To catch up on the background quickly: in the previous three books (The Black Incal, The Luminous Incal, and What Lies Beneath) John found that Incal, a sentient, glowing super-powerful thingy destined to bring balance to the galaxy in much the same way that Anakin Skywalker would in his own universe a couple of decades later. In typical mystical-space-opera fashion, everything was a duality: there were dark and light Incals, which needed to merge; two women who are sisters and guardians of the two Incals; a Great Darkness threatening the human empire that is opposed to the combined Incals; and so forth. John did the hero's-journey thing, turning enemies into allies, going on a dangerous journey to the heart of his world, where the Incals merged and turned into a super-cool spaceship - this is an '80s space opera - and one of the minor characters was subsumed into the Incal gestalt.
John and his allies are in that spaceship as The Incal, Vol.4: What Is Above begins. The evil Techno organization - I'm not sure what the overall name is; the Technopope is dead and their headquarters habitat of Technogea is run by the Techno-Centreur and the Cyclic Council, so they're the Techno-somebodies - has taken over human space and is proceeding with their evil plans to seed the universe with Shadow Eggs, semi-living manifestations of the evil Great Darkness. Those shadow eggs will eat all of the stars and then...I'm not really sure. Probably kill everyone; it's that kind of ha-ha-ha evil plot. It's not clear why the Technodudes want to do that; I suspect it's mostly that Jodorowsky assumes techno-anything is evil, and is attributing to them everything he doesn't like in life.
The Incal-starship has powerful weapons, but they can only break shadow eggs into pieces, which then re-form. They need a more organic solution to defeat Techno-ness and Darkness.
So they fly off to the prison planet Aquaend, where the minor character Raimo of Kamar and his crew have already been exiled, discovering a hidden undersea city Vitavil H2O where the locals live in harmony with the native gigantic medusas. (Medusa in the French-language sense of a jellyfish rather than a lady with a stunning gaze.) Those medusa somehow have the power to envelop and destroy shadow eggs, because gigantic sea-dwelling semi-sentients clearly have the power of space-travel, and so the giant wave of Techno shadow eggs is met by and destroyed by a wave of human-guided space-traveling medusas.
Vitavil H2O is also the current home of the human empire's semi-deposed Emperoress, thought dead. But no, he/she fled and is ready to re-take control of the human worlds once the little matter of the Technofellas is resolved.
That gets us about halfway through the book, so it's time to switch gears. The alien Berg race - from the next galaxy over, and invading human space intermittently over the past three books - is about to have its Five Thousand Year Games, in which a few hundred members of some alien race are gathered to fight to the death in the inevitable sandy arena. The single winner of the Five Thousand Year Games gets the honor of impregnating the Berg's Protoqueen - who may be immortal; this isn't clear - and then being disintegrated. After 24,000 such games, legend says, the Bergs will "enter the golden age of eternal prosperity."
This is, of course, the twenty-four-thousandth Games. The competitors this time are all humans. And John must compete - and win! - the game to fulfil the Incal's plans, fucking the giant bowl of goop that is the Protoqueen. (She first extrudes a body that closely resembles John's love Animah, to make the fucking somewhat more palatable.)
In the end, John does not avoid his inevitable post-coital disintegration, but he gets better with the help of his friends. Technogea is attacked and conquered by the forces of righteousness and Incal-hood. Our heroes seem to be entirely triumphant, with two books left to fill, but - shock! horror! - they learn that the Emperoress has been infected by the Great Darkness through a "psycho virus" and is now the new focus of its aims. This is our ending cliffhanger.
Mœbius's art is lovely and muscular; I still have the lurking suspicion that the people who really love this series first saw it before it was translated and don't read French. Jodorowsky's writing is full of super-science and mysticism in almost equal proportions, any distinctive characterization has mostly retreated by this point so his characters can explain the convoluted plot to the reader. I may seem dismisive, but it is definitely fun on a space opera level, full of bizarre ideas, weird technology, and shocking reversals. And there's still two books to go, as it gets bigger and crazier in the usual space-opera way.










