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Rorschach (character)

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Rorschach
Rorschach, one of the characters of Watchmen
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceWatchmen #1 (1986)
Created byAlan Moore (story) and Dave Gibbons (art), based on The Question created by Steve Ditko
In-story information
Alter egoWalter Joseph Kovacs
Team affiliationsCrimebusters, Nite-Owl (II)
AbilitiesNone, but is a ruthless, extremely resourceful fighter and investigator.

Rorschach is a superhero featured in the acclaimed 1986 DC Comics series Watchmen.

Wearing the inkblot-like mask he considers his true face, Rorschach has continued his one-man battle against crime long after superheroes became both detested and illegal. Although he at times shows an atheistic nihilism, Rorschach’s actions and journal writings display a moral absolutism, where good and evil are clearly defined and evil must be violently punished. He has alienated himself from the rest of society to achieve these aims.

Rorschach was created by Watchmen writer Alan Moore with artist Dave Gibbons but, like all characters in the series, was derived from a Charlton Comics character, in this case The Question, created by Steve Ditko. His real name, Walter Kovacs, is a reference Ditko's tendency to give his characters names beginning with the letter K.

Character history

Template:Spoiler His real name is Walter Joseph Kovacs, born March 21, 1940. His mother, a prostitute who resented his interference in her business, abused him viciously. At age 10, he was cruelly abused by two bullies and attacked them, partially blinding one with his own lit cigarette, and became a ward of the state, sent to the Lillian Charlton Home for Problem Children. In high school, he excelled in religious education and literature, as well as in boxing and gymnastics, and also wrote an essay in which he praised President Truman's decision to use nuclear weapons against the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, asserting that the bombs helped save lives by stopping the war.

During those high school years at age 16, Walter was informed of his mother's gruesome murder; her pimp force-fed her a bottle of Drano until she died in agony. Walter's only reaction consisted of the single word: "Good."

Reaching maturity, in 1956 at age 16 he found work as an unskilled garment worker; noting later to a prison psychiatrist "Job bearable but unpleasant. Had to handle female clothing". Working in this capacity, in 1962 he grew fascinated by a new fabric made possible through technologies developed by Doctor Manhattan, containing viscous fluids between two layers of latex. Two liquids, one black and one white, continually shifted in response to heat and pressure, forming symmetrical patterns like a Rorschach inkblot test while never mixing to produce a grey colour. Kovacs learned of the fabric when a young woman chose not to buy a dress which she had ordered made from it; subsequently Kovacs took the dress home and experimented with the fabric. He learned to cut the fabric and maintain the seal using heated scissors.

Two years later, when Kitty Genovese (both in real life and in Watchmen) was brutally murdered in front of a building full of tenants who didn't bother to help her, Kovacs decided that she had been the woman who had ordered the dress ("Young. Pretty. Italian name. I'm sure it was her"). Kovacs cut up the dress, making it into a mask and becoming Rorschach (taking his name from the test) to avenge the powerless victims of crime.

Eventually, in 1965 he teamed up with another superhero, Nite-Owl (II), whose technical skills and resources complemented his skills as an investigator.

In 1975, Rorschach was searching for a kidnapped child and found her captor's vacant hideout. A cursory inspection revealed, to his horror, that the girl had been murdered, butchered, and fed to two German Shepherd dogs. In the face of this atrocity, Kovacs' mind snapped and assumed the mental identity of Rorschach as a separate personality. He killed the dogs with a meat cleaver and waited for the kidnapper. When the man returned, he wordlessly chained him to a pipe, ignoring his claims of innocence (the man telling Rorschach: "you can't prove anything, there's no evidence", suggesting that he fed the girl to the dogs to get rid of the 'evidence'), then placed a hacksaw near him and set the house on fire. Finally speaking, he told the terrified man that he would not have time to cut through his restraints before the fire killed him (implying that he would have to sever his own arm to escape). Kovacs calmly watched the structure burn from across the street; the suspected kidnapper did not emerge. In a much-later interview with a psychologist, Kovacs explicitly mentions the incident as the point after which he became "Rorschach, who sometimes pretends to be Kovacs"; before that, he claims, he was only "Kovacs pretending to be Rorschach." He no longer refers to his "mask"; now he only calls the mask his "face".

After the Keene Act passed in 1977 (outlawing costumed vigilantes) demanded his retirement, he grew even more violent, murdering notorious multiple rapist Harvey Charles Furniss and leaving his corpse in front of a police station; a note pinned to his chest read, "Never!" True to his word, Rorschach remained an active "adventurer" in open defiance of the Act.

Events of Watchmen

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During a mid-1980s murder investigation of a man named Eddie Blake, Rorschach discovered that the victim was the alter ego of The Comedian, an amoral government-sponsored "costumed adventurer" and former colleague. Suspecting a plot to eliminate superheroes, he pursued the investigation accordingly, interviewing and warning several former members of the hero community. Although no one took his theory seriously, the sudden public denunciations and subsequent self-exile of Doctor Manhattan and the attempted murder of Adrian Veidt (the former Ozymandias) bolstered his confidence that he was on the right track. Before long, however, he was framed for the murder of Moloch, an ailing former adversary, and was arrested. Not surprisingly, Rorschach chose to fight back, improvising methods with ordinary household materials.

In prison Kovacs was examined by a clinical psychologist, and subject to numerous death threats and attacks by vengeful prisoners. A former organized crime head called The Big Figure orchestrated a prisoner riot as a distraction while his flunkies attacked Kovacs. He easily, almost leisurely, dispatched the would-be assassins before drowning The Big Figure (a diminutive old man) in a toilet. During this battle, Nite-Owl (II) and Silk Spectre (II) were attempting to break him out of prision, and used the chaos of the prision riot to do so. They sought his help in their own investigation into the murders of the former superheros.

