Conan the Adventurer (TV series)
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Conan: The Adventurer | |
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Conan: The Adventurer title screen, featuring (left to right, back to front) the characters Zzeben, Conan, Karella, Bayu, and Otli |
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Format | Supernatural drama |
Created by | Max A. Keller Robert E. Howard (characters) |
Starring | Ralf Moeller Danny Woodburn Jeremy Kemp Robert McRay T. J. Storm Aly Dunne |
Country of origin | USA |
No. of episodes | 22 |
Production | |
Running time | 42 min (per episode) |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | USA Network / syndication |
Original run | September 22, 1997 – May 25, 1998 |
External links | |
IMDb profile | |
TV.com summary |
Conan: The Adventurer (originally broadcast as simply Conan) was a low-budget American television series produced from 1997 to 1998 and loosely based on the fantasy hero Conan the barbarian. The TV show premiered on September 22, 1997, and ran for 22 episodes. This live-action series starred Ralf Moeller as Conan of Cimmeria and Danny Woodburn as his sidekick Otli. The storyline was quite different from the Conan lore created in the original Conan novels and short stories by Robert E. Howard, as well as that of the Conan later depicted in the various Conan comic book series by Marvel Comics. The TV character is based on the version in the 1980s films, but there is no continuity between the films and TV series.
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[edit] Plot arc
In the series, Conan escapes from slavery and acquires a magic sword from ancient Atlantis and is informed by his god Crom that he is destined to be a king "by his own hand" (a theme borrowed from earlier renditions) when he slays the evil sorcerer Hissah Zuhl (unique to this rendition). Zuhl (played by Jeremy Kemp) has effectively enslaved Conan's homeland, Cimmeria, and (though magical arts, trickery and threats) controls many surrounding lands. Hissah Zuhl is the primary antagonist of the series, responsible for the death of Conan's parents, and recurrent as the always just barely thwarted mastermind enemy.
Overall, the series focuses on Conan's vendetta against Hissah Zuhl (who figures in almost every episode, with a sarcastic reanimated skull as a clairvoyant servant), constantly seeking to kill Conan, and Zuhl's apparently endless horde of warriors, as well as vassal wizards and princes under Zuhl's control.
Conan's troop (all of whom are entirely or effectively unique to this television show) most consistently is made up of Woodburn as the clever dwarf Otli, T. J. Storm as the animalistic capoeira warrior Bayu, and Robert McRay as the mute staff-wielder and wrestler Zzeben who communicates in sign language, but sometimes also includes others, particularly the recurring character Karella, "Queen of Thieves" played by Aly Dunne.
[edit] Contrasts and continuity with other versions of Conan
In this live-action adaptation, Conan is a kind, sympathetic and jovial person, rather than a moody loner looking out for himself, and is a contented member of a merry band of adventurers with a humanitarian quest. The tone of the series resembles its contemporaries Xena: Warrior Princess and Hercules: The Legendary Journeys. The overall theme that Conan is a deeply honorable man – a is pushed to a comparative extreme.
The series further contrasts with the original stories in that it does not include the villain Thoth-Amon nor the evil god Set, and in that Hissah Zuhl is not based on Thoth-Amon but rather on the villain in the original The Tower of the Elephant Howard short story (the general plot basis for the first two episodes of the television series). The nature and scope of Conan's adventures are (perhaps ironically) sharply limited in the television series compared to the comics and original stories (in which Conan had many occupations all over the then-known world, and many sets of clothing), as the TV Conan has a single-minded purpose (defeating Hissah Zuhl and freeing the people enslaved by him), rarely strays far from Zuhl's territory, always wears little but a loincloth, and in virtually every episode he and his band are wandering in the wilderness until either attacked by Zuhl's minions and going to a small village afterward, or going to a small village initially, only to be set upon by Zuhl's minions.
On the spiritual level, Conan's Cimmerian deity Crom in this version is not a remote, unseen god as in previous storylines, but an accessible deity who at times provides Conan direct divine assistance, and Conan is outright devout in his worship of Crom (while in previous incarnations, Conan has little faith in gods, and believes that Crom simply observes as men struggle).
Minor points of continuity between the original stories and the television series occur, especially placenames, such as Cimmeria, Conan's birthplace, and Shadizar, "the City of Wickedness" (however, most other placenames, and almost all character names, were simply invented for the TV show). The Serpent Men of Thoth-Amon in the original stories appear, but later, as minor, one-off enemies, and as servants of Hissah Zuhl, in the episode "The Taming". The quasi-Howardian Red Sonja character has a prominent but one-time role in an eponymous episode.
