Adam O. Pruett wrote:
Hanzo the Razor wrote:
What proof is there that they've gone back on their word? The only record of any word being given is the contract itself -- and that shows that DC has abided by the terms of the agreement. That contract basically states, "When Watchmen goes out of print, you get the property back."
A clause which, again, Moore (and everyone else) had every expectation would be honored. So either DC knowingly deceived Moore up front, which isn't ethical-- or they later decided to exploit an unforeseen loophole, cutting off Moore from his legally reasonable expectation to his Rights of Reversion, which isn't ethical. You cannot dismiss this by waving your hand and saying "Moore agreed to that loophole" because nobody at the time had
any reasonable expectation that the language of the agreement would later be used in this way.
Nevertheless, that clause was in the contract and Alan Moore
agreed to it. It's not like they tricked him or told him something that wasn't true -- it was laid out in print and Alan signed it!
In fact, this 1987 Comics Journal interview shows Alan knew *exactly* what the score was --
Wikipedia wrote:
Moore explained in 1986 that his understanding was that when "DC have not used the characters for a year, they're ours." Both Moore and Gibbons said DC paid them "a substantial amount of money" to retain the rights. Moore added, "So basically they're not ours, but if DC is working with the characters in our interests then they might as well be. On the other hand, if the characters have outlived their natural life span and DC doesn't want to do anything with them, then after a year we've got them and we can do what we want with them, which I'm perfectly happy with."
Adam O. Pruett wrote:
Hanzo the Razor wrote:
Adam O. Pruett wrote:
Serious question: How is saying "Moore made his bed, now he must lie in it" not a "She shouldn't have worn that dress, she was asking for it" argument?
Because they're not remotely alike at all? One is a signed contract that both parties agreed to while the other is a physical assault that wasn't agreed to by the victim?
You're still blaming the victim for allowing themselves to be exploited rather than directing your objections at the person or persons actually committing the exploitation.
How is Alan Moore a victim? He made an agreement with DC Comics that he'd be paid "a substantial amount of money", receive royalties from sales, and would get the rights back after one year of the book being unused.
He got the deal he agreed to of his own free will -- just because it didn't work out how he planned doesn't mean he's a victim -- it means he should have been more careful.
This recent
Moore television interview shows he has some unrealistic expectations of the deals he makes. He's unhappy with the LoEG and From Hell film adaptations having been made despite the fact that he sold those rights himself. His stance was, "I thought how these things were supposed to work is that they pay you money for a development deal and then the movie never ends up getting made". If you don't want a movie being made, don't sell the rights!
Adam O. Pruett wrote:
Hanzo the Razor wrote:
Serious question right back at you: if you make a deal with someone, you both sign an agreement that details that agreement, and a few years later the other person decides he doesn't like the terms of that agreement -- are you morally wrong for wanting the agreed upon deal to be upheld?
It depends entirely on whether the agreement was legal. And if it was legal, was it otherwise exploitative? Did said parties have reasonable expectations guaranteed by the intent and spirit (if not the word) of the contract? Was the agreement made under false pretenses? As I mentioned earlier -- contractual agreements can be RIFE with such problems, and a signature isn't the ultimate adjudicator in many, many cases (and for many reasons). So, again-- is there any circumstance where you would agree that preventing exploitation is more important than contractual agreement?
Sure -- but I don't see "I don't like the deal I agreed to" as exploitation.
Apparently, this contract is legal. And this contract had a clause that Alan Moore fully knew the terms of, as shown by his words above. This isn't a wide-eyed Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster situation, where Moore was some naive bumpkin that got swindled by a fast-talking publisher. Alan knew that he doesn't get the rights to Watchmen back as long as it's in print -- since it continues to make money for DC, they haven't had a reason to take it out of print.
It was an unlikely event at the time, sure -- but it wasn't out of the realm of possibility, otherwise
why would they even have put the clause in to begin with? A clause that Alan Moore
fully understood as evidenced by his own words above?
At what point does Alan Moore bear
any responsibility for this situation to you? He's a very intelligent man, capable of reading and understanding a contract (and as shown in the quote above, fully understanding the terms of that contract), he was well-aware that Siegel, Shuster, Kirby, etc. all got deals they weren't happy with, etc. -- but he chose to sign anyway.
He had a right to object to any terms he didn't agree with -- but he didn't.
Now, if there was any actual evidence that this was some secret clause worded in a way that Alan didn't understand, I'd be totally with him. If there was any evidence that he was tricked or deceived, I'd be totally with him.
But all evidence that exists, including Alan's own words from TCJ and a contract he signed, indicates that he fully knew and understood the terms of his deal -- but just assumed that the book would go out of print. Not an unreasonable assumption -- but an assumption nonetheless.
He's an adult. He signed a contract that he understood. Why is it so evil for the other party to abide by the terms he agreed to?