An odd tale with a secret message.
MY OWN JOURNEY ABOUT ALAN MOORE
I was really excited when I knew about this incoming new comic book series by the master Alan Moore.
I am an insanely huge fan of Alan Moore's work.
And I've had the wonderful luck of reading many of his work and I think most of his relevant work:
V for Vendetta (my personal favorite), Watchmen, Marvelman aka Miracleman, Top 10, Tom Strong, Promethea, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, From Hell, Swamp Thing, The Killing Joke, Whatever Happened with the Man of Tomorrow, For the Man who has Everything, along with some of Tomorrow Stories and even some issues from his run on Vigilante and Green Lantern Corps.
Even I have read some books analyzing his works too.
Why did I mention all those?
Well, I thought that it's important since Fashion Beast isn't what everybody thinks it is.
MY OWN THEORY ABOUT WHAT THIS IS
Fashion Beast isn't a retelling of Beauty and the Beast using the world of fashion in a post-apocalyptical ambiance.
That would be the easy answer. The obvious angle.
And Alan Moore isn't easy or obvious.
All that, it's a cover, a mirage, something to hide his real intentions with this book series.
And it's even more impressive taking in account that the idea of the series was conceived many time ago, along with the collaboration with the late Malcolm McLaren.
Fashion Beast is the testament and last will of Alan Moore.
MY OWN RECOMMENDATION OF HOW TO READ THIS
I bought this series in single issues and I was so excited about reading something fresh new by Alan Moore that I started to read each single issue comic book when they werre coming out.
THAT was a mistake.
I have to tell you that when I reach issue #7, I was like...
...What the heck is this comic book series?
What is he trying to construct here?
Is the story going anywhere?
If I am already in the issue #7 and this is a 10-part series...
...when the story would really to carburize?
I was totally clueless.
I was enjoying the reading fair enough, due his mastering of words and the great artistic direction by Facundo Percio.
HOWEVER, I hadn't the faintest idea of what was this comic book series.
So,...
...I decided to keep buying the remaining three issues, but waiting to read them until have them all, and reading the whole series again and to avoid keeping guessing the meaning of the project.
I'm happy of deciding to do that.
If you read the single issues separately, it's very likely that you will be as clueless as I was at first. Read them when you have them all (and if you read it in the TPB edition, you won't struggle at all).
MY OWN DECODING OF THE SERIES
Once I got the remaining three issues, completing the run, I RE-READ the whole series.
And that it was...
MAGIC.
It was like opening the secret codes that Moore left in the issues.
Then, I understood what Alan Moore wanted to tell in this comic book series.
If you change all that stuff about fashion and clothes and you think in the context of comic books...
...Bam! Pow! Kapow! Tomá guacho!
Your eyes are now open and you are reading the opinion of Alan Moore about his own legacy in the comic book industry and how it has been managed with him AND without him.
You can read how good he is aware of how the rest of the world thinks about him and his personal obsessions.
Also, you perceive that he is tired BUT he knows that the work must continue, comic books must keep going out and he has no troubles of somebody not only takes over his work but even "destroy" completely and re-invent it all over again.
That is his statement since after all, that's what he did with the comic book industry with some of his earlier works (in America) like Watchmen and Swamp Thing.
He "destroyed" what has been done before and he re-invented the comic book industry.
He speaks out about how his works were being "re-doing" many times with different names but basically the same formula.
Also, he isn't afraid to show how the comic book industry "killed" him and now that same comic book industry is unable to access to new material, so the comic book industry went back to search on his unused ideas and drafts and marketing, as "something new" to make profit of that.
Even you can see his desire of a worthy sucessor but not a clone but somebody with fresh brand new ideas to shake again the comic book industry, in a totally different way like he did it, but...
...in there, you have a warning, to avoid to commit the same "mistakes" that he did or becoming just another like him.
Alan Moore doesn't want another "Alan Moore", no, no, it's the least thing that he wants.
He truly want a new "fire" able to shadow the "phoenix" in what he became.
People thinks that Alan Moore is an old crazy hermit who hates the world...
...And people can't be more mistaken.
If only people could be able to see Alan Moore as I see him, as I learned to see him through his works, through his interviews...
Alan Moore loves the world, loves the music, loves the simple wonders in small things, loves his current wife, and...
...he loves the comic books.
He loves the literary genre of comic books in general.
He never has been ashamed of being a comic book writer. Never pretending to be something else than that. Never looking to write in other formats to get any "credibility".
He is a comic book writer and he loves it!
When you reached to read enough material by him, and when you have reached certain point on your life, a "mental maturity" just to choose a crazy term to name something that you just feel, you just know, well, at that moment you will think in the same way, and maybe, just maybe you will see him in a better light, to realize that that "the beast" that you may think it's Alan Moore, he really is not, and just maybe, you are going to be able to watch him as truly is him.
And then, and only then, you will realize how wonderful human being he is, and his deep pure love for the genre of the comic books.