Alan Moore

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Alan Moore (Northampton, 18 de noviembre de 1953) es un escritor británico conocido por su trabajo como creador y guionista de historietas para adultos. Sus obras más conocidas, de las cuales ha sido guionista y co-autor, son Watchmen, V de Vendetta y From Hell.

Se le tiene por una leyenda viviente del comic y muchos de sus trabajos son considerados como grandes obras maestras de este medio. Su pasado, pintoresco y caótico, aunado a una actitud misantrópica y la intención declarada de convertirse en mago del caos, lo han vuelto célebre hasta el punto de que se ha vuelto un icono, inmediatamente reconocible por su barba y cabellera largas y prominentes. Políticamente se declara anarquista, ideología que refleja una de sus más aclamadas obras, V de Vendetta.

Moore trabajó primero para el mercado de su país en revistas como 2000AD o Warrior y, a partir de 1984, para el mercado estadounidense. En 2003, al cumplir 50 años, anunció su retiro del cómic mainstream para dedicarse a la producción en otros campos de su interés, pero continuó realizando esporádicos trabajos "alimenticios", especialmente para la compañía editorial America's Best Comics (ABC), creada especialmente para él por Wildstorm, subsidaria de la DC Comics. A mediados de 2005, al entregar el último guión de The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Black Dossier, rompió definitivamente con Wildstorm y DC Comics. Sin embargo, su trabajo no se ha detenido y sigue desarrollando ideas para comics y novelas gráficas en muy diversos géneros, así como proyectos literarios y dentro del performance.


Aporte a la historieta contemporánea

Desde un punto de vista formal, la obra de Moore es reconocida por inventar y/o desarrollar numerosos recursos narrativos que han contribuido a expandir las posibilidades expresivas del medio, tales como elipsis forzadas, simultaneidad y paralelismo de texto e imágenes, intercontextualización de elementos ajenos en principio a la historia que está contando, y un largo etcétera. Para algunos de sus detractores, dicho arsenal de recursos narrativos es usado por Moore para construir un castillo de fuegos artificiales que tapa un trasfondo más endeble de lo que se pretende. Para sus defensores, sin embargo, la continua elaboración e invención de recursos literarios y/o gráficos añaden capas de complejidad al trasfondo de su obra, así como abren caminos en la narrativa del medio. Desde un punto de vista conceptual, los temas explorados van desde la indagación en clave psicoanalítica del superhombre nitzscheano (Watchmen, su obra más famosa), hasta un subrepticio estudio antropológico sobre el concepto de libertad y el libre albedrío, enmarcándolo en una ficticia Inglaterra totalitaria (V de Vendetta, considerada por muchos su mejor obra).

Su trabajo incorpora un amplio abanico de influencias ajenas al mundo de la historieta, entre ellas la obra de escritores como Michael Moorcock y otros de la llamada nueva ola de la ciencia ficción, autores del género de horror como Clive Barker, consagrados como William S. Burroughs, Thomas Pynchon o Iain Sinclair y cineastas como Nicolas Roeg. Dentro del mundo del cómic, ha sido influido por Will Eisner, Harvey Kurtzman, Jack Kirby y Bryan Talbot.

Moore y el cine

Dos de sus cómics, From Hell y La liga de los caballeros extraordinarios (The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen), han sido convertidos en películas de Hollywood en 2001 y 2003, respectivamente. Además, otro film, Constantine (2005), dirigido por Francis Lawrence, está basado en el personaje John Constantine, creado por Moore, donde aparece como personaje secundario de la saga "La Cosa del Pantano". (Posteriormente Constantine sería protagonista de la serie de cómics "Hellblazer"). Moore, decepcionado por los resultados artísticos de estas interpretaciones, ha rechazado recibir dinero por adaptaciones futuras de su trabajo.

La última adaptación al cine de una obra suya es V for Vendetta, con guión de los hermanos Wachowski y protagonizada por Hugo Weaving y Natalie Portman. Moore ha renegado de la película, tachando su guión de "porquería" y ha exigido a los productores que retiren su nombre de los créditos.

Otro proyecto de película, Watchmen, iba a ser dirigido por Paul Greengrass pero finalmente la productora Paramount rechazó su realización por el elevado presupuesto. En la actualidad, el director estadounidense Zack Snyder se encuentra en proceso de posproducción de dicha adaptación, cuyo estreno está previsto para 2009.

Otros trabajos

Además de su dedicación al comic, Moore practica magia ceremonial desde mediados de los años 90, la cual ha servido de inspiración para varias de sus obras más recientes -especialmente Promethea- y se declara inscrito en la corriente de la Magia del caos. Es miembro de un grupo teatral de vanguardia llamado The Moon and Serpent Grand Egyptian Theatre of Marvels. Dos obras de este grupo, The Birth Caul y Snakes and Ladders, han sido transformadas en cómics por Eddie Campbell.

Ha escrito una novela, Voice of the Fire, un conjunto de historias breves aparentemente inconexas ocurridas en Northampton a lo largo de varios siglos desde la edad de Bronce hasta la actualidad. También ha firmado un guión aún no realizado, Fashion Beast, una relectura del mito de "La Bella y la Bestia" que le fue encargada por Malcolm McLaren.

Ha colaborado con su compañera sentimental, la dibujante Melinda Gebbie, en la novela gráfica de corte erótico Lost Girls.

Actualmente Moore continúa viviendo en su natal Northampton. Una biografía detallada, titulada Alan Moore: Portrait of an Extraordinary Gentleman, se publicó al cumplir Moore 50 años. Las ganancias de esta publicación están destinadas a acciones humanitarias.


