Name: Hercule (in English, Hercules)
Stomping Grounds: French comic strip Pif & Hercule (in English, Spiff & Hercules) first in communist newspapers, then in Pif Gadget magazine as well as his own mag, Super Hercule. There was a short-lived animated series as well.
Side: The Proletariat
Breed: Tuxedo cat
Cat Powers: Selling communism to your kids through the power of plastic gadgets. Hooliganism.
Skills: Eat 4, Sleep 4, Mischief 9, Wit 5, Gadget demonstration 5
Cat Weaknesses: Making trouble. That annoying friendship with a yellow dog. An open facial wound that will just not heal.
Stomping Grounds: French comic strip Pif & Hercule (in English, Spiff & Hercules) first in communist newspapers, then in Pif Gadget magazine as well as his own mag, Super Hercule. There was a short-lived animated series as well.
Side: The Proletariat
Breed: Tuxedo cat
Cat Powers: Selling communism to your kids through the power of plastic gadgets. Hooliganism.
Skills: Eat 4, Sleep 4, Mischief 9, Wit 5, Gadget demonstration 5
Cat Weaknesses: Making trouble. That annoying friendship with a yellow dog. An open facial wound that will just not heal.
Comments
By the way, I've got to say, I love the "so much crap, so little time" line! I've decided that has to be my epitaph! :-)
The line becomes rather ironic on a tombstone!
As for the irony of that line as an epitaph, that's exactly why I think it's brilliant. As a matter of fact, I find it even more cynical than ironical. And as I'm pegged as a rather cynical being... But, you know how Ambrose Bierce defined a cynic : "a blackguard whose faulty vision causes him to see things as they are, not as they ought to be" or something along the lines... You gotta love "The Devil's Dictionary"! I think I'll go back to reading it, now. It's been a while!
As for Pif, I usually read it for Rahan, but I may be confusing it with other b.d. mags of the time.
The Clarionet is one of my favorite definition. :-)
Rahan... Wow! Yeah, it was in Pif. But the whole caveman thing wasn't very appealling to me back then.
Just out of curiosity, do you know the South American comic "Mafalda" by Quino? It's about a little girl (and her friends) who tries to understand the grown-ups' world and whose parents are done answering her questions about politics, society, war and why eating soup is so important. I loved it when I was a kid, still do. It's so funny! Oh, and I loved "Garfield" as well! Then, of course, I discovered my uncle's old "Strange" magazines and the world of Marvel... And as I grew up surrounded by Japanese cartoons, mangas. But I always come back into reading my old Mafalda comics.
Then again, there are a lot of bande dessinée series I have poor recollections of because, well, I read so many! My own collection is relatively small (a shelf and a half), but I emptied my public library's stores at the rate of 20+ albums a week!