Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons' graphic novel "Watcher" is an unusual comic type as it is the first simple plot to deviate from the super hero and super power in the fictitious world. The story of multi-character is "human rather than superhuman" in actual environment (Moore, "mindscape"). The author reports on the darkness of rape, war and violence in the world of watchmen. The most important question that a rhetorician is interested in is to decide whether it is right or wrong This moral question extends throughout the novel and is revealed by the role of comedian (Edward Morgan).
1) Gibbons and Moore indirectly told Douglas that he wanted to make a controversial claim against a famous government person as an accused. Douglas' chatter highlighted his past motivation to focus on his magazine and showed the willingness of the media to pass etiquette for commercial success. 2) Emotional satire is derived from Douglas quarantining John by chance. John can effectively prevent the evil plot of Adrian Wide and try to prevent the spread of cancer. Gibbons and Moor emphasized that the desire to be recognized distorted the rationality from time to time
The observer was created by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons. The first part may be aimed at the wish of Allen Moore, but it does not necessarily infringe the wish of Dave Gibbons. Of course, do they all have the right to respect their views? Marvel began a lawsuit in Marvelman and after the art partner Alan Davis saw that the timely reprinting of British captains would serve Davis' booming American career, Alan Moore went to Marvel America He refused to reprint. The captain of the United Kingdom is working to break the booming partnership. Dave Gibbons has not expressed his view on the first part, but I understand that he does not object to their existence.
Watcher is a limited edition series of 12 manga books by Alan Moore, Dave Gibbons and John Higgins published by DC Comics in 1986 and 1987. The observer focused on the six main characters of the comedian, Manhattan doctor, staying up late, Ozymandias, Rorschach, Silk Ghost. These characters were originally based on a powerful crusade and then redesigned with a proactive proposal in order to accommodate the super hero attribute that DC acquired from the Charlton cartoon in the early 1980s. Series writer Alan Moore presented six "completely opposite methods" to perceive the world and created a hero who gives the privilege to determine the morally most understandable thing to the reader of the story.