 | The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Encyclopedia II - The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen - Synopsis
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen - Synopsis
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen - Volume one
Volume one opens with Mina Murray recruited by Campion Bond to assemble the League. Bond dispatches Miss Murray to Egypt along with an un-named "sea captain" (who later we discover to be Captain Nemo). Whilst in Cairo, Murray finds Allan Quatermain, who has become an opium addict. The duo are forced to flee to a port after Quatermain defends Miss Murray from a group of Arabs who attempt to rape her, killing two of their number. Down at the docks, Nemo emerges from the Nautilus and blasts the pursuing "mohammedan rabble" with a large harpoon gun, rescuing Murray and Quatermain.
Their next assignment is to head to Paris in order to rendez-vous with C. Auguste Dupin (a detective from Edgar Allan Poe's The Murders in the Rue Morgue) and capture a beast-man who transpires to be Dr Jekyll/ Mr Hyde. He has been hiding in Paris after faking a suicide, and preying on prostitutes. With Jekyll/Hyde successfully captured and handed over to MI6, the remaining trio head to a girl's school in Edmonton, run by the sado-masochistic Miss Rosa Coote. Rumours abound that many of the female pupils have become impregnated by the Holy Spirit. After a single night's investigation, the trio discover that the "Holy Spirit" is none other than Dr Hawley Griffin, the Invisible Man, who (much like Jekyll/Hyde) has been hiding since faking his own death. He is, by the way, attacking a girl certainly based on Elanor H. Porter's Pollyanna.
The League is then convened at its headquarters in the secret wing of the British Museum, where they are sent to recover a sample of cavorite from the clutches of Fu Manchu (who is not mentioned by name, for reasons of copyright).
Whilst Nemo decides to remain on board his submarine, the remaining quartet are dispatched to London's Limehouse district in order to discover more about the Chinese "devil-doctor". Murray and Griffin learn from an informant named Quong Lee (a storyteller from books by Thomas Burke) that Fu Manchu is indeed operating within the area and is planning something big, however Lee only gives them information in the form of a cryptic riddle, stating "The waters lap beneath the heavenly bridge. The dragon sleeps below it. My advice to you: do not awaken it". Although Griffin is skeptical, Murray concludes that Manchu's activities must be taking place beneath Rotherhithe Bridge. Meanwhile, Quatermain and Jekyll enter Manchu's lair itself (an opium den/bar), and Quatermain spots the doctor applying caustic paint to one of his victims. The duo are almost sussed as spies, however they manage to escape.
Back on board the Nautilus, the League convenes once more and Miss Murray pulls all the strings of evidence together. She believes Manchu had obviously stolen the cavorite for some nefarious purpose, and states that there is an uncompleted tunnel beneath Rotherhithe Bridge, which would be a perfect place for him to craft some form of aerial war machine without being discovered. Four of the group plan to infiltrate his lair and steal back the cavorite, with Nemo remaining on board the Nautilus.
It is Quatermain and Murray who first manage to get into the Chinaman's lair, and they discover a gigantic flying craft armed to the teeth with guns and cannons (which is obviously the "dragon" which Quong Lee spoke of in his riddle). Although they are discovered by a guard, an un-noticed Griffin is able to kill the guard and Quatermain takes his uniform, allowing him a disguise so that he might get inside the Dragon and steal back the cavorite. Griffin heads back outside to fetch Jekyll in the hopes of creating a diversion. Once inside one of the entrances (some form of office building/warehouse), Griffin infuriates Jekyll to such a degree that he becomes Hyde and begins slaughtering Manchu's henchmen.
Having stolen the cavorite, Murray and Quatermain are re-united with Hyde and Griffin in an underwater glass tunnel, and although they lock themselves in they realise it will only be a matter of time before Manchu's men burst in and kill all of them. Luckily, they are quickly able to come up with a plan and put it into action. Hyde grabs Quatermain and Murray, with Griffin holding onto his neck. Quatermain blasts a hole in the glass roof with his elephant gun and Miss Murray activates the cavorite, propelling the group upwards through the cascading water. Manchu's base is flooded, the Dragon is destroyed, and the Nautilus rescues the group as they fall back down into the Thames.