Comics- Early British work

  • ABC Warriors: "Red Planet Blues" (short story, with Steve Dillon, in 2000AD Annual 1985, 1984)
  • Anon E Mouse (as Curt Vile, in Anon (The Alternative Newspaper of Northampton) c.1977)
  • The Ballad of Halo Jones (with Ian Gibson):
  • "Ballad of Halo Jones: Book 1" (in 2000AD #376-385, 1984)
  • "Ballad of Halo Jones: Book 2 Prologue" (in 2000AD #405, 1985)
  • "Ballad of Halo Jones: Book 2" (in 2000AD #406-415, 1985)
  • "Ballad of Halo Jones: Book 3 Prologue" (in 2000AD #451, 1986)
  • "Ballad of Halo Jones: Book 3" (in 2000AD #452-466, 1986)
  • a one-off joke page in 2000AD #500, a jam issue, 1986 (not collected in the trade paperback; reprinted in The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore)
  • The Bojeffries Saga (with Steve Parkhouse, in Warrior #12, 13, 19 & 20, 1983-1984; Dalgoda #8, Fantagraphics Books, 1986; A1 #1-4, A1 True Life Bikini Confidential, Atomeka Press, 1989-1990; collected edition, Tundra, 1992)
  • Captain Airstrip One (with pencils by Chris Brasted, inks and letters by SMS, in Mad Dog #10, 1985)[1]
  • Captain Britain (sometimes called the Jaspers' Warp saga) (with Alan Davis, collects Marvel Super-heroes Magazine #386-388, The Daredevils #1-11, & The Mighty World of Marvel #7-13, 1982-1984; reprinted in X-Men Archives 2-7; tpb, Marvel Comics/Marvel UK, 2002 ISBN 0-7851-0855-6)
  • Classic Star Wars: Devilworlds #1 & 2 (collects five stories from 1981's Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back Monthly #151, 154-156, & 159, Dark Horse, 1996) [2]
  • The Collector:
  • "Trash!" (short story, with Sven Arnstein/Pat Wright, in Eagle #3, 1982)
  • "Profits of Doom" (short story, with Gabor Scott/Rex Archer , in Eagle #12, 1982)
  • Dark Star #19-25, 1979-1980:
  • "The Avenging Hunchback" (in Dark Star #19, March 1979; reprinted in The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore)
  • "Kultural Krime Komix" (in Dark Star #20, May 1979; reprinted in The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore)
  • "Talcum Powder" (in Dark Star #21, July 1979)
  • "Three Eyes McGurck And His Death Planet Commandos" (written by Steve Moore as Pedro Henry, in Dark Star #22-25, December 1979 - December 1980; reprinted in Rip Off Comix #8)
  • D.R. and Quinch (with Alan Davis, tpb, The Complete D.R. and Quinch Rebellion, 2006 ISBN 1-904265-48-0):
  • "D.R. and Quinch Have Fun on Earth" (in 2000AD #317, 1983)
  • "D.R. and Quinch Go Straight" (in 2000AD #350-351, 1984)
  • "D.R. and Quinch Go Girl Crazy" (in 2000AD #352-354, 1984)
  • "D.R. and Quinch Get Drafted" (in 2000AD #355-359, 1984)
  • "D.R. and Quinch Go to Hollywood" (in 2000AD #363-367, 1984)
  • "D.R. and Quinch Get Back to Nature" (in 2000AD Sci-Fi Special 1985)
  • Doctor Who:
  • "Black Legacy" (with David Lloyd, in Doctor Who (US comic) #14 (Marvel), also Doctor Who Magazine #35-38, 1980)
  • "Business as Usual" (with David Lloyd, in Doctor Who (US comic) #15 (Marvel), also Doctor Who Magazine #40-43, 1980)
  • Time War:
  • "Star Death" (with John Stokes, in Doctor Who Magazine #47, also The Daredevils #5, 1980)
  • "The 4-D War" (with David Lloyd, in Doctor Who Magazine #51, also The Daredevils #6, 1980)
  • "Black Sun Rising" (with David Lloyd, in Doctor Who Magazine #57, also The Daredevils #7, 1980)
  • Fat Jap Defamation Funnies (as Curt Vile, in The Backstreet Bugle, issue 10, January 1979)
  • The Complete Alan Moore Future Shocks (tpb, Rebellion, 2006 ISBN 1-904265-88-X collects almost all of his short 2000 AD stories some of which were previously collected in Alan Moore's Shocking Futures ISBN 0-907610-71-4 and Alan Moore's Twisted Times ISBN 0-907610-72-2 from Titan):
  • Abelard Snazz:
  • "The Final Solution" (with Steve Dillon, in 2000 AD #189-190, 1980) (also in Twisted Times)
  • "The Return of the Two-Storey Brain" (with Mike White, in 2000 AD #209, 1981)
  • "The Double-Decker Dome Strikes Back" (with Mike White, in 2000 AD #237-238, 1981) (also in Twisted Times)
  • "Halfway to Paradise" (with John Cooper, in 2000 AD #245, 1982) (also in Twisted Times)
  • "The Multi-Storey Mind Mellows Out!" (with Paul Neary, in 2000 AD #254, 1982) (also in Twisted Times)
  • "Genius is Pain" (with Mike White, in 2000 AD #299, 1983) (also in Twisted Times)
  • Future Shocks:
  • "Grawks Bearing Gifts" (with Ian Gibson, in 2000 AD #203, 1981) (also in Shocking Futures)
  • "The English/Phlondrutian Phrase Book" (with Brendan McCarthy, in 2000 AD #214, 1981) (also in Shocking Futures)
  • "The Last Rumble of the Platinum Horde" (with John Higgins, in 2000 AD #217, 1981) (also in Shocking Futures)
  • "They Sweep the Spaceways" (with Garry Leach, in 2000 AD #219, 1981) (also in Shocking Futures)
  • "The Regrettable Ruse of Rocket Redglare" (with Mike White, in 2000 AD #234, 1981) (also in Shocking Futures)
  • "A Cautionary Fable" (with Paul Neary, in 2000 AD #240, 1981) (also in Shocking Futures)
  • "Mister, Could You Use a Squonge?" (with Ron Tiner, in 2000 AD #242, 1981)
  • "A Second Chance" (with Jose Casanovas, in 2000 AD #245, 1982)
  • "Twist Ending" (with Paul Neary, in 2000 AD #246, 1982)
  • "Salad Days" (with John Higgins, in 2000 AD #247, 1982)
  • "The Beastly Beliefs of Benjamin Blint" (with Eric Bradbury, in 2000 AD #249, 1982)
  • "All of Them Were Empty" (with Paul Neary, in 2000 AD #251, 1982)
  • "An American Werewolf in Space" (with Paul Neary, in 2000 AD #252, 1982) (also in Shocking Futures)
  • "The Bounty Hunters!" (with John Higgins, in 2000 AD #253, 1982)
  • "The Wages of Sin" (with Bryan Talbot, in 2000 AD #253, 1982) (also in Shocking Futures)
  • "Return of the Thing" (with Dave Gibbons, in 2000 AD #265, 1982)
  • "Skirmish" (with Dave Gibbons, in 2000 AD #267, 1982)
  • "The Writing on the Wall" (with Jesus Redondo, in 2000 AD #268, 1982)
  • "The Wild Frontier" (with Dave Gibbons, in 2000 AD #269, 1982) (also in Shocking Futures)
  • "The Big Day" (with Jesus Redondo, in 2000 AD #270, 1982)
  • "One Christmas During Eternity" (with Jesus Redondo, in 2000 AD #271, 1982) (also in Shocking Futures)
  • "No Picnic" (with John Higgins, in 2000 AD #272, 1982)
  • "The Disturbed Digestions of Dr. Dibworthy" (with Dave Gibbons, in 2000 AD #273, 1982) (also in Twisted Times)
  • "Sunburn" (with Jesus Redondo, in 2000 AD #282, 1982) (also in Shocking Futures)
  • "Bad Timing" (with Mike White, in 2000 AD #291, 1982) (also in Shocking Futures)
  • "Eureka" (with Mike White, in 2000 AD #325, 1983) (also in Shocking Futures)
  • "Dad" (with Alan Langford, in 2000 AD #329, 1983)
  • "Buzz Off" (with Jim Eldridge, in 2000 AD #331, 1983)
  • "Look Before You Leap" (with Mike White, in 2000 AD #332, 1983)
  • Time Twisters:
  • "Hot Item" (written as Tharg) (with John Higgins, in 2000 AD #278, 1982)
  • "The Reversible Man" (with Mike White, in 2000 AD #308, 1983) (also in Twisted Times)
  • "Einstein" (with John Higgins, in 2000 AD #309, 1983)
  • "Chrono-Cops" (with Dave Gibbons, in 2000 AD #310, 1983) (also in Twisted Times)
  • "The Big Clock!" (with Eric Bradbury, in 2000 AD #315, 1983) (also in Twisted Times)
  • "Dr. Dibworthy's Disappointing Day" (with Alan Langford, in 2000 AD #316, 1983)
  • "Going Native" (with Mike White, in 2000 AD #318, 1983)
  • "Ring Road" (with Jesus Redondo, in 2000 AD #320, 1983) (also in Twisted Times)
  • "The Hyper-Historic Headbang" (with Alan Davis, in 2000 AD #322, 1983) (also in Shocking Futures)
  • "The Lethal Laziness of Lobelia Loam" (with Arturo Boluda, in 2000AD #323, 1983) (also in Shocking Futures)
  • "The Time Machine" (with Jesus Redondo, in 2000 AD #324, 1983) (also in Twisted Times)
  • "The Startling Success of Sideways Scuttleton" (with John Higgins, in 2000 AD #327, 1983)
  • Grit! (with Mike Collins, caustic Frank Miller's Daredevil spoof, The Daredevils #8, August 1983)
  • Marvelman (with Garry Leach, Alan Davis, John Totleben and others, Warrior #1-21, 1982-1984; Miracleman #1-7, 9-16, Eclipse Comics, 1985-1989; collected in 3 volumes) (#8 is a fill-in issue with reprints of old Mick Anglo stories)
  • A Dream of Flying (collects #1-3, which reprinted Warrior #1-3 & #5-11)
  • Red King Syndrome (collects #4-7 & 9-10, which included reprints of Warrior #12-21)
  • Olympus (collects #11-16)
  • Warrior #4 has an uncollected story called "The Yesterday Gambit", which was semi-adapted into Marvelman #15.
  • Marvelman Special #1 (includes new wraparound material by Moore, written around several Mick Anglo reprints, 1984)
  • Miracleman 3-D Special #1
  • Maxwell the Magic Cat (Northants Post, 1979-1986, tpb, Acme Press, 1986-1987 ISBN 1-870084-00-4, ISBN 1-870084-05-5, ISBN 1-870084-10-1 and ISBN 1-870084-20-9)
  • Moonstone: Tomorrow’s Truths (with Mike Collins/Mark Farmer, in Fantasy Advertiser #77, February 1983)
  • Monster (with Heinzl, in Scream! #1, 1984) [3]
  • Nutters Ruin (in Speakeasy #43; reprinted in The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore)
  • Not! The World Cup Special 1982 (as Curt Vile, drawn by Barrie Mitchell, 1982)
  • Once There Were Demons (written and drawn by Moore, in Embryo #5, 1971)
  • One-Off:
  • "A Holiday in Hell" (with Dave Harwood, in 2000AD Sci-Fi Special 1980, 1980)
  • "Killer in the Cab" (with John Richardson, in 2000 AD #170, 1980)
  • "The Dating Game" (with Steve Dillon, in 2000 AD #176, 1980)
  • "Southern Comfort" (with Walter Howarth, in 2000 AD Sci-Fi Special 1981, 1981) (credited as "RE-Wright" due to Moore's dissatisfaction with the final story) [4]
  • Ro-Busters:
  • "Bax the Burner" (with Steve Dillon, in 2000AD Annual 1982, 1981, reprinted in Sam Slade Robo-Hunter (V2) #6)
  • "Old Red Eyes is Back" (with Bryan Talbot, in 2000AD Annual 1983, 1982, reprinted in Sam Slade Robo-Hunter (V2) #7)
  • "Stormeagles are Go!" (with Joe Eckers, in 2000AD Annual 1984, 1983)
  • Rogue Trooper (both reprinted in 2000 AD Extreme Edition #15):
  • "Pray for War" (with Brett Ewins, in 2000AD Annual 1983, 1982)
  • "First of the Few" (with Jesus Redondo, in 2000AD Annual 1984, 1983)
  • Roscoe Moscoe (in Sounds, 1975-1981):
  • "Who Killed Rock 'n' Roll"
  • "The Stars My Degradation"
  • "Christmas On Depravity"
  • "The Bride of Pressbutton"
  • "Ten Little Liggers"
  • "The Rock and Roll Zoo"
  • Scant Applause (in Frantic Winter Special, 1979)
  • St Pancras Panda (in The Backstreet Bugle, #16-20, July-December, 1979)
  • Skizz: "Skizz: First Contact" (with Jim Baikie, in 2000 AD #308-330, 1983)
  • Tharg the Mighty: "The Shedding" (written as Tharg the Mighty, with Eric Bradbury, in 2000 AD #283-285, reprinted in Sam Slade Robo-Hunter V2 #31)
  • V for Vendetta (with David Lloyd, first two books serialised in Warrior #1-26, 1982-1985, DC, 10 issues, 1988-1989, tpb, DC, 1995)
  • Warpsmith (with Garry Leach):
  • "Ghostdance" (in A1, 1989, ISBN 1-871878-05-5)
  • "Cold War, Cold Warrior" (in Warrior #9-10, January-May 1983; reprinted in Axel Pressbutton #2, Eclipse Comics, 1984)
DC Comics

