
The story so far…
The Comedian is dead and nobody cares…because he was a scumbag who tried to rape one of his own team, treated the closeted gay man like dirt, killed his baby mama after she sliced him for abandoning her and their unborn child after winning the Vietnam War (alternate history), and treated everyone else like dirt as well. And yet he learned something and only Rorschach, one of the few remaining active superheroes, is curious what it is. In our last chapter the former Silk Spectre, tired of her boyfriend Doctor Manhattan seeming to lose his humanity, left him and spent time with the former Nite Owl II (not like that…yet), but returned to learn that during a talk show appearance, Doc Man was accused of giving his previous lover cancer just by existing (he did not, however, turn into a car…Harry Partridge lied to me!) and teleported the paparazzi away. Based, but then he ran off to Mars.
Skimming the omnibus I’m reading from we seem to have reached a part of the story that will focus on each of the heroes that make up the Watchmen, which I know is not a team name but it’s an easy way to group our main cast. Just letting you know I’m not stupid. (I’m only an idiot.) This gives us not only a chance to look at each of the heroes individually, but compare them to the hero that Alan Moore intended to use versus how they appear in the comic. Now it’s possible that the change in character from messing up newly bought licenses to do whatever you want original characters altered the plan. Still, it’s fun to think about what might have been, so let’s start here.

The Captain Atom DC inherited was Captain Nathaniel Adam, an Air Force expert in nuclear energy and weapons who got caught in his own rocket, blewed up real good, but because Charlton Comics was a Bronze Age universe operating under Silver Age rules (which might have been what hurt them having read and reviewed his various Charlton appearances), he not only survived but gained superpowers. He could alter his molecular structure, fire nuclear blasts, and he developed a special armor that could hide under his skin when he didn’t have his powers active while still protecting the outside world from his radioactive body. If none of that makes sense, welcome to Charlton. I found that happening a lot.
Doctor Manhattan, the only character in the book with actual superpowers because Alan Moore, has far more powers. We already saw him teleport an entire studio of people away and the Comedian noted there were a ton of ways Doctor Manhattan could have stopped him from killing the pregnant woman but didn’t. We’ll discuss the Captain Atom we did get but for now we can speculate what Captain Atom would have done. As far as going to Mars, Cap A once flew into space to fight a dragon that a kid could project himself into playing with Puff The Magic Dragon style when he slept, and fought numerous alien invaders, even going to their planet to beat them up. Let’s not pretend hanging out on Mars would have been impossible.

Doctor Manhattan is such a litterbug.
Watchmen #4
DC Comics (December, 1986)
“Watchmaker”
WRITER: Alan Moore
ARTIST/LETTERER: Dave Gibbons
COLORIST: John Higgins
EDITOR: Len Wein
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Does Star Wars Have A Future?
Sounds reasonably suicidal.
Before you start, this isn’t some “doom and gloom” article, nor am I going all Pollyanna on “we can totally save Star Wars, everybody!”, or any of that. This is one of those stream of consciousness articles that often comes off rambly to me but I have yet to be called out on them for whatever reason. It’s basically me thinking about where Star Wars is, where it would go, and where it could go if the people making it cared…and right now it doesn’t even sound like the creators cares.
Anyone who thinks the franchise is doing well is clearly not paying attention. Any defense I see tends to be either brand loyalists or along certain sociopolitical lines. The die hard fans have not been happy at least since The Last Jedi, if not The Force Awakens, while none of the Disney + shows outside of early seasons of The Mandalorian have gotten much in the way of praise. From breaking lore to forced false representation to in-fighting over which “daughter” gets to replace Luke Skywalker mistaken for one group “fixing” the franchise (as it turned out Dave Filoni just won the chance to get his “daughters” Ahsoka and Sabine into the new spot), to The Acolyte supporting the franchise’s villains to…does anybody even remember Star Wars: Resistance happened? The High Republic stuff is either a joke or a forgotten Disney Junior show. The last video game, Star Wars: Outlaws, so bad a dude got a 17 hour review going over every bit of broken story, game mechanic, and bug riddling that game, which isn’t doing Ubisoft any favors. I’m still trying to work my way through that one and it’s amazing how many different ways there are to fail at video game design.
So yeah, they’re not doing so hot, are they?
Disney’s new leadership recently met with Lucasfilm’s new management to discuss the future of the Lucasfilm properties, all of which have been damaged except for THX-1138, which if you ask me couldn’t get much worse if you tried. How do you make sex boring in a movie about a world banning it? Willow and Indiana Jones both had the title characters replaced by the “better” female character that nobody was interested in. I just hope American Graffiti isn’t on that list because I don’t know what they’d do with that. Meanwhile they made live-action sequels to animated works people have heard about, brought back Boba Fett because his armor’s cool and then made him lame, and in both cases people only care when they’re mocking it.
So how did Disney screw up one of the biggest geek media franchises? Simple: they hate geek media, like much of Hollywood, the same Hollywood that looks down on animation, so the animation studio decided to abandon and replace their legacy to play to the cool kids, which was all Iger cared about. Now we have new people, but no evidence they’ll fix the problem after years of broken hope that new blood would fix what went wrong. Marvel couldn’t even before Disney. DC hasn’t. Star Wars shows no signs of it. So if this franchise has a future, what is it?
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Posted by ShadowWing Tronix on May 12, 2026 in Animation Spotlight, Book Spotlight, Movie Spotlight, Streaming Spotlight, Television Spotlight and tagged commentary, Disney Star Wars, Lucasfilm, stream of consciousness.
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