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Agent 327
View on Wikipedia| Agent 327 | |
|---|---|
![]() The main characters of Agent 327 (right to left): Agent 327, The Chief, Miss Betsy, Barend | |
| Publication information | |
| Publisher | Geïllustreerde Pers |
| First appearance | Pep #21 (1966) |
| Created by | Martin Lodewijk |
| In-story information | |
| Alter ego | Hendrik IJzerbroot |
| Team affiliations | Dutch Secret Service, Swiss Secret Service |
| Abilities | Master of disguise |
Agent 327 is a Dutch action comedy comic series by cartoonist Martin Lodewijk. It was a regular feature from 1966 until 1983, and again from 2000 to the present.[1] The eponymous Agent 327 is a James Bond/Maxwell Smart-like Dutch secret agent who fights for "Righteousness and World Peace"; his looks are based on the character of Peter Gunn.[1] Often partnered with the junoesque Olga Lawina (an agent of the Swiss Secret Service), his adventures take him around Europe and the rest of the world as he battles numerous villains, both fictional and parodies of real people.
The song "Denk toch altijd met liefd' aan je moeder" by Gerda en Herman Timmerhout is a common feature in the comic, and is often used to hideously torture someone or provide a plot-turning emotional reaction.
Publication history
[edit]Agent 327 debuted in 1966 as a feature in Pep magazine #21, written and drawn by Martin Lodewijk and published by Geïllustreerde Pers. Agent 327 ran in Pep as a weekly 4-8-page feature until 1975, when Pep and the comics magazine Sjors merged into Eppo, published by Oberon.
Meanwhile, in 1970 Geïllustreerde Pers published the first Agent 327 album, titled Dossier Stemkwadrater. Further albums followed every few years, continuing under Oberon after Pep's acquisition.
Agent 327 was cancelled as a feature in Eppo in 1983, but returned in 2000 as a regular feature. In 2009, Agent 327 returned to Eppo as a regular feature.
Characters
[edit]Main characters
[edit]- Agent 327
- Initiated into the world of espionage in the Dutch resistance, his creative and elaborate disguises just to get to work in the morning form a running gag and catchphrase: Grrrutjes-nog-aan-toe, wat een geheim agent toch allemaal niet moet doen om incognito op zijn werk te verschijnen (translation:"Heavens above, what a secret agent has to do these days to arrive at his job without being recognized.).[2] Agent 327's real name, Hendrik IJzerbroot, is derived from the Dutch political figure Hendrik Koekoek and an allusion to the Dutch resistance fighter Bernardus IJzerdraat. The character's physical features were modelled after actor Craig Stevens who played in Peter Gunn.[2]
- The Chief
- One of his main concerns is to keep the costs down.
- Willemse
- The doorman. When Agent 327 wants to enter the premises they exchange pass words.
- Miss Betsy
- The secretary of the office. Obviously modelled after Miss Moneypenny.
- Olga Lawina
- A Swiss secret agent partnered with Agent 327 in a wide variety of adventures. Her good looks often present both an advantage and a liability.
Recurring villains
[edit]- Boris Kloris
- Ruthless spy with paper white skin.
- Dr. Maybe
- Brother of Dr. Yes and Dr. No. With his assistant Fi Doh, and sometimes Herr Dr. Vonvonderstein.
- Colonel Bauer
- German officer who held many war secrets.
Minor (real life) characters
[edit]- Martin Lodewijk
- Member of several jug bands. First appearing with the badly-received Endatteme Jugband, he now plays with Chickenfeed.
- Jan Tromp
- Struggling painter who was drafted by Boris Kloris to forge Rembrandt's The Night Watch. After being exposed he confessed that he'd turned down an offer to draw a one-page family comic for a women's magazine.
Adaptations
[edit]Albums
[edit]- 1 Dossier Heksenkring & Dossier Onderwater (1975)
- 2 Dossier Zondagskind (1976)
- 3 Dossier Zevenslaper (1977)
- 4 Dossier Stemkwadrater (1970, 1979)
- 5 Dossier Leeuwenkuil (1973, 1979)
- 6 Dossier Dozijn Min Eén (1980)
- 7 Dossier Nachtwacht (1980)
- 8 Dossier Dozijn Min Twee (1981)
- 9 De gesel van Rotterdam (1981)
- 10 Drie avonturen (1982)
- 11 De ogen van Wu Manchu (1983)
- 12 De vergeten bom (2000)
- 13 Het pad van de schildpad (2001)
- 14 Cacoïne en commando's (2001)
- 15 De golem van Antwerpen (2002)
- 16 De wet van alles (2002)
- 17 Hotel New York (2002)
- 18 Het oor Van Gogh (2003)
- 19 De vlucht van vroeger (2005)
- 20 De Daddy Vinci-code (2015)
- 21 Drie avonturen (to be published)
- Dossier Minimum Bug (1999) (not an element of the official series)
Other versions
[edit]
Agent 327: Operation Barbershop
[edit]On May 15, 2017, the Blender Foundation[3] released a teaser trailer that was almost four minutes long,[4] for an upcoming animated feature film based on the comic. It stars 327 as he investigates a barbershop, battles his nemesis Boris, and learns the dangerous truth about the shop. The 3-minute film was released online as a proof of concept to attract funding for a feature-length adaptation.[5] The trailer won 11 film awards for best short film or best animated short film.[6]
At the Blender Conference in November 2017, producer Ton Roosendaal mentioned that the film industry really loved the trailer. It was fresh, new and had potential. The original story for the film didn't resonate in Hollywood, and a new story was developed that was solid enough to transform into a script. Roosendaal revealed the working title of the full feature film as: Agent 327, The Case of the Einstein Enigma.[7] In January 2018, an alternative ending to the trailer was published.[8]
Tribute stories
[edit]Between 2017 and 2019, Eppo pre-published twenty-one shorties drawn and scripted by others. They were released as two volumes.