Bond congratulates the group upon the success of their mission, and leaves the Nautilus with the cavorite, telling them he will take it back to his superior M. However, Griffin is oddly absent from the group, having disguised a load of brooms (as himself) using his own bandages, spectacles and clothing. He follows Bond back to the Military Intelligence Headquarters, and discovers that M is in fact Professor Moriarty, the arch-nemesis of Sherlock Holmes. Moriarty has constructed his own aerial war machine, and with the cavorite he can now put it into action. Griffin returns to the Nautilus and informs the group of what he's discovered. Nemo realises that M is Moriarty, and also knows he plans to bomb London's east-end, wiping out what is left of Manchu's criminal empire.
The League embark on board the Victoria - a hot-air balloon owned by Nemo - and board Moriarty's ship. Hyde and Nemo begin an attack on the crew (Nemo using a machine pistol, Hyde using his fists), whilst Murray and Quatermain ascend to the top deck where Moriarty is waiting (Griffin has cowardly stripped and remains by the balloon, which is still anchored to the ship). Quatermain guns down Moriarty's guards using his own machine-gun, however the Professor disarms him and prepares to kill him. Just in time, Miss Murray smashes the case containing the cavorite and Moriarty foolishly rushes torward the device, grabs onto it, and propels himself into the night sky. The League leave the ship via the means of the balloon, and once again are rescued by the Nautilus, this time manned by Nemo's first mate Ishmael (the protagonist from Herman Melville's "Moby Dick").
The series ends with Mycroft Holmes congratulating the League for their work, telling them to remain in London should there be more for them to face in the future. The comic itself ends with the scene of Martian ships falling towards Woking, and thus sets in motion the second volume.
The book version of Volume one also includes a short prequel called Allan and the Sundered Veil, which features Allan Quatermain and the Time Traveller from H. G. Wells' The Time Machine.
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen - Volume two
Volume two opens on Mars, where John Carter and Gullivar Jones have assembled an alliance (including the Séroni from Out of the Silent Planet by C. S. Lewis) to defeat the aliens who have been bedeviling the native Martians. These prove to be the aliens from The War of the Worlds, who learn about Earth from the humans on Mars and launch themselves there.
When the aliens land on Earth, the League is dispatched to guard the crater in which they have landed. They are present when one of the first aliens emerges from the spacecraft, after an onlooker falls into the pit. When a team of men descend into the pit to make peace with the visitors, the aliens unleash the power of their "heat-at-a-distance machine" (i.e. a laser weapon). Before the weapon opens fire, Nemo realises its nature and pushes the group onto the ground, thus keeping them below the deadly beam while the rest of the massed crowd is cooked. Jekyll turns into Hyde and begins to rage, threatening the aliens with violent death. Realising that they can hardly fight the creatures, the League retire to a nearby inn, at which they run into a confident military division who have been sent to defend the crater. Hyde indulges in a somewhat compassionate conversation with Mina, and Griffin (under cover of invisibility) leaves to form an alliance with the Martians.
The next morning, the group emerge from the inn and hear the military shelling the spacecraft, only for the aliens to retalliate yet again with their laser weaponry. The army division is obliterated, as is the inn which the League were lucky enough to exit. A carriageman (William Samson Snr) arrives to take the group back to the British Museum, where they shall receive more orders from Mycroft Holmes. He tells Miss Murray to stay at the museum and learn what she can about Mars, also giving her the locations of the British gun emplacements. This puts her in extreme danger, as while Nemo, Hyde and Quatermain return to the crater in order to survey the situation, Griffin stays behind and assaults Murray.
During their reconnaissance, the other three members of the League come close to a Martian tripod, an enormous three-legged war-machine. They quickly return to their coach and are taken swiftly back to London. Upon returning, Hyde finds Miss Murray lying beaten on the floor and realises what has happened. Shortly afterwards, Mycroft Holmes sends Mina and Quatermain on a new mission, giving them very vague specifications concerning their task. In the meantime, Nemo and Hyde patrol London's rivers on board the Nautilus, attacking the Martians and retreiving their engineering when possible.
