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Alan Moore

Alan Moore

Birthday: 18 November 1953, Northampton, England, UK
Height: 193 cm

Alan Moore was born on November 18, 1953 in Northampton, England. He is a writer and actor, known for From Hell (2001), The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (2003) and Watchmen (2009). He has been ma ...Show More

"I also wanted to write about power politics. Ronald Reagan was president. But I was worried readers Show more "I also wanted to write about power politics. Ronald Reagan was president. But I was worried readers might switch off if they thought I was attacking someone they admired. So we set "Watchmen" in a world where Richard Nixon was in his fourth term - because you're not going to get much argument that Nixon was scum! For me, the '80s were worrying. 'Mutually assured destruction'. 'Voodoo economics'. A culture of complacency...I was writing about the times I lived in". (on the political approach to the Watchmen comic book series). Hide
We had one particularly dense Hollywood producer say, 'You don't even have to do the book, just stic Show more We had one particularly dense Hollywood producer say, 'You don't even have to do the book, just stick your name on this idea and I'll make the film and you'll get a lot of money - it's... The League Of Extraordinary Animals! It'll be like Puss In Boots!' And I just said, 'No, no, no. Never mention this to me again.' Hide
I'm perhaps overstating my case here a bit, but I think I lent an awful lot of literary and intellec Show more I'm perhaps overstating my case here a bit, but I think I lent an awful lot of literary and intellectual credibility to the American comics business and to the comics business in general when I entered it. I don't feel the same way about comics any more, I really don't. I never loved the comic industry. I used to love the comics medium. I still do love the comics medium in its pure platonic, essential form, but the comics medium as it stands seems to me to have been allowed to become a cucumber patch for producing new movie franchise. Hide
[on the flimsy origin stories of superheroes] People, I'm sure, have had their parents killed in fro Show more [on the flimsy origin stories of superheroes] People, I'm sure, have had their parents killed in front of their eyes. I think that would probably lead to a life in analysis, and probably all sorts of personal problems... it probably wouldn't lead to you becoming a bat-themed vigilante. Hide
I was starving. I've always liked comic books. Since I as 6 or 7. I'd discovered American comic book Show more I was starving. I've always liked comic books. Since I as 6 or 7. I'd discovered American comic books at age 7. I later came to appreciate comics as an art form, and realized that even with glorious exceptions like Will Eisner, Harvey Kurtz, this was a field that was still largely untouched. . Its great work still lay in the future at that point.And I was working for a subcontractor to the gas board. Miserable office job. This was in the late 70s. I'd been through a series of fairly miserable jobs after my hurried removal from the grammar school that I was in. -- on deciding to become a comic writer Hide
"It's 1988 now. Margaret Thatcher is entering her third term of office and talking confidently of an Show more "It's 1988 now. Margaret Thatcher is entering her third term of office and talking confidently of an unbroken Conservative leadership well into the next century. My youngest daughter is seven and the tabloid press are circulating the idea of concentration camps for persons with AIDS. The new riot police wear wear black visors, as do their horses, and their vans have rotating video cameras mounted on top. The government has expressed a desire to eradicate homosexuality, even as an abstract concept, and one can only speculate as to which minority will be the next legislated against. I'm thinking of taking my family and getting out of this country soon, sometime over the next couple of years. It's cold and it's mean spirited and I don't like it here anymore. Goodnight England. Goodnight Home Serve and V for Victory. Hello the Voice of Fate and V for Vendetta." - from his 1988 introduction to V For Vendetta. Hide
I've always had my problems with genre, and I am coming to the conclusion that genre has really only Show more I've always had my problems with genre, and I am coming to the conclusion that genre has really only ever been a convenience. Hide
[on being disassociated with the film adaptations of his work]: "I want them to say, 'We're not goin Show more [on being disassociated with the film adaptations of his work]: "I want them to say, 'We're not going to give you any money for your work, you're not going to get any credit for it and we're not going to put your name on it.' To see a line of dialogue or a character that I have poured that much emotional involvement into, to see them casually travestied and watered down and distorted... it's kind of painful. It's much better just to avoid them altogether." Hide
"The answer I always fall back on is to quote Raymond Chandler. People said: 'Raymond, don't you fee Show more "The answer I always fall back on is to quote Raymond Chandler. People said: 'Raymond, don't you feel devastated by how Hollywood has destroyed your books?' And he would take them into his study, point to the bookshelf and say, 'There they are. Look, they're fine.' The film has got nothing to do with my work. It has a coincidental title to a book I've done and they've given me a huge wedge of money. No problem with that" - on the subject of how he feels of Hollywood's treatment of his works. Hide
The main reason why comics can't work as films is largely because everybody who is ultimately in con Show more The main reason why comics can't work as films is largely because everybody who is ultimately in control of the film industry is an accountant. These people may be able to add up and balance the books, but in every other area they are stupid and incompetent and don't have any talent. And this is why a film is going to be a work that's done by dozens and dozens and dozens, if not hundreds of people. They're going to show it to the backers and then they're going to say, we want this in it, and this in it... and where's the monster? Hide
The world of ideas is in certain senses deeper, truer than reality; this solid television less signi Show more The world of ideas is in certain senses deeper, truer than reality; this solid television less significant than the Idea of television. Ideas, unlike solid structures, do not perish. They remain immortal, immaterial and everywhere, like all Divine things. Ideas are a golden, savage landscape that we wander unaware, without a map. Be careful: in the last analysis, reality may be exactly what we think it is. Hide
I'd rather my work maintain my only profile. It doesn't really matter to readers whether I exist or Show more I'd rather my work maintain my only profile. It doesn't really matter to readers whether I exist or not, now does it? It's only the work. I don't want them to admire my haircut. I don't want them to admire my complexion or my trim physique. If they enjoy the story, then that's great. The contact between me and them has been successfully completed, you know? Hide
The League film cost 100 million because Sean Connery wanted 17 million of that - and a bigger explo Show more The League film cost 100 million because Sean Connery wanted 17 million of that - and a bigger explosion that the one he'd had in his last film. It's in his contract that he has to have a bigger explosion with every film he's in. In The Rock he'd blown up an island, and he was demanding in The League that he blow up, was it Venice or something like that? It would have been the moon in his next movie. Hide
... But at the end of the day, Watchmen was something to do with power, V for Vendetta was about fas Show more ... But at the end of the day, Watchmen was something to do with power, V for Vendetta was about fascism and anarchy, The Killing Joke was just about Batman and the Joker - and Batman and the Joker are not really symbols of anything that are real, in the real world, they're just two comic book characters. -- on "The Killing Joke" Hide
I left school at the age of seventeen and my first job was hacking up sheep carcasses for the Co-Op Show more I left school at the age of seventeen and my first job was hacking up sheep carcasses for the Co-Op Hide and Skin Division. It certainly gave me an insight into life, because we had to turn up at 7:30am and drag these blood-stained sheepskins out of these vats of freezing cold water, blood, and various animal byproducts. Then we used to mutilate them in a variety of strange ways... but, oddly, a form of concentration-camp humor arose, and many was the happy hour that we had throwing whacked-off sheep's testicles at each other. Hide
I think what I said after Watchmen and that, was that I no longer felt the super hero form was reall Show more I think what I said after Watchmen and that, was that I no longer felt the super hero form was really the best way to tell important meaningful stories. That if I wanted to do a story on the environment, I think it would be better without the swamp monster in it, if I wanted to do a story about politics, it would be better not to have a bunch of superheroes in it. I believe that the superhero icon still has a valuable power in it. It kind of transformed my childhood. Its a talisman of the imagination.They were powerful as a way of opening up rooms in my imagination when I was a child. They were very very valuable to me. And the fact that you can use them to tell allegorical stories or whatever, that doesn't mean you should. "Batman: The Killing Joke", which still sells, and I believe that it has been accepted that it was the main influence on the first Batman film, for what's that worth, is a terrible book. I mean, it doesn't say anything. Its talking about Batman and the Joker, and says that yes, psychologically Batman and the joker are mirror images of each other. So? You know. You're never going to meet somebody remotely like either of those two people. You're not going to meet people who have been driven mad in that way. -- on the superhero genre Hide
Wanted people to have some idea of what it would be like to spend two hours in a room cutting up a w Show more Wanted people to have some idea of what it would be like to spend two hours in a room cutting up a woman. There was no possible sense of glamour about it. That seemed to be the only honest way to do it. -- on the violence in "From Hell" Hide
The majority of films feel like a waste of two hours of my life. This is probably because I'm an inc Show more The majority of films feel like a waste of two hours of my life. This is probably because I'm an increasingly cranky and reclusive weirdo. Hide
You couldn't do it. There certainly couldn't be the violence [of the book]. That would be too much. Show more You couldn't do it. There certainly couldn't be the violence [of the book]. That would be too much. It would be just unpleasant. The blood is black and white in the comic, which provides a necessary distancing. -- on translating the level and detail of violence in "From Hell" to a film Hide
I find film in its modern form to be quite bullying. It spoon-feeds us, which has the effect of wate Show more I find film in its modern form to be quite bullying. It spoon-feeds us, which has the effect of watering down our collective cultural imagination. It is as if we are freshly hatched birds looking up with our mouths open waiting for Hollywood to feed us more regurgitated worms. The 'Watchmen' film sounds like more regurgitated worms. I for one am sick of worms. Can't we get something else? Perhaps some takeout? Even Chinese worms would be a nice change. Hide
There is a certain amount of darkness in magic but there is much more radiance and light. And it is Show more There is a certain amount of darkness in magic but there is much more radiance and light. And it is purely about the world of ideas. -- on magic Hide
