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The Alan Moore Interview: Comics at the present time



By Barry Kavanagh, 17 October 2000 I kind of think that there's not enough stuff being produced in comics, because it's quite easy to have read loads of the quality stuff and still be left wanting.

Depends how hard you're looking really.

Depends what they stock, I suppose.

It depends what you're thinking about, having read all the quality stuff -

Well, I don't mean all but -

You know, all the turn of the century newspaper stuff? Even some of the more obscure currently produced indie stuff? I mean, it's a big field.

Yeah, the older stuff is very hard to get and costs a lot of money.

Well, you know, it depends.

In terms of new titles coming out and so on...?

I think there's far too many new titles coming out... I think most of them, the creative teams, if you were to take them out and line them up against a wall and shoot them it wouldn't really make much of a ripple in the world of general culture and there'd probably be a lot of trees that would thank you for it. I mean, most of the major companies, ninety-nine per cent of what they put out is unreadable rubbish, not even children like it, it's not even aimed at children any more. The average comic fan I think these days is probably a guy about thirty? Which means that an awful lot of them are guys in their forties. And yet these are still guys who presumably are obsessed with the same characters in spandex. Nah, I'd like to see a lot less comics coming out but a lot more thought put into them. I think that one of the problems is that the industry is geared towards - it's better to put out fifty comics that don't really sell than five that do - this seems to be the philosophy in the industry.

That's kind of insane, that.

Yeah but it's what happens. I mean, you ought to distinguish. You ought to separate the medium and the industry. The comic medium's wonderful. It still produces remarkable work, more than we've got any right to expect. I think that at the moment there's probably, well, there's as much remarkable work out there that there's ever been. You've only got to look at, say, the Chris Ware material in the Acme Comics Novelty Library. Some of the best, most breathtaking comic books that have appeared in the last decade, easily. But unfortunately the comic industry is still on a downward spiral largely because of the incompetence - I don't think there's really anything else you can describe it as - of the main players.

Well, certainly in shops, walking around, it seems to be the same stuff. There doesn't seem to be the amount of variety and -

Well, there is variety there but probably most of the shops don't stock it. The thing is that everybody wants to stock, you know, like, somebody does a halfway decent, from what I've heard, X-Men film, I'm not going to bother to see it because I'm sure that "halfway decent" by a lot of people's standards is probably nowhere close in terms of mine - and I'm too much of a snob anyway - but the thing is, it's like with Batman films, you get a load of Batcrap - Batcrap, X-crap -

- Wall-to-wall -

- and the thing is that because comics is not doing that great at the moment, the retailers, if they've a choice between ordering a hundred copies of some X-Men film tie-in that they know are going to sell, or, say, three copies of some little title from Fantagraphics or Topshelf or Drawn & Quartoy or one of the reputable publishers, that is a bit difficult, a bit intellectual, perhaps a bit expensive, then they're going to buy the X-Men stuff every time, so I think that if a shop in Dublin is anything like the shops over here, then I should imagine that comics is at very best a sideline, I should imagine it makes most of its money from action figures? Trading cards?

Yeah, there's a whole floor of that in Forbidden Planet.

Yeah. So almost anything but comics, really. This is the way that it is. It could have been different. If things had gone a bit differently fifteen, twenty years ago. And if you'd got the sort of people with vision in control then who actually thought "Well, you know, this could open up comics to a whole new market," rather than leave us condemned to the same dwindling market that we've had for the last fifty years. But no, there was nobody there, there was no back-up. There was a few creators who were taking chances and who were actually for the first time making comics into something that adults could be interested in but there was no back-up. The companies concerned saw this as a short term profit, they didn't see it as anything they could build on. Like I say, these are not people who are over-endowed with imagination.







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