Is Alan Moore Right? Do Comic Book Movies Make People Fascists?

Legendary writer Alan Moore apologizes for his “responsibility” for the popularity of comic book stories because he believes they prime people for fascism. Is the Watchmen author right?

Joshua M. Patton
10 min readOct 18, 2022

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Image via or Gaius Cornelius (cropped)

Comic books as an art form have faced a lifetime of mostly scorn from people who see it as low art, if art at all, and claptrap for kids. This perception changed in the late 20th Century in no small part to the work of writer Alan Moore on titles like Swamp Thing, Watchmen, and The Killing Joke. He injected maturity, political worldview, and pure comics spectacle in his stories, proving that this visual medium is capable of delivering an engaging artistic experience for adults. Unfortunately, the now novelist and screenwriter, thinks that was a huge mistake. In an interview, he said that he thinks the idea of adults lining up to see “Batman movies” is terrifying, suggesting that they are infantilized and yearning for better days, thus primed to succumb to fascism.

Moore is obviously referencing the rise of authoritarianism, nationalism, and xenophobia in Europe and the United States. To even ask if he’s correct is as arrogant as interrogating the notion from Martin Scorsese about Marvel (and others’) movies…

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Joshua M. Patton

Entertainment, culture, politics, essays & lots of Star Wars. Bylines: Comic Years, CBR. Like my work? Buy me a coffee: https://ko-fi.com/O5O0GR