During their mission in the countryside, Mina and Alan encounter a man called Teddy Prendick, the protagonist from H.G. Wells' The Island of Dr. Moreau. He is obviously insane and gives them little information, save that in the woods nearby lurks a Doctor whom he once encountered. Their search is uneventful, and they return to a country inn. Quatermain remarks that he'll be damned "if (he) sleeps on the floorboards", while Mina replies that he doesn't have to. This leads to a situation in which the two of them make love, and the comic from this point splits between their love scene, a scene in which Hyde is beating a Martian tripod on board Nemo's submarine, and a quick three-panel "shot" of Griffin telling the aliens they "have to do something to the river". Awakening post-coitus, Quatermain discovers the scars on Mina's neck, and is seemingly horrified.
The next day, Nemo discovers that the Martians have used some sort of red weed on the river, and it has immobilised his submarine. Quatermain tells Mina that he was not shocked by the nature of her scars, but rather his second wife (named Estella, from Haggard's book "Allan's Wife") had similar scars on her own neck, and that he found it odd "that destiny should so distinguish the two women (he) loved the most". They engage in another love scene in the forest, but this time are disturbed by one of Dr. Moreau's animen, who is comically based on the children's comic-book character Rupert Bear, and indeed the rest of his animal-human hybrids are similar to famous characters from children's fiction ( e.g Mr Toad, Mr Rat, Mr Badger and Mr Mole from The Wind in the Willows).
Hyde returns to the British Museum and finds Griffin there. Taking full advantage of this chance encounter, Hyde exacts his revenge by brutally beating and then raping Griffin, "because (his) treatment of Miss Murray was uncivil..." Griffin is killed due to these injuries. Mina and Alan meet with Dr Moreau in his secret hideout in the forest, and tell him that Military Intelligence has asked for H-142. Moreau seems disturbed by this request, but obliges nonetheless and offers the duo dinner.
During dinner with Hyde back at the museum, Nemo discovers that the brute has killed Griffin, and attempts to kill him. He is held back by the coachman Samson, who urges him not to kill Hyde seeing as he is their only hope against the Martians. Nemo grudgingly obliges.
The following morning, Murray and Quatermain return to the city with H-142, finding gas-masked intelligence agents waiting for them, along with Agent Bond. They proceed to the riverside, where Nemo and Hyde are waiting for them. Bond says that all bridges apart from London Bridge have been blown up in a bid to impede the invaders, and that H-142 must be "delivered". As the League arrive at the bridge, they see that the Martians have all gathered on the other side. Bond leaves with the cargo crate carrying the hybrid.
Seeing that nothing is stopping the Martians from crossing, Hyde gives Mina a fond farewell, and dances out onto the bridge towards an oncoming tripod, singing happily. The machine attacks him but he survives, charging into its front leg and ripping it off. With the walking machine toppled, Hyde rips open the top hatch and eats the alien inside. The other tripods activate their rays and kill Hyde, followed by a gun retort from downriver. Nemo is curious as to what the guns could be firing, and Bond tells him the H-142 has been fired. Quatermain is confused, and Bond explains indifferently that it was indeed one of Moreau's hybrid, but was in fact a hybrid bacterium, made up of anthrax and streptococcus. Nemo is infuriated, and Bond coolly replies that officially the Martians will have been killed by the common cold, whilst any humans found dead will have been killed by Martians (crossing with Wells' storyline). Angered by the use of British government's heartless use of biological weaponry against its own people, Nemo leaves in the Nautilus and tells Quatermain and Murray to "never seek (him) again" mistakenly believing that they knew the British plan.
A month later, Mina and Alan are walking through Serpentine Park (which Allan says will soon be named after Hyde, thus giving it the name Hyde Park). Mina says that she is to leave for Coradine, a ladies' commune in Scotland, leaving Allan alone on a park bench, and ending volume two.
