Standard PPC procedure for handling crossovers is to first send agents
from the Department of Intelligence to investigate the problem. Typically, PPC sends one agent per
continuum. For instance, if the
crossover involves Star Wars, Star Trek
and Babylon 5;, there'd be three spies, each one specializing
in a specific continuum, sent to investigate.
Typical concerns include the cause of the crossover and its plausibility,
the canonical characters and/or creatures involved, and the effects on the
canonical plots and relationships. All
this can be extremely difficult to sort out, especially when cross-continuum
relationships and romances are involved.
Crossovers, despite their inherent complexity, can be surprisingly
crude. Often, there is little point to
them beyond having Character A fight Character B, or have Character C cuddle
with Character D. Even worse is the
"Blender Crossover" in which different canonical characters from
different continuums are "revealed" to be actually the same
person. Bulldog, a PPC veteran who has
investigated many a crossover, told me about one he'd recently investigated, in
which Gandalf and Albus Dumbledore were allegedly one and the same. This despite the fact that they are not the
same species or the same age. There are
also "Supplantation Crossovers" in which characters from one canon
supplant those from another canon, and "Cohabitation Crossovers", in
which all the characters from the involved canons coexist.
********************************************
What the hell does Sub Rosa do:
move her office every second week?
Ah, there it is-- and I'm not ridiculously late for a change. Sub Rosa is the Director of the Department
of Intelligence, and like every Director I've met or heard of, she's a sentient
plant, a rosebush in her case.
*Ah, here you are at last. You
and Zaneth will be investigating a crossover involving the Lord of the
Rings and the Harry Potter continuums. The offending fic is called "Harry
Potter and the One Ring of Power."*
"Subtle title-- not. With
all due respect, ma'am, what happened to Bulldog? Isn't he usually the one who breaks in the rookies on this type
of job? And isn't Zaneth in the Sue
Department?"
*Zaneth is in the Sue department, but we're "borrowing" him
since Bulldog, unfortunately, has been incapacitated. He returned from his last assignment suffering from the delusion
that he is a house-elf.*
I practically choked upon hearing that. A house-elf is maybe two feet tall; Bulldog is six foot eight.
"Damn. Sorry to hear
that." I turned to Zaneth the
illithid. "You ever done one of
these before?"
*No-- and I know you haven't, either.
I thought there was a policy about that requiring at least one agent in
a team investigating a crossover to have prior experience.*
*There is,* Sub Rosa 'said' curtly.
*Unfortunately, both of you work with continuums that are being strained
to the breaking point by floods of bad fanfic-- and the personnel are also
severely strained. Simply put, with
Bulldog out of commission, there is no one available to serve as a mentor. You will simply have to do your best. Good luck.
And, Zaneth?*
*Yes?*
*Remember, you are NOT on an assassination mission, which means that
you are NOT to suck out anybody's brain.
You are only to gather intelligence.
Understood?*
*Yes.* Zaneth's tentacles were
lashing, though, so I could tell he wasn't thrilled about being denied an
opportunity to kill.
******************************************
Oh, charming. What a great way
to start the story-- by ditching all four hobbits! Obviously, the writer is one of those who thinks hobbits are
useless wimps. S/he starts off with
some wizards' meeting in which Albus Dumbledore, Alastor Moody (who would
sometimes blurt "Constant vigilance!" at odd and inappropriate
moments) , and a bunch of other wizards discuss what to do with the One Ring,
as Frodo and his friends are all now catatonic, having been left so by the
shock of their trip from Middle-Earth to Knockturn Alley. So they are now out of commission-- and it
doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out who is going to replace Frodo and
his friends...
On the upside, the spelling and grammar appear okay. No egregious errors that I can see. Another point in the writer's favor is that
the English characters actually sound English; I've heard Joe Bob complain
about Harry Potter fics in which the supposedly English
characters used a lot of American slang.
That would be right down there with having Aragorn talk like a hiphop
singer-- which unfortunately has been done.
On the downside, "the pick a card" routine strikes me as
stupid; surely Dumbledore could have used a more INTELLIGENT way to choose the
Ringbearer.
*Ilsensine preserve us! How
DARE it!*
"You probably mean 'she', Zaneth.
Humans are not 'its'."
Illithids are hermaphrodites, and their native language is EXTREMELY
gender-neutral. For instance, they have
no words for 'son' or 'daughter'; they just have words meaning 'offspring' or
'child'. Their pronouns are also
gender-neutral. They have two forms of
the word 'it': one form corresponds
almost exactly to the English word, while the other is applied only to
sentients and is the nearest equivalent to 'he' or 'she' in the illithid
language.
