Spirou et Fantasio (TV series)

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Spirou et Fantasio
Spirou & Fantasio 2006 series.png
Written byCyrille Vayssette
Directed byDaniel Duda
StarringLaurent Vernin
Sylvian Goldberg
ComposerFabrice Aboulker
Country of origin France
Belgium
Original languageFrench
No. of seasons2
No. of episodes39
Production
Executive producerOlivier Nomen
Running time22 minutes
Original release
Network M6
ReleaseSeptember 3, 2006 (2006-09-03) 
January 2009 (2009-01)

Spirou et Fantasio, or, Les nouvelles aventures de Spirou et Fantasio, is a French-Belgian animated comedy-adventure television series based on the Franco-Belgian comics series Spirou et Fantasio . It premiered in France in September 2006. The show's English-language title is "Spirou & Fantasio (Two of a Kind)", or "Two of a Kind: Spirou & Fantasio". [1] The English-dubbed version was made available on Netflix in the United States from January 8, 2013, till April 18, 2014. [2]

Contents

List of episodes

  1. "L'Île de Zorglub 1" ("Zorglub's Island, Part 1")
  2. "L'Île de Zorglub 2" ("Zorglub's Island, Part 2")
  3. "Légende glacée" ("The Ice Legend")
  4. "L'Arche de Zorglub" ("Zorglub's Ark")
  5. "Vengeance des samouraï" ("The Samurai's Revenge")
  6. "Robert le robot" ("Robert the Robot")
  7. "Le troisième composant" ("The third component")
  8. "Formez le cercle" ("Round and Round")
  9. "Spip ne répond plus" ("Spip Disappears")
  10. "Enfer vert" ("The Greening Effect")
  11. "Hibernator" ("Love at First Fright")
  12. "Un monstre de toute beauté" ("A Beautiful Monster")
  13. "La Revanche de Zorglub" ("Zorglub's Revenge")
  14. "Le ciel est tombé sur nos têtes" ("Everything's Rosy")
  15. "L'École des petits génies" ("Child's Play")
  16. "Fantasio fait des étincelles" ("Sparkling Fantasio")
  17. "La taille fait la différence" ("It's All in the Size")
  18. "Cure de jouvence" ("A Toast to Youth")
  19. "La Clé d'Uhr" ("The Key to Uhr")
  20. "La lumière de Shamash" ("Shamash")
  21. "Trou bleu" ("True Blue")
  22. "Super paparazzi" ("The Mysterious Paparazzi")
  23. "Le maître des ombres" ("Light and Shadow")
  24. "Zaoki décroche la Lune" ("Moonstruck Zaoki")
  25. "In vivo" ("In Vivo")
  26. "Zorglub ne tourne pas rond" ("Zorglub Stops the World")
  27. "Eclipse Total" ("Total Eclipse")
  28. "Seuls contre moi" ("Who's Who?")
  29. "Poulpe fiction" ("Sea Fever")
  30. "Fan de Zorglub" ("Zorglub's Fan Club")
  31. "Bug" ("Game Plan")
  32. "Numéro 1" ("Number One")
  33. "Z-H2-O" ("Z-H2O")
  34. "Coup de foudre" ("Stormy Weather")
  35. "Spirou et Fantasia" ("Back to School")
  36. "Le grand ménage" ("Heavy Housekeeping")
  37. "Paradis perdu" ("Paradise Lost")
  38. "Série B" ("Serie B")
  39. "La femme invisible" ("The Invisible Woman")

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Zorglub</span> Fictional character in Spirou et Fantasio comic strip series

Zorglub is a fictional character in the Belgian comic strip Spirou et Fantasio, created by Greg and André Franquin, and first appeared in the serialised story Z comme Zorglub in Spirou magazine in 1959, later published in the diptych albums "Z comme Zorglub" (1961) and "L'ombre du Z" (1962). Zorglub's character was initially that of a sinister megalomaniac, mad scientist, but also a clumsy and bungling one who later reformed and became a friend and ally to the protagonists.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marsupilami</span> Comic strip character created by André Franquin

Marsupilami is a comic book character and fictional animal species created by André Franquin. Its first appearance was in the 31 January 1952 issue of the Franco-Belgian comics magazine Spirou. Since then it appeared regularly in the popular Belgian comics series Spirou & Fantasio, as a pet of the main characters, until Franquin stopped working on the series; the character's final appearance in the series during Franquin's lifetime was in 1970.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Zantafio</span>

Zantafio is a recurring fictional antagonist in the Spirou et Fantasio comic book series. He was created by André Franquin and first appeared in Spirou et les héritiers (1952). Zantafio bears a strong resemblance to Fantasio, because they are cousins. In Le dictateur et le champignon (1953), he is a South-American dictator of the fictional country Palombia.