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen - The New Traveller's Almanac
Volume two has an extensive appendix, most of which is filled with an imaginary traveller's account of the alternate universe the League is set in. This Almanac is noteworthy in that it provides a huge amount of information (46 pages) of background information - all of which is taken from pre-existing literary works or mythology. This quasi-Expanded Universe shows the plot of the comic to be just a small section of a world filled with notable characters and places from world literature. The travel reports, mostly compiled from log entries by Mina Murray, Prospero and Captain Nemo, talk about topics such as:
Note: This list is not complete.
- A scientific investigation into the "Wonderland" from Lewis Caroll's Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass
- Scientific Investigations into C. S. Lewis's fantasy world Narnia
- Frequent mention of the King Arthur myth and the Holy Grail
- Reports on the countries discovered by Lemuel Gulliver in Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels, such as Laputa, Brobdingnag or the land of the Houyhnhnms
- A report from Thomas More's Island of Utopia, which has fallen apart under frequent wars
- A report of an expedition to the Black Lagoon
- H.P. Lovecraft's fictional Massachusetts village Innsmouth and the aquatic terrors the Deep Ones are mentioned by name (apparently the Deep Ones are rather capable singers).
- Arkham, another invention of Lovecraft's, is noted by Wilhelmina Murray, as is the Miskatonic River and Miskatonic University.
- Dunwich, a neighbor to Arkham, is spoken of.
- Jerusalem's Lot, the wicked town of Stephen King's novel Salem's Lot, is reported.
- The short story The Lottery is referenced, though, like many other things, not in name.
- Further mentions of Dr. Moreau and Edward Pendick, though Dr. Moreau is not mentioned by name in the Almanac.
- David Lynch's television series Twin Peaks is also mentioned by the name of the city
- Travel logs by Sindbad the Sailor from The Book of One Thousand and One Nights
- Mention of the island from William Golding's The Lord of the Flies (ironically, it is Sindbad who remarks that the island "would be a bad place for a group of schoolchildren to be marooned in")
- Mention of the small country of Klopstokia from WC Fields' movie Million Dollar Legs
- A report from the fabled country of Shangri-La
- Mention of the lost continents of Atlantis and Mu
- Report of a Pirates' Conference bringing together Captain Clegg, Long John Silver, Captain Hook and others
- Mention of Daniel Defoe's Robinson Crusoe
- Reports of El Dorado and the James Bond villain Goldfinger are included within.
- Mention of Paul Bunyan
- The chapter on the Americas includes a rather cryptic reference to the Coen Brothers' film The Big Lebowski.
- Another cryptic reference is to the Beatles' film Yellow Submarine as well as to Sergeant Pepper.
- The House of Usher is mentioned.
- The "proverbially pretty" town of Stepford and its agreeable women are mentioned.
- Reports from L. Frank Baum's Land of Oz
- Reports from Washington Irving's Sleepy Hollow
- Reports from Thule and Hyperborea
- Mention of the Monster from Mary Shelley's Frankenstein
- A rather bizarre take on Father Christmas, as well as allusions to Coca Cola's TV spots featuring Father Christmas and a family of polar bears
- In one of Wilhelmina Murray's many entries into the almanac, Dracula and his castle are mentioned, though not in name, leaving a bit to be assumed by the reader.
- A direct reference to Mervyn Peake's colossal castle Gormenghast.
- The fictional island Melniboné, created by Michael Moorcock, is referenced.
- Kurtz and Marlow, the main characters of Joseph Conrad's story Heart of Darkness are mentioned in the Africa chapter.
- Madame Butterfly is spoken of in the chapter on Asia.
- Robert E. Howard's lands of Cimmeria and Aquilonia are mentioned.
There are many more references, some of which are hard to spot and might be described as easter eggs for the connoisseur.
