Search This Blog

Showing posts with label bande dessinée. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bande dessinée. Show all posts

18 June 2022

UPDATED: Iznogoud comic - 1996

Now updated with a much better image for the cover to issue #2 (and I've now completed my Iznogoud comic collection, yay!)

An oddity from 1996 then...it's the Iznogoud comic. For more details of Iznogoud why not checkout his wikipedia entry here?
Art is by Jean Tabary. This was just a 3 issue run and is hard to get hold of.

Phoneix Press? Not come across them before - they printed at least one other title - Phantom 2040 - as well as a VR Troopers 3D comic but not sure what else. If you have any ideas, just let me know. 

Phantom 2040 was a 4 issue mini-series printed (in the USA) in 1995 and re-imagined the legendary Phantom character (created by Lee Falk) in, I'm guessing, the year 2040. Cover images can be found here

Iznogoud comic - issue 1, March 1996, published by Phoenix Press Limited
Stories are as follows
Kissmet [previously published in The wicked wiles of Iznogoud]
Mesmer-Eyesed [previously published in The wicked wiles of Iznogoud]
The occidental philtre [previously published in The wicked wiles of Iznogoud]
The time machine [previously published in The wicked wiles of Iznogoud]


Iznogoud comic - issue 2, April 1996, published by Phoenix Press Limited
Stories are as follows
The magic carpet [previously published in Iznogoud and the magic carpet]
The tiger hunt [previously published in Iznogoud and the magic carpet]
The box of souvenirs [previously published in Iznogoud and the magic carpet]


Iznogoud comic - issue 3, May 1996, published by Phoenix Press Limited
Stories are as follows
The picnic  [previously published in The wicked wiles of Iznogoud]
Chop and change [previously published in The wicked wiles of Iznogoud]
Incognito [previously published in Iznogoud and the magic carpet]

10 May 2021

Cartoon Aid - the big book (part 4)

I've looked before at publications associated with the Cartoon Aid charity (like Band Aid but with more cartoons and less Bob Geldof) - if you missed them they are as follows...
a). the Olympic book is here
b). Bryan Hitch's work in the Kidz book is here
c). Mike Collin's work in the Kidz book is here
d). Terry & Sheila Bave's work in the Kidz book is here
e). Simon Donald's work in the Kidz book is here
f). Cartoon Aid auction at Sotheby's & a festival in Margate is here
g). Waddington's jigsaw (from the Margate festival is here)
h). Scare Bears monster party book is here 
i). a REALLY big tome called Cartoon Aid here 

I've started looking at some of the contents of this big book, so far I've looked at Asterix (here and here) and then I've found that there is some DC Thomson material in there (here) and now I've found some Achille Talon

Wikipedia (here) says that Achille Talon is a Franco-Belgian comics series featuring an eponymous main character, created by Greg (the pseudonym of Michel Regnier). Starting publication in the Franco-Belgian comics magazine Pilote in 1963, the series presents the comic misadventures of an anti-hero.

The name derives from "talon d'Achille", the French term for an "Achilles' heel", which suits the character although the Achilles' heel of Achille Talon is not his heel but his large nose.


I'm not aware of other English language reprints of Achille (but I could be really wrong - if you know differently do just let me know) so is this his first and / or last English language reprint???






20 June 2020

Iznogoud comic - 1996

An oddity from 1996 then...it's the Iznogoud comic. For more details of Iznogoud why not checkout his wikipedia entry here?
Art is by Goscinny (the man who drew Asterix - and much else besides). This was just a 3 issue run and is hard to get hold of.

Phoneix Press? Not come across them before - they printed at least one other title - Phantom 2040 - as well as a VR Troopers 3D comic but not sure what else. If you have any ideas, just let me know. 

Phantom 2040 was a 4 issue mini-series printed (in the USA) in 1995 and re-imagined the legendary Phantom character (created by Lee Falk) in, I'm guessing, the year 2040.

