Commander Perkins

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Commander Perkins is a German Science Fiction series by H. G. Francis (i.e. Hans Gerhard Franciskowsky) that appeared partly as audio play and partly as a novel series. The audio plays and novels are written in German.

Contents

[edit] Background

The series is set approximately 50 to 100 years in the future. Mankind has settled the moon, where the moon base "Delta-4" is a central setting, while the rest of the solar system is being explored. The scientist character of Professor Dr. Arthur Common has created (with the assistance of his daughter Cindy) the "Dimension Transmitter." With this device, users can overcome arbitrary distances without time delay. Via an enormous energy expenditure from the Transmitter, the Time/Space dimensions break open to allow small groups of humans to visit alien planets without transport.

Based on this premise, in this series, the protagonist Commander Randy Perkins and his friend and colleague Major Peter Hoffmann, often accompanied by the professor's telepathically gifted son Ralph, undertake voyages into alien worlds, often involving the ill-prepared Earth in intergalactic events.

[edit] Main Characters

  • Commander Randy Perkins, an experienced officer and main protagonist.
  • Major Peter Hoffmann, Perkin's best friend. Tends to panic during action, but makes characteristic humorous and sarcastic remarks. He has a crush on Cindy Common.
  • Professor Dr. Arthur Common, scientist, is the inventor of the Dimension Transmitter.
  • Cindy Common, his impulsive young daughter and assistant. She has a crush on Perkins and fends off Hoffman's flirting with biting humor.
  • Ralph Common, the telephathic 12-year-old son of the professor.
  • Oberst (Colonel) G. Camiel Jason, the administrator of moon base Delta-4. Unsympathic, stubborn and impulsive, he is much an antagonist as the various aliens Perkins has to fight.
  • General Basil Lucan Crinian, the chief of the Armed Forces of Earth.
  • Camiel, individual class robot, brings humor into the series.

[edit] The Wega Series

The Wega Series is the first series that consists of six audio plays that were produced in 1976-1978 by Europa (audio play). It was directed by Heikedine Körting, with scripts written by H. G. Francis. The playing time of the individual audio plays varies between 35 and 50 minutes.

Episodes:

  1. The Gate to Another World (1976)
  2. In the Tide of Infinity (1976)
  3. The Secret of the Ufos (1977)
  4. Bordon The Immortal (1977)
  5. Saturn Calling Delta-4 (1978)
  6. Expedition Into the Past (1978)

Starring

Also Starring: Andreas Beurmann, Volker Bogdan, Volker Brandt, Werner Cartano, Peter Kirchberger, Ernst von Klipstein, Lutz Mackensy, Rolf Mamero, Christian Mey, Hella von der Osten-Sacken, Jochen Sehrndt, Horst Schick, Heinz Trixner, Claus Wilcke.

[edit] Plot summary

The Dimension Transmitter is still in the experimentation stage. However, there is already contact with the 8th planet of the Wega system. With cameras and probes, data were collected from that planet. On the moon base, Ralph Common is lured into the Dimension Transmitter by a telepathic voice. He overrides all safety locks and is transported to the Wega planet, where he is detained by the locals. Professor Common asks Commander Perkins and Major Hoffmann to bring back his son to the moon. They succeed; however, Ralph Common tells them that there must be a connection between Earth and Wega, since there are maps showing the area of the Mediterranean Sea. Communication with the Wegans is not yet possible, with the exception of the "Telepathic Voice", which only Ralph can hear.

The Wegans realize that there is a dimension portal set up between the worlds. By waiting at its warp point, they send an emissary to the moon who, however, is killed by accident. In an attempt to mediate, Perkins, Hoffmann and Ralph take another trip to the Wega. They fail, and Perkins is captured. A release attempt succeeds, but apparently the commander was brainwashed and remains in a kind of awake coma. Perkins awakes after half a year - at the same time a Wegan spaceship appears on Earth, which is later accidentally shot down (the ship creates an energy field which scrambles electronic processes in both machines and the human body). Wegan survivors try to reach the Dimension Transmitter in order to return to their home world. Professor Common wants to release the Wegans, but the military wants to cross-examine the extraterrestrials. But while transporting them back to the Wega an error occurs, Perkins, Hoffman and the Wegans are hurled not just through space and to the Wega planet, but also into the past, where the two humans witness the accidental death of a nobleman and are blamed for murder. At the last second, Professor Common finds the two men and can bring them back.

Meanwhile, clues were found that the Wegans had something to do with the Biblical disaster of Sodom and Gomorrha. All the Wegan men of the shot spaceship are declared dead, and in retaliation the Wegans send a space fleet to Earth in order to take revenge. The destruction of mankind seems inevitable. Perkins, Hoffman and Ralph travel to Wega to settle the conflict; there they meet Bordon the Immortal, whose aging process had been stopped by a curse (which is linked to the death of the nobleman Perkins and Hoffman had witnessed). Together they manage to halt the attack on earth, but it proves to be only a temporary solution.