  • DC Universe: The Stories of Alan Moore (trade paperback, 2003, Titan ISBN 1-84576-257-6 DC ISBN 1-4012-0927-0).
  • Three different variations of this paperback have been printed. All three include:
  • Batman Annual #11: "Mortal Clay" (with George Freeman, 1987)
  • DC Comics Presents #85: "The Jungle Line" (with pencils: Rick Veitch, inks: Al Williamson, featuring Superman and Swamp Thing, 1985)
  • Detective Comics #549-550: "Night Olympics" (with Klaus Janson, featuring Green Arrow and Black Canary, 1985)
  • Green Lantern Corps:
  • "Mogo Doesn't Socialize" (with Dave Gibbons, from Green Lantern (vol. 2) #188, 1985)
  • "Tygers" (with Kevin O'Neill, from Tales of the Green Lantern Corps Annual #2, 1986)
  • "In Blackest Night" (with pencils: Bill Willingham; inks: Terry Austin, from Tales of the Green Lantern Corps Annual #3, 1987)
  • Omega Men:
  • "Brief Lives" (with Kevin O'Neill, from #26, 1985)
  • "A Man's World" (with pencils: Paris Cullins; Inks: Rick Magyar, from #27, 1985)
  • Secret Origins #10: "Footsteps" (with Joe Orlando, featuring The Phantom Stranger, 1987)
  • Superman Annual #11: "For the Man Who Has Everything" (with Dave Gibbons, 1985)
  • Vigilante #17-18: "Father's Day" (with Jim Baikie, 1985)
  • the 2006 printing expands to include:
  • Batman: The Killing Joke (with Brian Bolland, 1988)
  • Superman: Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow? (with Curt Swan, collects Superman #423 and Action Comics #583, 1986)
  • in 2008, The Killing Joke was printed in a 20th Anniversary hardcover, and this collection was revised again to remove that story
  • Swamp Thing #20-58, 60-61, 63-64, Annual #2 (with Stephen R. Bissette, Rick Veitch and others, 1983-1987, collected in 6 trade paperbacks with the exception of #20):
  • Saga of the Swamp Thing (collects #21-27, 1987)
  • Swamp Thing: Love and Death (collects #28-34 & Annual #2, 1990)
  • Swamp Thing: The Curse (collects #35-42, 2000)
  • Swamp Thing: A Murder of Crows (collects #43-50, 2001)
  • Swamp Thing: Earth to Earth (collects #51-56, 2002)
  • Swamp Thing: Reunion (collects #57-58, 60-61, 63-64, 2003)
  • 9/11: Artists Respond Volume 1: "This is Information" (short text piece with art by Melinda Gebbie, 2002)
  • Watchmen (with Dave Gibbons, DC, 12 issue limited series, 1986-1987, tpb, 1987)
Image/Awesome Comics

