***
In 1999 the
world was introduced to the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. The comic
series created by comic book mastermind Allan Moore and artist Kevin O’Neil
took Victorian characters and brought them together as a supergroup (in both
senses of the word). The conceit of the LoEG comics is that everything
that has happened in fiction is real. Dracula stalked the same London as
Sherlock Holmes, Mr. Hyde and the Invisible Man.
When the first
comic starts, the League has been in existence for over 100 years, founded by
Shakespeare’s Prospero at the behest of England’s Fairy Queen. In the first
volume of the LoEG, Mina Murray, the heroine of Dracula, must assemble a team
together to battle the mysterious Fu Manchu, while in the second they must help
defeat an invasion from Mars.
The story of
the LoEG has continued over the decade since its introduction, with two
complete series (Vols. 1 & 2), a standalone graphic novel (the Black
Dossier) and the current storyline, Century.
Century has
been published as a series of standalone books that tell the story of the
League and their attempts to foil the plan of Crowley-esque Satanist Oliver
Haddo’s plan to create the Moon Child, a sort of anti-christ.
The third book
of Century, Let It Come Down, is set in 2009 and scheduled for release this
July. What’s of interest to the reader of this blog is this panel from the
newest book.
The hero is
walking through a modern London, passing a Wellesian Martian tripod that is a
memorial to the Martian invasion.
At one point,
he strolls by a poster for DriveShaft’s new album, Oh, Who Cares? (a reference
to Nirvana’s Nevermind), and that sets gears moving.
The majority
of the LoEG’s sources to date have been literary. This doesn't’ surprise
me. I imagine that unlike Harlan Ellison, Moore doesn’t have a huge tv in
his living room. He is the type who declares a disinterest in pop culture
and I expect he follows that up. The only TV character who’s been in the series
to date was Emma Peel from The Avengers.
But it’s great
to think about how well the tale of the Island and the castaways fit into the
larger world of the LoEG.
The world of
the League would nicely encompass the characters of Lost. There are still
musicians, con men, fugitives and surgeons. Jack’s own drug problems
mirror nicely those of Allan Quatermain, and Sawyer and Kate’s brushes with the
law are practically jaywalking tickets compared to the invisible man’s violations.
The tensions created by having a former Republican Guardsman on the
island pale in comparison to having a cornerstone of the team be a Sikh
revolutionary, even if they’re both talented engineers in their own ways.
An island
capable of movement, inhabited by a number of factions seeking to control its
powers for their own goals? That fits nicely.
A major
divergence is in the morality of the two stories. In the League, there’s
often a great deal of pragmatism applied to the resolution of problems.
To defeat the martians, for example, humans must resort to biological
warfare (did you really think it was just a common cold?). Lost has a
Manichean worldview. There is good and there is bad. They are opposed,
much like the dual sides of a backgammon piece or the opposing poles of two
magnets.
The island can
be considered to be, as in the original Lost narrative, as a staging ground for
the conflict between good and evil. It has, in the League’s world as much
as the original, sealed itself away to act as a battleground between the forces
which serve the Alpha and the Omega, the forces of Jacob and Barry.
Of course, as
part of the world of the League, it’s possible that many fictional explorers
may have found their way onto the Island’s shores. Imagine, for example,
Lemuel Gulliver or Robinson Crusoe finding themselves shipwrecked on its
shores. Would they be candidates, or just hapless castaways? Could
Captain Nemo have found himself encountering the island, perhaps with his
League companions or just with his storied crew?
Professor
Challenger might certainly have found his way onto the island in the past, and
it would be amusing to see contemporary explorers Dirk Pitt or Lara Croft
attempt to explore its mysteries.
The reference to
Lost in the new League story is likely a throwaway one, but it’s still exciting
to imagine how the stories of the island might fit into a larger fictional
universe.
Justin Mohareb has killed more magazines than most Hindus have had steak dinners. He currently has a moribund blog a relatively quiet podcast and he also writes for Biff Bam Pop and does editing for TDot Comics.
Justin Mohareb has killed more magazines than most Hindus have had steak dinners. He currently has a moribund blog a relatively quiet podcast and he also writes for Biff Bam Pop and does editing for TDot Comics.
4 comments:
Barry!!! I had to laugh even though I should have seen it coming.
Well written with lots of insight. I guess I should really read the comics then. Right?
Might prove to be very insightful ... being a LOST fan and all.
Well done, Justin. :)
Nice column. I was worried there for a second when I saw that panel, worried that Century #3 was already out and I was going to have to yell REAL LOUD at my comic shop. That thing's been on my pull list for three years, and it's weird to have something like that - a comic which seems to come out annually. I'm not complaining - the man's a genius, and I'd wait a decade between issues for LOEG.
But one thing I take issue with is this: I imagine that ... Moore doesn’t have a huge tv in his living room. He is the type who declares a disinterest in pop culture and I expect he follows that up.
A statement that I counter with a quote from the man himself (from an EW interview he did):
EW:Do you ever relax and just watch television?
Alan Moore: Selectively, mostly on DVD. The absolute pinnacle of anything I've seen recently has got to be The Wire. It's the most stunning piece of television that has ever come out of America, possibly the most stunning piece of television full-stop.
See? TV. And GOOD TV. I don't think he's disinterested in pop culture - he's just smart enough to ignore the shit.
Good stuff, Justin!
I'm pretty sure I know where you can find the comics, Senexmacdonald. ;)
How awesome is that picture!? You should instruct your friends and family that if ever you went missing, this is the picture they should distribute.
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