they just rolled up on a
secret layer that is really weird and freaky, and they’re kind of walking
into… I think he’s just kind of like when you first go to a place you’re kind
of looking around and soaking it in, and that’s how I feel.
Justin: No, I think he’s scared. He’s
scared. He’s a scared cat.
Justin: Do you mean Mandy is?
Alex: There’s one other thing that I
wanted to point out. So as they’re walking through the base, we get to see a
couple of rooms that we’ve seen before. We see the room with the big Alexander
painting. We see the chamber where he transported the squid as we find out next
issue. They walked through the stairs that he’s walked before. But right as
they come in, we see a weird sort of doomed structure. Nite Owl says, I mean,
what the hell is that thing? Half this equipment I don’t even recognize. Is
that the chamber that created Dr. Manhattan or a version of it?”
Justin: Interesting, I mean, I had never
thought that, but I guess it could be.
Alex: I don’t know, it just seems
weird thing to call out in particular, right?
Pete: Yeah, kind of. It reminded me
that’s the only thing we’ve seen close to anything like that. So you’ve got to
kind of assume he tried to make his own Dr. Manhattan.
Alex: Yeah, if he wanted to do that,
he probably should have gotten more blue Curacao. So then we get a two page
sequence, a big fight sequence as Ozymandias takes down Nite Owl and Rorschach
pretty handily. Pete, your dude taken out like a bitch. What’d you think?
Pete: Hey man, if you’re all class,
he’s still fighting though. He’s still fighting.
Justin: Yes, he does. He uses his fork
Alex: So, the interesting thing, I
think, about the structure of the issue here is the first half of the issue
when he’s talking to the assistants, he’s repeating his past, right? He’s
laying that all out. But then we get this big two page spread in the middle of
this fight sequence that’s mostly silent, and then after that we get to see the
superhero history that we’ve heard about and seen so far.
Alex: But through Ozymandias’
perspective, so it’s almost these two halves, these histories laying out. For
the assistants who are part of the overall grand scheme, he’s laying out that
part of the history. For the superheroes, he’s laying out the superhero
history, is how I took that at least.
Justin: Oh yeah. I think that’s great. I
mean, it fits nicely in the first part of his story and the second part of his
story timing wise. But again, real cocky to be telling your plan literally
while you’re fighting the heroes.
Alex: Yeah. On the Rorschach band,
it’s so weirdly upsetting to see Ozymandias rotating his mask. I know that’s
such a specific thing, but seeing him take his mask and kind of twist it so
that what Rorschach has called his face isn’t on right makes be very sad for
Rorschach in that moment.
Alex: Did you feel that way?
Pete: Yeah, that was definitely like a
Alex: Yeah, cool. Thank you for
Justin: If I was fighting you and if I had
just like shaved off your goatee while I was fighting you.
Justin: Which is what I will do with
Pete: Well, since I have a beard that
would be weird that you would do that unless you were talking about going back
in time to when I did have a goatee.
Justin: No, but your goatee is your power.
I will shave just the goatee and leave the beard, which is even goofier.
Pete: I would have to turn it into old
school mountain chops then.
Justin: Yeah. And who, who can walk around
Pete: That’s a good point.
Alex: Yeah. It just reminded me of
like if you had someone who’s shorter than you and you will hold their head and
they’re just kind of flailing their arms and they can’t hit you that’s kind of
what he was doing. It’s a super douche move, you know, just like you’re not
even worth my time. I’m just gonna pull on your mask and that’s enough to make
Justin: But they’re not, I mean, they show
up here and he dispatches them instantly and then they are literally just
following him around while he tells more of his story. They’re there to stop
him and then it’s like, “Oh cool. Yeah. Take us on a tour of your cool
Alex: Yeah. Got any snacks? We’re
pretty hungry. Any sugar cubes or anything like that? Love a good sugar cube.
So they do want it around. He lays out the whole plan. He explains how he
killed The Comedian. He gave several people cancer in order to frame Dr.
Manhattan and get him off planet. He heard about Rorschach thing. I thought
this was an interesting detail. It sounds like he didn’t plan his own
assassination until Rorschach started sniffing around. So it’s interesting that
there’s a certain level of improvisation to what Ozymandias is doing.
Pete: But also like this plan, the
odds of it working out are insane. He started his plan by just irradiating some
random people, that’s wild. The only reason it seems cool is because we’re here
at the end of it hearing how great it was. If he walked up to you and was like,
“I have this plan to save the world. I’m just going to irradiate these
strangers for the next couple of weeks.” It’s like, what dude are you
Alex: That’s a real chest move, man.
He’s using the ponds that he has. I think it’s a boss move. I mean, when you
think about it, there’s so many villain plants and never really happened.
