Art on Paragon Paradox by Scott Twells - more on him in the next part! |
Happy new year, and welcome to the second instalment of my
rambling commentary on 'The Paragon Paradox' from PARAGON Annual 2016. (First part here.) In choosing my Paragon Patrol, I
had three characters in mind from the off. Obviously I'd use Spencer Nero - Ekhidna
was his nemesis, after all, and I figured his tendency to jump to conclusions
might cause a bit of friction with his peers. But although leaning heavily on
Spencer Nero continuity with the story, I wanted Jikan to take a leading role. He's the comic's flagship character -
PARAGON's equivalent of Judge Dredd -
and I deliberately held back his arrival till Part Two to give it more
impact. Jikan subsequently galvanises the team and is pivotal to all that
happens afterwards. I've never written Jikan before, and whilst he looks like
Toshiro Mifune, I originally thought he should probably come across like
Tomisaburo Wakayama - Ogami Itto from
the 'Lone Wolf and Cub' movies. (Yeah, I know they're based on some remarkable
comics - I have the first couple of volumes - but I saw the movies first and
they've had a lasting impact.) That notion
didn't really stick - Jikan seems more amiable than the gruff Lone Wolf - but
he does carry out some theatrically over-the-top blood-letting that is
hopefully in the spirit of the films.
Lettering by Jim Campbell |
Next up was Ganesh:
a mainstay of early issues of PARAGON, who these days only appears in his 'Li'l
Ganesh' or 'Oor Ganesh' incarnations (both of whom also make cameos.) I wanted
to bring him back in his full atomic-stomping glory. I wrote him as quite
knowing and slightly fed-up - he really just wants to get back to his celestial
garden, but the universe keeps conspiring against him, in ways whose outcome is
all too clear to him. I also gave him a slightly pompous side - he's a god
amongst mortals, after all.
Spencer Nero's
role in the story is basically to screw things up. Everything that happens is
his fault (dating right back to PARAGON #13) and he doesn't make things any
better by picking fights with his team-mates, getting his uncle into
difficulties, and breaking the entire multiverse.
It's a running theme that
Spencer is often architect of his own troubles, or at least doesn't always make
things easier for himself, and that plays out in spades here. But what's really
significant is that this is the story that properly settles whether or not the
Janus Mask does actually have mystic powers, or whether it's all in Spencer's
head. It turns out it does indeed have remarkable, untapped powers - but
Spencer's spent fifteen years using it on its most basic 'setting'! Might we
now witness him trying to explore these powers in future stories? We shall see.
There's something of same conceit here that Arnold Rimmer faced in Red Dwarf:
Back to Reality - the suggestion that he was stuck playing the useless-gimp-cover-identity
of a vastly more capable secret agent.
So, who would the fourth man be? Originally, I thought
Icarus Dangerous might be good, not least since he actually hails from Ancient
Greece, and would therefore be a logical fit with Ekhidna. I imagined Spencer
Nero would look at him with the same kind of star-struck awe in which teenage
girls view boy bands - a living, breathing person from classical mythology! But
that didn't prove possible, so Davey Candlish suggested I use Bulldog. Bulldog was created by Jason Cobley,
who very kindly agreed to let me write his character - for a brief history,
have a look at Jason's blog here.
Bulldog I saw as working-class (even though he's an officer),
effective and fairly blunt - the sort of chap who might prick the pomposity of
the more flamboyant members of the team, and undercut their pretensions with a
dry quip. Bulldog's role swiftly became the guy who gets things done - the reliable,
sensible backbone of the squad. Compared to the other three, he seemed a much
more straightforward, much less troubled character. In some strange way, it
felt to me like having Bulldog in the story somehow 'legitimised' it, helping
draw a clear line to some thirty years of small-press comics history (but more
on that in the next post.)
So, this was the team, with a few others pencilled in as
cameos, to show Ekhidna's impact on various parallel worlds. Except, in my
original synopsis, Ekhidna was only the first villain the heroes would face -
she'd swiftly be superseded by a related character (and, in even earlier
drafts, his minions too), out for revenge. I'm not going to name these fellas
here, as I still hope to bring them into 'Spencer Nero' in the future, but if
you know your Greek mythology, you'll know that Ekhidna didn't create most of
the monsters of antiquity on her own...
The problem was, of course, that this was wildly overambitious,
and as usual, I was trying to squeeze too much in. At one stage, I even wanted
some of the PARAGON heroes to end up stuck in the dimensions of the cameo
characters - I had a plan that they'd have to escape from Oor Ganesh's Dudley
Watkins dimension, in which Spencer Nero (secretly Scottish - see PARAGON
Annual 2015) might end up going native. Actually, I still like that idea -
might make for an interesting Nero two-or-three pager.
Oor Ganesh, by Davey Candlish |
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