Nikolai Dante ended – for the most part – like it was supposed to, with the Russian Rogue finally vanquishing all of his worst enemies. There were terrible sacrifices (it’s still the only comic to make me cry over a piece of dead computer hardware) but there were also moments of heroism and compassion that ultimately saved the day.
This was always to be expected, since a
15-year action-filled saga was unlikely to end in despair and misery. But what
then? After freeing the world from tyranny, would Dante go out in his
prophesised blaze of glory, or would he rule an empire in a new and just age?
Well, neither, as it turned out. Instead
the story ends with two men playing Russian Roulette, with the winner wandering
out into the world, wondering what he’s going to do next.
And that’s it.
With its sexy and swaggering take on the
typical 2000ad killing machine, Nikolai Dante was the one strip that got me
reading the comic again after a decade-long break (with Dredd also contributing
a lot to that homecoming.) I fell for it hard.
Created by Robbie Morrison and Simon
Fraser, with able assistance from the great John Burns, Nikolai Dante has
undoubtedly been one of my favourite comics in the past decade. It was funnier
and openly sillier than the usual things you saw in 2000ad, but it could also crank
up the emotional intensity, while still finding room for the misadventures of a
rogue on a flying robot horse.
There were massive shifts in tone that
still felt organic, with the light tales of a gentleman thief and his
sci-fi shenanigans slowly shifting into a deeply dark war story, before
becoming something else that was a weird combination of both, before leading to
the expected grand finale in the past couple of years.
But when that grand finale was done, and
there was only epilogue, the final fate of the comic strip’s title character
was still unknown. And while there was certainly a lot of closure in those
final pages, I just didn’t think Sympathy For The Devil, that last story, would
turn out the way it did. And like Dredd, my first reaction was one of
disappointment.
Again, like the disappointment I felt when
I got to the end of Day of Chaos in Judge Dredd, this was almost all my own
fault. After all the Dante comics of the past decade, I was genuinely hoping
for some kind of Happily Ever After, but also ready for something a lot more
tragic.
To get something that doesn’t really fit
into either category – to get an ending that was so open-ended, after all that
– was a more than a bit disconcerting.
And yet… What other ending could there have
been for this comic?
After all, the appeal of Dante was always
that he didn’t quite do what was expected of him. He shamelessly stabbed his
most vicious foes in the back instead of taking them head on, and literally ran away from
offers of ultimate power.
So when it was all done, and he’d raised
his army of thieves & whores and brought down a terrible tyranny, Dante was
never going to be happy with the reins of ultimate power, and was just as
unlikely to throw his life away.
The need to burn out, rather than fade
away, is a fairly adolescent one, and after all he had been through - all the
war and death and family melodramas - Dante was too old for that shit.
(Besides, Morrison takes piss out of the
idea that Dante is going to bleed to death heroically pretty early on in
Sympathy For The Devil, with another Great Swordsman suddenly appearing, only
to be despatched almost instantly, just like all the other Dead Great Swordsmen
who crossed blades with Nikolai.)
And he can’t be the Tsar, because he was
just so unsuitable for that type of role, and the last conversation he has with
the previous ruler convinces him that he couldn’t handle that burden, and he
does not have the required cruelty to keep the peace.
He’s brought down an empire, but he is not
the man to rule it. He is the Tsar of All The Russias for just the briefest of
moments, before he walks away.
Even with an intense bout of Russian Roulette, in which Dante actually chooses to put the gun to his head, it certainly wasn’t what I was expected
from the final Dante story, and there was some disappointment when I did get
through the last five episodes in one go. This ending certainly wasn’t as
pessimistic as the climax to the latest Dredd mega-series in the pages of the
same issues, but I was – like Dredd – left wondering: ‘Is that it?’
But then I went back and read the past six
months of Dante stories, and it did feel like a more natural ending. It was more
obvious that there wasn’t be anything close to a fairy tale ending.
This last story is drenched in the main
character’s own uncertainty over his own ability to rule - the only time he
laughs is when he dives out a window to escape a wall of bureaucracy, and swings
across the city on some handy flagpoles. Even the love of his life – the fabulous
Jena Markov, can feel it, and isn’t surprised when he doesn’t show for the
wedding
I’m damned if I know what sort of ending I
was expecting, but the more I think about it, and the more I consider it, this
feels more and more like the only ending it could have ever had.
The first reaction to a comic story can be
a vital one – instantly crystallising an opinion that won’t ever be shaken. But
there are plenty of other comics that can be initially impressive, only to
appear more problematic as time and thought go by.
And there can be comics that initially
appear lackluster, or weak, or disappointing, only to later reveal themselves
to be anything but, and that’s been my experience with these Dredd and Dante
endings.
Any initial disappointment I felt while overdosing
on thrillpower in a London café has been almost completely replaced for a sneaky admiration for
both endings.
After all, they didn’t give me what I expected, and that’s a good thing – sometimes the best thing a story can do. To complain too much about that just feels childish.
Not giving me what I wanted? Yeah. That's it, all right.
After all, they didn’t give me what I expected, and that’s a good thing – sometimes the best thing a story can do. To complain too much about that just feels childish.
Not giving me what I wanted? Yeah. That's it, all right.
2 comments:
hey dude,
ill probably never see your response to this comment or know if you even got it, but i think you totally nailed a nice summary of the ending, literally just finished it 30mins ago, a part of me was sadisticaly dissapointed he didnt blow his brains out in the russian roulette, another part of me thoroughly expected a butch cassidy style ending, but really i always wanted the happilly ever after! i got none of them, not what i expected and not want the devil or angel on my shoulders wanted, it leaves it open, endings be damned! i frickin love dante, just wish i owned a few more comics so i could cut up and stick the pages in a frame XD
cheers,
joe
Endings be damned, indeed! I'd be interested in hearing what you think after you've had a few days/weeks/months to digest that ending, because I am certainly - if slowly - feeling more impressed by it...
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