In appearance and style, the TV show Conan is most like that of the films, including brown (rather than black) hair, a Germanic accent, costuming and a sword nearly identical to the filmic versions, signature sword moves from the films, jewelry in the form of an eight-spoked wheel, and other cues from the Schwarzenegger portrayal of the character, as well as an opening credits logo based on that of the films.
Another point of partial continuity with the comics is Conan's frequent spoken comment that he does not like magic; this was often expressed aloud in the comics but was usually unspoken in the Howard books.
The she-bandit character Karella is based on the "Queen of Pirates" Bêlit of the original Conan stories, and the thief Valeria of the Conan films, herself based largely on both Bêlit and the Red Sonja character of the Conan comics (yet further based on another Howard character, Red Sonya, unconnected to the original Conan stories). The show's Karella and Red Sonja characters are sufficiently different to avoid viewer confusion or boredom, as the brigand nature of Karella (inherited from the Bêlit character) is juxtaposed with the TV Sonja's duty as a holy warrior for a sect known as the Truth Keepers, and Karella like Bêlit is a brunette while Red Sonja is (obviously) a redhead.
As with Subotai and The Wizard in the 1982 film, the other characters in the series are basically whole-cloth inventions for the production at hand and bear little resemblance to characters from early Conan media. Otli the dwarf in particular is entirely out-of-character for Conan as a companion (though is refreshingly the provider of comic relief at the expense of other characters, especially
As in all previous variants of the Conan franchise, beautiful women – as strong, Amazon-like warrior women in impractically skimpy outfits, damsels in distress, or scheming femmes fatales figure in the plot in every episode.
Points of moral and ethical message similarity between this depiction of Conan and his fictive world and the other depictions (as well as many other works of fantastical fiction and mythology in the West, from [[the Bible]] to Star Wars) include consistent themes of the value of human freedom, the importance of honor and loyalty, justice through victory, the use of (righteous, not wanton) violence as a means to justice and freedom, the value of friendship and trust, the idea that bad things come to those who dabble in evil, and the possibility of redemption for past wrongs for which reparations are made.
[edit] Nudity
While some reports claim[who?] that one or more versions of the show contain some nudity (allegedly because the show was aimed mostly at an adult audience), no nudity is intact in the version released to North American audiences on television and later on DVD.[clarify] The DVD version features many women and men in clothing comparable in coverage to what one might wear to a non-nude beach, and has themes of sexuality and sensuality roughly on par with other fantasy and science fiction mainstream programming aimed at (predominantly male) teens, and the plot complexity, plausibility, dialogue, gore-censored action sequences, moral lessons and other core content of the program are obviously aimed at the same youth audience.
[edit] Episodes
Year | Episode Title | Aired |
1997 | 1. "The Heart of the Elephant" | September 22, 1997 |
1997 | 2. "The Heart of the Elephant" (Part 2) | September 22, 1997 |
1997 | 3. "Lair of the Beastmen" | October 6, 1997 |
1997 | 4. "The Siege of Ahl Sohn-Bar" | October 13, 1997 |
1997 | 5. "A Friend in Need" | October 20, 1997 |
1997 | 6. "The Ruby Fruit Forest" | October 27, 1997 |
1997 | 7. "The Three Virgins" | November 7, 1997 |
1997 | 8. "Ransom" | November 14, 1997 |
1997 | 9. "The Curse of Afka" | November 21, 1997 |
1997 | 10. "Impostor" | November 28, 1997 |
1997 | 11. "Amazon Woman" | December 7, 1997 |
1997 | 12. "Homecoming" | January 25, 1998 |
1997 | 13. "The Taming" | February 1, 1998 |
1998 | 14. "Red Sonja" | February 8, 1998 |
1998 | 15. "Shadows of Death" | February 15, 1998 |
1998 | 16. "The Child" | February 22, 1998 |
1998 | 17. "The Crystal Arrow" | March 1, 1998 |
1998 | 18. "The Labyrinth" | April 26, 1998 |
1998 | 19. "The Cavern" | May 3, 1998 |
1998 | 20. "Antidote" | May 10, 1998 |
1998 | 21. "Lethal Wizards" | May 17, 1998 |
1998 | 22. "Heir Apparent" | May 24, 1998 |
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Conan the Adventurer at the Internet Movie Database
- Conan the Adventurer at TV.com
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