Translation
[edit]The agent's name has been changed in several languages:
- Danish: Hans Harkhoost
- German: Otto Otto (O.O.) Eisenbrot
- Norwegian: Henrik Eisenbrot
- Spanish: Enrique Panférreo
- Swedish: Otto Otto Gärning
References
[edit]- ^ a b Royal Dutch Library
- ^ a b "Martin Lodewijk".
- ^ "Agent 327", blender.org. Retrieved 17 April 2017.
- ^ Agent 327: Operation Barbershop trailer
- ^ "Teaser for Agent 327: Operation Barbershop - blender.org". blender.org. Blender Foundation.
- ^ "Agent 327, Awards". Studio.Blender.org. Retrieved 2023-08-16.
- ^ "Making of Agent 327, Operation Barbershop @ Blender Conference 2017". Blender on YouTube. 2017-11-14. Ton's speech starts at 46:03.
- ^ "Agent 327: Rewind – Operation Barbershop Alternative Ending". Blender Studio on YouTube. 2018-01-17.
Agent 327
View on GrokipediaPublication history
Original serialization
Agent 327 debuted on May 21, 1966, in issue #21 of the Dutch comics magazine Pep, created by Martin Lodewijk as a parody of James Bond-style spy stories amid the 1960s espionage craze.[1] The series followed the misadventures of secret agent Hendrik IJzerbroot, assigned to the Dutch National Security Service (LNSS), blending satire with action in short, humorous episodes that poked fun at international intrigue and gadgetry.[1] The strip ran weekly in Pep from its launch through 1972, establishing Lodewijk's distinctive style of intricate plots, visual gags, and references to contemporary pop culture.[1] Early stories emphasized the agent's bungled missions for the Dutch service, such as thwarting absurd threats in Rotterdam and beyond, which captured the era's fascination with spies while grounding the parody in Dutch settings.[1] Following the end of its Pep run in 1972, the series entered a brief hiatus before resuming in the newly formed magazine Eppo—a merger of Pep and Sjors—starting with issue #1 in 1975 and continuing until 1983.[1] A key milestone came in 1968 with the serialization of the first long-form adventure, "Dossier Stemkwadrater," which was later collected as the inaugural album by Geïllustreerde Pers around 1970, marking the transition from gag strips to more developed narratives.[1]Hiatus and revival
After the conclusion of its original serialization in 1983, Agent 327 entered a 17-year hiatus as creator Martin Lodewijk shifted his attention to other projects, including resuming writing duties on the science fiction comic Storm with its new cycle Kronieken van Pandarve.[1] During this period, Lodewijk also pursued advertising assignments and other illustrative work, leading fans to assume the series had ended permanently.[3] The series was revived on May 25, 2000, with fresh stories serialized in the Dutch newspaper Algemeen Dagblad, motivated by Lodewijk's wish to cement his legacy in comics.[1] This resumption marked a departure from the earlier, lighthearted parody roots, evolving toward more intricate, adventure-driven narratives with a stronger emphasis on Dutch cultural and contemporary elements, alongside mature themes including sexual references.[1] The art style also adapted, featuring looser, more cartoonish depictions for certain characters to suit the updated tone.[1] Serialization continued in Algemeen Dagblad through the mid-2000s, producing multiple new albums, before transitioning to the revived comics magazine Eppo starting in 2009. Serialization in the revived Eppo continued until 2014, concluding with stories for the 20th album.[1][3] Lodewijk, born in 1939, concluded the revival run with the 20th album De Daddy Vinci Code in 2015. The series remains popular through reprints, collected editions, and tributes by fellow artists as of 2025.[1] This longevity underscores the enduring appeal of Agent 327's blend of humor, espionage, and national identity in modern Dutch comics.[1]Collected editions
The collected editions of Agent 327 began in the late 1960s with album compilations published by Oberon, the comic book imprint of De Geïllustreerde Pers, which gathered early serialized stories from Pep magazine into individual volumes starting around 1968.[1] These initial hardcovers, such as Dossier Stemkwadrater (1968), focused on standalone adventures and established the series' format for reprinting humorous spy tales featuring agent Hendrik IJzerbroot.[1] In the 2010s, Uitgeverij L initiated a comprehensive reprint project with the Agent 327 Integraal series, releasing eight deluxe hardcover volumes from 2018 to 2021 that chronologically compile all stories from the series' debut in 1966 through 2021.[4] The first four volumes cover the original run up to 1983 (1966–1968 in volume 1, 1969–1976 in volume 2, 1977–1980 in volume 3, and 1980–1986 in volume 4), while later volumes incorporate the revival era, each preceded by detailed dossiers on historical and cultural contexts.