  • 1963 (with Stephen R. Bissette, Rick Veitch and others, 6 issues, 1993)
  • Alan Moore's Complete WildC.A.T.S (with Travis Charest and others, collects WildC.A.T.S. #21-34 and #50, Image, 1995-1998, tpb, 392 pages, DC, August 2007, ISBN 1401215459, Titan, September 2007, ISBN 1-84576-617-2), and also previously collected as:
  • WildC.A.T.S: Homecoming (tpb, collects #21-27, Image, 1998, ISBN 1-58240-006-7, DC, 2000, ISBN 1-56389-582-X)
  • WildC.A.T.S: Gang War (tpb, collects #28-34, DC, 1999, ISBN 1-56389-560-9)
  • Fire From Heaven #1-2 (with Ryan Benjamin, Chuck Gibson, Jim Lee, 26 pages each, Image, 1996)
  • Glory (#0, Image, 1999; #0, 1-2, Avatar, 2001, 3&4 never released)
  • Judgement Day (collects #Alpha, #Omega, Final Judgement, Aftermath, Awesome Holiday Special #1, and some of Sourcebook, Checker Book Publishing, 2003, ISBN 0-9741664-5-6)
  • The Maxx #21 (with Sam Kieth, 1991)
  • Mr. Monster’s Gal Friday...Kelly #3: "It’s Kelly’s Boyfriend... Mr. Monster – Shopping" (with Alan Smith and Pete Williamson, Image, 2000)
  • Shadowhawks of Legend #1: "Shadows in the Sand" (short story, with Steve Leialoha, Image, 1995)
  • Spawn:
  • Spawn #8: "In Heaven" (with Todd McFarlane)
  • Spawn #32 (short story, prequel to Blood Feud)
  • Spawn: Blood Feud (with Tony Daniel and Kevin Conrad, Titan, 1999, ISBN 1-84023-117-3)
  • Spawn #37: "The Freak" (dialogue only, plotted by Todd McFarlane)
  • Supreme:
  • The Story of the Year (with Joe Bennett, Rick Veitch, Keith Giffen, Dan Jurgens, Stephen Platt, Chris Sprouse and others, Image Comics/Awesome Entertainment, 1996-1998, tpb, collects #41-52A&B, Checker Book Publishing, 2003, ISBN 0-9710249-5-2)
  • Note that 52A & 52B have short stories not collected in the trade
  • The Return (with Chris Sprouse, Rick Veitch and others, Awesome Entertainment, 1999-2000, tpb, collects #53-56, and the Return #1-6, Checker Book Publishing, 2003, ISBN 0-9710249-6-0)
  • Violator:
  • Violator: "The World" (with Bart Sears (1 & 2) and Greg Capullo (3) (pencils) and Mark Pennington (inks), 3-issue mini-series, 1994)
  • Violator vs. Badrock (4-issue mini-series, 1994; tpb, 1998, ISBN 1-887279-11-3)
  • Alan Moore: Wild Worlds (trade paperback, 320 pages, Titan Books, July 2007, ISBN 1-84576-559-1, Wildstorm, May 2007, ISBN 1401213790) collects:
  • "Spawn/WildC.A.T.S." (4-issue-mini series)
  • Majestic: "The Big Chill" (with Carlos D'Anda (pencils) and Richard Friend (inks) , in Wildstorm Spotlight #1, previously collected in Mr. Majestic, 176 pages, DC, 2002, ISBN 1-56389-659-1)
  • Voodoo: Dancing in the Dark (4-issue mini-series, tpb, 1999, ISBN 1-56389-533-1)
  • Deathblow by Blows (with Jim Baikie, 3-issue mini-series, 1999-2000)
  • WildC.A.T.S #50: "Reincarnation" (short story)
  • Youngblood, a proposed trade paperback would include:
  • Awesome Holiday Special (with Steve Skroce, Awesome Entertainment, 1997)
  • Youngblood #1-2 (with Steve Skroce, Awesome Entertainment, 1998)
  • Awesome Adventures #1: "Dandy in the Underworld" (short story)
  • Alan Moore's Awesome Universe Handbook
America's Best Comics

  • Albion (plotted by Alan Moore, written by Leah Moore & John Reppion, Wildstorm, 6 issue mini-series 2005, tpb, October 2006 ISBN 1-4012-0994-7)
  • America's Best Comics 64 page Giant
  • The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (with Kevin O'Neill):
  • Book One (6 issue mini-series, 1999-2000, collected hardback edition, 2001, paperback, 2002, DC Comics/Wildstorm/ABC)
  • Book Two (6 issue mini-series, 2002-2003, collected hardback edition, 2003, paperback, 2004, DC Comics/Wildstorm/ABC)
  • Black Dossier (ABC,November 2007 (dated 2008), 208 pages, ISBN 1-4012-0306-X)
  • Book Three (forthcoming, will be published as three 72 page graphic novellas, Top Shelf and Knockabout, 2008, ISBN 978-1-60309-000-1) [5]
  • Promethea (with J.H. Williams III and others, 32 issues 1999-2005, collected in 5 volumes, DC Comics/Wildstorm/ABC)
  • Volume 1
  • Volume 2
  • Volume 3
  • Volume 4
  • Volume 5
  • Terra Obscura (with Peter Hogan and Yanick Paquette):
  • Volume 1 (6 issues, 2003-2004, tpb, 2004, Titan, ISBN 1-84023-860-7, DC Comics, ISBN 1-4012-0286-1)
  • Volume 2 (6 issues, 2004-2005, tpb, 2005, Titan, ISBN 1-84576-193-6, America's Best Comics ISBN 1-4012-0622-0)
  • Tomorrow Stories (with various artists, 12 issues, 1999-2002, collected in 2 volumes in hardback and paperback, DC Comics/Wildstorm/ABC, in 2006, there were two additional "specials", 64 page issues half-written by Alan Moore)
  • Tom Strong:
  • Tom Strong (with Chris Sprouse and others, 36 issue series, 1999-2006, collected in 6 volumes to date, DC Comics/Wildstorm/ABC)
  • Moore wrote the first 22 issues (the first three books, and half of volume four) and the final issue; other issues were written by others including Ed Brubaker, Mark Schultz, Brian K. Vaughan, and Steve Aylett)
  • Tom Strong's Terrific Tales (with Steve Moore, Art Adams and others, 12 issues, 2002-2005, collected in 2 volumes, DC Comics/Wildstorm/ABC, each issue has one eight page story by Alan Moore)
  • Top 10 (with Gene Ha and Zander Cannon, 12 issues, 1999-2001, collected in 2 volumes, DC Comics/Wildstorm/ABC):
  • Top 10: Book One (collects #1-7)
  • Top 10: Book Two (collects #8-12)
  • Top 10: the 49ers (graphic novel prequel)
  • Smax (with Zander Cannon, 5 issues, 2003-2004, hardback and paperback collected editions, 2004, DC Comics/Wildstorm/ABC)
Self-published and miscellaneous

