Five years after giving his supposedly-last interview, the Great Wizard of Northampton Alan Moore has once again deigned to allow someone to record a conversation with him for public consumption. This time, it's part of Paperback Writers: Graphic Content, a new BBC series where comic book writers discuss their musical influences.
Moore is surprisingly delightful over the course of the two-hour interview-slash-DJ-session, sharing great songs alongside tidbits from his life. He talks a bit about the end of his comic book career, as well as his upcoming work in opera and film. In a rare instance, he also talks briefly about adaptations of his work. Not the upcoming HBO TV sequel-adaptation of Watchmen, of course—rather, Terry Gilliam's attempted adaptation during the late 1980s. Moore says:
I did hear that when Terry Gilliam was supposed to be doing Watchmen back in the 1980s. I remember he told me that he'd had a number of phone calls from David Bowie asking to play the Rorschach character. There's an alternate world we can only imagine.
As if I needed any more proof that we're living in a divergent Hellworld that splintered off the main timeline after Bowie's death. Now I'll be cursed with dreams of another, even better world where Bowie played Rorschach in a Joel Silver-produced Terry Gilliam movie penned by Gilliam's Brazil co-writing partner, Charles McKeown. (Okay so maybe that Joel Silver part still would ruined it.)
You can listen to Moore's two-hour BBC interview here. And speaking of superheroes and Bowie, this week also marks the 42nd anniversary of Bowie's Heroes album, which you should probably listen to, too.
(Top image from Fred Romero on Flickr and Libby Arnold on Flickr)