As one might guess, Zaneth has found gender and gender-related terms
very difficult to get used to. He's
been known to call women 'hims' and men 'hers'
to the consternation, annoyance, and amusement of the other agents. Lately, he's gotten better, largely because
Joe Bob took him aside one time and gave him a quick run-down on how to tell
men and women apart, after one of the male agents offered to feed Zaneth a fist
sandwich. Joe Bob also told Zaneth that
we humans attach a fair degree of importance to gender differences.
*No, I mean, 'How dare it'. How
dare this cretin do that to Draco Malfoy!*
"Draco Malfoy's part Elf?
Yeah, right. Okay, so, he's
blond and thin, like some Elves, but so are plenty of humans. My mother's blonde and thin, but that
doesn't mean she has Elvish blood. I'm
betting the writer simply wanted a quick and dirty way to make one of the
Potter chars able to speak Elvish. Hmmm, now this bit about Voldemort makes no sense... How long would you say Voldemort's had his
new body?"
*Voldemort regained physical form at the end of Goblet of
Fire This fic is set
sometime during Harry Potter's fifth year, which means it can be no more than a
year since Voldemort's restoration.
Granted, he SAID he was stronger than ever upon his restoration, and he
was strong enough to kill Cedric and fight Harry to a stand-still. Even so, he was still described as being
considerably weaker than Sauron. Yet,
he is depicted as being strong enough to send four hobbits to another
dimension-- and send a Dark Mark to the Nazgul, too. I agree with you: that
does seem unlikely.*
"Agreed. It's pretty
obvious that Harry and his pals are going to crash the Council of Elrond. How about we join them and see how bad this
really gets? We've got a good selection
of disguises, too: dwarf, elf,
hobbit--"
*I REFUSE to be ANYTHING small and hairy!*
Assuming Zaneth's typical of his people, illithids feel the same way
about body hair that other people do about tentacles and slime: they find it extremely repugnant. So his reaction to the very idea of posing
as a hobbit or dwarf wasn't exactly a surprise.
"Okay, if it's minimal body hair you want, let's be Elves, since
they've the least body hair of the races represented at the Council."
*Elves, it is then.*
Of course, no sooner do we step through the portal with our disguises
on, then I see Zaneth examining his new long black hair with obvious distaste.
*Can I shave this stuff off or something? It's... irritating.*
"Sorry, but you're stuck with it for the duration. Elves generally wear their hair long. As far as I know, there are no bald Elves in
Middle-Earth."
*Jarlaxle is bald.*
"He's also from the <i>Forgotten Realms</i> continuum,
not this one. And the other drow
consider him peculiar because he does shave his head, among other things."
*Very well, then. Where are
we?*
"Rivendell. Watch
yourself; this place is nuts. I'd say
at least 90% of the LOTR Mary Sues turn up here-- and they've turned the place
upside down."
*Hogwarts is in a similar condition, for the same reason.*
We easily spotted Harry and his friends and just as easily tailed
them. (Given that Harry Potter was
probably the only person in Middle-Earth wearing GLASSES, he was rather hard to
miss.) The four Hogwarts students spent
the next several days getting acquainted with everybody and learning more
background information-- including a lot of stuff that they could have likely
more safely learned in the Hogwarts library.
Hermione especially asked a lot of questions.
"Refresh my memory, Zaneth, but isn't Hermione supposed to be
SMART?"
*Yes. In fact, she is the top
student in Harry's class.*
"So why is she being portrayed as an ignoramus here?"
*Either the author dislikes her, or is using her as an exposition
device. The trouble is that Hermione
practically LIVES in the Hogwarts library and has had prior experience with
temporal/spatial travel, making her the character who'd be the MOST likely to
already know stuff about Middle-Earth.
By the way, does Aragorn TRULY consider it improper for a woman to ask
questions?*
"No, I've a feeling he might be the story's Designated Sexist
Jerk, a role that more usually falls to Boromir or Gimli."
A little later, Zaneth telepathically groaned after Malfoy explained
his motives for joining the Fellowship.
*This is truly awful. The writer
had BETTER come up with a credible reason for Voldemort's turning on Draco's
parents or else! After all, Voldemort
is trying to rebuild his power base, so it would be illogical for him to randomly
turn on loyal followers. In the past, he has tended to use painful,
but non-lethal, punishments on even those who had disappointed or betrayed
him.*
"Yeah. 'He's the bad guy'
doesn't quite cut it as a reason for such an out-of-character attack. I'm afraid the writer simply wants to make
Draco a good guy, or an anti-hero at least."
