First
Prog: 34
Final
Prog: 374
Total
appearances: 70
-including
strips in StarLord, but not his prolific output for Eagle or any
other IPC comics.
NB He's
mostly credited as Jack Adrian, but he used his own name a few times,
not to mention a handful of bizarre, typically one-off pseudonyms.
Creator credits:
Creator credits:
TimeQuake
Lowder in a nutshell - time travel antics meet a gruff response. Art by Ian Kennedy |
Other writing credits:
Dan Dare
Judge
Dredd
MACH 1
Invasion
Ro-Busters
Future
Shocks and Time Twisters
Notable
character creations:
See, I
want to write down the main guy from TimeQuake here, but I can't
quite remember his name... Jack Blocker, perhaps?
More
notable, for sure, was his idea to fill up a Judge Dredd story with
copyright-bearing characters used in advertising, most famously the
Jolly Green Giant.
Lowder himself says this story was derived from 'the Island of Dr Moreau' - crazy creatures brought to life that then run amuck. It's a great hook for a 2000AD story! Art by Brian Bolland |
Notable
characteristics:
Plot
twists, especially involving time travel, people being selfish,
stupid, mean or even all three.
On
Chris:
In
the early days, Lowder (rhymes with soda, not with powder) was something of a go-to man for Tharg. A
dependable scripter for most of the series than ran in the early
years, plugging schedule gaps on Invasion,
MACH 1 and
even Dreddwith relative ease, although not necessarily making a big splash. By 1978, he was near the top of Tharg's 'on-call' list - he's
one of the few droids credited with three strips in a single Prog!*
I'm old enough to remember when the idea of a Channel Tunnel was the peak of sci-fi nonsense Art by Ian Kennedy |
This Future Shock hews rather closely to the first ever episode of the Twilight Zone, but it's pulled off with enough visual aplomb to give it a pass. Art by Brian Bolland |
Lowder turns straight to the military option (the more to show its limitations, natch) Art by Frisano |
Lowder's first 2000AD foray into time travel fun times! Art by Frisano |
Lowder
seems to suit a certain kind of protagonist, typically someone who's
looking to gain something for themselves, and generally is not
heroically single-minded as your Savages, Probes or Dredds.
In
theory, that would make him a poor fit for Dan
Dare, a heroic hero if ever there was
one. Except, this era of Dan Dare
is quite the strange beast. Deep into the 'Lost Worlds' section when
Lowder took over the scripting reins, Dare and his crew are exploring
strange, new worlds, and invariably falling foul of evil monsters
(not to mention evil crew members), often ending in genocide and
murder. (If you want a flavour of these strips without actually
reading them, I point readers to early episodes of Space Spinner
2000, who expressed great glee for this run of Dan
Dare!).
Attack of the giant tentacle monster! Art by Dave Gibbons |
Attack of the secret worm monster! Art by Dave Gibbons |
The
point is, Lowder is not so interested in exploring Dan Dare's
character or general mission (inasmuch as there was a mission).
Instead, he wants to give young readers the good stuff: shapeshifting
worm creatures, death planets aplenty, and people going space-crazy.
It's good, unclean fun, and probably exactly the sort of thing that
really soured any readers who had grown up with original Eagle-era
Dan Dare. I hadn't, and this era is my favourite Dan Dare for sure.
Uncomplicated shooting action... in space! Art by Dave Gibbons |
Art by Dave Gibbons |
I'm a sucker for villains who turn into giant killer worms. Art by Dave Gibbons |
Meanwhile,
Lowder finally got to deliver his own series, beginning in the pages
of StarLord. It's time-travelling coppers in TimeQuake!
Again, it's not so much about the characters as it is about the
plots. We meet a somewhat generic 2000ADish 'hero' from 1970s Britain
who is trigger happy, a bit selfish, and generally grumpy, who finds
himself kidnapped by the Time Police to help them capture a
time-travelling crimelord from the same era.
Cue lots of 'what the hell's going on' type dialogue, and something of a romp across the more fun bits of world history, especially Aztecs and Nazis, because that's what you do in time travel stories.
Lowder ladles on this sort of stuff, with an added measure of 'ooh, which
one of the 'goodies' is going to betray them / turn out to be a
baddie'. More fun than that were the sequences dealing with 'all this
mucking about in time is wrecking the entire space-time continuum'
stuff, complete with 'am I in danger of erasing my own existence'
shenanigans. To some extent it's cliché territory, but to a greater
extent this was all quite new at the time (well, I imagine it was to
most readers?), and it's handled clearly.
