Pif gadget

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Pif gadget was a monthly (initially weekly) comics magazine for the youth, created in February 1969. Its audience peaked in the early 1970s.

Created as an outlet of the French Communist Party, it was preceded by Vaillant, le journal de Pif, and prominently featured Pif le chien, a dog character created by José Cabrero Arnal. Pif gadget was called Pif et son gadget surprise for a few months in the beginning. The name gadget was a reference to objects offered with each issues, including the very popular Pifises (brine shrimp in stasis, which readers could raise as minuscule pets).

Pif gadget gathered interest through its determination to publish only "complete stories" (i.e.: unserialized). Its featured comics included:

  • Rahan
  • Doc Justice
  • Hugo Pratt's Corto Maltese
  • Marcel Gotlib's Gai Luron
  • Nikita Mandryka's Les Aventures potagères du Concombre masqué
  • Raymond Poïvet and Roger Lecureux's Les Pionniers de l'Espérance
  • Le Grêlé 7/13, Nasdine Hodja, Arthur le fantôme justicier, Les Rigolus et les Tristus, Corinne et Jeannot, Dicentim le petit Franc etc.

Pif gadget's record print was 1 million issues on April 6, 1970, matched by another in September 1971. It was, and still is, the record for a European comic strip. The paper also benefitted from being able to reach the Newly industrialized countries, and was one of the select few Western magazines to be allowed circulation behind the Iron Curtain (due to its left-wing credentials). It went into rapid decline (decreasing in content and starting the publishing of comics which were serialized more often than not), one linked to the weakness of the Soviet Union; its last major feature was during the bicentennial of the French Revolution in 1989. The original version was last printed in 1993, the paper being revived in 2004.

[edit] References

  • Richard Médioni, Pif gadget : la véritable histoire des origines à 1973, édition Vaillant collector, 2003.

[edit] External links

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