The Island of Dr. Moreau

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The Island of Doctor Moreau is an 1896 science fiction novel written by H. G. Wells, addressing ideas of society and community, human nature and identity, religion, Darwinism, eugenics, and the dangers of unchecked and irresponsible scientific research.

Contents

[edit] The novel

When the novel was written in the late 19th century, England's scientific community was engulfed by debates on animal vivisection. Interest groups were even formed to tackle the issue: the British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection was formed two years after the publication of the novel.

The novel is presented as a discovered manuscript, introduced by the narrator's nephew; it then 'transcribes' the tale.

[edit] Summary

After being rescued from shipwreck and brought to a mysterious island, Edward Prendick discovers that its inhabitants are the macabre result of experimental vivisections, the work of the visionary Dr. Moreau. In the interests of scientific advancement, the doctor has transformed various beasts into strange looking man-creatures, "human in shape, and yet human beings with the strangest air about them of some familiar animal."

Prendick slowly begins to recall the stories of infamous Moreau, known for his experimental science and work with morbid growths. Exposed by a journalist who published a pamphlet called The Moreau Horrors!, Moreau was shunned by the scientific community and forced to leave England.

Moreau and his assistant, Montgomery, eventually share more and more with Prendick concerning their eleven years of work on the island. The animals are held in check by a series of prohibitions which have been "woven into the texture of [the beast's] minds beyond any possibility of disobedience or dispute." These creatures have deemed these prohibitions as "the Law," which are repeated ad nauseam.

Not to go on All-Fours; that is the Law. Are we not men?
Not to suck up Drink; that is the Law. Are we not men?
Not to eat Fish or Flesh; that is the Law. Are we not men?
Not to claw the Bark of Trees; that is the Law. Are we not men?
Not to chase other Men; that is the Law. Are we not men?


According to Moreau, the Law is ever repeated and ever broken as it battles in the creatures' minds against the deep-seated, ever-rebellious cravings of their animal natures.

Apart from the Law, Moreau had infected the creature's dwarfed brains with a kind of deification of himself. Moreau explains that he fashions and attempts to educate the creatures only to find that when his influence is taken away, the "beast creeps back in and begins to assert itself again" through a reversion process. Once the beast-men begin to revert, Moreau releases them into the wild, taking no interest in them due to a sickening sense of failure. The loosed creatures form a community—"a mockery of rational life" according to Dr. Moreau—in an attempt to maintain a sense of humanity.

Prendick has no choice but to remain on the island as Moreau's guest. As he continues to observe life on the island, Prendick, along with Montgomery, eventually discover instances where the law has been broken: scratches on trees, creatures sucking water from a stream, and several mutilated and half-eaten rabbits. Realizing that one of the beasts has tasted blood, Moreau confronts the perpetrator, a rebellious leopard-man. When accused of the offence, Dr. Moreau is assaulted by the leopard-man, leading to the leopard-man being pursued and eventually shot dead by Prendick.

The slaying is the catalyst to a downward spiral of events. Moreau's most recent experiment, a puma, escapes before the transformation is complete. Moreau pursues the escaped puma and both are fatally wounded in a confrontation. With the knowledge of their creator's death, the animals begin to rebel, continually breaking the Law and imposing anarchy. Montgomery is forced to kill several of the beasts in self-defense. Overcome with a feeling of hopelessness, Montgomery becomes drunk and leaves Moreau's compound only to be slaughtered by some of the feral beasts. Prendick attempts to rescue Montgomery, but in his haste, accidentally sets the compound on fire.

With both Moreau and Montgomery slain and the compound burned to the ground, Prendick is forced to live for a time among the beasts. Appalled by the creatures' reversion process to their bestial natures, Prendick eventually makes his way back to the burned compound, surviving in Robinson Crusoe style until he happens upon a stranded sloop and is finally able to make his way out to sea.

Prendick is eventually rescued eleven months after his original disappearance at sea, and returns to England. His attempt to relay his experiences are written off as madness, the assumed effect of his tenure on the island.