Media and fame, they're like an element as much as water and fire are. They're 20th century elements Show more Media and fame, they're like an element as much as water and fire are. They're 20th century elements, they're the ones that we didn't have before in this way, and the people who are thrown into that grinder are still being thrown in without and preparation, without any understanding of what it is they're being asked to face. Hide
I believe that every single individual human being should probably make their own peace with the uni Show more I believe that every single individual human being should probably make their own peace with the universe. I mean, we're all of us different emotionally, we're all different physically, intellectually... it would be really odd if we were all the same spiritually. So that's why I have a problem with religion per se, because "religion," the very word, it comes from the same root word as "ligature" and "ligament" and it means, "to be bound together in one belief" which I find a bit creepy and a bit unnatural. Hide
It is important to me that I should be able to do whatever I want. I was kind of a selfish child, wh Show more It is important to me that I should be able to do whatever I want. I was kind of a selfish child, who always wanted things his way, and I've kind of taken that over into my relationship with the world. Hide
The idea was to do a documentary comic about a murder. I concluded that there was a way of approachi Show more The idea was to do a documentary comic about a murder. I concluded that there was a way of approaching the [Ripper] murders in a completely different way. I changed the emphasis from 'whodunit' to 'what happened'. I'd seen advertisements for Douglas Adams' book "Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency". A holistic detective? You wouldn't just have to solve the crime, you'd have to solve the entire world that that crime happened in. That was the twist that I needed. -- on "From Hell" Hide
A real writer doesn't just want to write; a real writer has to write. A real writer doesn't just want to write; a real writer has to write.
100 million dollars - that's what they spent on the Watchmen film which nearly didn't come out becau Show more 100 million dollars - that's what they spent on the Watchmen film which nearly didn't come out because of the lawsuit, that's what they spent on The League Of Extraordinary Gentlemen which shouldn't have come out but did anyway. Do we need any more shitty films in this world? We have quite enough already. Whereas the 100 million dollars could sort out the civil unrest in Haiti. And the books are always superior, anyway. Hide
[on "worshipping" the Roman snake god Glycon] "The only references there are to him in the literatur Show more [on "worshipping" the Roman snake god Glycon] "The only references there are to him in the literature, which are very disparaging, are in the works of the philosopher Lucien. Lucien explains that the whole Glycon cult was an enormous fraud, and that Glycon was a glove puppet. And I've got no reason to disbelieve that whatsoever. To me, I think that's perfect. If I'm gonna have a god, I prefer it to be a complete hoax and a glove puppet because I'm not likely to start believing that glove puppet created the universe or anything dangerous like that." Hide
League of Extraordinary Gentlemen was the reason why I decided to take my name off all subsequent fi Show more League of Extraordinary Gentlemen was the reason why I decided to take my name off all subsequent films. Hide
To me, all creativity is magic. Ideas start out in the empty void of your head - and they end up as Show more To me, all creativity is magic. Ideas start out in the empty void of your head - and they end up as a material thing, like a book you can hold in your hand. That is the magical process. It's an alchemical thing. Yes, we do get the gold out of it but that's not the most important thing. It's the work itself. That's the reward. That's better than money. Hide
There is more integrity in comics. It sounds simplistic, but I believe there is a formula that you c Show more There is more integrity in comics. It sounds simplistic, but I believe there is a formula that you can apply to almost any work of modern culture... Hide
Much as I love the medium, I despise the industry. I've always despised it to a certain degree but a Show more Much as I love the medium, I despise the industry. I've always despised it to a certain degree but after this last few years and all this nonsense with the films, I believe it to be a completely poisonous place that isn't really going anywhere. I did once feel I was part of a movement that wanted to change comics into something was valuable to culture, but I don't really feel that kinship in the way I used to. -- on the comic book industry Hide
There is something about the quality of comics that makes things possible that you couldn't do in an Show more There is something about the quality of comics that makes things possible that you couldn't do in any other medium. Things that we did in Watchmen on paper could be frankly horrible or sensationalist or unpleasant if you were to interpret them literally through the medium of cinema. When it's just lines on paper, the reader is in control of the experience - it's a tableau vivant. And that gives it the necessary distance. It's not the same when you're being dragged through it at 24 frames per second. Hide
... it was done while I was doing Watchmen, or just after or something, I'm not sure which but it wa Show more ... it was done while I was doing Watchmen, or just after or something, I'm not sure which but it was too close to Watchmen. I mean, Brian [Bolland] did a wonderful job on the art but I don't think it's a very good book. It's not saying anything very interesting. -- on "The Killing Joke" Hide
Alan Moore's FILMOGRAPHY
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