I have no idea what to think about this comic. None at all.
Frank Miller's 1990 offering, Give Me Liberty, is as choppy as it is bizarrely conceived. Featuring overwrought themes of "social justice" and racism it feels like a weird time travel loop gone wrong from the present to the, not so long ago, past. Victims of oppression (in this case the focus is on Blacks and Native Americans) are tossed into battle against agents of oppression (namely evil multi-nations corporations, and don't forget the government!) with a heaping helping of conspiracy and betrayal to spice up the mix.
From the very beginning we are introduced to our main character, Martha Washington who is born into, predictably enough, an environment of penury and crime. Depictions of poor schooling are presented alongside depictions of petty theft and even murder! After being tossed into a psychiatric hospital, she escapes and eventually joins the latest American military outfit PAX (a fabrication of Miller). In doing so, her shameful criminal history can be expunged.
From there the story trails off into utter inanity. With a narrative more chopped up that a Buroughs novel, innumerable horribly choppy insertions of faux-newspaper headlines and equally fictional magazine clippings, don't really help the cause neither. Merely lacing the comic instead of elucidating the story and making it more believable, they reduce (to me at least) to forced churlish cut and paste operations. As well meaning as the excerpts might seem, there's little rhyme nor reason for their insertions.
It was during the umpteenth insert that I noticed the resemblance to Watchmen. Following a brief facepalm I briefly roved my eyes over the front page and noticed that Dave Gibbons, of the aforementioned fame, was indeed the illustrator. Which brings me to my next question.
How could just an otherwise phenomenal meet-up of skill and talent be so mediocre?
Instead of a well organized and equally well crafted narrative, Give Me Liberty feels like the result of a bad acid trip more than anything. Upon finishing this comic I had a vision of Dave and Frank spending an awful trip that was half rereeading Watchmen and half saturating their skulls with critical theory twaddle.
In either case (and at any rate for that matter) I can't hate this comic no matter its flaws. The art is great and the resemblances to Watchmen (the good parts at least) are enjoyable, as they very well should be to any comic fan. Moreover, while the (character) development that precedes them might be flimsy/suspect at best - non-existent at worst, some of the character designs are pretty cool (I loved the brain-in-a-vat representation of the ex-president as well as the depiction of The Surgeon General). Even moreso were some of the, characteristically Miller, wide double page illustrations - choppy they might have been yet, were pretty cool nonetheless.
So where does this leave us? With a full belly and satisfied reading experience? Probably not. Does it deserve loathing or derision? Not exactly. It's definitely worth a read. However, any star rating beneath three is unnecessarily vindictive. On the other hand, any rating above three is absurd.
Take it for what it is. Frank Miller's, retroactive, SJW-esque, Give Me Liberty is a curious romp through innumerable issues that are even more pertinent now, than they were at the birth of the 90's.
There is truly nothing new under the sun.