you lol'd at a one-panel joke from the 1986 original: at the end, Redford is running against Nixon, who is still president then.
How exactly did DC screw him & Gibbons over? I’ve read ppl alluding to it but it’s unclear to me. Their contract promised that the rights would revert when the book when out of print, and then... they kept it in print? Did it say anything about derivative works etc.?
― drunk on hot toddies (morrisp), Saturday, October 19, 2019 12:56 AM (yesterday)
xxp So is “they kept it in print” literally the sum of DC’s transgression? There must be more to it than that. Were they explicitly granted the right to do prequels, sequels, adaptations, etc.?
― drunk on hot toddies (morrisp), Saturday, October 19, 2019 1:05 AM (three hours ago)
I don’t understand why M&G would feel confident that their masterpiece would go out of print. But I’ve also never heard of a contract with terms like that, maybe it’s the best they could get? The comics industry is weird.
― drunk on hot toddies (morrisp), Saturday, October 19, 2019 1:30 AM (three hours ago)
it was 1985, the market for endlessly-in-print collections of american comics basically didn't exist
― expedited frictionless convergences (bizarro gazzara), Saturday, October 19, 2019 1:31 AM (three hours ago)
and it's bitterly ironic that watchmen was one of the projects that helped create it
― expedited frictionless convergences (bizarro gazzara), Saturday, October 19, 2019 1:32 AM (three hours ago)
bg has it: they signed a contract in 1985 that gave temporary stewardship of the property to DC with an expiration date of 12 months after publication. Watchmen #12 came out on the 28th of July, 1987, so rights would have reverted in July 1988.
The Ronin paperback came out 4 weeks before Watchmen #12. The Watchmen paperback came out on the 8th of September.
If you're aware of any DC collections prior to those at all, let alone any that were masterpieces that could be expected to stay in print in a market with no returns or reorders, please let us know! It looks like The Greatest Superman Stories Ever Told hardback didn't even come out until November 1987 (and immediately went out of print, not even getting a paperback until 1989).
High Society's second buy-by-phone edition didn't even come out until November '87 either, and the first had been out of print for over six months. It may not have been offered to the DM until 1991?
Anyway by 1989 Moore was not creating new work for DC, but he and Gibbons were fine with DC and Warner keeping the book available, as they weren't publishers, and neither party gave any consideration to the copyright expiry clause. (NB that it had been a VERY major issue in the publicity in 1985-86, that the creators owned it but DC were just going to mind it for them, make sure it didn't get bruised, you know.) Then DC sold a set of Watchmen badges through comic shops, and Moore & Gibbons asked where their merchandise royalties, as specified in the contract, were. DC said "oh those were promotional, selling them brought attention to the book, you don't get royalties on promotional items" and Moore went "well, you are acting in bad faith and I will never work with you again."
At some point, DC realised that keeping the collection in print was a loophole they could exploit. Moore's position is that once it became apparent that this was going to be the first comic book in the history of the US to stay in print, it would have been appropriate to acknowledge that the contract had been drafted under different circumstances, and renegotiate a book contract. DC's position was "fuck you, you do not deserve 75c a copy, 15c is extremely generous of us."
Despite refusing to treat him like an author, DC spent the next ten years wanting and asking Moore to write for them. In 1999, Jim Lee cleverly got Moore to sign on to creating a four-title line of comics for him under WFH, then sold his entire company to DC for a large amount of money and a President position before any of these had been published. Moore had taken WFH because it meant more money upfront for the artists, for whom he was trying to find work after Liefeld had crashed and burned the titles they were collaborating on. In this honourable spirit, he agreed to keep working for the ten or so collaborators' sake, as long as DC had no editorial input and his cheques came from a holding company.
DC agreed to this, and in the spirit of good faith, Moore agreed to engage in promotional activity around the 15th anniversary of Watchmen, approving a range of action figures and filming a promo video with Gibbons.
DC then set about fucking with Moore's comics, refusing to allow him to publish stories based on facts even when they had published non-fiction comics about the same facts in the same year, pulping the entire run of the final issue of League Of Extraordinary Gentlemen (a creator-owned title he had allowed to come over under Jim Lee's aegis) for the most pathetic fuckery imaginable (claiming Marvel would sue them for reprinting as one of dozens of genuine Victorian adverts, an advert for a product with Marvel in the name), and so on. Moore withdrew his participation in the Watchmen promos, and the part of DC that was dealing with him on that cancelled them.
Then Joel Silver lied about him at a press conference, and Moore asked DC to issue a retraction, and they refused, and he once again stopped dealing with them, even through the arms-length holding company. DC then revenge-fucked him by sabotaging the final LOEG book that they had rights to, holding it up for months and eventually cancelling the 7" that was part of it on the grounds that the Elvis Presley estate would sue them bcz Moore was kind of doing an Elvis voice on one side.
(At this point they also published a $100 hardcover of V For Vendetta with multiple typos on the box, just for kicks)
Then the Snyder Watchmen movie happened, against Moore's wishes, and also saw Snyder bragging about his extreme respect for Moore while making incorrect statements about Moore's authorship, the nature of his objections, the nature of his domicile, what city he lives in, etc etc. Hundreds and hundreds of shitty merchandise items were produced alongside the film, down to a Rorschach toaster that grills a mask pattern onto bread. Did Moore & Gibbons receive their merchandise royalties from these? U-Decide.
A few years after that, under Nelson, DC finally offered to hand the rights to the graphic novel Watchmen back, but in exchange for the rights to do spinoffs and sequels. Moore said "this seems like a bad faith offer and you are untrustworthy." To which DC said "this dumb old hippie is never going to sue us, chocks away!" and embarked on the Before Watchmen scabfest and various other spinoffs since, from Rebirth to Doomsday Clock to Lindelof's Watchmen. Their previous actions very very clearly indicate that they know they do not have the rights to do these projects, and they do not care.
I know I type this shit out every 18 months on here, but there's new bits of dickery this year!
The one I don't understand is V for Vendetta - Alan and David Lloyd were the owners of that (possibly with Dez Skinn in the mix) but still happily conceded copyright to DC on it.
― Ward Fowler, Saturday, October 19, 2019 1:59 AM (two hours ago)
This was just a case of "we're being treated well on Watchmen, I'll let DC finish this one off too." AFAIK the same 12-month reversion clause applies.
wasn't there a story about there being a rorschach appearance in some dc anthology or sourcebook or something (Who's Who?)?, just within a 10 year limit, so that the character ownership wouldn't revert?
― koogs, Saturday, October 19, 2019 3:32 AM (one hour ago)
I don't think so, no.
― now let's play big lunch take little lunch (sic), Friday, 18 October 2019 21:12 (six years ago)