[edit] Movie adaptations

The novel has been made into a movie on three occasions:

[edit] Popular culture

  • Dr. Moreau is also featured in the second volume of Alan Moore's comic book series The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. While never referenced in the novel, Moreau's first name is attributed as Alphonse in the comic series (which is the first name of another Moreau-inspired character; Dr. Alphonse Mephisto, from South Park). He has created many characters from Classic Fiction, including Rupert the Bear and Toad of Toad Hall. He also references Gustave Moreau as his 'Nephew'. (Aside from Moreau, The Invisible Man and Martians from The War of the Worlds make appearances in issues with Dr. Moreau, providing the only time that three out of four main creations of H.G. Wells are in the same book. Wells' four main character, the Time Traveller from The Time Machine, was a main character in Allan and the Sundered Veil, a serialized back-up story in the first volume.)
  • On their 1983 album Good For Your Soul, the eclectic New Wave band, Oingo Boingo, included a tribute to The Island of Dr. Moreau with the song No Spill Blood.
  • New Wave band Devo's song Jocko Homo is the B-Side to Devo's first single, Mongoloid. Based on a chant from the movie The Island of Lost Souls. ("Are we not Men? We are Devo!")
  • In The Simpsons episode Treehouse of Horror XIII, one of three featured short stories is titled The Island of Dr. Hibbert—a parody of The Island of Dr. Moreau.
  • In the Sliders episode "This Slide of Paradise" (1997), the main characters visit a compound where Dr. Vargas (played by Michael York) engages in Dr. Moreau-style experiments producing animal/human chimeras. York starred in the 1977 movie version of the novel.
  • The anime series Full Metal Alchemist featured characters known as chimeras who were essentially identical to the hybrids found in the Moreau story.
  • The real-time strategy video game Impossible Creatures is loosely based on the hybrid animal/man concepts found in the Dr. Moreau story.
  • The popular first-person shooter, Far Cry is also loosely based on the book.
  • The Moreau series by S. Andrew Swann deals with human/animal hybrids named "moreaus".
  • Several forms of moreau (including feline, dolphin, and bear moreau) are playable character races in some d20 Modern campaign settings.
  • Dr. Mephisto parodies Moreau as a genetic engineer in South Park. He lives in a mansion on a hill and is ever-accompanied by the small rat-human from the 1996 movie based on the book, named Kevin.
  • The miniture sidekick from the 1996 movie was also the inspiration for Mini-Me from Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me.
  • JLA: The Island of Dr. Moreau was an Elseworlds comic produced in 2002 by DC Comics portraying the Justice League as various human/animal hybrids.
  • In Kirby: Right Back at Ya!, there is a character named Doctor Moro, whose name, character, and appearance are based on Dr. Moreau. He is a random bad guy hailing from Nightmare Enterprises who creates dinosaurs from the Cappies' own DNA and appears in the two-part episode "Fossil Fools".
  • The Japanese animated movie Blue Submarine No. 6 featured a Dr. Zorndyke who killed billions of people by flooding most of the world's food producing lowlands. He then retreated to Antarctica and created a series of hybrids, especially sea creatures. These creatures waged constant war against the surviving humans.
  • An Episode of Batman: The Animated Series entitled "Tyger, Tyger"(1992) is loosely based on the events of the novel.
  • The novel Dr. Franklin's Island by Ann Halam is based on the Dr. Moreau story.
  • A one-issue story entitled "Monster Isle" in Roy Thomas' Red Sonya comic is based on the tale.
  • The Mighty Boosh episode "Mutants" begins with zoo animals mysteriously disappearing, and we learn that they are being spliced together to make make new animals to attract more business to the zoo.
  • The popular website Gaiaonline host two roleplay based shops that are certered around the plot of the story.
  • In the video game sly 3 the character Dr.M is based on Doctor Moreau, and even shares the affinity for splicing animals.

[edit] External links

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