Monkey Island

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The Secret of Monkey Island, CD version. The original had textual verb buttons and inventory.

Monkey Island is the collective name given to a series of four graphical point-and-click adventure games produced and published by LucasArts, originally known as LucasFilm Games through the development of the first two games in the series. The games follow the misadventures of the hapless Guybrush Threepwood as he struggles to become the most notorious pirate in the Caribbean, defeat the plans of the evil undead pirate LeChuck and win the heart of governor Elaine Marley. Each game's plot usually involves the mysterious Monkey Island and its impenetrable secrets.

Ron Gilbert, the creator of the series, only worked on the first two games before leaving LucasArts. The rights to Monkey Island remained with LucasArts, and the third and fourth games were created without Gilbert's input.

Overview

The Monkey Island series is known for its humor and "player-friendly" qualities. The player cannot permanently place the game in an unwinnable state or cause Guybrush to die without great effort on the game player's part. This "player friendly" approach was unusual at the time of the first game's release in 1990; prominent adventure-game rivals were Sierra On-Line and Infocom, both of whom were known for games with sudden and frequent character deaths or "lock-outs". LucasArts itself used such closed plot paths for its drama games like Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade: The Graphic Adventure (1989) but preferred the open format for other humor-oriented adventure games such as Sam & Max Hit the Road (1993) and Day of the Tentacle (1993).

The series has a somewhat fluid notion of continuity. Since the creative team changed dramatically between most installments of the game, there is little consistency not only between the graphical appearance of the games, but their basic plot points and backstories. (A few examples of this include the events leading up to LeChuck's death and the circumstances surrounding Herman Toothrot's original arrival on Monkey Island.) As such, it is rather difficult to describe the series as a whole since specific details vary from game to game and there is little consensus on which version constitutes canon.

Much of the soundtracks of the games is composed by Michael Land. The score largely consists of dub and reggae-inspired music. In keeping with the reggae influence, Elaine Marley's name may be a reference to Bob Marley.

Setting

File:WallpaperWMI1-01 1280x1024.jpg
Many islands, large and small, are scattered throughout the Tri-Island Area.

Each of the games takes place on fictional islands in the Caribbean. The time period in which they take place is around the Golden Age of Piracy but deliberately vague (although in the third game, the date of a coin reads 1687). The islands teem with pirates dressed in outfits that seem to come from movies and comic books rather than history, and there are many deliberate anachronisms and references to modern-day popular culture.

The main setting of the Monkey Island games, the "Tri-Island Area", a fictional archipelago in the Caribbean. Since the first game in the series, SMI, each game except MI2 has visited the titular island of Monkey Island while introducing its own set of islands to explore. MI2 features four new islands, CMI introduces three, and EMI, which revisits some of the older islands, features three new islands as well.

The main islands of the Tri-Island Area are Mêlée Island, Booty Island, and Plunder Island, which are all ruled by Governor Elaine Marley in place of her long lost grandfather, Horatio Torquemada Marley. Elaine moves from island to island at her convenience, though she considers her governor's mansion on Mêlée Island, the capital island of the area, as home.

Other islands in the region are considered under the umbrella of Tri-Island Area as well, even though Elaine does not rule them. These include the pirate islands Scabb Island and Phatt Island, the urbanized Lucre Island and Jambalaya Island, the minor islands of Hook Island, Dinky Island, Skull Island and Knuttin Atoll, and the volcanic islands of Blood Island and Monkey Island itself. Additional islands seen in maps of the area but never visited include Blunderbuss[citation needed], Spittle, and Pinchpenny, the latter two appearing in the main sea map from EMI.

Characters

Many "supporting" characters have recurring roles in the games, including:


Inspiration

Although Ron Gilbert has been widely quoted that the game was inspired by Disneyland's Pirates of the Caribbean ride, in his blog he stated that his true inspiration was Tim Powers' book On Stranger Tides[1].

The games

Template:Spoilers

The Secret of Monkey Island

SMI cover
SMI cover

The series debuted in 1990 with The Secret of Monkey Island on the Atari ST, Macintosh and IBM PC platforms, and it was later ported to Amiga, Sega CD and FM Towns.

The game starts off with the main character Guybrush Threepwood stating "I want to be a pirate!", and he is soon off to prove himself to the old pirate captains. During the perilous pirate trials, he meets the beautiful governor Elaine Marley, with whom he falls in love, unaware that the ghost pirate LeChuck also has designs on her. When Elaine is kidnapped, Guybrush procures crew and ship to track LeChuck down, defeat him and rescue his love.

