Arthur, King of Time and Space is a
"gag-a-day"
web
comic by Paul Gadzikowski, based on
Arthurian
legend.
The strip started on
May 21,
2004,
with
Arthur
pulling the sword
Excalibur from the stone while
Merlin looked on, and
is projected to continue more or less in realtime, with the
characters aging and the plot progressing one year for each year of
the strip's run.
The premise of the strip is that Arthur's
destiny is too great to be contained within a single lifetime, and
that Arthur and his associates exist at multiple points in space
and time. This allows Gadzikowski to tell a number of parallel but
contrasting versions of the story in different settings, switching
between them for dramatic, humorous, or rhetorical effect.
There
are three major settings/
story arcs:
The "fairy tale arc", a straight (allowing for the
fact that it's a humor strip) retelling of the legend. Arthur is
the High King of Britain
in a time that's nominally the fifth century A.D. but is laced with
anachronisms and
fantasy. Merlin,
Arthur's trusted advisor, is a wizard and knows the future, but
Arthur never heeds his warnings.The "space arc", a space opera re-envisioning of the legend with
Star Trek
and Star
Wars influences. Arthur is the High King of all British
space during the decline of the Roman interstellar empire, and
commanding officer of the starship Excalibur, which is the largest
and best ship left in British space. Guinevere and Lancelot are members of his crew. Merlin, Arthur's
trusted advisor, is from an advanced alien race, the Avalonians, and knows the future
because he's been there (the Avalonians have time travel), but Arthur
never heeds his warnings.The "contemporary arc". Arthur is a US
high school student - since (as the strip makes a point of
mentioning) the age of majority in the modern US is higher
than in fifth century England, it will be some time before he
becomes this arc's version of High King - who has an after-school
job at the comics shop owned by his art teacher, Merlin, and spends
the rest of his free time playing online role-playing games in which he teams up with
Guenevere and Lancelot. Merlin draws a web comic, opening the way
for metahumor, and has a young ward, Nimue; if he knows the future, he's not letting
on.In addition to the three major arcs, there are a number of
secondary arcs, which appear less often and don't parallel the
overall plot as closely. So far these include:
The western arc, in which
Arthur is sheriff in an
old
west town, with Lancelot et al. as his deputies. The western
arc follows the overall arc in the broad outlines (while the
newly-crowned king has trouble gaining the respect of his subject
kings, the newly-appointed sheriff has trouble gaining the respect
of the local ranchers),
but not in all the details (Arthur, Guinevere, and Lancelot begin
as adults, unlike the other ongoing arcs where they start out in
their teens).The movie
parody arcs. These arcs,
while containing character and situational parallels, completely
ignore the overall plot arc, instead running through the plot of
the relevant movie in slightly over a week. Movie parody arcs to
date have included:*The Lord of the
Rings, with Arthur-as-Frodo Baggins bound to destroy the "One
Grail" with the
aid of Merlin-as-Gandalf, Lancelot-as-Aragorn, etc.*Star Wars, with Arthur
as Luke
Skywalker and Merlin as Obi-Wan Kenobi (and a "behind-the-scenes"
joke with several female characters protesting the cartoonist's
casting of Princess Leia).Other settings - such as the
prehistoric setting in which Arthur is a
caveman and Excalibur is a
pointy rock - have made
one-off appearances to support specific jokes.
Other characters
that have featured in the major arcs so far
include:
Kay: Arthur's
adoptive brother. In the space arc, he is running things while
Arthur's away on the Excalibur. In the contemporary arc he attends
high school and (unlike Arthur) can't wait to be an
adult.Morgan: In the fairy tale arc, Morgan le Fay
is a sorceress allied with Faerie, plotting against Arthur. In the space arc,
Morgan (who is married to King Uriens of Gore) is allied with the
otherdimensional Fae, and has a grudge against Arthur, but is
unable to act against him because of a time paradox - a younger
version of herself, who is still Merlin's apprentice and only
beginning to think of allying with the Fae, is a crewmember on the
Excalibur and a rival with Guinevere for Arthur's affections. In
the contemporary arc, Morgan Cornwall (who is engaged to Uriens
Gore, a Senior Vice-President at Excalicorp), is Arthur's drama
teacher, who had a relationship with Merlin as a
student.Lot of Orkney: In both the fairy tale
and space arcs, Lot is a petty king opposed to Arthur's rule. He is
married to Morgan's sister Morgause and has an idealistic son, Gawain, whose loyalty to Arthur drives
him to despair. He has not yet appeared in the contemporary
arc.Tristram: In
the fairy tale arc, Tristram has been sent to Camelot by his uncle,
King Mark
of Cornwall to keep him away from the King's wife Isolde. He is openly antagonistic to
Merlin (this not being part of the original legend). In
the contemporary arc Tristam (as "sadslacker") joined Arthur's
online RPG group while Lancelot ("lakeboi") was absent, and
remained on his return. It was recently revealed that the
contemporary Tristam's uncle is the CEO of a large company, and is
married to a doctor whom Tristam loves.External links
Arthur, King of Time
and Space Main Page