Alan Moore's Watchmen

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Alan Moore’s “Watchmen” focuses on several characters throughout the novel making the idea of a main character moot. However, one character can be described as the most influential to the plot of the graphic novel. Rorschach can be seen as such due to the fact that he narrates a large portion of the novel, and his heroic code that he follows. Not only does he influence the plot by those two reasons, but also by uniting the characters after a long silence. The Comedian is the only character that almost perfectly fits as the character with the most influence on the plot of “Watchmen.” The death of his character allows for the plot to be set in motion. He has not only has he shaped every other character in the novel, but the symbol that represents his character can be found throughout the graphic novel. Although Rorschach can be interpreted as the most influential character of “Watchmen,” The Comedian influenced more aspects of the plot than any other character of the graphic novel.
After The Comedian’s murder, Rorschach determines that the motive behind his death is the fact that he was once a masked adventurer. He takes this motive and turns it into a theory of someone hunting down masked adventurers and killing them. Once he comes to this conclusion, he visits his past partners to warn them of the potential danger they may face soon. He first visits the partner he was closest to Dan Dreiberg, Nite Owl, and warns him of a possible murder attempt against him. He then visits Ozymandias, Dr. Manhattan, and Laurie Juspeczyk to warn them as well. Because he mentions Dan to Laurie, she instantly wants to contact him after a long period of time, thus rekindling the bond between the two characters (Moore, 1.23).
One would automati...

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...this through the imagery in on page nineteen of chapter four in the sixth panel. Through the coloring, The Comedian is bright yellow, just as his badge is. His eyes are red representing the “blood” found on the badge’s left eye, and he has the biggest smile stretched across his face.
It is understandable to think that Rorschach is the most influential character in Watchmen, however it is clearly The Comedian due to his incredible influence of all the characters and the fact that his death sets the main plot in motion. Though his heroic code is not as strong and stable as Rorschach’s, The Comedian understands the world perfectly, but “he doesn’t care” (Moore, 4.19). Both of these characters saw the “true face” of this reality, one just fought against it while the other became a parody of it.

Works Cited

Moore, Alan. Watchmen. New York: D.C. Comics, 1987. Print.

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