Izngoud comic - issue 1, March 1996, published by Phoenix Press Limited
Stories are as follows
Kissmet [previously published in The wicked wiles of Iznogoud]
Mesmer-Eyesed [previously published in The wicked wiles of Iznogoud]
The occidental philtre [previously published in The wicked wiles of Iznogoud]
The time machine [previously published in The wicked wiles of Iznogoud]


Izngoud comic - issue 2, April 1996, published by Phoenix Press Limited
image care of 
http://www.eurocomics.info/iznogoud.html

Stories are as follows
The magic carpet [previously published in Iznogoud and the magic carpet]
The tiger hunt [previously published in Iznogoud and the magic carpet]
The box of souvenirs [previously published in Iznogoud and the magic carpet]


Izngoud comic - issue 3, May 1996, published by Phoenix Press Limited

Stories are as follows
The picnic  [previously published in The wicked wiles of Iznogoud]
Chop and change [previously published in The wicked wiles of Iznogoud]
Incognito [previously published in Iznogoud and the magic carpet]

2 June 2020

Asterix and other bande desineé reprints in British comics

If you enjoyed my chat with Tony Esmond on episode #23 of the Never Iron Anything podcast here are my notes for the show - hopefully there'll be something here to pique your interest...check out the show link here...

https://neverironanything.podbean.com/e/episode-23-asterix-and-the-big-fight-with-richard-sheaf/

Ranger
40 pages
Lots of colour
Thick paper
All 12 new strips written by Mike Butterworth
Art by Mike Hubbard, J Millar Watt, Geoff Campion, Jesus Blasco, Arturo Del Castillo
David Roach says “...it was a large, unwieldy, somewhat unfocussed comic which felt uncomfortably old fashioned at the dawn of the swinging ‘60s”

18th September 1965 – 18th June 1966 = 40 issues
In all 40 issues
“Britons never, never, never shall be slaves”
44 pages in ‘Asterix and the big fight’ – so slightly abridged
Ranger book 1967 = 1 x page (page 34 of Asterix & the big fight)
·         This page was missed out completely in Ranger [44 pages to squeeze into 40 issues]
·         April 16 1966 is the page before; April 23 1966 is the page after!

The strip is set in Britain not in France. Just says that some of the Britains adapt to the Roman way of life and some resist; no sense that this is the last village holding out against the occupation.

Not translated by Anthea Bell & Derek Hockridge
Vitalstatistix = Caradoc
Asterix = Beric the bold
Dogmatix = Fido
Obelix = son of Boadicea
Getafix = Doric
(Local village) Linoleum = Chipping Wallop
Cassius Ceramix = Barewolf
Psychoanalytix the druid = Dr Dottidoc

Lots more words in the Ranger version

Other early BD strips in British comics
Tintin in Eagle in 1951 – albums (in English) started to appear in colour from 1958 onwards

Alix – 2 volumes in 1971

Ompa-pa – published in English in 1977/78

·         Reprints in The first instance of Fleetway reprinting a European strip that I can find, using Steve Holland and Dave Ashford’s Collector’s Guides as reference, is in The Sun (which was a comic back then rather than a newspaper), which in November 1950 ran “The Jester’s Revenge“. Unfortunately there are no credits for this strip or for “Hal Hotspur” which appeared in February 1951 and was also a European strip.

·         Both stories have medieval themes and were cut and paste jobs often appearing in the centre pages and on the back cover with distinctive flat colouring of the time. The Sun and its companion comic The Comet would often turn the black line to blue and then colour the strips, creating a rather odd effect. Other pages would be two colour while the balance was printed in black and white.

·         The Phantom Knight” reprinted in The Comet from February 1955 followed the pattern set by The Sun. This medieval strip had three pages all in the distinctive colours just described. Researchers will have to rely on stumbling across the source material of these strips to assign creative credits and original titles, or it may be revealed that they are actually original works by obscure un-named artists.

·         “Skippy the Kangaroo” is credited to a team of creators – Danet, Dubrisay and Genéstre and as an “André Sarrut Production”. The three named creators – artist L. Danet and animators G. Dubrisay and Roland Genéstre – all worked on Sarrut’s troubled animated film,  The Shepherdess and Chimney Sweeper (La Bergere et le Ramoneur) between 1948 and 1950, a production which was never officially released.

