Jump to content

Luc Orient: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
Luc Orient is the hero of a science fiction comic serie, created in 1966 by Greg (pseudonym of Michel Regnier), writer, and Eddy Paape, artist.
Luc Orient is the hero of a science fiction comic serie, created in 1966 by [[Greg]] (pseudonym of Michel Regnier), writer, and [[Eddy Paape]], artist. It belongs to the rich family of [[Franco-Belgian comics]].


Luc Orient, professor Hugo Kala from Eurocristal laboratory, and his girl-friend Lora, share several adventures involving aliens (from planet Terango) and scientific mysteries. The entire serie is made of a set of 18 episodes and spans across a few decades, from the end of '70s to the end of '90s: despite this limited number of issues and a resemblance of the adventures of Flash Gordon (at least in the first episodes), character had a good success.
Luc Orient, professor Hugo Kala from Eurocristal laboratory, and his girl-friend Lora, share several adventures involving aliens (from planet Terango) and scientific mysteries. The entire serie is made of a set of 18 episodes published across a few decades, from the end of '70s to the end of '90s: despite this limited number of issues and an initial resemblance with the adventures of [[Flash Gordon]], character had a good success in many European countries, where a small fan community is still alive.

Stories were originally published in several magazines, including [[Tintin]], [[Tintin Hebdo]]
and [[Nouveau Tintin]]. Following is the list of stories:

# Le Dragon de Feu [The Dragon Of Fire] (TI Nos. 952-970, 1966-67)
# Les Soleils de Glace [The Suns Of Ice] (TI Nos. 976-997, 1967)
# Le Maitre de Terango [The Master Of Terango] (TI Nos. 1009-1029, 1968)
# La Planète de l'Angoisse [The Planet Of Terror] (TI Nos. 1040-1059, 1968-69)
# La Forêt d'Acier [The Forest Of Steel] (TI Nos. 1082-1102, 1969)
# Le Secret des 7 Lumières [The Secret Of The 7 Lights] (TI Nos. 1118-1138, 1970)
# Le Cratère aux Sortilèges [The Crater Of Spells] (TI Nos. 1183-1196, 1971)
# La Légion des Anges Maudits [The Legion Of The Fallen Angels] (TI Nos. 1206-1221, 1971-72)
# 24 Heures pour la Planète Terre [24 Hours For Planet Earth] (TI No.1258-TH No. 10, 1972-73)
# Le 6ème Continent [The Sixth Continent] (TH Nos. 53-60, 1974)
# La Vallée des Eaux Troubles [The Valley Of Murky Waters] (TH Nos. 83-98, 1974)
# La Porte de Cristal [The Crystal Gate] (NT Nos. 10-25, 1975-76)
# L'Enclume de la Foudre [The Anvil Of Thunder] (NT Nos. 96-107, 1977)
# Le Rivage de la Fureur [The Shores Of Wrath] (1981)
# Roubak, Ultime Espoir [Rubak: Ultimate Hope] (1984)
# Caragal (1985)
# Les Spores de Nulle Part [The Spores From Nowhere] ("Tintin Pocket" 1970; collected 1990)
# Rendez-Vous à 20 Heures en Enfer [Rendezvous At 20:00 In Hell] (1994)

== Publishing History ==

Luc Orient was originally serialized in the weekly comic magazine "Tintin" starting in 1966. It was one of the many series simultaneously launched by its then-editor Greg to give the magazine a needed facelift. Luc Orient's adventures were then collected as a series of graphic novels by Editions du Lombard, starting in 1969.
The series continued regularly with one or two volumes per year until episode 13 released in 1978. After "Tintin" cancellation in 1978 (following several name changes), the later episodes were released sporadically.
Episode 16 was written by Paape himself. "Episode 17" was not a single new story but a collection of short stories previously published in the digest-sized "Tintin Pocket" in the early 1970s and reformatted for graphic novel publication. Episode 18, released in 1994, seems to be the last in the series.