A little later, Harry and his friends met Bilbo Baggins-- and indulged
in some egregious showing-off with Harry's Invisibility Cloak, which Harry
draped over Draco, saying "I don't NEED a ring to make myself invisible,
do I?"
That kind of smug arrogance is NOT a trait one wants in a Ringbearer,
especially since Harry's behavior just then suggests he isn't taking the
responsibility all that seriously.
Eventually, the Council of Elrond started-- and things REALLY hit the
fan.
'Boromir's eyes lit up.
"This Ring-- it contains much of Sauron's own power. Would it be possible to use it to overthrow
the Lord of Mordor, and free my country of Gondor from his threat
forever?"
'Gandalf shook his head, as Harry piped up: "If you could sense what I sense about this Ring, Boromir,
you wouldn't ever say anything like that.
I'm a wizard myself, if not as powerful as Gandalf. My friends and I can sense this thing's evil
will. If we, or anybody, tried to claim
it and use it as out own, we'd end up twisted and evil."'
Hmmph. There's nothing wrong
with Harry's argument-- except that he pretty much stole Aragorn's lines. But things got even worse when the Council
started discussing who was going to be the Ringbearer.
'"That would be a perilous journey." Boromir looked doubtful. "And who will go there-- go into the
heart of the Dark Lord's own country, to destroy this Ring? I'd be willing to take the chance, for the
sake of Gondor." Boromir looked
around the table. "But who can
bear the Ring? These four?" He snorted.
"Why they are but children, and one of them, a mere GIRL!"'
Ouch. Looks like Boromir was
also a Designated Sexist Jerk-- AGAIN.
Ron not surprisingly got mad, and caused Boromir's sword to fly to him
with an "Expelliarmus" spell.
*Wrong spell.* Zaneth seemed
utterly disgusted.
*"Expelliarmus" simply disarms a person. Ron should have used "Accio", a
Summoning Spell, to make Boromir's sword fly to him like that.*
Then Ron REALLY poured it on, saying "Swords are all right, for
people who can't REALLY protect themselves, but give me a wand and I'll make
sure that anybody that bothers me OR my friends wishes he had never been
born!"
Yikes. What is the writer trying
to do here? Make everybody look like a
jerk? If so, they're succeeding
brilliantly. Finally, after Draco and
Hermione put in their two cents (Hermione stooping to actually use the juvenile
and out-of-character 'Girls rule, boys drool' line, much to Zaneth's fury), the
Council hashed out who would be in the Fellowship. Harry then made the classic error of announcing that the
Fellowship would leave Rivendell at dawn.
I know a couple of assassins to whom that mistake is a killing offense.
Things didn't improve during the journey. Draco and Harry began bonding, as they discussed their families
and backgrounds, much to Ron's amazement.
We soon turned the volume on the Character Analysis Device way down,
because the damn thing sounded almost every time Draco said or did anything.
*So far, Ron is the ONLY Harry Potter char who
HASN'T been somehow butchered in this thing.
Draco is a nice guy, and Harry is now his confidante, while Hermione is
both less intelligent and less mature than she usually is. I REALLY want to kill somebody-- starting
with whoever is masquerading as Draco Malfoy.*
"I hear you-- but they're ALL canonical characters. Some of them just happen to be
misplaced."
On the upside, the writer seemed to have a handle on the actual times
and distances involved. (The downside
was that Zaneth and I had to camp out.
I think I could have cheerfully lived the rest of my life WITHOUT
learning what the illithid equivalent of trail mix was...) We both agreed we already had a good-sized
charge list going, but Zaneth had his heart set on visiting Moria. Big surprise. Illithids typically live underground, and I bet Zaneth missed his
home cavern. We knew the Fellowship
would unsuccessfully try to climb Mt. Caradhras, and be forced into going to
Moria by a blizzard. We also knew that
given our limited mountaineering experience that it would be highly dangerous
for us to try to climb Mt. Caradhras.
So, after a quick change from Elves to orcs, we simply went to
Moria. (Okay, that's dangerous, too,
but at least Zaneth knew his way around places like it.)
Moria, or Khazad-dum, was once THE major Dwarvish settlement in
Middle-Earth. It had two main sections,
a residential area and a mine. The
residential part was toward the surface and therefore had fairly decent
lighting. Everything here was carved
out of grey stone, and to me, at least, looked more imposing than homey. The mine was mainly a mithril mine, and it
was HUGE. And dark. And creepy.