Investigating jointly, Nite Owl and Rorschach learned that the mastermind behind the plot was Adrian Veidt, who had been hailed as the smartest person in the world. Rorschach and Nite Owl traveled to his home in Antarctica to confront him; however, they were unable to prevent him from accomplishing his ultimate goal. Before the duo arrived, Veidt teleported an enormous Lovecraftian "alien" that he had manufactured into the heart of New York City, killing millions and psychically traumatizing millions more. Exactly as Veidt had predicted, the hoax united the world against the perceived alien threat and thereby avoided a brewing nuclear showdown.

Shortly after Veidt confesses his plot to Nite Owl and Rorschach, they are joined by Doctor Manhattan and the Silk Spectre. After a brief struggle, the adventurers realize that by exposing Veidt's act they would only manage to return the world to the brink of nuclear catastrophe. The other heroes agree that they must keep the hoax a secret, but Rorschach flatly refuses to comply ("No. Not even in the face of Armageddon. Never compromise."). Manhattan attempts to persuade him, but Rorschach maintains his defiance. In tears, he demands that Manhattan kill him; wordlessly, Manhattan complies.

However, Rorschach's legacy may have greater consequences; prior to departing for Antarctica, he wrote a lengthy journal detailing his investigation and sent it to a reactionary fringe newspaper. Whether or not the journal's contents would be printed, or whether it would be taken seriously by the public since his mental illness is well known, was left as an open question at the very last page of the Watchmen comics series.

Themes

Rorschach is an extreme example of moral absolutism, who believes in an unalterable moral code that requires the strict and severe punishment of any infraction. His opposition to the evil of crime is contrasted with his total lack of empathy for criminals, whom he treats as non-human, and his disdain for conventional morality, law, government, and the police, being willing to torture or execute criminals in the pursuit of his aims. Rorschach is thus himself strangely inhuman and not entirely "good". His view of the world is in "black and white". There are no shades of grey - thus reflecting the properties of the mask that he wears. Additionally, in this respect, the nature of a Rorschach test, which is heavily open to interpretation, contrasts with Rorschach's moral views, which are in his mind, not open to debate.

In his interview with a prison psychologist, Rorschach reveals that his bleak world view is informed by the idea that the world has no inherent meaning, only that which human beings attribute to it, stating that "[Existence] Has no pattern save what we imagine after staring at it for too long". His belief that there is no God, no "metaphysical" side to morality allows him to sit in judgment of what he regards as the depravity of humanity. The symbolic meaning of the name "Rorschach" that can be derived from this is obvious.

After the discovery of Ozymandias' plot, Rorschach might have cracked when faced with such a moral ambiguity. This would explain why he demands for Dr. Manhattan to kill him; he would rather die than accept it. Alternately, he may have realised that Dr. Manhattan would not allow him to return to America if he was going to reveal the truth, but Rorschach was psychologically incapable of compromising and keeping quiet. Unable to even deny that he would reveal what Ozymandias had done, Rorschach did not demand for Dr. Manhattan to kill him - he knew that that would happen anyway - but to get it over with and not try to convince him to keep the secret.

However, Rorschach as a character shows inconsistencies and progression. As a child he is depicted praising the atomic bomb as a viable solution, but in his adulthood refuses to condone a similar act in Ozymandias' plot. This may be explained by the differences between the younger, less absolutist Kovacs and the current 'Rorschach' persona who believes evil must be punished no matter the circumstances.

Sexuality

Rorschach is shown with a troublesome childhood, raised by an abusive mother who works as a prostitute. As a child in a foster home he reports sexually-charged nightmares influenced by his mother's profession. He is uncomfortable with sexual imagery, pausing disdainfully at the sight of naked couples in their bedroom windows or the graffiti image of an embracing couple.

Additionally, Rorschach treats homosexuality as a deviance, suspecting Ozymandias of the orientation and filing the observation for further investigation. He is uncomfortable with women, displayed in his description of working with women's garments as unpleasant and his restitching of a dress to look less like a woman, as well as an off-hand comment about disliking Silk Spectre II's costume. It is implied that Rorschach himself may have repressed homosexual feelings for Nite-Owl in a scene where Nite-Owl shakes hands with Rorschach and refers to him as his friend; Rorschach doesn't let go. Nite-Owl has to pry his hand loose. However, this could just be because Rorschach was happy to have anyone show any kind of affection towards him after his solitary life.

Artistic details

Although the black-and-white pattern on Rorschach's mask changed from frame to frame, apparently randomly, there are several aspects in which the pattern has significance:

  • The pattern is identical during three moments when Rorschach registers surprise:
    • Chapter 1, Page 8, Frame 2, upon discovering Edward Blake's hidden Comedian costume and gear;
    • Chapter 5, Page 24, Frame 5, upon discovering that Edgar William Jacobi (aka Moloch) has been shot; and
    • Chapter 6, Page 20, Frame 9, upon realizing that the bone being fought over by Gerald Grice's dogs is a human femur.
  • During Rorschach's arrest (Chapter 5, Page 28, Frame 3) he asks himself who has framed him. His mask pattern resembles a question mark.
  • The pattern resembles the "embracing lovers silhouette" (a common visual theme throughout the series) immediately after a frame of Laurel Juspeczyk (Silk Spectre II) and Dan Dreiberg (Nite Owl II) embracing (Chapter 12, Page 23, Frame 1), as well as a flying owl when referring to the Owlship (page, Frame 5).
  • Just before, and while Rorschach mentions joking (Chapter 12, Page 20, Frames 4-7), his face resembles a laughing clown.