W for Wall
Nov. 6th, 2011 06:28 amObvious crossover?
After realizing that his ex-wife has moved on, an aging rock star binges on alcohol and every drug within easy reach and while catatonic fantasizes about the battle between two of his major subpersonae; a fascist eugenicist with legions of young skinheads at his command (a reaction to the brutal conformity and the societal portrayal of the same war which took his father), versus a superhero wearing a relatively featureless mask over horrible burns (ie, his emotional scars), who represents his own sheer murderous rage, and who claims to be an anarchist but in the end relies upon the very same demagoguery to gain the support of an adoring populace (in short, his harsh upbringing has made him look to increasingly wider acclaim to try and fill the holes in his soul).
After realizing that his ex-wife has moved on, an aging rock star binges on alcohol and every drug within easy reach and while catatonic fantasizes about the battle between two of his major subpersonae; a fascist eugenicist with legions of young skinheads at his command (a reaction to the brutal conformity and the societal portrayal of the same war which took his father), versus a superhero wearing a relatively featureless mask over horrible burns (ie, his emotional scars), who represents his own sheer murderous rage, and who claims to be an anarchist but in the end relies upon the very same demagoguery to gain the support of an adoring populace (in short, his harsh upbringing has made him look to increasingly wider acclaim to try and fill the holes in his soul).