(Truth to tell, I don't think I would have gone there without
Zaneth. Moria is one of those places I
would not like to visit alone.)
We quietly and discreetly chose a good vantage point that would let us
see all comers, and broke out the PPC issue laptop to check the Words. Actually, I checked the Words, while Zaneth
explored the immediate area. The
current display described the Fellowship's battle with some Wargs-- and also
showcased the writer's inability or unwillingness to have LOTR characters use
appropriately archaic dialogue.
Instead, they spoke like modern people.
(I REALLY can't imagine Gandalf threatening to "fry" anybody,
be they human or animal.)
Afterwards, Zaneth and I decided on a game of cards. He already had a game in mind, in fact. *Joe Bob taught me a very amusing game in
which you place wagers on different combinations of cards. The loser has to disrobe.*
"No. I am NOT playing
strip poker here. If we run into any
hostiles, I'd rather face them with all my clothes ON."
At times like this, I wondered if Joe Bob was such a good role model or
mentor for Zaneth. Unofficially, as
Zaneth's partner, part of his duty has been to teach the illithid human
ways. Some of his 'lessons' have had
rather unfortunate results, though-- like the time he decided to introduce
Zaneth to beer. Poor Zaneth got very
drunk very quickly-- and then he got very sick. Dr. Fitzgerald just about had kittens, and Upstairs wasn't happy
either.
In the end, we settled on Five-Card Draw. Every few minutes one of us checked the Words, to keep tabs on
the Fellowship. Boromir threw a stone
in the pool at Moria's entrance, disturbing a certain kraken-- and giving Harry
an oppurtunity to steal some of Frodo's lines.
Then Gandalf and the wizard kids made mincemeat of the poor
Watcher. Then we heard Gandalf say,
"Well? Get in while the getting's
good! That spell told everybody with
the right sort of eyes to see for five hundred miles around where we
are!" And with those anachronistic
words the Company went inside Moria.
We began tailing them again and listened to Harry and Draco bond some
more, as they discussed Hogwarts-- and Voldemort's attack on Draco's
parents. I could tell this discussion
was making Zaneth mad, for I could feel the beginnings of a lovely headache. Hermione and Ron both seemed to like Gimli,
and listened to his stories about Khazad-dum in the First Age. Then the group reached Balin's tomb, and
Hermione found the account of Balin's death-- which she could somehow
read. I knew what was coming next....
"In a few minutes, Zaneth, there's going to be a huge battle right
here-- and I'd rather not get caught in the crossfire."
*Pity. This place is
extraordinary. How old did you say it
was?*
"It was built sometime in the First Age, so it's several millennia
old. Seriously, we better bail. Maybe you and Jay can tour Moria together,
some other time." I found myself
hoping that Jay never learned about what had happened to the Watcher, for she'd
probably blow a fair-sized gasket. That
thing had been her PET.
Zaneth and I then portalled back to Headquarters-- with maybe five
seconds to spare. Morbid curiosity
impelled us both to read the Words, and we saw things didn't get any
better. The four HP kids, including the
injured Hermione, helped Gandalf fight the Balrog-- and Ron later boasted about
this deed to Celeborn. Harry actually
forced the Balrog back with his Patronus.
Despite their efforts, however, Gandalf was seemingly killed. The Fellowship then headed to Lorien, where
Harry and Ron respectively impersonated Frodo and Sam, charming the socks off
of Galadriel in the process. Poor
Celeborn was depicted as being a jerk, when he was simply a guy married to a
woman who was smarter and more perceptive than he was. There was also an interlude in which the
male HP characters apparently... lost their virginity to some Elf-women. The debacle finally ended when the four HP
characters took off for Mordor after Boromir tried to take the Ring from Harry,
and then ran into Gollum.
We then filled out the charge lists.
Zaneth, like other agents I've known, added "annoying PPC
agents" to the charges. I mentally
shrugged; Upstairs saw that one all the time.
But I couldn't let his contribution to "Additional comments"
stand....
"We can't put down 'kill the writer'".
*And why not?*
"Fanfic writers have certain legal rights that we can't
violate. Their creations, on the other
hand, have none, which is why we can kill them. We can't kill canonical characters, either, no matter how
outlandishly they act. We just clean up
the resultant messes."
*Or look for them, as we just did.
I like 'cleaning up' better; it is far more satisfying.*
Spoken like a true Underdark predator-- or PPC assassin....
