Spike: Asylum

Spike: Asylum is a five-issue comic book limited series based on Angel television series.[1] It was released from September 2006 through January 2007. The five issues were collected together in a single trade paperback in May 2007.[2]

Spike: Asylum
Publication information
PublisherIDW Publishing
Format100 Pages, full color
Publication dateSeptember 2006–January 2007 (monthly)
No. of issues5
Main character(s)Spike, Lorne
Creative team
Written byBrian Lynch
Artist(s)Franco Urru
Letterer(s)Michael Heisler, Sulaco Studios, Neil Uyetake, Chris Mowry
Colorist(s)Matteo Gherardi, Elena Virzi, Fabio Mantovan, Donatella Melchionno

Plot

Ruby Monahan has gone missing and her family recruits Spike to track her down. It seems Ruby (a half-demon) has been checked into "Mosaic Wellness Center", a rehab facility designed to cure the demonic. Evidence shows Ruby is instead being tortured severely inside Mosaic so Spike agrees to infiltrate.

Whatever is going on, many of the clients do want to murder Spike, having a history with him, and are willing to hurt his newfound encounter-group friends to do so. And just where is Ruby anyway?

Writing and artwork

Cultural references

  • The Usual Suspects: A 1995 movie written by Christopher McQuarrie, directed by Bryan Singer, and starring Kevin Spacey. The cover for Asylum #2 is an homage to promotional material from this movie.
  • Smallville: In Asylum #3, a character calls Spike Brainiac, a character that actor James Marsters played in season 5 of the television series about a young Superman.
  • Firefly: When Lorne is seen performing in Las Vegas at the end of issue 3, he is performing the theme to Firefly, a Joss Whedon television show. Whedon is also the creator of both Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel.
  • Ghostbusters: Ivo Shandor, the Gozerian cultist/architect, is named as the person who built the Mosaic Asylum. Specific lines from the movie are mentioned ("society being too sick to survive", etc.), and Spike muses on why the name is familiar to him.

Continuity

Timing

In his blog, writer Brian Lynch has commented on when the comics takes place within Buffyverse continuity:

Spike is in Los Angeles, and he has a soul, and he's up and about and able to touch (and punch and kick and bite...and also hug...I'd assume. Three issues in and he does not hug anyone. Maybe for SPIKE: ASYLUM summer annual). But beyond that, I'm just telling the best SPIKE story I can, timelines be damned. Pick up the series and you tell us when you think it is. The first correct answer gets a hug. From Spike.

Canonical issues

Angel comics are not usually considered by fans as canon. However unlike fanfic, 'overviews' summarising their story, written early in the writing process, were 'approved' by both Fox and Whedon (or his office), and the books were therefore later published as officially Angel merchandise.

Later, Betta George from Asylum appears in Lynch and Joss Whedon's canonical Angel: After the Fall. The Mosaic Wellness Center is seen briefly, and Spike refers to him and George as going "way back". Later references under Lynch's pen as the series went on (such as in the After the Fall Epilogue in issue #23) would place the events of Spike: Asylum more definitively within the chronology of the series.

gollark: Sometimes we construct arbitrarily recursive subuniverses and extract all possible energy from them.
gollark: This is HIGHLY renewable.
gollark: GTechâ„¢ produces power from communism-capitalism reactions in a previously described process.
gollark: Also, the sun will eventually do bad things.
gollark: Technically, solar panels have a finite lifespan and we can't make arbitrarily many from Earth resources.

References

  1. Spike page at IDWpublishing.com. Archived August 14, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  2. Brian Lynch and Franco Urru. Spike: Asylum. IDW Publishing. ISBN 1-60010-061-9
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