Harman Patil (Editor)

Le dictateur et le champignon

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Series
  
Spirou et Fantasio

Published in
  
Spirou magazine

Date of publication
  
1953 - 1954

Author
  
André Franquin

Followed by
  
La mauvaise tête

Publisher
  
Dupuis

3.9/5
Goodreads

Artists
  
Franquin

Issues
  
801 - #838

Originally published
  
1956

Preceded by
  
La corne de rhinocéros

Date
  
1956

Le dictateur et le champignon httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb8

Writers
  
Franquin Maurice Rosy, idea

Similar
  
André Franquin books, Other books

Le dictateur et le champignon, written and drawn by Franquin, is the seventh album of the Spirou et Fantasio series. After serial publication in Spirou magazine, the story was released as a hardcover album in 1956.

Contents

Story

When the Marsupilami causes chaos all over town, Spirou and Fantasio decide that it is time to take him back to his home in the Palombian jungles. After an eventful journey by cruise ship, they find that Fantasio's shady cousin Zantafio has reinvented himself as General Zantas and become the country's ruthless dictator. The now power-mad Zantafio, intent on invading a neighbouring country, offers them top positions in his army, and when they indignantly refuse throws them in jail. The pair decide to feign a change of heart, and plan to foil the invasion using one of The Count of Champignac's curious inventions...

Background

Two characters introduced in previous stories return for the first time in this one: the resourceful Seccotine, and the shifty Zantafio who was last seen repenting his scoundrel ways at the conclusion of Spirou et les héritiers, but later evolved into a worse villain. Franquin expressed regrets at twisting the character back and forth like this, but later did the same again with Zorglub.

One of Champignac's most memorable mushroom-based inventions, the "Métomol", a powerful metal-softening gas, is introduced in this story and is later used again in several others.

The sequence where Spirou and Fantasio melt a whole army's gear is an early, still quite gentle, expression of Franquin's anti-militarism, which he would let loose much more ferociously in Gaston Lagaffe and Idées noires.

References

Le dictateur et le champignon Wikipedia