*********************************************
PPC Intelligence Report
Fic: Harry Potter and the One
Ring of Power
Description: A retelling of
<i>Lord of the Rings</i> in which Harry Potter, Hermione Granger,
Draco Malfoy, and Ron Weasley supplant the four hobbits in the Fellowship,
since the latter have been completely incapacitated by Lord Voldemort's
abducting them and bringing them to the Harry Potter continuum.
Crossover Type: Supplantation
Host Continuum(s): 'Lord of the
Rings'
Invasive Continuum(s): 'Harry
Potter'
Plot Holes: Character Ruptures,
Linguistic Aberrations
Problem Passages:
1) '"I had always thought that drinking cold water was bad for the
system, " he remarked, as Ron, Harry, and Draco came back to the rest of
the party, handing Hermione her bottle.
Harry shook his head absently, watching Hermione carefully. She stowed the bottle back in its place, but
she was moving slowly, and still seemed very vague.
'"Not where we come from, Aragorn. We sweated off a lot of water in Moria, and that fight also took
a great deal out of our systems. If you
don't get enough water into yourself, you'll damage yourself," answered
Ron. Aragorn looked slightly miffed at
being corrected by someone so much younger, with so much less experience in
wilderness travel, but kept his thoughts to himself.'
A very egregious example of an HP character making a LOTR character
look stupid. Aragorn has literally
DECADES of experience in wilderness survival, so he'd know perfectly well what
the effects of dehydration are, and how to handle possibly iffy water. He doesn't NEED some teenager telling him
this stuff. Similarly, he'd also know
enough to treat Hermione's head wound IMMEDIATELY-- and since he's a healer, he'd
do a good job. The fic is full of
instances in which an HP character outshines a LOTR character.
Nor can I imagine Aragorn looking "miffed"....
2) "We have long feared
that something evil slept in Moria," said Celeborn. "Had I known that you had awakened it,
I would have forbidden you entry to Lorien.
Gandalf must have been mad, to go into Moria. He threw away his life!"
I admit Celeborn had expressed similar sentiments in the book, but the
expression "threw away his life" is too modern-sounding. This fic is full of such anachronistic
dialogue.
Extracanonical character:
Hermione Granger
Native continuum: 'Harry
Potter'
Offenses against host canon:
Bringing 21st century knowledge to Middle-Earth; bringing
extradimensional magic to Middle-Earth; supplanting a character from the host
canon; displaying unexplained knowledge of Dwarvish language; sometimes being
out of character; annoying PPC agents.
Recommendation: Send subject to
the Department of Fictional Psychology for observation and/or treatment, and
then return her to her home continuum.
Extracanonical character: Draco
Malfoy
Native continuum: 'Harry Potter'
Offenses against host canon:
Bringing 21st century knowledge to Middle-Earth; bringing
extradimensional magic to Middle-Earth; supplanting a character from the host
canon; being COMPLETELY out of character; claiming Elvish ancestry; displaying
unexplained knowledge of at least one Elvish dialect; altering the sexual mores
of the Lorien Elves; REALLY annoying PPC agents.
Recommendation: Send subject to
the Department of Fictional Psychology for treatment and then return him to his
home continuum.
Extracanonical character: Harry
Potter
Native continuum: 'Harry
Potter'
Offenses against host canon:
Bringing 21st century knowledge to Middle-Earth; bringing
extradimensional magic to Middle-Earth; supplanting a character from the host
canon; becoming a non-canonical Ringbearer; commanding extraordinary deference
and respect from LOTR characters, including canonical authority fgures such as
Elrond and Galadriel; altering the sexual mores of the Lorien Elves; annoying
PPC agents.
Recommendation: Send subject to
the Department of Fictional Psychology for observation and/or treatment and
then return him to his home continuum.
Extracanonical character: Ron
Weasley
Native continuum: 'Harry
Potter'
Offenses against host canon:
Bringing 21st century knowledge to Middle-Earth; bringing
extradimensional magic to Middle-Earth; supplanting a character from the host
canon; using incorrect spells; making characters from the host canon look like
fools; acting like a boastful jerk; altering the sexual mores of the Lorien
Elves; annoying PPC agents.
Recommendation: Send subject to
the Department of Fictional Psychology for observation and/or treatment and
then return him to his home continuum.
Additional comments: Retrieve
the four hobbits from the 'Harry Potter' continuum and send them to the
Department of Fictional Psychology and/or the Medical Department. Return them to their home continuum as soon
as they recover.