<i>Spirou & Fantasio</i> Franco-Belgian comics series

Spirou & Fantasio, commonly shortened to Spirou, is one of the most popular classic Franco-Belgian comics. The series, which has been running since 1938, shares many characteristics with other European humorous adventure comics like The Adventures of Tintin, Lucky Luke, and Asterix. It has been written and drawn by a succession of artists.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Champignac</span>

Champignac, or specifically Champignac-en-Cambrousse, is a fictional village frequently featured in the adventures of Spirou et Fantasio by André Franquin and the successive authors. The initial idea of Champignac is attributed to Henri Gillain. The village was introduced in the adventure Il y a un sorcier à Champignac, first published in Spirou magazine in 1950.

Yves Chaland was a French cartoonist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Seccotine</span> Recurring character from the Spirou et Fantasio comics

Seccotine is a recurring character from the Spirou et Fantasio comics, and the first major female character of the series, a strong-willed reporter. She was created by André Franquin, and made her first appearance in La turbotraction serialised in 1953 and published in the album La corne de rhinocéros in 1955.

<i>Le Petit Spirou</i> Belgian comic book series

Le Petit Spirou is a popular Belgian comic strip created by Tome and Janry in 1987. The series developed from La jeunesse de Spirou (1987), a Spirou & Fantasio album in which Tome and Janry set to imagine Spirou's youth. It was developed into a spin-off series shortly afterwards and the authors have focused on it ever since the controversy created after their final Spirou et Fantasio album, Machine qui rêve (1998). New albums are among the bestselling French-language comics, with 330,000 copies for the latest one.

<i>Quatre aventures de Spirou et Fantasio</i> First album of the Spirou & Fantasio series by Franquin

Quatre aventures de Spirou et Fantasio, written and drawn by Franquin, is a collection of four stories from serial publication between 1948 and 1950 in Spirou magazine, namely Spirou et les plans du robot, Spirou sur le ring, Spirou fait du cheval, and Spirou chez les Pygmées. Together they were released as the first official series Spirou et Fantasio hardcover album in 1950.

<i>Panade à Champignac</i>

Panade à Champignac is the nineteenth album of the Spirou et Fantasio series. The story, written and drawn by Franquin, was serialised along with Bravo les Brothers in Spirou magazine before publication as a hardcover album in 1969.

<i>Virus</i> (<i>Spirou et Fantasio</i>)

Virus, written by Tome and drawn by Janry, is the 33rd album of the Spirou et Fantasio series, and the first to come from this creative team, carrying on the series after the work of previous authors. The story was initially serialised in Spirou magazine before being released by Dupuis as a hardcover album in 1984.

<i>Le réveil du Z</i>

Le réveil du Z, written by Tome and drawn by Janry, is the thirty-seventh album of the Spirou et Fantasio series, and the fifth of the authors. The story was initially serialised in Spirou magazine before being released as a hardcover album in 1986.

<i>Les Chapeaux noirs</i>

Les Chapeaux noirs, album in the Belgian comic series Spirou et Fantasio, released in 1952. The album contains the longer story Les Chapeaux noirs written and drawn by Franquin, and three shorter stories, Mystère à la frontière by Franquin, and Comme une mouche au plafond and Spirou et les hommes-grenouilles by Jijé. All the stories were previously serialised in the Franco-Belgian comics magazine Spirou between 1949-50.

<i>Spirou et laventure</i> 1948 comic album by Jijé

Spirou et l'aventure, written and drawn by Jijé, is the first published album containing Spirou et Fantasio adventures. The 6 featured stories were produced during and after World War II, and serialised in the Franco-Belgian comics magazine Le journal de Spirou during this unusual period. They were assembled and published as a hardcover album in 1948 and feature the first appearances of Fantasio.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Will (comics)</span>

Willy Maltaite, better known by the pseudonym Will, was a Belgian comics creator and comics artist in the Franco-Belgian tradition. In the genre known in Francophone countries as bande dessinée, Will is one of the young cartoonists trained by Jijé, who made them live and work with him in his studio in Waterloo. He is considered one of la Bande des Quatre, and a founding member of the Marcinelle school.

<i>Spirou et Fantasio</i> (comic book)

Spirou et Fantasio, written and drawn by Franquin, is an album that precedes the main Spirou et Fantasio album series. It contains Franquin's first four stories completed between 1946 and 1948, three of which were serialised in Spirou magazine.

Marcel Denis was a French-speaking Belgian comics creator. He was the creator of the series Hultrasson and Les Frères Clips in Spirou magazine. He also made two episodes of Tif et Tondu. He was a part of the so-called Marcinelle School, influenced by Jijé and André Franquin.

<i>Spirou</i> (video game) 1995 video game

Spirou is a platform game developed and published by Infogrames during 1995 for the Mega Drive and 1996 for the Super NES, and Game Boy video game consoles, and for Microsoft Windows and MS-DOS. A Game Gear version was planned, but scrapped, though a prototype version with the full completed game was leaked online.

Spip is a fictional Eurasian red squirrel and a main character in the Belgian comic strip Spirou et Fantasio. He is Spirou's pet and was the first recurring supporting character in the series.

References

  1. "Spirou & Fantasio (Two of a Kind)". Mediatoon Distribution.
  2. "Leaving Netflix USA – April 18th to April 30th".