  • Act of Faith (art by Stephen R. Bissette and Michael Zulli, in The Puma Blues #20, 1988)
  • American Flagg! (with Larry Stroman and Don Lomax. Back-ups in #21-26 + #27, June-December 1985)
  • Alan Moore's Yuggoth Cultures and Other Growths (with Bryan Talbot, Juan Jose Ryp and various other artists, 3 issue mini-series, Avatar, 2003)
  • Big Numbers (with Bill Sienkiewicz, 2 issues of a projected 12, Mad Love, 1990)
  • Bob Wachsman Tummler (written by Harvey Pekar, drawn by Moore, in American Splendor #15, May 1990; reprinted in The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore)
  • The Bowing Machine (art by Mark Beyer, in RAW volume 3 number 3, 1991)
  • Cold Snap (art by Bryan Talbot, in Food for Thought, April 1985, reprinted in Slow Death 11, Ex-Directory, The Secret Files of Bryan Talbot and Alan Moore's Yuggoth Cultures and Other Growths)
  • Come on Down (art by Bill Wray, in Taboo #1, 1988)
  • Dr Omaha Presents Venus in fur: Candid chit-chats with cartoon Kit-Cats (with Melinda Gebbie, in Images of Omaha #2, 1992; reprinted in The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore)
  • From Hell (with Eddie Campbell, prologue in Cerebus 124, first 6 chapters in Taboo #2-7, 1989-1992, 11 volumes, Mad Love/Tundra/Kitchen Sink Press, 1991-1998, tpb, Eddie Campbell Comics, 1999)
  • From Hell: The Compleat Scripts, 1994, full scripts of prologue and first three chapters
  • The Hasty Smear of My Smile... (with Peter Bagge & Eric Reynolds, in Hate #30, June 1998)
  • Heroes for Hope: Starring the X-Men pages 16-18 (with Richard Corben, December 1985)
  • Hungry is the Heart (with Dame Darcy, in Meatcake #9 , Fantagraphics, 1999; reprinted in Alan Moore: Portrait of an Extraordinary Gentleman)
  • I Can Hear the Grass Grow (as Curt Vile, in Heartbreak Hotel #3, March 1988, reprinted in The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore)
  • I Keep Coming Back (with Oscar Zarate, in It's Dark in London, 1996; reprinted in Alan Moore's Yuggoth Cultures and Other Growths)
  • In Pictopia (with Don Simpson, in Anything Goes #2, Fantagraphics, 1986; reprinted in The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore)
  • Itchy Peterson: Born Lucky I Guess (with Val Semeiks, in Nightmare Theatre #4, October 1997; reprinted in Alan Moore's Yuggoth Cultures and Other Growths)
  • Letter from Northampton (written and drawn by Moore, in Heartbreak Hotel #1, Jan 1988; reprinted in The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore)
  • Leviticus (art by Hunt Emerson, in Outrageous Tales from the Old Testament, 1997; reprinted in Alan Moore's Yuggoth Cultures and Other Growths)
  • Light of thy Countenance (48 page, graphic novel, Avatar Press, 2009)[6]
  • "Litvinov's Book" (with Richard Pace, in Negative Burn #19, Caliber Press, 1995)
  • Lost Girls (with Melinda Gebbie, #5-7, Taboo 1991-1992, 2 issues, Tundra, 1995-1996, graphic novel, Top Shelf, 2006 ISBN 1-891830-74-0)
  • Love doesn’t last forever (art by Rick Veitch, in Epic Illustrated #34, February 1986)
  • Lux Brevis (art by John Totleben, in Kimota: The Miracleman Companion, 2001)
  • Lust (with Mike Matthews, 1989, Crack edition, in the collection Seven Deadly Sins; reprinted in The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore)
  • The Mirror of Love (art by Stephen R. Bissette and Rick Veitch, in AARGH!, Oct 1988; Top Shelf edition in 2004)
  • The Moon and Serpent Bumper Book of Magic (with co-writer Steve Moore and artists including Kevin O'Neill, Melinda Gebbie, John Coulthart, and José Villarrubia, 320 pages, hardcover, Top Shelf, 2010, ISBN 978-1-60309-001-8) [7]
  • The Nativity on Ice (as Curt Vile, with Bryan Talbot, in Kimota 3, Winter 1995; reprinted in Alan Moore's Yuggoth Cultures and Other Growths)
  • Neonomicon (with Jacen Burrows, Avatar Press, forthcoming)[6]
  • The New European (with Gary Frank and Cam Smith, in Vampirella/Dracula: The Centennial, October 1997)
  • Outbreaks of Violets (24 postcards with various European illustrators[8], designed by Rian Hughes, 1995 MTV Europe Music Awards booklet)
  • The Riddle of the Recalcitrant Refuse (with Michael T. Gilbert, in Mr. Monster #3, 1985)
  • The Spirit - The New Adventures (with Dave Gibbons, Daniel Torres, issues 1 and 3, Kitchen Sink Press, 1998)
  • "The Most Important Meal"
  • "Force of Arms"
  • "Gossip and Gertrude Granch"
  • "Last Night I Dreamed of Doctor Cobra"
  • Shadowplay: The Secret Team (with Bill Sienkiewicz, in Brought to Light, Eclipse, 31 pages, 1989, ISBN 0-913035-67-X)
  • A Small Killing (with Oscar Zarate, Victor Gollancz Ltd, 1991; Dark Horse, 1993; Avatar, 2003)
  • Tapestries (art by Stephen R. Bissette, Stan Woch and John Totleben. in Real War Stories #1, July 1987)
  • The Worm -- "The longest comic strip in the world" (storyline, script by Jamie Delano and others, art by "a galaxy of greats"; Slab-O-Concrete publications in association with and in aid of The Cartoon Art Trust, 64 pages, 1999, ISBN 1-899866-37-X)
Text stories and prose

