Difference between revisions of "M.I.A."
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==Continuity== | ==Continuity== | ||
− | The [[London Clan]] is introduced in this episode - it is the first gargoyle [[clan]] | + | The [[London Clan]] is introduced in this episode - it is the first gargoyle [[clan]] known to have survived to the present day that did not have its origins in the [[Wyvern Clan]]. Other similar clans are introduced in "[[The Green]]" and "[[Bushido (episode)|Bushido]]". |
[[Leo]], [[Una]] and [[Griff]] appear for the first time. Griff will reappear in "[[Pendragon]]", and other members of the London Clan are shown in "[[The Rock]]". | [[Leo]], [[Una]] and [[Griff]] appear for the first time. Griff will reappear in "[[Pendragon]]", and other members of the London Clan are shown in "[[The Rock]]". |
Revision as of 02:35, 21 December 2007
"M.I.A." is the forty-third televised episode of the series Gargoyles, and the thirtieth episode of Season 2. It originally aired on December 21, 1995.
- Directed by: Kazuo Terada
- Story edited by: Gary Sperling
- Written by: Robert Cohen
Contents
Summary
Continuity
The London Clan is introduced in this episode - it is the first gargoyle clan known to have survived to the present day that did not have its origins in the Wyvern Clan. Other similar clans are introduced in "The Green" and "Bushido".
Leo, Una and Griff appear for the first time. Griff will reappear in "Pendragon", and other members of the London Clan are shown in "The Rock".
Goliath uses the Phoenix Gate, even though he had promised to prevent it from being used in "Avalon Part Three". In "Eye of the Storm" he similarly uses the Eye of Odin himself rather than giving it to Odin.
Tidbits
The notion of Goliath taking part in the Battle of Britain was a very early idea in Gargoyles (once it was redesigned as a serious adventure series rather than a comedy). Originally, the plan was for Goliath to be awake during the thousand years when the rest of his clan was in stone sleep, remaining in Castle Wyvern and guarding them for most of that time - but when the Second World War erupts, Goliath, realizing the gravity of the situation, fights alongside the RAF to prevent the Germans from conquering Britain and endangering Castle Wyvern and its sleeping gargoyles. When this notion of how Goliath spent the thousand years between 994 and 1994 was dropped, Greg Weisman still felt enamored enough of the notion of Goliath participating in the Battle of Britain that he looked for another way to allow for his presence there, and found it in the Phoenix Gate.
One of the RAF pilots in the Battle of Britain sequence (identified in the dialogue) is Douglas Bader, an actual historical figure who took part in the defense of London during the Blitz, and whom Greg Weisman had even met as a boy. (Bader is another human in the series who, after the initial astonishment at seeing gargoyles has worn off, readily accepts them, leading to a particularly great scene where he saves Goliath and Griff from a German bomber and then exchanges a thumbs-up with Griff.) The animators erred, however, in having him fly a Spitfire in this scene (he actually flew a Hurricane during the Battle of Britain).
The notion of Leo, Una, and Griff looking like a winged lion, unicorn, and griffon respectively came from English gargoyle sculptures with similar appearances.
According to Greg, the bulk of the London Clan (there's more of them, of course, than just Leo, Una, and Griff) lives on a country estate just outside London. Una serves as its leader; her second-in-command stays on the estate to look after things there.
Links
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