Yoko Tsuno volume 7: The Curious Trio


By Roger Leloup (Cinebook)
ISBN: 978-1-84918-127-3

The edgy yet uncannily accessible European exploits of Japanese scientific adventurer Yoko Tsuno began gracing the pages of Spirou from the September 24th issue in 1970 and are still going strong.

The mind-blowing, eye-popping, extremely expansive multi-award winning series was created by Belgian author, artist and novelist Roger Leloup who was born in 1933 and worked as one of Herge’s meticulous background assistants on the iconic Adventures of Tintin strip before striking out on his own.

Compellingly told, superbly imaginative yet always framed in hyper-realistic settings and sporting utterly authentic and unshakably believable technology, these illustrated epics were at the forefront of a wave of strips featuring competent, brave and immensely successful female protagonists which revolutionised European comics in the 1970s and 1980s and are as potently empowering now as they ever were.

The first Spirou stories ‘Hold-up en hi-fi’, ‘La belle et la bête’ and ‘Cap 351’ were all short introductory vignettes before Miss Tsuno truly hit her stride with premier epic Le trio de l’étrange which started serialisation with the May 13th 1971 issue.

Although the first of her 26 European albums, in English The Curious Trio was actually the 7th chronicle released by Cinebook and opens in a busy TV studio at midnight (back when actual humans pushed, pulled and focussed the clunky paraphernalia) where young Director Vic Van Steen loses his rag with best pal Pol Paris for falling asleep on his camera.

Later, still smarting from another fractious tiff, the pair walk home past a deserted construction site and espy what looks like a brilliant burglary…

The quietly flamboyant break-in is in fact a pre-arranged test by sleekly capable freelance Japanese electrical engineer Yoko Tsuno who has been hired by the owners of a major firm to test their new security. After apologising for nearly ruining her trial with their well-intentioned interference, the lads invite the enigmatic Yoko to join their film crew as sound engineer on a proposed outside shoot.

The job is to explore a range of flooded caves for a documentary and before the week is out the new friends are hauling equipment to a spectacular cavern ready to work out the technical details. No sooner do they begin however than something goes terribly wrong and the trio are dragged deep underground by the irresistible, swirling waters…

From here the remarkably realistic strip takes a huge leap into the uncanny as their subterranean submersion dumps them into a huge metal-shod vault where they are taken prisoner by blue-skinned humanoids.

The colossal complex is of incredible size and, as the captives are bundled into a fantastic vessel which runs on rails via magnetic levitation and driven even deeper underground, a handy translation helmet enables the only friendly-seeming stranger to explain.

Her name is Khany and her race, the Vineans, have been sleeping in the Earth for almost half a million years…

However since recently awakening internecine strife has entered the lives of the colonists as ambitious militaristic brute Karpan constantly manoeuvres to seize power from the vast electronic complex known as The Centre which regulates the lives of the colonists.

The humans’ first meeting with the blustering bully does not go well after he tries to beat Khany, and martial artist Yoko gives him a humiliating and well-deserved thrashing…

In his fury Karpan attempts to disintegrate them but is pulled away by security forces. As the newcomers resume their trip to the Centre he secretly follows their magnetocarrier, resolved to destroy them…

As they hurtle to unimaginable depths in the maglev ship, Khany introduces the humans to a stowaway – her young daughter Poky – and relates the astounding tale of the Vineans’ escape from planetary doom and two million light-year voyage to Earth. Accustomed to subterranean living, when they arrived they hollowed out a mountain and dug down even further.

Her history lesson is interrupted by Karpan’s murderous attack, which is only thwarted by Yoko’s quick thinking and her companions’ near-insane bravery…

Eventually, after another, far more subtle murder attempt, the badly damaged magnetocarrier reaches its destination and the astonished visitors are brought before a stupendous computer to plead their case and expose Karpan’s indiscretions.

The vast calculator dubbed The Centre controls every aspect of the colony’s life and will deliver judgement on the human invaders’ ultimate fate, but after mind-scanning Yoko its pronouncement is dire: the strangers are to be placed in eternal hibernation…

When Pol plays his long-hidden trump card and threatens to destroy the machine with a stolen disintegrator, diplomatic Khany proposes a solution; suggesting simply waiting until they can all confront the still-absent Karpan…

Yoko is still deeply suspicious and not convinced that Karpan is responsible for every attempt on their lives. Whilst she’s resting that “night”, Poky sneaks into her habitation chamber and takes her on an illicit tour of the underside and innards of the impossibly huge complex that verifies her suspicions with a ghastly revelation.

What they expose is a horrific threat not just to the Vineans – Karpan included – but to every human on the surface of Earth…

The eerie mystery then explodes into spectacular action and a third act finale worthy of a James Bond movie as Yoko’s duel with an incredible malign menace settles the fate of two species…

Absorbing, rocket-paced and blending tense suspense with bombastic thrills, spills and chills, this is a terrific introduction to a world of rationalist mystery and humanist imagination with one of the most unsung of all female action heroes and one you’ve waited far too long to meet…
Original edition © Dupuis, 1979 by Roger Leloup. All rights reserved. English translation 2012 © Cinebook Ltd.