As the Wegans poise to strike against Earth, Perkins takes a desperate gamble; against the strict orders of Colonel Jason, he hides Professor Common on a deserted moon station and merely disables the Dimension Transmitter, since he knows that the device is mankind's only hope to end this conflict. The Wegans invade Delta-4, but come up empty-handed and - as Perkins has hoped - are now willing to negotiate. To his surprise, the Wegan high commander turns out to be Bordon himself, who is also revealed as the telepathic voice which had lured Ralph into the Dimensional Transmitter. Bordon is participating in the war to prove that the humans are the ones to blame and the Wegans therefore have the right to retaliate. After much arguing, Perkins manages to persuade the Immortal to find the roots for the Wegan antipathy against the humans - by means of controlled time travel back to the last days of Sodom and Gomorrha.

Along with Ralph, Perkins, Hoffman and Bordon arrive near the two cities just in time to see a Wegan spaceship land. As it turns out, Sodom and Gomorrah had been the landing site of an ancient Wegan expedition. One of its members, Drapondor (an Immortal like Bordon himself) had disappeared, and that caused a conflict between the two people. As Perkins' group enters the city, they attract unwelcome attention and seek refuge in the house of Lot, where they find Drapondor - infected with leprosy, which is also the cause of his detachment from the expedition force. As the events transpire as recorded in the Bible, Perkins and his group, taking Lot and his family along, manage to escape just before the Wegans drop an atomic bomb, eradicating the two cities. The time travelers are whisked back into their own time at the last second; in Delta-4 Drapondor is cured of the disease, and the series ends with Bordon making a public apology to the people of the Earth.

[edit] The First Novels

In 1979, Franz Schneider Verlag published two Commander Perkins novels. Interestingly enough Francis does not take any references to the audio plays in those two books. With the second novel a new character, Camiel the robot, is introduced.

  1. The Red Fog (1979)
  2. Planet of the Soulless (1979)

[edit] Plot summaries

  • The Red Fog

A red veil deposits itself around Earth which lets humans disappear when it lowers to the ground. It is found out, the fog originated from the Dimension Transmitter as a small ball came and damaged. After the repair Commander Perkins, Major Hoffmann and Ralph Common travel to the planet Empty, from which the fog came and investigate, how to fight the strange substance, threatening all life on Earth.

  • Planet of the Soulless

Ralph Common and all the psi-talented humans on Earth lie in dying, a telepathic power of the planet Psion seems to destroy their brains. In the last second Ralph can be protected with a special helmet against the psi attack. Commander Perkins, Major Hoffmann, Ralph Common and the robot Camiel travel to Psion investigating the cause of the attack. They determine that on the strange planet, all inhabitants act like soulless machines.

[edit] The Arrow Trilogy

The second series consists of three audio play episodes that appeared 1980 under the direction of Heikedine Körting under the label Europa. The scripts were again written by H. G. Francis. A 4th and 5th episode were announced, however they never appeared. H. G. Francis also never wrote scripts for those. Why those episodes did not appear is not completely clear. However low sales figures of the first three audio plays might have been decisive. The action placed around the planet Arrow and The Middle Eye is incomplete. H. G. Francis used elements from the Arrow Trilogy in the Copanian plot, which resulted in some inconsistencies in the novels. The playing time of the individual audio plays is approximately 33 minutes each.

Episodes:

  1. Lost in Infinity (1980)
  2. The Galactic Weapon-Master (1980)
  3. The Middle-Eye (1980)

Starring

Also Starring: Volker Brandt, Peter Buchholz, Werner Cartano, Wolfgang Jürgen, Harald Pages.

[edit] Plot summary

Professor Common discovers a planet that is scattered with spaceship wrecks across the planet's surface. The military (including Colonel Jason) have a primary interest in retrieving the weapons from the destroyed spaceships. During the exploration, the Humans are frightened by a highly sophisticated people. One of their scientists, Coleman, even ealerts the aliens to the humans' presence by activating some of the wrecks' equipment.

An evacuation of the planet takes place immediately, but documents determining the galactic position of the Earth brought along by Coleman remain on Arrow. Perkins and Hoffman, with the scientist in their company, are sent back to the ship graveyard to retrieve or destroy them, but the aliens (which resemble humanoid panthers) are alerted and Coleman begins to act increasingly irrational. As it turns out, he has come under the mental control of a metal-devouring creature the aliens use to dispose of the wrecks, which later kills the scientist. Perkins and Hoffman are taken prisoner.

In the meantime, Professor Common, Cindy and Colonel Jason try their best to retrieve Perkins' group, but they do not succeed. Instead, however, a strange device appears in the Dimension Transmitter which emanates strange impulses which grow stronger and stronger. The professor, assuming that the device is either a weapon or a homing beacon, immediately sends it to another solar system.

