The
Crimebusters are a superhero group that succeeds the Minutemen and are the main characters of
Watchmen. The group was short-lived when the Keene Act that forbade non-government sanctioned superheroes was passed. Among its notable members are:
The Comedian The Comedian (Edward Morgan "Eddie" Blake) is a
vigilante, initially based on the
Shield and then on the Charlton Comics character
Peacemaker, with elements of the
Marvel Comics spy character
Nick Fury added. Moore and Gibbons saw the Comedian as "a kind of
Gordon Liddy character, only a much bigger, tougher guy". Gibbons went with a
Groucho Marx-style appearance (mustache and cigar) for the Comedian in his design, deciding that the "clown" look had already been appropriated by the
DC Comics supervillain
the Joker. His costume itself was noted by Gibbons as being particularly problematic; he was initially designed with a more militaristic costume which was later dropped for a black leather outfit with a "rapist mask". Richard Reynolds described the Comedian as "ruthless, cynical, and
nihilistic, and yet capable of deeper insights than the others into the role of the costumed hero". In the
Watchmen film, he is portrayed by
Jeffrey Dean Morgan. The film also places him as John F. Kennedy's assassin, as shown in the opening montage. In
Watchmen: The End Is Nigh, the Comedian is voiced by Mark Silverman. Due to his death in the graphic novel, he does not appear in the
HBO sequel series
Watchmen, but he is mentioned and his legacy lives on through his daughter Laurie. The Comedian is seen briefly in a flashback episode in which he is portrayed by an uncredited actor. According to a Peteypedia article, Lady Trieu's mother Bian My had encountered Blake during the
Vietnam War in 1971, during which he and his battalion of Blazin' Commandos' burned down her village. In
Watchmen Chapter I, Comedian is voiced by
Rick D. Wasserman.
Doctor Manhattan Dr. Jonathan "
Jon"
Osterman is a vigilante and the only character with
superpowers. His character was based on the
Charlton Comics character
Captain Atom. He was originally a
physicist who was transformed into a blue, irradiated powerful being after he was disintegrated in an Intrinsic Field Subtractor in 1959. He had returned to the chamber to retrieve his girlfriend's watch (which he had repaired), and was accidentally locked inside when the Subtractor started automatically. Osterman was blown into atoms, with nothing left of his body. Within a few months, his disembodied consciousness managed to reconstruct a physical body for itself, after several hideous partial reconstructions. Following his reanimation, he is immediately pressed into service by the
United States government, which gives him the name
Doctor Manhattan, after the
Manhattan Project. Though he dabbles briefly in crime-fighting, his greatest influence is to grant the U.S. a strategic advantage over the
Soviet Union during the
Cold War, with his most significant action taking place after he is personally asked by President
Richard Nixon to intervene in the
Vietnam War, leading to an unqualified victory for the U.S. with the defeat of
North Vietnam and the
Vietcong. This prevents the
collapse of the Saigon government. Since he works for the U.S. government, he is exempt from the provisions of the
Keene Act, but spends much of his time doing advanced technology research and development, and physics research. He is single-handedly responsible for the shift to electric-powered vehicles by synthesizing the needed elements and chemicals himself, causing a huge leap in many areas of science and technology. As a result, the technology of the alternative 1985 of the
Watchmen universe is far more advanced. After the death of his father in 1969, he does not conceal his birth name and is referred to as "Jon" or "Dr. Osterman". Perhaps due to his own
transhumanist nature, Doctor Manhattan is not only able to perceive time as non-linear, with him often describing past, present and future events as though they were all happening within the time of his retelling of them, this also leads to him acting in accordance with a personal philosophy which most closely resembles
determinism. While he can change reality to his will, he believes himself and all of his actions to be pre-determined. He therefore both does and does not possess free will and is, in a way, controlled by forces well within his control. He refuses to change the pre-ordained course of events. In the
Watchmen film, Doctor Manhattan is a CGI character whose body is modeled after fitness model
Greg Plitt, with voice,
motion capture, and facial performance provided by
Billy Crudup (who also portrays Osterman prior to his transformation). In
Watchmen: The End is Nigh, Doctor Manhattan is voiced by
Crispin Freeman. In the
Watchmen TV series, he is portrayed by
Yahya Abdul-Mateen II. For much of the series, he is solely known by the name
Cal Abar, the husband of series protagonist Angela Abar and the survivor of an unnamed accident in 2009 which wiped his memory. In reality, Manhattan installed a device into his forehead that suppressed his superpowers and his omniscient sense of time, allowing him to pursue a comfortable relationship with Angela, though this did remove his memory prior to 2009. Late in the series, in 2019, Angela discovers a plot by the white supremacist ring the Seventh Kavalry to destroy Manhattan and harness his powers; Angela subsequently forcibly removed the device from his forehead, causing him to regain his abilities and appearance. Immediately afterward, Manhattan is captured by the Kavalry and transported into a synthetic
lithium cage. As Senator Joe Keene, the Kavalry's leader, prepares to destroy Manhattan while harnessing his powers (ultimately killing Keene in the process since the machine didn't have a component that can filter the atomic energy), Lady Trieu intervenes, kills the rest of the Kavalry, and continues the demonstration in attempt to take his powers for herself so that she can do improvements to the world which Doctor Manhattan never got around to doing. Trieu is successful in killing Manhattan and he shares a final moment with Angela before he dies, though Trieu's plans are ultimately upended by Veidt and she is killed by another of his attacks. At the end of the series, Manhattan is implied to have transferred his powers to Angela. In
Watchmen Chapter I, Doctor Manhattan is voiced by
Michael Cerveris.
