Why does manhattan kills rorschach




















Is there an extended version of Watchmen? Is Watchmen worth watching? Does Watchmen follow the movie? Is Watchmen movie worth watching? Is Dr Manhattan evil? Who killed the comedian?

Is Rorschach a virgin? Why is Ozymandias so strong? Who is stronger Darkseid or Dr Manhattan? Can darkseid kill Dr Manhattan? And this is where things get interesting. Faced with the truth and its results, Dr. Manhattan and Rorschach, the two protagonists of our article, reacted completely differently. Namely, by becoming dehumanised, Dr. Manhattan achieved a certain level of objectivity that allowed him to interpret human behaviour more properly, seeing the greater good.

For Dr. Manhattan, thing were never really just black or white; Dr. Manhattan was able to see and properly interpret the grey in between. As for Rorschach, he always represented moral absolutism. He was an anti-hero and a vigilante with a strict, albeit bloody moral code that only saw black or white. For Rorschach, you were either good or bad, there was nothing between those two polar opposites. Manhattan decided to accept it and let Ozymandias get away with it. As Nite Owl, he beat up one of the Knot-Tops and threatened to kill him and the whole gang before Rorschach drew him away to continue the more important mission they were on.

Hooded Justice was the first person to become a masked vigilante. Never appearing without his mask on, his identity was a mystery to even his fellow Minutemen, and his lover, Captain Metropolis. WJK wrote: You just answered your own question. Manhattan's viewpoint at least.

Did he even know that Rorschach didn't have his journal on him, especially with the tachyons disrupting his precognition funny how he describes time as being simultaneous for him, yet throw in a couple of tachyons and it blocks the future for him - or maybe he was lying?

Then again, did he even know that Rorschach had a journal in the first place, and that he was writing down all the events of his investigation in it? But yeah, perhaps that just doesn't matter and he didn't want to take the risk.

I've always found the "thermodynamic miracle" excuse odd, though. I've made another thread concerning Dr. Manhattan, so we can discuss that there, but I don't know whether or not a woman falling in love with a man who almost raped her and bearing his child is really that big a deal, unless that wasn't Alan Moore's point. Thought so. Writer Of Wrongs. You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum.



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