Rahan (comics)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Nick Number (talk | contribs) at 01:50, 22 November 2022 (repaired link(s) to disambiguation pages (you can help); dmy dates). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Rahan is a French comic series about an intelligent prehistoric man, that appeared first as part of Pif gadget starting in March 1969,[1] then published in albums of 2 to 4 complete stories. It was initially written by Roger Lecureux, and after his death in 1999, by Lecureux's son. Rahan has over 100 stories and lasted for 30 years.

The comics' illustrations are mainly drawn by André Chéret. Other artists who also contributed were Romero, Guy Zam (in French) and José de Huescar (in French). It had received a few adaptations over the years – notably adapted into a 2008 Italian-French animated television series, titled Rahan: Son of the Dark Age, produced by French animation studio Xilam Animation.

Premise

Rahan receives his necklace from his dying adoptive father. (Illustration by André Chéret.)

After the destruction of his tribe in a volcano eruption, Rahan moves from land to land and tribe to tribe while spreading goodwill among those-who-walk-on-two-feet, and a powerful ethic of cooperation. With his open altruism often at odds with his powerful will to survive, Rahan's ethic is encompassed by the qualities represented by the bear-claw necklace he received from his dying adoptive father, Crao: courage, loyalty, generosity, resilience and wisdom. After Rahan gets married, he receives a sixth claw, the claw of curiosity.

Rahan uses a variety of scientific methods to pick up bits of his knowledge (from nature) and spin it for a solution – for himself, for some human tribe or even to help some animals in distress. He comes up with the catapult, the net, the fishing pole, the lens, diverts water for use in drinking and agriculture, flies on wings of leather, uses concave mirrors to concentrate the rays of the sun to heat caves and fight rampaging animals. In stark contrast to any other primitive story, which usually base around using stone as a major material, Rahan's adventure combines the positive social attitude of a true leader (being Rahan himself) with the inventive mind of a true scientist.

In other media

In 1986, Rahan was adapted into an animated series by RMC Audiovisual, having a total of 26 episodes. Another animated series was made in 2008, developed as a children's animated series with many differences.

In 2006, a movie adaptation was planned, directed by Christophe Gans and starring Mark Dacascos in the titular role, but it had been postponed.

The black edition of Rahan was edited by Soleil Prod in 1998, serving as the "complete edition" of the series.

TV series

Xilam Animation, France 3, Rai Fiction and Castelrosso Films[2] produced a television series titled Rahan: Son of the Dark Age.[3]

Taking place in a singular storyline, Rahan travels through a world after a dawn of humankind, with two tribes vying for who will be in control. Along his journey, he is accompanied by a sidekick named Ursus. While magic was repeatedly shown in the comics to be an ignorant misinterpretation of physical phenomena, the Shadow Queen (or "Queen of Darkness") is an actual magic user and the main antagonist of the series.

Cast

References

  1. ^ (in French) Jean-Francois Lixon, Rahan, le fils des âges farouches a 45 ans at France TV info. 18/11/2013.
  2. ^ (in French) Rahan, fils des âges farouches on planete-jeunesse.com, 06/08/2011.
  3. ^ France-Italy Animation 'Rahan: Son of the Dark Age' at MIP Jr, October 10th, 2008, by Aaron H. Bynum on archive.is.

External links

2008 Series