  • "A Hypothetical Lizard" (in Liavek: Wizard's Row, 1987; The Year's Best Fantasy, 1989; Demons and Dreams, 1989; Words Without Pictures, 1990)
  • "Alphabets of Desire" (limited print designed and lettered by Todd Klein, available only from Klein's website)
  • "Belly of Cloud" (unpublished comics script printed in The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore)
  • "Brasso with Rosie" (in Knockabout Trial Special, 1984, reprinted in Honk 2, January 1987; art by Peter Bagge)
  • "The Children's Hour" (in Now We Are Sick, 1991)
  • "The Courtyard" (in The Starry Wisdom: A Tribute to H. P. Lovecraft, February 1995)
  • "Fuseli's Disease" (in The Thackery T. Lambshead Pocket Guide to Eccentric & Discredited Diseases, edited by Jeff VanderMeer and Mark Roberts, 2003, pages 89-91)
  • "The Gun" (in Batman Annual, 1985, UK; illustrated by Garry Leach)
  • "Here Comes the Jetsons" (in Sounds, April 4, 1981; illustrated by Moore)
  • "I was Superman's Double" (in Superman Annual, 1985, UK; illustrated by Bob Wakelin)
  • "Judge Dredd" (unpublished comics script printed in The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore)
  • "Light of Thy Countenance" (in Forbidden Acts, October 1995)
  • "Mystery and Abomination" (in Sounds, August 8, 1981; illustrated by Moore)
  • Night Raven: "The Cure" (in Marvel Super-Heroes #390-391, 1982; illustrated by Mick Austin and Paul Neary)
  • Night Raven: "White Hopes..." (in Marvel Super-Heroes #392-393, 1983; illustrated by Paul Neary)
  • Night Raven: "Sadie’s Story" (in M.S.H. #394-395, 1983; illustrated by Paul Neary)
  • Night Raven: "Anaesthetic" (in The Daredevils #6, 1983; illustrated by David Lloyd)
  • Night Raven: "Snow Queen" (in The Daredevils #7-10, 1983; illustrated by Alan Davis)
  • "Protected Species" (Superman story in The Superheroes Annual, 1984; illustrated by Bryan Talbot)
  • "Recognition" (in Dust: A Creation Book Reader)
  • "Sawdust Memories" (in Knave, December 1984)
  • "Shrine of the Lizard" (in Weird Windows #2, 1971; reprinted in The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore)
  • "The Sinister Ducks" (2 pages in Critters #23, 1988)
  • "Terror Couple Kill Telegram Sam In The Flat Field" (in Sounds, February 14, 1982, the title is a reference to the band Bauhaus; illustrated by Moore)
  • "To The Humfo" (in Weird Windows #1, 1970)
  • "Travel Guide for Agoraphobics" (in Honk 4, March 1987; illustrated by Eddie Campbell)
  • "Zaman's Hill" (in Dust: A Creation Book Reader)
Novels and illustrated books

  • Voice of the Fire, 1996, Victor Gollancz; 1997, Orion Books; republished 2003, Top Shelf Productions. This new edition features a dust jacket designed by Chip Kidd, an introduction by Neil Gaiman and thirteen color plates by José Villarrubia.
  • The Mirror of Love, 2003, Top Shelf Productions. A new version of his story for AARGH (Artists Against Rampant Government Homophobia). This edition features an introduction by David Drake and forty-one color illustrations by José Villarrubia.
Non-fiction

As well as his run on Captain Britain in The Daredevils Moore contributed text Night Raven stories, fanzine reviews and a number of long articles (writing up to 24 pages out of the 54, for example in issue #5). The non-fiction pieces include:

  • "The Importance of Being Frank" (The Daredevils #1-2, about Frank Miller, 1983) [9]
  • "Invisible Girls and Phantom Ladies" (The Daredevils #4-6, about sexism in comics, 1983)
  • "O Superman: Music & comics" (The Daredevils #5, 1983)
Other work includes:

  • "C.B.? - That's a Big Ten-Four!" and "Bear's Monkey Business" in B.J. and the Bear Annual 1982 (1981), article and illustrations
  • Scooby Doo Annual 1982, feature about haunted houses
  • "A Short History of Britain" (in Marvel Superheroes #389, 1982)
  • "Alan Moore's Writing for Comics", Avatar Press, (published previously in Fantasy Advertiser 92-95, August 1985-February 1986 and Comics Journal 119-121, 1988)
  • "Comments on Crumb" (in Blab #3, 1988)
  • Comics Forum 4, 1993, transcript of a lecture discussing 1963, feminism, pornography and Image comics
  • Comics Journal #167, 1994, tribute to Jack Kirby
  • "Correspondence: From Hell", 1997, letters between Moore and Dave Sim in Cerebus #217-220; reprinted in The Extraordinary Works of Alan Moore.
  • Beyond our Ken, 2002, review of works by Kenneth Grant, published at free magazine, KAOS issue 14
  • Unearthing, 2006, about Steve Moore, in London: City of Disappearances, edited by Iain Sinclair, hardcover ISBN 0241142997, paperback ISBN 0141019484.[10]
  • "BOG VENUS VERSUS NAZI COCK-RING: Some Thoughts Concerning Pornography", Arthur Magazine, Vol 1, No 25, November 2006
Introductions to work by others

  • The Adventures of Luther Arkwright by Bryan Talbot
  • Alec: The King Canute Crowd by Eddie Campbell (Escape edition)
  • Batman: The Dark Knight Returns by Frank Miller
  • The Big Book of Everything by Hunt Emerson
  • Bread and Wine: An Erotic Tale of New York by Samuel Delany
  • Brickman
  • Doc Chaos by Dave Thorpe
  • Escape
  • Grendel: Devil by the Deed by Matt Wagner
  • Greyshirt: Indigo Sunset by Rick Veitch
  • Hellboy: Wake the Devil by Mike Mignola
  • H. P. Lovecraft's The Haunter of the Dark by John Coulthart (also a kaballah of Lovecraft's gods)
  • The Mechanics by Jaime Hernandez
  • Mr. Monster: His Book Of Forbidden Knowledge by Michael T. Gilbert
  • The One by Rick Veitch
  • Planetary by Warren Ellis and John Cassaday
  • The Spiral Cage by Al Davison
  • The Spirit Archives Volume 1 by Will Eisner
  • The Suttons by Phil Elliott
  • Violent Cases by Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean
  • Zero Girl by Sam Kieth
Disponibles:

Etapa estadounidense

America's Best Comics

Aparte de ser el mejor escritor en la historia de los comics. Sus obras han marcado parteaguas en la industria y en la manera de escribir y concebir comics, siendo que algunas de sus obras ya eran consideradas con mucho aprecio aun en su tapa de preparación.

Vale la pena ver su biografia en Inglés. Contiene detalles y aspectos sobresalientes de su vida personal que en español no vienen.

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Otros comics:
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Another suburban romance.

