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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Synopsis  





3 Computer game  





4 Albums  



4.1  Pocket series  





4.2  Comic book series  







5 See also  





6 References  





7 External links  














Bobo (Belgian comic)






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Bobo (Belgian comics))

Bobo
Main character with the logo used from 1989
Author(s)Paul Deliège, Maurice Rosy
Illustrator(s)Paul Deliège
Current status/scheduleDiscontinued
Launch date1961
End date1997
Publisher(s)Dupuis
Genre(s)Humor comics, gag cartoon
Original languageFrench

Bobo is a Franco-Belgian comics series created by Paul Deliège and Maurice Rosy.[1] The series features an eponymous prisoner of the jail Inzepocket ("in the pocket" with a French accent).[2]InDutch, the series' name is Jaap.

History

[edit]

Bobo first appeared in a mini–récit (mini-story) in Spirou magazine on May 11, 1961[3] In the early years, it was written by Rosy, who also took artistic responsibility during a brief period in the 1970s.[4] Eventually, the character evolved into its own series, mostly consisting of short stories, and a few full length (i.e. 44 pages) stories. Fifteen albums appeared until the 1990s, when the series ended its run.

Synopsis

[edit]

Bobo was sentenced to twenty years in jail for stealing a bicycle (it was the bicycle of the sentencing judge). Bobo is always trying to escape in various ways, usually by digging, and thus make his way to the beaches of Acapulco. Other major characters are the prison's manager who is fond of pies and cookies; the prison bully who has it in for Bobo and his various schemes; the Professional, a grumpy old prisoner, who insists that everything be done "by the book," his copy of which dates back to before the prison reform movement (at his insistence, the Professional lives in an old dungeon, wears a ball-and-chain, does heavy labor and only eats stale bread and dirty water); and Stonie the warden, who always carries a stone (left over after building the prison), and which he is constantly trying to get rid off, but his colleagues insist that he carries. There is also Julot-les-pinceaux (Julian Brush), Bobo's outside accomplice who is always coming up with various schemes to get his beloved boss out of the nick.

Computer game

[edit]

A six-stage computer game was made was released for Atari ST and Commodore AmigabyInfogrames Entertainment. The player steers Bobo through six tasks: feeding soup to his hungry inmates in the mess hall whiles killing flies; peeling an ever-increasing mount of potatoes; cleaning the floor of the prison office hallway; helping his numerous mates escape via a trampoline; running over a set of three high-mounted power lines; and finally, stopping your cellmates from snoring when you are trying to sleep.[5]

The purpose of the game is not to reach a certain goal, but to collect as many points as possible in the short space of time given in most of the tasks. Failing in these task is inevitable—like in the first, the inmates get hungry very quickly as time passes, and eventually someone puts the soup pot on Bobo's head; and in the third an increasing number of guardsmen, dogs and inmates keep running through the hallway, staining the floor with their dirty shoes.[6]

Albums

[edit]

Source:[7]

Cover of Le Prince de l'évasion (1964)

Pocket series

[edit]

Scenario: Maurice Rosy - Illustrations: Paul Deliège

  1. Bobo, le Prince de l'évasion (1964)
  2. 4 aventures de Bobo, le Prince de l'évasion (1964)
  3. Bobo aux sports d'hiver (1964)
  4. Bobo se déguise (1965)
  5. Bobo au sommet (1965)
  6. Une baballe pour Bobo (1965)
  7. Bobo fait le mur (1966)
  8. Bobo et l’amie Pierre (1966)

Comic book series

[edit]

Scenario and illustrations: Paul Deliège

  1. Bobo prend l'air (1977)
  2. Bobo prend la mer (1978)
  3. Bobo comic's troupier (1980)
  4. Un sac en cavale (1981)
  5. Destination Lune (1982) (Deliège, Didgé, Julos)
  6. L'Homme obus (1983)
  7. La Pri$on dorée (1985)
  8. Le Volontaire (1986)
  9. e Professionnel (1987)
  10. La Carpette violente (1988)
  11. Le Retour du Greffé (1989)
  12. L'Escalade (1990)
  13. L'Oiseau du diable vauvert (1991)
  14. Bobo fait le mur (1992)
  15. La Rançon de la gloire (1994)
  16. La Première pierre (1997)

See also

[edit]

Marcinelle schoolBelgian comicsFranco-Belgian comics

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Paul Deliège". lambiek.net. 7 December 2023.
  • ^ "Deliège - Dessin". dupuis.com (in French). 7 December 2023.
  • ^ BDoubliées. "Spirou année 1961" (in French).
  • ^ Lambiek Comiclopedia. "Maurice Rosy".
  • ^ "Bobo". Lemon Amiga. Retrieved 2024-04-11.
  • ^ "Bobo". atarilegend.com. 18 June 2013.
  • ^ "Jaap". stripinfo.be (in Dutch). 16 November 2023.
  • Footnotes

  • Bobo albums Bedetheque (in French)
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bobo_(Belgian_comic)&oldid=1227373163"

    Categories: 
    Dupuis titles
    Belgian comics characters
    1961 comics debuts
    Belgian comic strips
    Humor comics
    Gag-a-day comics
    Comics characters introduced in 1961
    Fictional thieves
    Fictional prisoners and detainees
    Fictional prison escapees
    Male characters in comics
    Comics adapted into video games
    Hidden categories: 
    CS1 French-language sources (fr)
    CS1 Dutch-language sources (nl)
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Articles with French-language sources (fr)
     



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