== Credits ==
Most of the information reported here comes from Web site "Cool French Comics" http://www.coolfrenchcomics.com/index.html

== See also ==
* For a non-exhaustive list of French and Belgian authors, see [[List of comic creators]]
* For a non-exhaustive list of French and Belgian comic books, see [[List of comic books]]
* For a non-exhaustive list of French and Belgian characters, see [[Franco-Belgian comics/Characters]]
* For a non-exhaustive list of French and Belgian comics magazines, see [[Franco-Belgian comics magazines]]
* For a non-exhaustive list of French and Belgian comics publishing houses, see [[Franco-Belgian publishing houses]]

== External links ==
* Cool French Comics: http://www.coolfrenchcomics.com/index.html <br>
* Centre National de la BD: http://www.labd.com/ (in French).<br>
* BD Paradisio: http://www.bdparadisio.com/ (in French).<br>
* BDSelection: http://www.bdselection.com/ (in French).<br>



[[Category:Comic books]]
[[Category:Comics]]
[[Category:French literature]]
[[Category:Belgian literature]]

Revision as of 06:26, 5 October 2005

Luc Orient is the hero of a science fiction comic serie, created in 1966 by Greg (pseudonym of Michel Regnier), writer, and Eddy Paape, artist. It belongs to the rich family of Franco-Belgian comics.

Luc Orient, professor Hugo Kala from Eurocristal laboratory, and his girl-friend Lora, share several adventures involving aliens (from planet Terango) and scientific mysteries. The entire serie is made of a set of 18 episodes published across a few decades, from the end of '70s to the end of '90s: despite this limited number of issues and an initial resemblance with the adventures of Flash Gordon, character had a good success in many European countries, where a small fan community is still alive.

Stories were originally published in several magazines, including Tintin, Tintin Hebdo and Nouveau Tintin. Following is the list of stories:

  1. Le Dragon de Feu [The Dragon Of Fire] (TI Nos. 952-970, 1966-67)
  2. Les Soleils de Glace [The Suns Of Ice] (TI Nos. 976-997, 1967)
  3. Le Maitre de Terango [The Master Of Terango] (TI Nos. 1009-1029, 1968)
  4. La Planète de l'Angoisse [The Planet Of Terror] (TI Nos. 1040-1059, 1968-69)
  5. La Forêt d'Acier [The Forest Of Steel] (TI Nos. 1082-1102, 1969)
  6. Le Secret des 7 Lumières [The Secret Of The 7 Lights] (TI Nos. 1118-1138, 1970)
  7. Le Cratère aux Sortilèges [The Crater Of Spells] (TI Nos. 1183-1196, 1971)
  8. La Légion des Anges Maudits [The Legion Of The Fallen Angels] (TI Nos. 1206-1221, 1971-72)
  9. 24 Heures pour la Planète Terre [24 Hours For Planet Earth] (TI No.1258-TH No. 10, 1972-73)
  10. Le 6ème Continent [The Sixth Continent] (TH Nos. 53-60, 1974)
  11. La Vallée des Eaux Troubles [The Valley Of Murky Waters] (TH Nos. 83-98, 1974)
  12. La Porte de Cristal [The Crystal Gate] (NT Nos. 10-25, 1975-76)
  13. L'Enclume de la Foudre [The Anvil Of Thunder] (NT Nos. 96-107, 1977)
  14. Le Rivage de la Fureur [The Shores Of Wrath] (1981)
  15. Roubak, Ultime Espoir [Rubak: Ultimate Hope] (1984)
  16. Caragal (1985)
  17. Les Spores de Nulle Part [The Spores From Nowhere] ("Tintin Pocket" 1970; collected 1990)
  18. Rendez-Vous à 20 Heures en Enfer [Rendezvous At 20:00 In Hell] (1994)

Publishing History

Luc Orient was originally serialized in the weekly comic magazine "Tintin" starting in 1966. It was one of the many series simultaneously launched by its then-editor Greg to give the magazine a needed facelift. Luc Orient's adventures were then collected as a series of graphic novels by Editions du Lombard, starting in 1969.

The series continued regularly with one or two volumes per year until episode 13 released in 1978. After "Tintin" cancellation in 1978 (following several name changes), the later episodes were released sporadically.

Episode 16 was written by Paape himself. "Episode 17" was not a single new story but a collection of short stories previously published in the digest-sized "Tintin Pocket" in the early 1970s and reformatted for graphic novel publication. Episode 18, released in 1994, seems to be the last in the series.

Credits

Most of the information reported here comes from Web site "Cool French Comics" http://www.coolfrenchcomics.com/index.html

See also