from jcolag -
... I (vaguely) recall Moore back then talking about how superheroes were all really fetishists repressing sexual and violent tendencies.
I hate to back-track this topic too far, but I couldn't ignore this comment.
Would I be alone then in viewing Superheroes as, for the most part, being something that a person could use as an inspiration in how to live their own life? I'm not referring to the flash-in-the-pan violent heroes who never last more than a few short years, but characters like Batman, Superman, Captain America, Spiderman, Green Lantern and all the other characters that have had strong moral stances AND have stuck to them throughout their history, regardless of the evil they've faced (disregarding deviations from those morals to support small changes in direction that never stick).
The statement Moore makes about superheroes, from my point of view, seems to be coming from someone who has their own "issues" to deal with. Any type of "fetish" that could be found in superheroes in general is either coming from a specific artist who worked on a book and not so much the characters themselves, or from reviewers who try too hard to find things to talk about and put "repressed tendencies" into places where it doesn't belong and was never intended to be. I just can't imagine that Bill Finger & Bob Kane were sitting around saying "There's not enough homo-erotic tension in our books, how about we have Batman run around with a boy who wears green underwear?" You know, sometimes accidents happen, and a guy cranking-out 20-30 pages a month might mess-up and put a hand where he didn't intend it to be or draw something innocently that might appear to be a body part if you look too hard and squint a little.
Sure, there has been some fine examples of "fetishes" in comics. The early Wonder Woman stories spring to mind with their repeated depictions of WW tied-up by guys she should have been able to knock-out with but the flick of her finger, but that seems to be more of the exception than the rule, as far as I can see.
And while I'm at it ...
... when I mention disliking Watchmen among other fans, I'm told that I didn't "get it," and that a lot of the story was meant to be ironic (and, thus...uhm...I wasn't supposed to enjoy it, I guess).
I took forever to finally give Watchmen (the comic) a chance simply because I wanted to know why, nearly ten years afterwards, people were still talking about it. I have to admit, it was impressive (except the pirate stuff, which I found boring and usually skipped) and I really liked the ending where the evil plot is revealed. However, I don't find that the book holds-up well for a repeat reading because I know how it ends, and without the mystery of the story, there is no story to read. Contrast that with my opinion of "The Sixth Sense", a movie that was unfortunately spoiled for me long before I ever saw it. Even though the "mystery" of that film was gone for me, I was able to watch it from a different point-of-view, picking-out the scenes where people who didn't realize what was going-on were lead to believe what M&M Nighty-Night Shamalamadingdong wanted them to believe. It was still a fun movie to watch because I was able to see how the viewers, seeing it for their first time, were fooled into believing something that wasn't true.
Back to the Watchmen movie: I think it's a shame that whenever the movie comes-out on DVD (I won't pay to see a movie in a theater anymore), based on what I'm hearing here, I won't be able to watch it with my kids around. For better or worse, I am more mindful of my children seeing scenes containing "adult situations", to put it mildly, than I am of their viewing any level of violence because they don't mimic the violence they see on tv (I'm with them all day long, so I'm not missing anything). And as far as "language" goes, they've heard more than enough from their sometimes-overly-frustrated parents that, if they haven't picked it up by now, seeing one film won't hurt them in the least. If something was changed from the comic to the movie, I was hoping that the sexual situations would have been glossed-over somewhat or just hinted at.