·         “The  adventures of Boy Colin” appeared in The Sun in October 1954
o   Ran for a whole year
o   Therefore first 2 albums were reprinted
o   Belgian creators J Van Melkebeke & Paul Covelier
·         Super Detective Library #42 (1954)
o   Most contents of SDL were reprints
o   Often used American / British newspaper strips

·         Knockout April 1960 – Jerry Spring by Jije becomes “He’s Slade”

·         Knockout May 1960 – Anna of the jungle by Hugo Pratt became ‘Jungle Drums’

·         Valiant issue 1 (6th Oct 1962) – Paladin the fearless by Jean-Michel Charlier & Albert Uderzo, a reprint of Bulldog from Pilote [Charlier writes Blueberry, Young Blueberry & Buck Danny]

·         Valiant 16 Nov 63 – 18 Jan 64 = Little Fred and Big Ed = 10 weeks
·         Valiant 25 Jan 64 – 4 Apr 64 = Little Fred                        = 11 weeks
o   = Asterix the Gaul = 1st book (garish colours, characters not finalised)
o   Asterix = Little Fred, the ancient Brit with bags of grit
o   Obelix = Big Ed
o   Getafix = Hocus Pocus
o    An edited-down version of Asterix the Gaul appeared in Valiant, a boys' comic published by Fleetway Publications, beginning in the issue dated 16 November 1963. It appeared in colour on the back page. Set in the Britain of 43AD, the strip was originally called Little Fred and Big Ed. Little Fred and stonemason Big Ed lived in the village of Nevergivup which was surrounded by eight Roman camps: Harmonium, Cranium, Pandemonium, Premium, Rostrum, Aquarium, Maximum and Laudanum. Their druid was called Hokus Pokus. As the story progresses and Obelix is absent from the action, the strip was renamed Little Fred, the Ancient Brit with Bags of Grit.
o    They got through the whole story in one page per week. As an example of how they edited it, here's a comparison of the last two pages of the original and how they appeared in Valiant:
(with thanks to Robbie Moubert for the above)
·         Look & Learn reprinted ‘Asterix & Cleopatra’ as ‘In the days of good queen Cleo’
o   25 June 1966 – 22 April 1967 = 44 weeks; so no abridging of the strip
o   Obelix becomes Doric (which was Getafix’s name in the Ranger adaptation)

·         Lion reprinted ‘Lucky Luke’ (art by Morris; script by Goscinny) as Boy Kidd, 11/06/66-16/07/66 [the strip having previously appeared in the full run of Champion - 26/02/66-04/06/66]

·         Lion also reprinted (as Jinks) ‘Modeste et Pompon’ from Le journal de Tintin (Belgium) – art by Andre Franquin; this had appeared previously in Knockout under the title ‘Dickie and Birdbath watch the woggle’ (1960)

18 March 2019

Lady Lovely Locks and the Pixietails

In a break from my normal look at boys comics here's a glimpse of a comic that I came across a couple of times recently, having never seen it previously. Michael Carroll covered it on his blog (here) when thinking about the Marvel UK '70s and '80s leftovers (as he described it).



I could see that the cover was likely to have been drawn by Mario Capaldi (although it's uncredited) so I thought I'd acquire a single issue as a curiosity. Alongside the usual colouring in sort of things and games for kids there was 3 pages of this strip...


ok - so I wasn't expecting that, what's this strip? Looks like some sort of bandes dessinées - but that's quite a large choice, any chance of a signature?


Ah-ha! There's the signature, in nearly the penultimate panel there's something that looks like 'Crisse'. OK so pop over to lambiek.net (here), look in C and find Didier Crisse - could it be him? What strip might it be?

Hmmm, he seems to have illustrated a strip about a Japanese Princess in 'Tintin' magazine 1980-87 with Bom (writer presumably). So a quick bit of googling and we suddenly have a strip called 'Nahomi'.


So there we have it - a very obscure reprint of a European comic strip in the UK.


Here's a foreign edition of Lady Lovely Locks issue 1 - again, cover looks like Mario Capaldi's work.

And the Marvel UK #1

...and #2