Nite Owl Nite Owl II (
Daniel "Dan" Dreiberg) is a superhero who uses
owl-themed gadgets, in a manner which led Dave Gibbons to consider him "an obsessive hobbyist... a comics fan, a fanboy." Nite Owl was partly based on the
Ted Kord version of the DC Comics superhero
Blue Beetle. Just as Ted Kord had a predecessor, Moore also incorporated an earlier adventurer who used the name "Nite Owl" (the retired crime fighter Hollis Mason) into
Watchmen. Richard Reynolds noted in
Super Heroes: A Modern Mythology that despite the character's Charlton roots, Nite Owl's
modus operandi has more in common with the DC Comics character
Batman. According to Geoff Klock, his civilian form "visually suggests an
impotent, middle-aged
Clark Kent." The second Nite Owl is another vigilante who has not revealed his identity in the post-Keene Act era throughout the novel. "Before Watchmen: Nite Owl #1" establishes that Dan Dreiberg's mother was physically abused by his father. Dreiberg's obsession with the original Nite Owl led him to plant a remote microphone device on Hollis' vehicle in order to track him down. It also establishes the events of how he was taken in as his apprentice: His father dies of an apparent heart attack while beating Dan's mother (Dan and his mother hold off calling for an ambulance) At the funeral, Hollis, having since discovered Dan's abusive childhood via police reports, confronts Dan and agrees to take him on as his sidekick. However, after training him, Hollis announces his retirement and informs Dan that he is giving him the Nite Owl identity rather than creating a sidekick persona for him. It is also revealed that Rorschach met Nite Owl on Dan's very first patrol and offered his assistance as a partner to the young rookie hero. in between the filming of his flashback scenes and the 1985 scenes, showing the physical decline of his character. He is not present in the HBO
Watchmen series, having been under federal custody since the events of the graphic novel. In the animated film
Watchmen Chapter I, Nite Owl is voiced by
Matthew Rhys.
Rorschach Rorschach (real name
Walter Joseph Kovacs) is a
noir private detective-themed vigilante who wears a white mask with constantly shifting
ink blots. Rorschach continues to fight crime in spite of his outlaw status, eventually making the
FBI's Ten Most Wanted List. Born to an abusive prostitute and a man whose last name she never bothered to learn, he spent much of his childhood in a home for troubled youth, after which he began working in a garment factory. After reading about the
murder of Kitty Genovese and the reported complete indifference of the witnesses of the crime, he modified a special fabric that she had ordered, according to him, to create a mask and became a vigilante, eventually forming a productive partnership with Nite Owl II. In 1975, after failing to rescue a young girl, he lost all faith in humanity. Moore based Rorschach on the
Steve Ditko creations the
Question and
Mr. A. Moore said he was trying to "come up with this quintessential Steve Ditko character—someone who's got a funny name, whose surname begins with a 'K,' who's got an oddly designed mask". As a result, Rorschach's real name is given as Walter Kovacs. Ditko's Charlton character the Question also served as a template for creating Rorschach. Moore said he did not foresee the death of Rorschach until the fourth issue when he realized that his refusal to compromise would result in him not surviving the story. and Nite Owl organizes a rescue mission to free Rorschach from jail when he is arrested.
