Archive for the ‘Alan Moore’ Category

It’s that time again!  And much to my dismay politics are getting in the way of having a Guy Fawkes Day celebration.  Which is fine! Mrs. Wonderful is having an election party with a friend from Iowa who came all the way out here to Colorado and will be staying up as late as need be to take part in the hectic life of election coverage Tuesday night.  I know today is November 5 and tomorrow is election day, but preparing for election parties is a lengthy process.

Tonight I do plan on watching V for Vendetta as a way of getting my Guy Fawkes day fix in.  I might need to start reading V for Vendetta annually to celebrate the day as well.  I should also invest in a Guy Fawkes mask huh?

For those only versed in Alan Moore’s book, here’s a little history lesson for you about Guy Fawkes Day and why it’s significant for England.  The question always rises, do people celebrate the failed gun powder plot, or the man who attempted destroying a corrupt governmental system?  It’s up for debate, and no answers are wrong.

This excerpt was pulled from Time.com.

The English, among other talents, are adept at nurturing their grudges. How else does one explain the enduring enmity toward Guy Fawkes, a conspirator in a plot to blow up Parliament in 1605? Some four centuries after Fawkes was caught, tortured and executed for his role in a scheme that never came to fruition, Britons still celebrate his demise each Nov. 5 by burning his likeness in effigy and setting fireworks ablaze.

One of the ironies of Fawkes’ legacy is that he was a late addition to the infamous “Gunpowder Plot.” Born a Protestant in 1570, Fawkes enlisted in the Spanish army in the Netherlands around 1593, shortly after converting to Catholicism. Co-conspirators Robert Catesby, Thomas Winter, Thomas Percy and John Wright enlisted Fawkes as a ringer, reasoning that his military skills — he had participated in the 1595 capture of Calais, France — and his anonymity as a foreign soldier made him an ideal candidate to help execute their plan.

Fawkes’ henchmen were zealous Catholics who believed that by beheading the government, they might usher in a new era of Catholicism in Protestant England. Led by Catesby, they hatched a plan to explode gunpowder under Parliament during a state opening, when King James I, his queen, and other family members and government leaders were inside. The plot was set for Nov. 5, 1605, and in the preceding days, the conspirators rented a cellar underneath the building, where Fawkes stashed at least 20 barrels of gunpowder.

Things didn’t go according to plan. The plotters sought wider support, and, as the story goes, one of the individuals to whom they reached out alerted his brother-in-law, a lord, not to attend Parliament on Nov. 5. The building was searched, and Fawkes was apprehended along with his stockpile of gunpowder. Tortured on the rack, he revealed the names of his co-conspirators. Some of them were killed while resisting arrest; others, including Fawkes, pled not guilty and went to trial, where they were convicted of high treason. In January, 1606, the remaining conspirators were hanged, drawn and quartered. Parliament immediately established Nov. 5 as a day of celebration.

Today, Guy Fawkes Day — also known as Bonfire Night — is marked across the United Kingdom by celebrations. To foot the bill for the traditional fireworks, children roam the streets in the days leading up to the event, brandishing their effigies — known as “Guys” — and ask passers-by for a “penny for the guy.” (The phrase famously serves as the second epigraph to T.S. Eliot’s 1927 meditation on despair, “The Hollow Men.”) Families gather for food and festivities that might seem incongruous with the event’s bloody origins — although perhaps not as incongruous as lighting fireworks and bonfires to celebrate an abortive attempt at arson.

In recent years, Fawkes’ legacy has broadened. He provided the inspiration for the tile character in the Wachowski brothers’ V for Vendetta, in which a masked crusader embarks on a terrorist campaign against a totalitarian British dystopia. Fawkes also proved an effective fundraising rally cry for onetime U.S. presidential candidate Ron Paul, who garnered more than $4 million on the holiday in 2007 from a website commemorating Fawkes. This year, revelers will gather across Britain — most notably in Lewes, a town once known as a hotbed of anti-Catholicism sentiment that throws one of the British Isles’ biggest conflagrations — and in nations ranging from South Africa and Canada to New Zealand and Australia. Guards will also perform the annual search —more pageantry than precaution—of the Houses of Parliament to ensure no would-be Fawkes is lurking. Though the animosity and rituals may merely be symbolic at this point, the celebrations still burn brightly.

Some times I wonder about Alan Moore; He’s one of the greatest comic book writers in history, and might just be one of the greatest writers in the modern period, right after Neil Gaiman.  However, I’ve never been able to pin point which way he leans, far left or far right.  His works of fiction, mostly within the comic book genre, have always led me to believe he maintains more of a conservative, assholish type of persona, yet in his personal life he seems a bit more liberal and open minded.  So I’ve never been able to figure it out.

The Comics-X-Aminer recently posted Moore’s opinion on Frank Miller’s blog post on Occupy Wall Street. While Moore still seems to act a little uppity and “holier then thou,” I’m glad to see Moore does have an open mind about the rights of people and free speech.  I’m not certain what I personally think about Occupy Wall Street as a movement, but I love that Moore is speaking out against Frank Miller’s small-minded opinions about the movement.  Thank you Alan for letting Frank Miller have it!

