Yamamaya wrote:By the ending I mean how one character's plan succeeded and everyone else's efforts were completely and utterly wasted.
So you hate effective and competent villains in stories. Got it. You want the Dr. Claw "I'LL GET YOU NEXT TIME GADGET!" villains, not ones that actually accomplish anything. Good to know.
I hated the fact that eveyrone(save for Rorschach) were completely cool with the morally gray method that character used.
No, none of them were. Now I'm questioning if you even read the comic. Night Owl said it was repulsive but he had no choice but to go along with it or else all the people who died would have died in vain, and even more would die if the plan was exposed. Doctor Manhattan just commented on how futile the plan was in the first place. I'm too lazy to pull out my copy of the book right now but I think Silk Spectre had the same thoughts that Night Owl did. None of them were like "Hey great job, this was an awesome plan!"
Not to mention how stupid it is. We can't figure out how to finish it so we'll throw in a [SPOILER]PSYCHIC OCTOPUS LOLOLOLOLOLOL[/SPOILER]
That was planned from the beginning. You didn't pay attention during the parts with the special effects guys and the artists on that island? It was never added in at the last second because they couldn't think of an ending, it was always planned from the start of the book.
EDIT: Ha ha Phil said the same thing. Awesome. XD
Also lemme get out some ammunition, spoilered.
[SPOILER]And of course, when you call it a giant squid, it does sound pretty stupid. But it’]
Also,
[SPOILER]The big problem here is that from the moment Dr. Manhattan is introduced in the story, he is shown as being the pawn of the United States government. Doing the bidding of president Nixon in the name of the Stars and Stripes. He even wins the Vietnam War for the US. Would the world really believe that Dr. Manhattan is a universal threat to the world and cause them to cease hostilities against each other? Russia didn’t really trust the US back in 1985, so why would they believe Dr. Manhattan went rogue after years of faithful service to Uncle Sam? If anything, Dr, Manhattan’s attack would either escalate the Cold War or start World War III.
First, the “threat” needs to remain alien in nature and scary as hell. Fans tend to agree, the only way humanity could believably stop warring with each other is if they faced a new and menacing extraterrestrial enemy.
Second, the destruction this “threat” causes should include piles and piles of bloodied and battered corpses. Fans feel that audiences need to see at face value the horror of the “solution” the perpetrator of this plan has caused. In early drafts of the script, the victims of this attack get vaporized, leaving only ash — not particularly gruesome. If you look at the opening pages of Watchmen’s final chapter, you’ll understand why fans feel that kind of carnage needs to be shown. A picture is really worth a thousand words.[/SPOILER]
Finally,
[SPOILER]Look, the giant squid at the end of the graphic novel isn’t a metaphor or a symbol. It’s far-out and weird and bizarre in ways you could never comprehend, but it’s all those things precisely because it HAS to be. Ozymandias wants to unite the governments of the world in a single cause, to force them to lay their petty differences aside and join forces against a greater foe. He wants to make them a team.
The Lovecraft-ian squid achieves that by seeming to come from another dimension – another plane of existence. It’s so beyond comprehension that it absolutely HAS to be a unilateral threat to everyone -- it’s not a U.S. or Russian fear, but a global one. More importantly, it’s not CAUSED by the U.S. or the Russians or the Cubans or whomever. It comes from outside.
Dr. Manhattan, meanwhile, comes from within. Dr. Manhattan is an American. No, he’s more. He’s a TOOL of the American government. Great pains are taken throughout the book to establish this. Any attack that seemed to come from Manhattan, would therefore seem to come from Washington -- to be ordered by the U.S. government itself.
But what if the attacks only happened on American soil? How could the Russians claim Manhattan was working for the government then? They probably couldn’t -- but then why would they help? It would negate Ozy’s goal of joining the world against one common cause, no matter how it was handled.[/SPOILER]
Dr. Manhattan is just too inhuman for my tastes(not to mention his ludicrous arguments in favor of destroying life.
That's the point of Dr. Manhattan is that he's supposed to be inhuman. So you are subtly saying he is a great character, because he's making you feel how you're supposed to feel about him. Further, he was never in favor of destroying life. He just didn't care if it got destroyed (which is another reason the film ending didn't make sense; Doc repeatedly showed himself to be indifferent to how humans acted).