In their holding cell on Arrow, Perkins and Hoffman encounter a fellow prisoner: one of the aliens, who introduces himself as Polcor, a Galactic Weapon Master. In addition, the cell is telepathically empowered and begins to pull the information about Earth from their minds when Professor Common rescues them. After the two have reported, Colonel Jason realizes the value of Polcor as a source of information and sends them back - along with Ralph - to retrieve him from the cell and question him on an uninhabited planet. But Polcor's identity turns out to be a ruse: He is in fact the ruler of the Galactic Weapon Masters on Arrow, and he had developed a horrible weapon - a Sun Annihilator - for a greater cosmic power, the Middle Eye, which had, of course, been refused. In order to make up for the disgrace, Polcor tries to blame mankind for the existence of the weapon. What is worse is that the Sun Annihilator is actually the device Professor Common had accidentally snatched wit the Dimension Transmitter.

Retrieving the Annihilator, Perkins, Hoffman, Ralph and Polcor return to Arrow, to be captured by the Middle Eye, an alien race appearing as sentient, eye-like beings. Polcor's accusations against the humans are easily countered by Perkins; still, the Middle Eye decides to keep the humans as prisoners to learn the location of Earth from them. Polcor, on the other hand, is punished for his deceit by being forced to watch his home planet getting destroyed by the Middle Eye. In revenge, Polcor frees the humans and enables their escape from the Eye's ship before they can be interrogated, and with the help of Professor Common they return safely to Earth.

[edit] The Copanian Series

In 1980 and 1981, the Franz Schneider Verlag published four more books with a continuous plot line to create the Copanian Series. However, no reference was made to either the Wega or the Arrow series, although The Middle Eye played an important role.

  1. The Forbidden Star (1980)
  2. Land of the Green Sun (1980)
  3. Lost in Infinity (1981)
  4. In the Spell of the Glowing Eyes (1981)

[edit] Plot summary

Dr. John Lightfire has discovered a planet which exhibits best living conditions. After an examination too swift Humans begin to colonize "Lightfire." On a tour with Ralph Common and his friend George Croden Commander Perkins discover an ancient robot. The machine attempts to attack them, but collapses from weakness brought on by age. Ralph and George start to age rapidly. Humans determine Lightfire is a sacred planet which must not be set foot on by threat of annihilation of the whole race of the trespasser. In the hasty evacuation, the Copanian high priest Arentes manages to smuggle himself to Earth. He finds Humans interesting and wants to study them to find out, whether they might be worth to be spared. Meanwhile, the Humans have successfully deceived the Copanians into attacking a different uninhabited planet instead of Earth. Closer investigations determine the bait planet to be consumed by a Copanian controlled black hole is inhabited after all. Feverishliy, the Humans try to save the doomed planet and its inhabitants.

[edit] The Seven Columns Series

In 1983 and 1984, the Franz Schneider Verlag published what would be the last three novels for the Seven Columns Series. These formed the prelude to the series. At least one further novel was in preparation, however no more appeared. Unfortunately, the plot line remained unfinished.

  1. The Third Moon (1983)
  2. The Mystery of the Seven Columns (1984)
  3. The Time Trap (1984)

[edit] Plot Summary

On planet Phart, Perkins, Hoffmann, Camiel, and Cindy Common discover a buried sleeper ship. On board is a martial people for whom the planet is meant to be a prison. Humans wake these warriors not knowing what grave danger for other planets they evoke. The ship takes course on the planet Canyoura around it to attack. Perkins and the others go to Canyoura to warn the population. The people of the planet to not believe them, citing that no one would dare attack the planet as it has one of the Seven Columns. When humans research the meaning of these columns, they are taken prisoner and trained to become gladiators for Canyouran entertainment. On the run Perkins and Hoffmann discover the secret of the First Column, immortality.

[edit] Audio plays based on the novels

The audio play publisher Maritim produced new audio plays based on the first four novels by H.G. Francis. These appeared under the name Das Sternentor (The Stargate), since Europa still holds the rights of the name Commander Perkins. The fifth audio play was to appear in October 2005 but the demise of one of the starring actors delayed production. They were announced for July or August 2006.[citation needed]

Episodes:

  1. The Red Fog (2002)
  2. Planet of the Soulless (2003)
  3. The Forbidden Star (2003)
  4. In the Land of the Green Sun (2004)
  5. Lost in Infinity (2006)
  6. Banished by Glowing Eyes (2006)

Starring

Also Starring: Peer Augustinski, Tanja Dohse, Sabine Hahn, Michael Harck, Günther Lüdke, Reent Reins, Charles Rettinghaus, Ursula Vogel, Pia Werfel, Claus Wilcke.

[edit] External links

Languages