Islands visited:

  • Mêlée and Hook Island: Mêlée's main settlement is surrounded by thick jungle and holds the infamous SCUMM Bar, a seedy dive where pirates drown their fear of LeChuck. Hook Island is a small rock off the north coast of Mêlée, the two islands connected by a track cable.
  • Monkey Island: The cannibal-infested island that LeChuck uses as a base of operations.

Monkey Island 2: LeChuck's Revenge

MI2 cover
MI2 cover

The second game, Monkey Island 2: LeChuck's Revenge from 1991, was available for fewer platforms; it was only released for the Amiga, MS DOS, Macintosh, and later for FM Towns.

As Guybrush, with a treasure chest in hand, and Elaine hang on to ropes in a void, he tells her the story of the game. He has decided to find the greatest of all treasures, that of Big Whoop. Unwittingly, he helps revive LeChuck, who is now in zombie form. Guybrush is eventually captured by his archnemesis. but escapes with help from Wally and finds the treasure only to find himself dangling from a rope, the situation from the beginning of the game. As Guybrush concludes his story, his rope breaks and he finds himself facing LeChuck, who he finally defeats using voodoo. The ending is very surrealistic and is open to a number of interpretations.

Islands visited:

  • Scabb Island, The starting island of the game. There is no treasure there, so Guybrush decides to look elsewhere.
  • Phatt Island: An island, visited in order to piece together a map to Big Whoop.
  • Booty Island: A part of Elaine's governorship, visited in order to find another piece of the map to Big Whoop.
  • Dinky Island: The island where Guybrush finds the treasure chest.
  • Monkey Island: Though this is not made apparent until near the end of the third game.

The Curse of Monkey Island

CMI cover
CMI cover

The Curse of Monkey Island, the third in the series, was exclusively available for Windows users in 1997.

Guybrush unwittingly turns Elaine into a gold statue with a cursed ring and she is soon stolen by pirates. He tracks her down before searching for a ring that can lift the curse. LeChuck appears in a fiery demon form, and is on the heels of Guybrush until a standoff in LeChuck's amusement park ride, the Rollercoaster of Doom.

Islands visited:

  • Plunder Island[2]: An island home to a pirate retirement community under Elaine's gubernatorial powers. Guybrush must find a way off Plunder, in order to lift the curse.
  • Blood Island: A run-down resort island and the resting place of a big, uncursed diamond ring.
  • Skull Island: Located off the coast of Blood Island, it is the destination of a hideout for pirate smugglers who have made the uncursed diamond their own.
  • Monkey Island: Guybrush and Elaine are both captured and taken to LeChuck's island, now utilized as an amusement park.

Escape from Monkey Island

EMI cover
EMI cover

The last game to date, Escape from Monkey Island, was released in 2000 for Windows, PlayStation 2 and Macintosh.

When Guybrush Threepwood and Elaine Marley return from their honeymoon, they find that Elaine has been declared officially dead, her mansion is under destruction order, and her position as governor is up for election. Guybrush investigates and unearths a conspiracy by LeChuck and evil real estate developer Ozzie Mandrill to use a voodoo talisman, "The Ultimate Insult," to make all pirates docile in order to turn the Caribbean into a center of tourism.

Islands visited:

  • Mêlée and Hook Island: EMI revisits the first two islands of the game, though certain things have changed.
  • Lucre Island: Guybrush travels to Lucre to talk with the Marley family lawyers, but he is framed for bankrobbery by Pegnose Pete.
  • Jambalaya Island and Knuttin Atoll: Jambalaya is the place to find the "Ultimate Insult", but the island has already been taken over by consumer franchises and the pirates are sent to Knuttin Atoll for re-socializing.
  • Monkey Island: Guybrush is taken hostage by LeChuck, and he must figure out how to escape from Monkey Island.

Common themes

The games in the series share several minigames, puzzles, in-jokes, and references.

Minigames

Each game contains a minigame based on learning and repetition of a sequence in order to become more proficient: insult swordfighting in the first game, a number-based "password" in the second, rhyming insult sword-fighting in the third, and insult arm wrestling and "Monkey Kombat" in the fourth. The first and fourth games also both feature a puzzle which involves following another character through several locations, a trick also used in Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis. Some other minigames include a spitting competition, naval cannon battles and platform diving.