Entrevista a Alan Moore conmemorando sus 25 años de escritor. [Gracias cocomarin]
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Audiobooks

[aportados por mmdsx]

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The Moon and Serpent
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Pistas:
01 Overture Hair of the Snake That.
02 The Map Drawn on Vapour (I)
03 Livinoff's Book
04 The Map Drawn on Vapour (II)
05 The Stairs Beyond Substance
06 The Spectre Garden (I) The Enoch
07 The Book of Copulation
08 Finale A Town of Lights

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The Birth Caul
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Pistas:
01 The Birth Caul (I)
02 This Present Moment (18.11.95)
03 The Birth Caul (II)
04 The World's Blunt Engine
05 The Birth Caul (III)
06 Drowning In Gold
07 The Birth Caul (IV)
08 The Dressing Of The Tongue
09 The Birth Caul (V)
10 Dummy
11 The Birth Caul


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Angel Passage
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Pistas:
01 Golden Square
02 Innocence
03 Hell
04 Experience.mp
05 Heaven

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The Highbury Working
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Pistas:
01 Terrae Lady, That's My Skull
02 Terrae A Skeleton Horse
03 Aquae Pepper's Ghost
04 Aquae Hat-Trick
05 Aeris Opium Nights (Sell Me More)
06 Aeris Limbo
07 Ignis No. 1 With A Bullet
08 Ignis The Angel Highbury

-------------------------------------------

1zb9e8m.jpg


Snakes and Ladders
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Pistas:
01 The Gate Of Tears.
02 Stars And Garters.
03 Baghdad.
04 Art.
05 Syon.


Documentales

The Mindscape of Alan Moore [aportado por mmdsx]


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Scans de rarezas y entrevistas

Alan More scans from loopyjoe 1.rar


A Short History of Britain, by Alan Moore (Excerpt from Marvel Super-Heroes (UK) 389) (1982) (loopyjoe-DCP)
About the Special Executive, by Alan Moore (Excerpt from The Daredevils 05) (1983) (loopyjoe-DCP)
Alan Moore interview from Fantasy Advertiser 80 (1983) (loopyjoe-DCP)
The Courtyard (original story from Alan Moore's The Courtyard Companion) (2004) (loopyjoe-DCP)
The Great Old Ones (evocations from The Haunter of the Dark) (1999) (loopyjoe-DCP)
V For Vendetta - Vengeance (Alan Moore's original script) (loopyjoe-DCP)


1963 Book 01 - Mystery Incorporated (1993) (c2c)
1963 Book 02 - No One Escapes The Fury (1993) (c2c)
1963 Book 03 - Tales Of The Uncanny (1993) (c2c)
1963 Book 05 - Horus, Lord Of Light (1993) (c2c)
1963 Book 05 - Horus, Lord Of Light (1993) (c2c)
1963 Book 06 - The Tomorrow Syndicate (1993) (c2c)
Swamp Thing v2 046 (1986)



Cita:
Swamp Thing v2 046 (1986) - added letters pages which featured a response by Alan Moore.

1963 - all 6 issues - added various 'ads' and other non-story pages to make them all c2c. Like the stories, the ads are parodies of ones from the 1960s, almost certainly written by Alan Moore.

Credit is due to the original scanners, unfortunately I don't know who they are.


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Alan More scans from loopyjoe 2.rar

Alan Moore's Exit Interview (c2c) (2007) (loopyjoe-DCP)
Alan Moore Spells It Out - Bill Baker (c2c) (2005) (loopyjoe-DCP)
America's Best Creator (Excerpt from The Wizard Wildstorm Special) (1999) (loopyjoe-DCP)
Blood Feud - Preludes And Nocturnes (Excerpt from Spawn 32) (1995) (loopyjoe-DCP)
Fanzine Reviews by Alan Moore (Excerpts from The Daredevils 01-11) (1983) (loopyjoe-DCP)
For Julie Schwartz - Obituary by Alan Moore (Excerpt from DC Comics Presents - Flash) (2004) (loopyjoe-DCP)
Garry Leach and Alan Moore interview from Hellfire 01 (1983) (loopyjoe-DCP)
Globetrotting For Agoraphobiacs, by Alan Moore (Excerpt from Knockabout 09) (1985) (loopyjoe-DCP)
I Belong To Glasgow, by Alan Moore (Excerpt from Mighty World of Marvel v2 09) (1984) (loopyjoe-DCP)
Introduction by Alan Moore (Excerpt from Grendel - Devil by the Deed) (1986) (loopyjoe-DCP)
Invisible Girls and Phantom Ladies - Sexism in Comics (Excerpts from The Daredevils 04-06) (1983) (loopyjoe-DCP)
It's a Miracle! (Miracleman article from Speakeasy 52) (1985) (loopyjoe-DCP)
It's Kelly's Boyfriend Mr Monster (from Mr Monster's Gal Friday Kelly 03) (2000) (loopyjoe-DCP)
Moore and Claremont Speak Out On Writing (from Speakeasy 54) (1985) (loopyjoe-DCP)
O Superman - Music and Comics (Excerpt from The Daredevils 05) (1983) (loopyjoe-DCP)
Santa's Christmas Chaos (cartoons by Alan Moore from Frantic Winter Special) (1979) (loopyjoe-DCP)
The Complete Alan Moore Nightraven (1982-1983) (loopyjoe-DCP)
Three Go Mad In... (Alan Moore Interview from The Sunday Review, 01 Oct 2006) (loopyjoe-DCP)

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Se irá actualizando.
 

Joker

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Respuesta: Alan Moore

También recomiendo The Courtyard que es buenísima, así como Johnny B. Quick, que deben estar en la Novena.
 

LiAm

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Respuesta: Alan Moore

Hay varias cosas que faltan. Habra que irlas añadiendo. Como Supreme,( que ya viene) WildCats, Los Especiales de Superman, Su numero de Detective Comics, y varias cosas que hizo con Awesome.
 

LMCR

some d00d
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Respuesta: Alan Moore

...así también sus títulos en Avatar Press.
 

Lord_Folken

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Por Glycon! :eek:mfg:

El mejor escritor de comics del mundo! :tata:
 

Fenix-W

renaciendo siempre...
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detrás de mi pantalla
Respuesta: Alan Moore

Wow, habia cosas que ni sabia que existian jajaja Impresionante, esta seccion esta muy buena, te pone al dia con mucha info.
Gracias Liam, lo mas!
 

LiAm

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Respuesta: Alan Moore

Siempre he sido fan de Moore.
Aun asi, no pude evitar sentir una mayor admiracion por su trabajo mientras posteaba el tema. La mayoria de lo que ha hecho aporta mucho al género, iconiza a sus personajes y cuenta historias de alto nivel.

Lo unico que me extraña es que aun no haya escrito una historia de amor memorable.
 
H

House

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Dios es inglés y usa barba.

Falta decir que comenzó su carrera haciendo comics para publicaciones infantiles, bajo el seudonimo Jill de Ray, que hace alusión a Gilles de Rais, el mayor asesino serial de niños de la hirtoria. (Este Moore es un loco...:p)
 
H

House

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¡Al fín!


