The Adventures of Blake and Mortimer volume 11: The Gondwana Shrine


By Yves Sente & André Juillard, coloured by Madeleine DeMille & translated by Jerome Saincantin (Cinebook)
ISBN: 978-1-84918-094-8 (Album PB/Digital edition)

Win’s Christmas Gift Recommendation: Blockbuster Thrills No Movie Can Match… 9/10

Edgar P. Jacobs devised one of the greatest heroic double acts in pulp fiction: pitting his distinguished scientific adventurers Professor Philip Mortimer and Captain Francis Blake against a daunting variety of perils and menaces in a sequence of stellar action-thrillers blending science fiction scope, detective mystery suspense and supernatural thrills. The magic was made perfect through his stunning illustrations, rendered in the timeless, infinitely accessible Ligne Claire style which had made intrepid boy-reporter Tintin a global sensation.

The Doughty Duo debuted on 26th September 1946: gracing the pages of the very first issue of Le Journal de Tintin: an ambitious international anthology comic with editions in Belgium, France and Holland. It was edited by Hergé, with his eponymous, world-famous star ably supplemented by new heroes and features for the rapidly-changing post-war world.

Blake and Mortimer are the graphic personification of Britain’s sadly lost and blighted Bulldog Spirit: and worthy spiritual successors to Sherlock Holmes, Allan Quatermain, Professor Challenger, Richard Hannay and all the other intrinsically decent stalwarts of lost Albion and valiant champions with direct connections to and allegiance beyond shallow national boundaries…

Following decades of fantastic exploits, the series apparently ended with the 11th album. The gripping contemporary adventure had been serialised between September 1971 and May 1972 in LJdT, but after Les trois Formules du professeur Sato: Mortimer à Tokyo was completed, Jacobs abandoned his story due to failing health and personal issues.

Edgard Félix Pierre Jacobs died on February 20th 1987, having never returned to the extended adventure. Concluding volume Les trois Formules du professeur Sato: Mortimer contre Mortimer was only released in March 1990, after the Jacobs family and estate commissioned veteran cartoonist Bob de Moor to complete the tale from the originator’s pencils and notes.

The long-postponed release led to re-release of the earlier volumes, and was followed in 1996 by new adventures from two separate creative teams hired by the Jacobs Studio who would henceforth produce complete books rather than weekly serials.

The first was L’affaire Francis Blake by Jean Van Hamme & Thierry “Ted” Benoit which settled itself into a comfortably defined, familiar 1950s scenario for a rousing tale of espionage and double-dealing. Controversially, it omitted the elements of futuristic fiction and fringe science which had characterised Jacobs’ tales and focused on the suave MI5 officer rather than bombastic, belligerent boffin and inveterate scene-stealer Mortimer…

The same was broadly true for the follow-up release, published in 1999, although references to the space race and alien infestation did much to restore those fantasy credentials in Yves (XIII, Le Janitor, Thorgal) Sente & André (Bohémond de Saint-Gilles, Masquerouge, Arno, Mezek) Juillard’s La machination Voronov.

The latter team eventually won the plum job of detailing the early days and origins of the lads in Les Sarcophages du 6e Continent, Tome 1: La Menace universelle and Les Sarcophages du 6e Continent, Tome 2: Le Duel des Esprits. The albums were the 16th and 17th published exploits of the peerless pair: a boldly byzantine epic spanning decades and stretching from India under the Raj to Cold War Europe and deep beneath Antarctic ice…

The tale revealed how Blake and Mortimer first met in India before WWII: introducing Philip Angus Mortimer, his tragic first love and diabolical maniac scientist Emperor Ashoka before jumping to 1958 when the resurrected villain’s incredible technology and Soviet subversion threatened the entire world…

Battling the menace, Mortimer clashed again with despised arch nemesis Olrik who had become a crucial but unwilling tool in Ashoka’s scheme. Olrik’s previous susceptibility to the telecephalscope of Professor Septimus (see The Yellow M) made him an ideal candidate for Ashoka’s ultimate weapon: a system capable of turning cerebral energy into planet-spanning power affecting electrical devices, heavy machinery and solid objects with tremendous force.