Pop-culture references

The Monkey Island series is full of spoofs, in-jokes, humorous references, and Easter eggs: so many, in fact, that entire web sites are dedicated to their detection and listing.

Running gags include lines such as "Look behind you, a three-headed monkey!", the introduction "I'm Guybrush Threepwood, a mighty pirate", "Hi, I'm selling these fine leather jackets" (a reference to Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade: The Graphic Adventure), and "That's the second biggest monkey head I've ever seen" (and in EMI "That's the second bigg... No, that's the biggest conch shell I've ever seen!"), and the astounding fact that Guybrush can hold his breath for 10 minutes.

Many attempts have been made to draw parallels between the series and the movie Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl. This would be very appropriate since Ron Gilbert has openly admitted that sections of Monkey Island 2 borrowed extensively from the original Disneyland ride, such as the famous "dog holding the keys to the jail-cell". However, he has also said that he thought the latest movie (Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest) may have 'borrowed' from the Monkey Island series too, due to many similarities (e.g. the coffin Jack Sparrow uses as a boat, akin to that used by Guybrush to find the Voodoo Lady).

Each game in the series features cameo appearances by Steve Purcell's characters Sam & Max (who were featured in their own LucasArts adventure game, Sam & Max Hit the Road). The pair appear as voodoo idols in the first game, as costumes in a costume shop on Booty Island in the second, as toys in LeChuck's demonic carnival and as light-formations at the theatre (in Mega-Monkey mode) in the third and as one of the possible aliases for Pegnose Pete in the World of Prosthesis puzzle in the fourth scene from EMI.

The secret

None of the games explicitly reveal the "Secret of Monkey Island" (although creator Ron Gilbert has stated that the secret was not revealed in any of the games, and that the true secret would be revealed if he got to work on the fifth entry in the series). LeChuck himself, when asked in the second and third games, refuses to answer the question; Guybrush can eventually prod LeChuck to confess that he does not know what the secret is.

There are many theories popular among players, and at least one case can be made from each game in the series. One of these theories states that the bizarre revelation at the end of MI2 is the true secret of Monkey Island (again, Ron Gilbert has confirmed that the secret is yet to be discovered, in an interview with GameSpot). The fact that it was debunked in CMI, the theory states, is merely a retcon by the new development team after Ron Gilbert's departure. Elements in the closing scenes of MI2 seem to support this theory, as do certain comments of pirates in the insult swordfighting section of the first game, asking Guybrush to "play along". Members of the CMI team (many of who also were part of the MI2 team) claimed at one point that they knew what the original secret was: that the storyline of the games was simply the fantasy of a child. Gilbert, however, has contradicted this in various interviews, saying that he never told anyone what the true secret of Monkey Island is [1]. A large article about the subject can be found here.

Gilbert stated in a 2004 interview that when the game was originally conceived it was considered "too big", so they split it into three parts. He added that he "knows what the third [part] is" and "how the story's supposed to end," indicating that he had a definite concept of the secret and a conclusive third game.[3]

The team behind Escape from Monkey Island attempted to resolve the issue by showing that the Giant Monkey Head was actually the control room of a Giant Monkey Robot. The cut-scene in which the revelation was made is called The Real Secret of Monkey Island. This however seemed to confuse the issue.

Future of the series

A fifth Monkey Island game has been rumored (and is the source of jokes in the fourth game), although no official word has been released from LucasArts. One significant hint at this is in the fourth game, when both the Voodoo Lady character and Guybrush make claims about involvement in "an unbreakable five game contract." The company's cancellation of the planned sequels Full Throttle: Hell on Wheels and Sam & Max 2: Freelance Police may indicate a strong reluctance to produce new graphic adventures.

In a recent Gamespot interview, Gilbert claims the true secret of Monkey Island has yet to be revealed, and that he wishes to make a fifth Monkey Island game to conclude the series.[2]

During television network G4's coverage of the 2006 E3 Convention, a LucasArts executive was asked about the return of popular franchises such as Monkey Island. The executive responded that the company was currently focusing on new franchises, and that LucasArts may return to the "classic franchises" in the next decade.[3]

Footnotes

  1. ^ Ron Gilbert (September 20, 2004). "On Stranger Tides". GrumpyGamer. Retrieved April 17. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ Plunder Island was erroneously referred to as Puerto Pollo in EMI; Puerto Pollo is the main settlement on Plunder Island.
  3. ^ Idle Thumbs, Ron Gilbert Speaks: Part 2

See also

External links

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