Blocker is pretty much the archetypal 2000AD protagonist: quick with his fists, hot tempered, and will not take orders! Art by Ian Kennedy |
Cue lots of 'what the hell's going on' type dialogue, and something of a romp across the more fun bits of world history, especially Aztecs and Nazis, because that's what you do in time travel stories.
What?! A traitor - what an unexpected twist. Art by Magellanes Salinas |
Gotta love those paradoxes Art by John Cooper |
For
my money, that first StarLord series of TimeQuake
went on a few episodes too long, while the second series, this time
in 2000AD proper, was somehow too short. Tharg could have brought it
back for more, but I guess never quite found the room for it.
By the time of the second TimeQuake outing, Blocker had evolved into the other archetypal 2000AD protagonist: completely blasé about all the craziness going on around him. |
Lowder
was kept busy instead on Ro-Busters,
writing a couple of longish stories that ran in the second half of
StarLord. He very much wrote 'sarcastic robots doing rescue mission
work' stories, which are fine, but they haven't stood the test of
time given that Pat Mills took the story back for 2000AD, and
essentially ditched any and all 'rescue mission' antics in favour of
telling stories leading up to / about class war / robot rebellion
against human masters. It maybe doesn't help that these are examples of decent scripts let down by mediocre art.
Lowder's Ro-Jaws gets in the action much more than he usually does. Art by Jose Ferrer |
Art by Carlos Pino |
Lowder poking fun at editor Kelvin Gosnell Art by Carlos Pino |
To
be honest, all of this is a mere prologue for Lowder's lasting impact
on 2000AD, namely his many Time
Twisters. A self-confessed fan of time
travel fiction, he apparently pestered Steve MacManus enough until he
was given free reign to write Future
Shocks with a time travel theme that
got their own series moniker.
More Lowder aliens having a lark. This one's neither a Future Shock, nor a Time Twister, but very much falls into both camps. Art by John Higgins |
Yes,
Alan Moore is the celebrated author of micro-epics including The
Reversible Man, and Chronocops,
but Lowder put in the hard graft writing nearly twice as many as
anyone else. In the process, he left no classic time travel paradox
unexplored! Frankly, if you want a primer in the fundamentals of what
unintended consequences time travel could wreak, you may as well read
a collection of Chris Lowder's Time
Twisters**. The perils /
impossibilities of inventing time travel. Accidentally littering
history with its own greatest monsters. Discovering that no one
actually wrote Shakespeare's plays. The reality that even time-crime
doesn't pay.
Sometimes, people just blunder into trouble |
This one's a time travel cracker: how do you escape your destiny? Art by Mike Dorey |
With
Lowder, there's nearly always the added bonus of horrible people
being horrible to each other, the scheme that goes wrong because of
human nature, and human ineptitude winning the day. And, of course, a
general undercurrent of comedy. Lowder's basic writing style is
exactly in keeping with 2000AD – big, simple ideas, told with
mean-spirited people, spiced with violence and humour. Not his fault
he was being printed alongside peak Wagner, Grant and Mills, who took
the same ingredients to new heights!
Who killed who? It's time travel 101 Art by Carlos Ezquerra |
For now,
that's where Lowder's 2000AD story ends, set quietly to one side
along with other esteemed 'first wave' writers such as Tom Tully,
Alan Hebden and Gerry Finley-Day. I believe he continued writing
Eagle strips, but unless he has a time travel scheme that'll see a
new script emerge one day from the past, those Time Twisters will remain his great
legacy.
Personal
favourites:
Dan
Dare: Doppelganger;
Garden of Eden
Future
Shocks: Fangs, What hit Tunguska?
Time
Twisters: This is Your Death;
the Perfect Crime; the Impossible Murders; Running out of Time; the Contract
OK, it took two episodes and a hell of a lot of 'we caused disaster x' jokes along the way, but this pun is SO forced it's kinda delightful. Art by Jesus Redondo |
*Prog 78,
fact fans. Off the top of my head, there are four others who've
achieved this feat. Share your answers on a forum post for the chance
to win a... something?
**No such
collection exists. Although I remain hopeful that Rebellion's current
annual project of collecting ALL the Future Shocks, in order, will
include sweeping up the Time Twisters, Terror Tales and other
assorted one-off tales. Even if it has to be in a 'Restricted Files'
kind of way.
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