Before Watchmen: Nite Owl reveals that Rorschach was active as a hero before Nite Owl made his debut and on the latter's first night out as a hero, Rorschach sneaks into his owl ship and offers his services to Nite Owl as a partner. The former detail seems to have been retained in the final version of the film (though the Nite Owl's goggles gave her last name as her mother's maiden name, Juspeczyk). Silk Spectre was ranked 24th in ''
Comics Buyer's Guide'' "100 Sexiest Women in Comics" list. In the television series, Laurie (portrayed by
Jean Smart) has given up vigilantism and joined the FBI, becoming an agent in the Anti-Vigilante Task Force. On one mission, she and her co-workers posed as bank robbers at National Bank Inc. to draw out Mister Shadow. Though hinted to think of Dan where she owns a pet owl, it is heavily hinted she pines for Doctor Manhattan. She is sent to Tusla by Senator Joe Keene Jr., who apparently offered to have Dan released from prison, to investigate the death of Judd Crawford, but in reality she is meant to help the Seventh Kavalry locate Doctor Manhattan. She is present when Veidt manufactures another squid attack in an attempt to stop Lady Trieu from becoming a godlike entity, and ultimately arrests Veidt for his many crimes. While she does not have a crime-fighting alter ego anymore, this older, hardened version of Laurie nevertheless shows several parallels with her father the Comedian, having taken her father's last name, sharing his affinity for jokes as metaphors for her worldview, and having become an FBI agent after giving up vigilantism as the Comedian did before her. In the animated film
Watchmen Chapter I, Silk Spectre is voiced by
Katee Sackhoff.
Adrian Veidt Adrian Veidt, known as
Ozymandias prior to the events of the graphic novel, is a former superhero who draws inspiration from his hero
Alexander the Great and the Egyptian pharaoh
Ramesses II, for whom he takes his superhero alias. A child prodigy, he graduated from high school and college before he was 18 and learned the art of lying as he hid the full scope of his brilliance for most of his childhood after being accused of cheating. When he inherited his family's fortune upon his parents' death in a car accident, Adrian gave it away to see if he could be a success by himself. Veidt traced Alexander the Great's path across the globe and ultimately returned to the United States, where he became a successful businessman. However, when his business partner and would-be love interest overdosed on drugs (purchased with funds given to her by Adrian as a gift to allow her to have fun in
New York City one night), Veidt decided to avenge her death as a superhero. His costume was conceived as a Halloween costume but he quickly developed a name for himself as a hero. Two years before the Keene Act passed, Veidt went public with his
secret identity and began merchandising his alter ego as he became one of the most important businessmen in the USA. However, his fear of a nuclear war between the USSR and the US, plus a rivalry with the Comedian (who unknowingly planted the idea of stopping the inevitable
nuclear holocaust into Veidt's head), led to him engaging in the vast conspiracy at the heart of the
Watchmen series. Ozymandias was directly based on
Peter Cannon, Thunderbolt, whom Moore had admired for
using his full brain capacity as well as possessing full physical and mental control. Gibbons noted "One of the worst of his sins [is] kind of looking down on the rest of humanity, scorning the rest of humanity." In 2008, he was ranked number 10 on the
Forbes Fictional 15.
Wizard magazine also ranked Ozymandias as 25th-greatest villain of all time and
IGN ranked him as 21st-greatest comic book villain of all time. In the
Watchmen film, Veidt is portrayed by
Matthew Goode. His costume was designed to parody the rubber suits featuring nipples in the film
Batman & Robin. This incarnation of Veidt uses a German accent when speaking with friends and an American accent when speaking publicly. Instead of breeding a giant monster and placing it in New York to massacre half the city as in the comics, Veidt destroys New York, along with many major cities across the globe, with energy blasts designed to look as though Doctor Manhattan had caused it, bringing world peace. In the television series, Veidt is portrayed by
Jeremy Irons. In the years since 1985, he continued to run his companies and helped to advance technology beyond those of Doctor Manhattan, which the world feared due to its ties with cancer. However, Veidt became a recluse, and sometime before 2019, Veidt is reported to have died with his company acquired by Lady Trieu, revealed to be his daughter through artificial insemination. Veidt spent much of the time since 1985 in
Karnak, using the same teleportation device used for the squid to send storms of smaller squids randomly across the earth as to hold up the pretense of an alien invasion and ward off further international conflict. To his dismay, the world did not become the utopia he hoped to oversee, and in 2009, he took Doctor Manhattan's offer to be transported to a closed ecosystem Manhattan had created on
Europa to be adored by clones of two servants, Phillips and Crookshanks. Initially pleasing, Veidt soon became bored and instructed the first Phillips to become an adversary to him, the Game Warden. The Seventh Kavalry had somehow obtained pre-recorded footage that Veidt made in the event that
Robert Redford became President of the United States. Over the next eight years, Veidt was able to briefly escape the ecosystem to leave a message to Lady Trieu for rescue, which comes in the form of an automated craft. For the trip back to Earth, Trieu turned him into a gold statue, having him revert to his human state years later so that he could witness her destruction of Manhattan and attempted harnessing of his powers. Transported back to his lair in Antarctica by Manhattan, Veidt uses his squid teleportation device to attack Tulsa so that he can stop Trieu from becoming a god. He is successful, only to be arrested by Wade Tillman and Laurie Blake. In the animated film
Watchmen Chapter I, Veidt is voiced by
Troy Baker. == Minor characters ==