Zenith was an interesting comic book creation and one of the graphic novels I owned I
eventually sold for something like ten times the face value during a time of stretched finances.
The character Zenith first appeared in 2000AD way back in 1987 during a period at the comic when it was undergoing something of a shake-up. The pair in charge of the editorial side, Steve MacManus and Richard Burton, were experimenting with largely unknown writers and artists and one of those was Grant Morrison.
Morrison had been contemplating a Zenith like character for several years but the final cut was slightly different to what he had originally planned. The first draft was a darker version of the finished article and Morrison explained the ‘lightening’ of the character as a reaction to more serious work such as Watchmen.
Zenith was set when it was written in the 1980s but the origins of the story date back to the Second World War. The Nazis created a superhuman being named ‘Masterman’ and conducted experiments which attempted to create humans which could house the power behind Masterman – the Lloigor. Defecting German scientists bring the technology to Britain where ‘Maximan’ is developed in response to Masterman. In Zenith, the war is helped to a close by the atomic bombing of Berlin, at the time containing both superhumans.
Post-World War Two, the British military created Cloud 9 using the same technology, a team of superheroes which subsequently fell prey to 1960s attitudes and practices and became what can only be described as hippies.
Zenith (real name Robert McDowell) is the offspring of two of Cloud 9′s members and by the time we first meet Zenith they are dead. Other members have retired into obscurity or some other public survive and Zenith himself is more of a celebrity than a superhero, using his abilities to ensure a fun-filled life for himself. He is dragged into a battle against the Lloigor against his will along with the remaining members of Cloud 9 and it is the resulting complex battles and betrayals which fill the what are called Phases I to IV of the storyline.
The intricate plot is a little complex to describe here but those who followed the series until the end would have had no doubt that Morrison’s work was impressive. From the Second World War to a future Great Britain to parallel universes, Zenith had all the credentials for a entertaining sci-fi comic strip and it pulled it off in an innovative way.









