Watchmen #7
| Writer | Alan Moore |
| Artist | Dave Gibbons |
Dan and Laurie spend time together at Dan's home and Nite Owl's cave. But old habits die hard, and the two decide to vacate the premises as Nite Owl and Silk Spectre. They soon encounter an apartment on fire, but are the retired heroes still capable of living up to their old ways?
CRITIC REVIEWS
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USER REVIEWS
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8.5
Well, I gotta say this issue was pretty good. Finally, after six issues of this constant darkness, we have an issue with some light! Sure, it acknowledges the bad stuff happening in the World, but both Dan and Laurie being cheerful and real and being kinda hopeful makes me feel, well, a little good instead of feeling bad due to the previous stuff. It is a nice balance between both Yin and Yang that Alan Moore beforehand hadn't been able to accomplish, but through these two characters, he finally did the thing I wanted most from Watchmen, having some light in this dark, dark world. Other than that, usual thing with it having good art, good plot, most good stuff. Only critiques I have that pull it a 85 are the fact that there are some pacing issues or whatever like when Dan wakes up he sees the Sun and when Laurie wakes up its 3 in the morning, so unless the Sun just looks like the moon or I'm missing some crucial context, I feel like this a little bit of a plot hole unless Dan just spent a couple hours with these goggles in his Owl Cave with his goggles on butt booty naked. Also, very slow pace at the start, I was worried abt this entire issue being focused on these guys, but eh, I feel better that it was, because it allowed us to really connect with them, something missing in Issue 5. I see some stuff with Veidt in the background during Dan and Laurie's first thing scene, so I'm wondering what thats abt, gonna keep a close eye on him since we know the least abt him for now. more
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8.5
The feelings of angst that Moore is portraying here are done almost too well, to the point where I have always tried to rush through this comic because of it. In the other issues, that angst is often global, but here it is so personal.
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8.0
A nice change of pace after the last two issues. Still Moore is having his cake and eating it too here with the fetishized superhero’s and what not. It doesn’t derail the story but the juxtaposition just seems off.
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4.0
no one needs to write a comic book on what it's like being in your 40s
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