Other related archives20, 000 Leagues Under the Sea, 2003, A Princess of Mars, Alan Moore, Albert Campion, Alice in Wonderland, Allan Quatermain, America's Best Comics, Anno Dracula, Aquilonia, Ariel, Arkham, Arthur Conan Doyle, Atlantis, Auguste Dupin, Baroness Orczy, Black Lagoon, Bram Stoker, Bram Stoker's Dracula, British Museum, Brobdingnag, C. S. Lewis, Caliban, Captain Clegg, Captain Hook, Captain Nemo, Channel Tunnel, Charles Dickens, Cimmeria, Coca Cola, Comics Buyer's Guide, DC Comics, Daniel Defoe, David Lynch, Deep Ones, Dick Donovan, Doctor Syn, Dorian Gray, Dr. Crippen, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Dr. Moreau, Dracula, Dunwich, Edgar Allan Poe, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Edmonton, Edwin Lester Linden Arnold, El Dorado, Expanded Universe, Fanny Hill, Fantômas, Father Christmas, Frankenstein, Fu Manchu, Goldfinger, Gormenghast, Gulliver's Travels, H. G. Wells, H. P. Lovecraft, H. Rider Haggard, H.P. Lovecraft, Heart of Darkness, Henry Jekyll, Herman Melville, Holy Grail, Holy Spirit, House of Usher, Houyhnhnms, Hyde Park, Hyperborea, Ian Fleming, Innsmouth, Island of Utopia, James Bond, James Fenimore Cooper, Jason Flemyng, John Bunyan, John Carter, John Cleland, Jonathan Swift, Joseph Conrad, Jules Verne, July 7, Justice League of America, Justice Society, Kenneth Grahame, Kevin O'Neill, Kim Newman, King Arthur, King Solomon's Mines, L. Frank Baum, Land of Oz, Laputa, Last of the Mohicans, League of the Scarlet Pimpernel, Lemuel Gulliver, Lewis Caroll, Limehouse, London Bridge, Long John Silver, MI6, Madame Butterfly, Margery Allingham, Mark Twain, Mars, Martian, Martians, Mary Shelley, Melniboné, Mervyn Peake, Michael Moorcock, Mina Harker, Mina Murray, Miskatonic University, Moby Dick, Moby-Dick, Monica Bellucci, Mu, Mycroft Holmes, Narnia, Naseeruddin Shah, Natty Bumppo, Nautilus, Oliver Twist, Oscar Wilde, Out of the Silent Planet, Paris, Paul Bunyan, Peta Wilson, Phantom of the Opera, Philip José Farmer, Pollyanna, Professor Moriarty, Prospero, Richard Roxburgh, Robert E. Howard, Robert Louis Stevenson, Robinson Crusoe, Roger Moore, Rosa Coote, Rupert Bear, Russell Thorndike, Salem's Lot, Sax Rohmer, Scarlet Pimpernel, Scotland, Sean Connery, Sergeant Pepper, Serpentine, Shakespeare, Shane West, Shangri-La, Sherlock Holmes, Sindbad the Sailor, Sleepy Hollow, Steampunk, Stephen King, Stuart Townsend, Tears of the Sun, Thames, The Big Lebowski, The Book of One Thousand and One Nights, The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath, The Final Problem, The First Men in the Moon, The Invisible Man, The Island of Dr. Moreau, The League of Gentlemen, The Lord of the Flies, The Lottery, The Murders in the Rue Morgue, The Mysterious Island, The Picture of Dorian Gray, The Pilgrim's Progress, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, The Tempest, The Time Machine, The War of the Worlds, The Wind in the Willows, Thomas Burke, Thomas More, Through the Looking Glass, Thule, Tom Sawyer, Twin Peaks, United States, Victorian era, WC Fields, Washington Irving, William Golding, Woking, Wold Newton family, Yellow Submarine, addict, adventure, alternate universe, anthrax, bacterium, biological weaponry, caustic, cavorite, comedic television series, comic book, dragon, easter eggs, elephant gun, fictional world, film, first mate, graphic novel, harpoon, heat-at-a-distance machine, homage, hot-air balloon, laser, machine pistol, mini-series, mohammedan, opium, polar bears, prequel, prostitutes, red weed, riddle, science fiction, streptococcus, the Beatles, tripod, vampire, vicar, women
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Synopsis", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |