Anthologies Two anthologies of works by other authors set in the Moorcock multiverse have been published: • •
Comics . The Elric saga has also been adapted for comics and graphic novels several times: • In 1968, the French artist
Philippe Druillet drew the first comics version of
Elric in
Spirits #1, written by
Michel Demuth, which was published as a book the same year. • In the early 70s
James Cawthorn published his oversized graphic novel
Stormbringer with Savoy Books. • Elric first appeared in large-circulation comics in America in
Conan the Barbarian issues 14–15 (1972), in an adventure in two parts entitled "A Sword Called Stormbringer!" and "The Green Empress of Melniboné". The comic was written by
Roy Thomas and illustrated by
Barry Windsor-Smith, based on a story plotted by Michael Moorcock and James Cawthorn. •
Star Reach comics published Elric stories in the late 1970s.
First Comics published several
Elric mini-series in the 1980s as well. •
P. Craig Russell has drawn comics adaptations of several Moorcock stories:
Elric of Melniboné (with
Roy Thomas and
Michael T. Gilbert, 6-issue mini-series,
Pacific Comics, 1983–1984),
The Dreaming City and
While the Gods Laugh (with
Roy Thomas,
Epic Comics, tpb,
Marvel Graphic Novel No. 2,
Marvel Comics, 1982), and
Stormbringer (7-issue
limited series, 1997,
trade paperback,
Dark Horse Comics, 224 pages, 1998, ). The character has also been adapted by Walter Simonson,
Frank Brunner,
George Freeman, and others in the long-running Elric series at Pacific which Russell had co-created (reportedly tensions between him and Thomas were the reason for his departure). • 2011 marked the launch of another Elric-based comic,
Elric: The Balance Lost by
BOOM! Studios. The series, written by
Chris Roberson and drawn by Francesco Biagini, is available in both traditional hard copy and for digital download. • In 2014,
The Ruby Throne, the first volume of a new four-volume adaptation of
Elric of Melniboné written by Julien Blondel and illustrated by Didier Poli, Jean Bastide, and Robin Recht, was published by Glenat in France and titan in UK. The second volume,
Stormbringer, was published in March 2015 by the same team and publisher. The third volume, entitled
The White Wolf, was released in September 2017. The fourth volume,
The Dreaming City, was released in August 2021. A second cycle of four tomes is beginning in 2024 with the release by GLÉNAT of ELRIC TOME 5 - LE NÉCROMANCIEN (The Necromancer), an adaptation of THE WEIRD OF THE WHITE WOLF by Julien Blondel and Jean-Luc Carradines Cano, with art by Valentin Sécher.
Music • The name of the album
Stormbringer by the British
heavy rock band
Deep Purple is taken from the name of Elric's sword. • The lyrics of "
Perfect Strangers", the title track from Deep Purple's 1984 album of the same name, are inspired by Elric. •
The Chronicle of the Black Sword is a 1985 album by UK
space rock band
Hawkwind. Moorcock and Hawkwind had, at this stage, collaborated a number of times, most prominently on their 1975 album
Warrior on the Edge of Time, itself also inspired by the Eternal Champion concept. An expanded live album,
Live Chronicles, was released in 1986. This included several
spoken-word interludes by author Moorcock in his capacity as on-stage narrator. The live show also included a
mime artist portraying Elric himself. A video
concert film entitled
The Chronicle of the Black Sword appeared on VHS and later on DVD. • The song "
Black Blade" was recorded for the album
Cultösaurus Erectus (1980) by
Blue Öyster Cult, written by singer/guitarist Eric Bloom with lyrics by Moorcock. Moorcock also collaborated on the songs "The Great Sun Jester" (
Mirrors (1979)) and "
Veteran of the Psychic Wars" (
Fire of Unknown Origin (1981)). • The
heavy metal band
Tygers of Pan Tang take their name from the fictional islands of Pan Tang in the Elric series, where the ruling wizards keep pet tigers. • The UK space rock (later heavy metal) band
Mournblade take their name from the sister-sword of Elric's blade Stormbringer. •
New wave of British heavy metal band
Diamond Head made Elric one of the primary lyrical subjects of their 1982 release
Borrowed Time. The album also featured the character on the cover art, painted by
Rodney Matthews. •
Blind Guardian, a German
power metal band, included the song
Fast to Madness in their 1989 album
Follow the Blind, about Elric of Melniboné. • Italian Power Metal Band DOMINE have released four albums based heavily on Elric, namely "Champion Eternal" in 1997, "Dragonlord" in 1999, "Stormbringer Ruler" in 2002 and "Emperor of the Black Runes" in 2004. • The song "Ilian of Garathorm" from
Times of Obscene Evil & Wild Daring (2019) by
heavy metal band
Smoulder is based on Ilian, one of the iterations of the
Eternal Champion.
Film •
Wendy Pini published a book documenting her attempt to make an animated film project of the
Stormbringer series,
Law and Chaos: The "Stormbringer" Animated Film Project. • In May 2007, in an interview with
Empire magazine, directors
Chris and
Paul Weitz stated that they were in the process of adapting a trilogy of films based on Elric for
Universal Pictures. Universal dropped the project and it is now in the hands of
New Republic Pictures.
Role-playing games • Elric (along with Stormbringer) was listed in the first printing of
Advanced Dungeons & Dragons (AD&D) Deities & Demigods rule book. However,
Chaosium already had a role-playing series in the works based on Elric and Stormbringer, and the initial AD&D printing was not fully authorised. A mutually beneficial deal was worked out between Chaosium and
TSR, yet TSR chose to remove Elric from later printings of
Deities & Demigods. • The world of Elric's Young Kingdoms was the setting of the
Stormbringer role-playing game by the publisher Chaosium (
Hawkmoon has also been so treated, as has Corum). In 1993 Chaosium released
Elric! which still used their BRP system. • After a disagreement between Moorcock and Chaosium, the
Stormbringer line was discontinued. Subsequently, a new version called "Elric of Melniboné" was published by
Mongoose Publishing under their
Runequest system in 2007. • An independently published French role-playing game inspired primarily by the Elric Saga,
Black Sword Hack, was released in 2020. It has since received significant attention within the "
Old School Renaissance" movement.
Video game A video game based on
Elric was in development by Haiku Studios and to be published by
Psygnosis for the
PlayStation during the late 1990s.
Stormbringer There have also been several references in popular culture to Elric's sword
Stormbringer. == Critical response ==