So what upcoming Alan Moore movies will he disavow? All of them! But here's the Top 5.
5. Swamp Thing: The Anatomy Lesson


Hey, as soon as Moore heard they were Americanizing the title to escape a lawsuit from Marvel Studios, he dropped his name from the ticket. Like he needed an excuse. And after all the trouble the studio went to to disentangle the copyright issues (especially with that twit Todd MacFarlane - he keeps the gross-out horror action figure rights). You know, Neil Gaiman was pretty nice about the movie not using the Andy Warhol robot, but then, he's a bit of a media whore compared to Moore.

Surprised to see Top 10 in the Top 5? You shouldn't be. We have the technology to recreate this world. And if Watchmen proves that money can be spent dutifully recreating the deconstruction of comic book superhero archetypes, then the market can take the massive referential in-joke that is Top 10. Moore takes his name off the project when the studio announces that instead of superhero cops in a city full of superheroes, Top 10 would be about ordinary cops in a city full of ordinary people. Hey, it worked for Wanted.

Alan Moore's hyper-pulp legacy will have to remain with LXG, because of some disagreement about the blimps or something.
LXG.
Yeah, that's great, Alan.
Talk about an ugly stepchild.

The next Superman movie has to kill the character as imagined by Richard Donner. It has to. Chosen template: This. Gene Hackman with a Brainiac skull grafted to his head. Christopher Reeve act-alike Brandon Routh gold kryptonited into obsolescence. Gilbert Gottfried as the evil Mxyzptlk. And everybody else DIES. In 10 years, we can start fresh without the damn ghost of Donner in the public psyche. Of course, Alan Moore doesn't want to be included, not after Whatever Happened to the Caped Crusader stole his title and turned it into a Sandman: The Wake.
Oh Alan, see what selling out brought you?
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