SUPREME - 41

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Traducción:Joker
Rotulación: LiAm


Alan Moore sobre Supreme:
Cita:
Hasta cierto grado, Supreme es el arquetípico superhéroe en capa, que sobresale como los demás.Hasta cierto grado, eso es lo que quiero hacer con todos los personajes.Quiero hacerlos arquetípicos, quiero darles ese poder arquetípico que los mejores superhéroes tienen.

Lo que quiero, es hacer un Ser verdaderamente Supremo.No veo esto como un libro retro, no en el sentido que lo fue 1963.Lo que quiero es integrar en el modelo del superhéroe de los 90's toda la imaginativa de los 50 años anteriores. Darle esa clase de humor y ver si podemos sacar algo viable para el siguiente siglo.

Supreme parece un trabajo simple, pero hay mucha complejidad detras, aún cuando lo que lees es un cómic ligero y entretenido.



Descarga en la imagen.


No necesitan haber leído nada de Supreme antes. El maestro Alan Moore comienza la historia desde 0 en el número 41 (que es el que está posteado y que trataremos de cubrir) construyendo una historia rica en guiños en caracterizaciones de personajes y que da una leccion de storytelling para disfrutar.
 
C

cocomarin

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Pensé que esto debería estar aquí. Es una entrevista publicada como libro en 2007, conmemorando los 25 años de Alan Moore en el mundo de los cómics. Imperdible para conocer sus motivaciones, su proceso creativo y un poco de gossip referente a sus innumerables dimes y diretes con colegas y editoriales.

Alan Moore, Exit Interview:
ExitInterviewp00frontcover.jpg

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LiAm

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Gracias coco, por la entrevista. Y Mall , no había visto que actualizate con Supreme. :tup:
 

Joker

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x 3, lo bajo en este mismo instante. Muchas gracias.
 

mmdsx

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Álbumes de Alan Moore

Hola, los siguientes no son comics, sino rips en mp3 (versiónes digitales) de cinco álbumes que ha grabado Alan Moore en todos los casos junto a Tim Perkins.
En estos álbumes podrán escuchar a Alan Moore hablando sobre diversos temas, en su mayoría sobre la magia (o su visión de la magia), su filosofía y hasta lo podrán escuchar divagando. ;)
Todo esto con un acompañamiento músical por Tim Perkins.

Todos los links son para archivos rar que contienen mp3s a 160kbps y scans de los booklets.

Ojalá los disfruten.
A mi me gustó una parte (no recuerdo ni en cual álbum) donde Alan Moore repite al final de cada frase la sentencia "But you already know this..."


2u91vzm.jpg


The Moon and Serpent

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Pistas:
01 Overture Hair of the Snake That.
02 The Map Drawn on Vapour (I)
03 Livinoff's Book
04 The Map Drawn on Vapour (II)
05 The Stairs Beyond Substance
06 The Spectre Garden (I) The Enoch
07 The Book of Copulation
08 Finale A Town of Lights

-------------------------------------------

2wrkiuw.jpg


The Birth Caul

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Pistas:
01 The Birth Caul (I)
02 This Present Moment (18.11.95)
03 The Birth Caul (II)
04 The World's Blunt Engine
05 The Birth Caul (III)
06 Drowning In Gold
07 The Birth Caul (IV)
08 The Dressing Of The Tongue
09 The Birth Caul (V)
10 Dummy
11 The Birth Caul


-------------------------------------------

9rrf9u.jpg


Angel Passage

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Pistas:
01 Golden Square
02 Innocence
03 Hell
04 Experience.mp
05 Heaven

-------------------------------------------

2qxp26w.jpg


The Highbury Working

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Pistas:
01 Terrae Lady, That's My Skull
02 Terrae A Skeleton Horse
03 Aquae Pepper's Ghost
04 Aquae Hat-Trick
05 Aeris Opium Nights (Sell Me More)
06 Aeris Limbo
07 Ignis No. 1 With A Bullet
08 Ignis The Angel Highbury

-------------------------------------------

1zb9e8m.jpg


Snakes and Ladders

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Pistas:
01 The Gate Of Tears.
02 Stars And Garters.
03 Baghdad.
04 Art.
05 Syon.

-------------------------------------------
 

mmdsx

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El siguiente link no es mío, sino que estaba en KL:

o8b1c6.jpg


Brought To Light Comic and CD
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Brought to Light es una investigación hecha por Alan Moore
acerca de cierta agencia Estadounidense (la C.I.A.).
Incluye el cómic por Alan y Bill Sienkiewicz
(que tristemente ya no continuaron) y el audio
donde Alan hace la narración y Gary Lloyd provee la música.
 

LiAm

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105cqv7.jpg



[DB]
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[/DB]​

Alan Moore nos trae esta historia junto a Dave Gibbons con lo que ocurre en el cumpleaños de Superman. Batman, Robin y Wonder Woman le visitan en el ártico para llevarle sus regalos. ¿Pero qué le puedes dar al hombre que lo tiene todo?

Mongul - el conquistador espacial- lo sabe. Y no dudará en hacer presente su obsequio.

El cbr incluye tambien el DC Comics presents # 85. Con el team up de Superman y Swamp thing, escrito tambien por Moore y dibujado por Rich Veidt.

Link en mediafire, sirve como mirror para los otros que estan posteados ya.​
Agradecimentos al scanner original.
:tup:
 

Lord_Folken

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No puedo agradecerles lo suficiente...

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Ahora un poco de relax y a escuchar las palabras de sabiduria acompañadas con un tesito...
 

LiAm

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Debo admitir que For the man who has everything me gustó medianamente.

Tdavía me gustó mas el capitulo de JLU donde "homenajean" esta historia, pero es mera subjetividad mía. La historia es sobrebia por si sola.
 
F

Firestorm

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Respuesta: Alan Moore

Opino igual...For the Man who has everything is overrated para mi
 

LiAm

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Respuesta: Alan Moore

Says the Guy who thinks Watchmen is overrated. :xd:


A mi solo no me gustó tanto como se podria esperar, pero le reconozco que es de las mejores historias de Superman jamas escritas.
 
F

Firestorm

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Respuesta: Alan Moore

Moore is overrated :xd: linchenme :xd:

Ayer vi que lo posteaste en español y lo lei...y mantengo la posicion :xd: , no se me hace un comic tan bueno como todos lo dicen.
 
C

cocomarin

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Guest
Respuesta: Alan Moore

Yo no he leído aún la historia de supi, pero Miracle Man fue un cómic que realmente me dejó con la boca abierta (la etapa de moore, la de gaiman me da sueño), lo único criticable es la irregularidad del dibujo. Pero la forma de tomar un cómic pulp de los 50's para niños y crear una historia de desesperanza, terror y miedo con personajes tan llenos de vida como ésos nunca he vuelto a verlo. Pera mí ese cómic basta para para darle el lugar que tiene Moore.
Watchmen la encuentro fría, gran tema y lo que quieran sobre un acercamiento maduro a los superhéroes, pero creo que nunca termina de plasmar esa atmósfera noir que la obra requiere (además de los piratas, que todavía no los entiendo :xd:)
 
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