The following comes from the Comics-X-Aminer

“Well, Frank Miller is someone whose work I’ve barely looked at for the past twenty years. I thought the Sin City stuff was unreconstructed misogyny, 300 appeared to be wildly ahistoric, homophobic and just completely misguided. I think that there has probably been a rather unpleasant sensibility apparent in Frank Miller’s work for quite a long time. Since I don’t have anything to do with the comics industry, I don’t have anything to do with the people in it. I heard about the latest outpourings regarding the Occupy movement. It’s about what I’d expect from him. It’s always seemed to me that the majority of the comics field, if you had to place them politically, you’d have to say centre-right. That would be as far towards the liberal end of the spectrum as they would go. I’ve never been in any way, I don’t even know if I’m centre-left. I’ve been outspoken about that since the beginning of my career. So yes I think it would be fair to say that me and Frank Miller have diametrically opposing views upon all sorts of things, but certainly upon the Occupy movement.

“As far as I can see, the Occupy movement is just ordinary people reclaiming rights which should always have been theirs. I can’t think of any reason why as a population we should be expected to stand by and see a gross reduction in the living standards of ourselves and our kids, possibly for generations, when the people who have got us into this have been rewarded for it; they’ve certainly not been punished in any way because they’re too big to fail. I think that the Occupy movement is, in one sense, the public saying that they should be the ones to decide who’s too big to fail. It’s a completely justified howl of moral outrage and it seems to be handled in a very intelligent, non-violent way, which is probably another reason why Frank Miller would be less than pleased with it. I’m sure if it had been a bunch of young, sociopathic vigilantes with Batman make-up on their faces, he’d be more in favour of it. We would definitely have to agree to differ on that one.”

The Gunpowder Plot Conspirators

You know that graphic novel that Alan Moore wrote a while back, later turned into a hit film?  If you didn’t know, it was inspired by actual events that took place in the very early 1600′s.  Guy Fawkes, tired of the oppressive nature of the English government and King James, teamed up with a group of like minded English Catholics to kill the ruler and allow his daughter, Princess Elizabeth, to take the throne.

On May 20th of 1605, a Sunday, they met and decided to blow up Parliament with gunpowder.  One of the conspirators, John Percy, was able to gain access to a house which was very close to Parliament, and also owned by John Whynniard, keeper of the king’s wardrobe.  Fawkes was hired as the care taker of the house, and during the night and/or when Whynniard was not at home, the band of “terrorists” dug a tunnel underneath the house which led to a dirty basement room in parliament that Percy leased out.  Fawkes ran the barrels of gunpowder from the house to the basement room many nights over the course of a few months, enough to blow up the entire building.

As most of us know, however, the gunpowder plot failed with Guy Fawkes being the only conspirator discovered.  He didn’t reveal the names of any of his fellow conspirators and was hanged for treason.

Today, the 5th of November is celebrated by two groups of people…one being those who cheer for the failed gunpowder plot and the hanging of Fawkes, and those who believe Fawkes to be a hero in trying to rid England of an oppressive government.  Alan Moore’s story, V for Vendetta, is more of a celebration of Guy Fawkes’s attempt to kill the king, but more about how “governments should serve its people.”  Every year on the 5th of November, a parade runs through London with a burning effigy resembling Guy Fawkes.  While this is going on, the people will shout the “Gunpowder Prayer,” which goes like this…

Remember, remember, the 5th of November
The Gunpowder Treason and plot;
I know of no reason why Gunpowder Treason
Should ever be forgot.
Guy Fawkes, Guy Fawkes,
‘Twas his intent.
To blow up the King and the Parliament.
Three score barrels of powder below.
Poor old England to overthrow.
By God’s providence he was catch’d,
With a dark lantern and burning match

Holloa boys, Holloa boys, let the bells ring
Holloa boys, Holloa boys, God save the King!
Hip hip Hoorah !
Hip hip Hoorah !
A penny loaf to feed ol’Pope,
A farthing cheese to
A pint of beer to rinse it down,
A faggot of sticks to burn him.
Burn him in a tub of tar,’
Burn him like a blazing star.
Burn his body from his head,
Then we’ll say “Ol’ Pope is dead.”

However, most of us who read this blog celebrate the graphic novel, V for Vendetta written by Alan Moore.  So if you decide to celebrate Guy Fawkes Day (also known as Bon Fire Night) do a little of both…watch the film, and have an effigy burning.  I’ll let you decide if you want to celebrate the triumph of Parliament, or the heroic actions of Fawkes.  The things you’ll need are as follows…

1) A Guy Fawkes dummy…which can be life sized, or doll sized.  Go buy a doll at a toy store or sow up a home-made one.
2) Things to burn… A bon-fire on a beach is ideal, but if you can’t due to lack of space or because of fire laws, just get your grill ready.
3) FIREWORKS…but if you can’t get those, just get some sparklers and light them up during the burning.

While the effigy is burning, recite the gunpowder prayer and celebrate afterwards with some alcohol and anarchy!  HAPPY 5TH OF NOVEMBER!!!