In the final accounting, as a secret Antarctic base collapsed around them, the bitter foes abandoned their bodies to fight as pure unleashed mental entities in the planet’s ether, before being restored to their mortal frames as everything fell apart and Gondwana Base vanished in a welter of fire and ice.

Mortimer was evacuated with moments to spare, leaving the enemy to his well-deserved fate…

Released in 2008 but chronologically occurring some months after Mortimer was rescued from the ice and Ashoka’s mind machines, Le sanctuaire du Gondwana opens in drought-parched Africa as German scholar Professor Ulrich Heidegang explores the Ngorongoro crater and discovers something truly beyond comprehension. He barely escapes with his life but his sanity is shattered. Nevertheless, he presents to the global media an artefact that will forever change the history of humanity…

Months later in London, Professor Mortimer is still being treated by Dr. Mark Levy for the aftereffects of his out-of-body experience. Suffering headaches, vision problems, mood swings, and still partially amnesiac, he’s slowly rebuilding his life and relationships with the aid of captain Francis Percy Blake – who has returned to his job with MI5 – and other close friends.

Especially helpful in recovering his old life is Mortimer’s assistant Nastasia Wardinska and landlady/housekeeper Mrs Benson but the doctor still won’t allow him to return to work…

Nastasia is particularly keen to resume research. When the Antarctic citadel was destroyed, volcanic action unearthed manufactured artefacts that have since been determined as being over 350 million years old and constructed of a currently-impossible amalgam of diamond-sheathed gold!

After consulting with Blake and the copious notes for his long-delayed and postponed memoires, Mortimer opts to use his enforced leisure time to solve the mystery. Blake and old colleague Labrousse are already investigating the Antarctic site, so the Professor plans an oblique approach…

Using current geological theory and recent reports collated by archivist Mr Stone of the Daily Mail as the basis of his research, the Prof will explore another region of the world that was connected to Antarctica 350 million years ago. Rather callously rekindling an old romance with celebrated ethnologist and archaeologist Sarah Summertown, he then leads a small team to the Olduvai Gorge in Africa, which Stone’s incredible memory has pinpointed as the source of an amazing scoop: an ancient artefact with markings of diamond and gold…

None of the enthralled explorers are aware that all their efforts are being closely monitored and steered by a mysterious stranger…

Soon all the preliminaries are done and Mortimer’s team are interviewing Heidegang in his hospital room in Nairobi. The explorer has been driven mad by his experiences: hearing voices and talking of Lycaon beast-men and pre-human civilisations on a single supercontinent. He does, however, reveal the location of his find…

Whilst the searchers set out for the Ngorongoro crater, the story shifts to the mysterious stalker, who is revealed as the presumed-dead Olrik. Stalking the party, he organises a deadly squad of ne’er-do-wells, surveilling their spectacularly eventful safari as it endures incredible hardships and tragedy and striking just as they make contact with the hidden remnants of an immortal super-race who claim to be the Guardians of Gondwana…

The story then shifts into turbulent top gear as many disparate plot-strands stunningly converge and a single shocking revelation discloses the true history and ownership of Earth whilst exposing one of the heroes as anything but…

It all leads to a ruthless resumption of the duel between Olrik and Mortimer and the staggering intervention of Earth’s unseen overlords, who remove the annoyances and leave them to sort out their immediate issues elsewhere…

Binding many vivid facets of the heroes’ prestigious past exploits and achievements into a vibrant sci fi romp, this epic extravaganza blends antediluvian mystery with a savage vendetta to create a rousing quest yarn that delight fans of many genres.

These Cinebook editions also include previews and tasty teaser excerpts for other albums – Atlantis Mystery by Jacobs, and Sente & Juillard’s The Voronov Plot – plus a biographical feature and chronological publication chart of Jacobs’ and his successors’ efforts.

Gripping and fantastic in the truest tradition of pulp sci-fi and Boy’s Own Adventures, Blake and Mortimer are the very epitome of dogged heroic determination; never failing to deliver grand, old-fashioned thrills and spills in timeless fashion and with astonishing visual punch.
Original edition © Editions Blake & Mortimer/Studio Jacobs (Dargaud-Lombard S.A.) 2008, by André Juillard & by Yves Sente. All rights reserved. English translation © 2011 Cinebook Ltd.