List of fictional plants

This list of fictional plants describes invented plants that appear in works of fiction.

In fiction

In J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth

In J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter series

In Ursula K. Le Guin's Earthsea series

In Dungeons & Dragons

In Star Wars

In Monty Python's Flying Circus

The following plants appear in the David Attenborough sketch of the last Monty Python episode.

In the 2009 film Avatar

Plants in Pandora have evolved according to the characteristics of their environment, which has an atmosphere that is thicker than on Earth, with higher concentrations of carbon dioxide, xenon and hydrogen sulfide. Gravity is weaker in Pandora, thereby giving rise to gigantism. There is a strong magnetic field, causing plants to develop 'magnetotropism'. A particularly intriguing quality of flora and fauna in Pandora is their ability to communicate with each other. This is explained in the movie as a phenomenon called 'signal transduction', pertaining to how plants perceive a signal and respond to it.

In The Edge Chronicles

Lufwood: ash-grey and very tall tree, with a straight trunk devoid of many branches up until the canopy, from The Edge Chronicles series of books by Paul Stewart and Chris Riddell

In DC Comics

The Black Mercy is an extraterrestrial hallucinogenic plant used a weapon by the supervillain Mongul. Mongul first uses it in "For the Man Who Has Everything", a story by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons that was first published in Superman Annual #11 (1985) and later adapted into the August 7, 2004 Justice League Unlimited episode of the same name. Described in the original story by Mongul as "something between a plant and an intelligent fungus", the Black Mercy attaches itself to its victims in a form of symbiosis, and feeds from the victim's "bio-aura". The organism is telepathic, and reads its victim's heart's desire, giving them a logical simulation and an ending that the victim wants, which the victim experiences an entirely immersive, virtual experience in which their actual surroundings are masked to them. According to Mongul, victims are capable of "shrugging off" the hallucination, though some find the experience too compelling too do so unaided.[6]

The Black Mercy is typically depicted as consisting of dark green, thorned vines that attach themselves to a humanoid victim's upper torso, with a set of pink flowers, each with a long, red, tentacle-like stigma, growing in the center of the victim's chest. When Mongul first uses the Black Mercy on Superman, they burrow through his costume and into his body, able to penetrate his otherwise invulnerable skin because, Wonder Woman senses, they are at least partially magical, which is one of Superman's weaknesses. During his experience with the organism, Superman's breathing appears faint, and his ability to sense the fraudulent nature of the simulation it feeds him and fight it manifests itself as tears produced by his actual eyes. The Black Mercy can pulled off a victim by a strong humanoid such as Batman, and Mongul uses special protective gauntlets to handle the plant safely.[6] Although Superman is not able to awaken from the Black Mercy's simulation without help from Batman, Green Arrow Oliver Queen and Green Lantern Hal Jordan are both able to do so in a subsequent storyline.[7]

Characters who have experienced the Black Mercy include:

In mythology

Hoaxes

See also

References

  1. http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title.jsp?stid=82936
  2. http://home.att.net/~starflight.choreo/races/elo.htm
  3. 1 2 http://www.midwinter.com/lurk/synops/012.html
  4. Bassham, Gregory & Bronson, Eric (2003). The Lord of the Rings and Philosophy: One Book to Rule Them All. Open Court Publishing. p. 154.
  5. Mabey, Richard (7 November 2015). "The queen beech ruled the land, even when she fell". New Statesman. Retrieved 7 November 2015.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 Moore, Alan (w), Gibbons, Dave (a). "For the Man Who Has Everything", Superman Annual #11 (1985). DC Comics.
  7. 1 2 3 Johns, Geoff (w), Pacheco, Carlos (p), Merino, Jesus (i). "A Perfect Life: Chapters 1-2", Green Lantern (Vol. 4) #7-8 (February–March 2006). DC Comics.
  8. Jurgens, Dan (w), Zircher, Patrick (a). "Revenge, Part I". Action Comics #979 (Early June 2017). DC Comics.
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