Pete: That’s what I’m saying. This is
like a guy who like you’re playing monopoly with and he’s like, “ha ha,
I’m going to run waterworks.” It’s like, “Okay man, we’re going to
quit in 20 minutes, so do whatever you want.”
Alex: But that also points to
something that we’ve talked about all along, which even to he cops too,
everybody calls him the smartest man in the world. He’s not actually the
smartest man in the world. He’s very smart. But to your point, Justin, his Bain
plan is I’m going to build this big bod stir, get a bunch of Hollywood
screenwriters to work at it and then teleport it into New York, and then cool
times everywhere at that, and then most of the rest of the plant is, ah, shit.
I gotta do a bunch of cleanup on all these people that figured out my plan.
What do I do now? He’s remaining very cool about it, but it’s not as perfect a plan
as he wants to let on at all.
Justin: No, he fucked up.
Justin: When you got shove a pill in a
dude’s mouth and the fountain of your own building, like-
Alex: Yeah, it’s going to slop. It’s
getting sloppy. Yeah. So then we get to the moment we get to the big moment as
the New York city streets starts to clear out from the fight that’s happening
in the background, which itself is very sad because we do get to see this
lesbian couple devolving into a fight we didn’t even touch on. There’s this
incredibly sad moment, uh, where the grapher member of the couple who’s being
broke up with he’s like,”I just want to sleep with you. I just want to
fucking sleep with you. I just want to feel something. I just want to be happy.
I want to die,” and starts beating her up and it broke my heart reading
that. We see the same thing with the therapist and his wife where they’re
having almost the same conversation Lori and Dr. Manhattan had about are people
worth it or not? So do you save the earth or not?
Alex: And then Bernie and Bernie are
having a very similar conversation where Dreiberg is like, “I don’t care
what’s the big deal? We have the same Big birdy.” They’re completely
falling apart across the board. And as that’s happened and things are tightening
and simplifying with Ozymandias to we get that paddle where he says, “Do
it… Dan? I’m not a Republic serial villain. Do you seriously think I’d
explained to my master stroke if there remain the slightest chance of you
affecting its outcome? I did it 35 minutes ago.” And then we cut to that
paddle of Night Owl and Rorschach stnding in front of the clocks. We see that
it’s one minute to midnight in New York, and the streets of New York have
cleared off. But of course this is all happening into the past. And that final
page, we see all the characters seeing what’s happening, which we don’t find
out until the next issue.
Alex: And then the ultimate
heartbreak, Bernie and Bernie turned to each other. They hold each other as it
happens after younger Bernie has said, “No, I don’t want anything to do
with you, man. Leave me alone.” And they fade. And we end once again with
the same splash pattern on the comedians button. But this time it’s the
dissipated molecules of Bernie and Bernie who had been blown apart the same way
Dr Manhattan was created and we’re left with one white panel just like the snow
in the beginning. So sad.
Justin: So sad. The fact that they have
the line of like, “What does it matter that we’re both named Bernie?”
And then it actually is the most meaningful thing at the end that they were,
had a somewhat of a connection and there with each other when they die, such a
great subtle little little package.
Alex: Well then it pays off. Like we
touched on earlier in the podcast, all of these various things that of course
aren’t randomly thrown in there, but feel like they’re similarly randomly throw
it in there. Like the newspaper people like the therapist, all of these
characters. We lived with them so long beyond the “main characters” in
the book. All for this moment. Also, we could feel this moment and understand
the weight of this moment. Pete, how did it hit you?
Pete: I mean it just it sucked man.
Who really was it’s such a powerful ending after like such a Oh shit moment.
It’s like, you know, you really feel it.
Alex: Yeah. And then the back matter
of course is a rolling stone style interview where the interviewer puts
themselves in the interview way too much where he’s talking to Ozymandias. Of
note it takes place in 1975, which is about when he has started to kick his
plan off. We have about 10 years there where he’s putting it into action. So
there’s little hints there. There’s little touches there, but already you get a
sense of where Ozymandias is heading even though the guy himself doesn’t realize
it. Any final thoughts about this issue?
Justin: Just like I, like I said before,
the storytelling here though, the way it all culminates here, we have gotten
all of the heroes sort of origins and at this point all the characters origins
and now we’re here at this final point moment where the trap is sprung and it’s
Justin: I live for the day when I can
somehow get captured the moment of like, Oh, I did it 35 minutes ago.
Alex: Yeah. Pete, any final thoughts
Alex: Oh, man. [crosstalk 00:52:15]-
Justin: Well, I just think that we covered
it. it’s a powerful ending.
Alex: It is absolutely a powerful
landing and this is a powerful ending to our podcast. If you’d like to support
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past? Oh yes. Six weeks. Six weeks. Yeah. We taped this a week ago. Oh, Alan
texted. He’s definitely gonna be here next week for the last dish. I don’t
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