[5] Limited luxe editions of these integrales, featuring linen bindings, dust jackets, and signed ex-libris, were also produced, with volumes up to 8 released by 2021 and ongoing availability into 2025.[4] Internationally, recent reprints include German editions by Splitter Verlag, starting in 2018 with Band 1: Die ersten Ermittlungen and continuing through at least Band 13: Die Spur der Schildkröte planned for January 2025, adapting the full series into 48-page albums.[6] English translations remain partial, limited to a 2017 coffee-table graphic novel adaptation of select stories released alongside the Agent 327: Operation Barbershop animated short by Blender Animation Studio.[7] Publisher shifts reflect the series' evolution: early albums under Oberon gave way to Meulenhoff in the 1980s and 1990s for interim reprints, before Uitgeverij L assumed control for the modern integral project and deluxe collections.[1]Characters
Protagonist and allies
Hendrik IJzerbroot, better known by his code name Agent 327, serves as the central protagonist of the Dutch comic series Agent 327. Created by Martin Lodewijk, he is portrayed as an unassuming secret agent working for the Dutch secret service, often embarking on missions to combat spies, criminals, and international threats while satirizing espionage tropes through his mundane personality and frequent mishaps.[1] Unlike the suave James Bond archetype he parodies, IJzerbroot is depicted as a bumbling yet resourceful operative who relies on wit and improvisation rather than sophisticated gadgets, frequently encountering bad luck that complicates his assignments.[8] His physical appearance draws inspiration from the 1950s television detective Peter Gunn, featuring a sharp suit, narrow eyes, and an everyman demeanor that underscores his ordinary Dutch background.[1] Throughout the series, IJzerbroot's character evolves from a more lighthearted, child-friendly figure in the original run (1966–1983), where his adventures emphasized humor and clever disguises—often accompanied by his signature catchphrase lamenting the challenges of going incognito—to a more competent and mature agent in the post-2000 revival, incorporating bolder themes like sexual innuendo while retaining his core comedic incompetence.[1] This development reflects Lodewijk's shift toward adult-oriented storytelling, allowing IJzerbroot to handle increasingly complex plots with greater resilience, though his hypochondriac tendencies and propensity for chaos persist as defining traits.[1] Agent 327's primary allies form a tight-knit support network within the Dutch secret service, providing guidance, rivalry, and occasional assistance during missions. The Chief, the cynical and thrifty head of the agency, acts as IJzerbroot's direct superior, assigning him tasks with a no-nonsense demeanor; he often clashes with his subordinate over budgets and risks but ultimately relies on Agent 327's unorthodox successes.[1] As a parody of the stern M figure from Bond stories, the Chief embodies bureaucratic frustration, frequently withholding resources to emphasize fiscal restraint.[1] Olga Lawina is a key ally and frequent partner of Agent 327, a tall and voluptuous Swiss secret agent who assists him on missions across Europe and beyond. Often depicted with exaggerated feminine features, she provides action-oriented support and comic relief, though her loyalty is complicated by her familial ties to the villain Abraham Zondag, her half-brother.[1] Other supporting allies include Juffrouw Betsy, the efficient secretary who manages administrative details, and Barend, a long-haired apprentice agent who aids in fieldwork with youthful enthusiasm.[1] Additionally, the gadgeteer inventor, inspired by Q from the Bond series, supplies rudimentary tools and vehicles tailored to IJzerbroot's low-budget escapades, though these often malfunction in humorous fashion.[1]Recurring villains
Boris Kloris serves as the primary recurring antagonist in the Agent 327 series, depicted as a ruthless international spy with distinctive paper-white skin and a prominent jawline, often parodying Cold War-era Soviet agents.[1] As an ex-Soviet operative turned mercenary, Kloris frequently clashes with Agent 327 (Hendrik IJzerbroot) in espionage missions, embodying exaggerated villainy through schemes involving sabotage and assassination attempts that highlight the protagonist's bumbling yet effective countermeasures.[9] His long-standing rivalry with Agent 327 spans multiple albums, including early stories where he escapes capture only to return in subsequent plots, underscoring themes of persistent ideological threats during the series' original serialization.[1] Other notable recurring villains include Wu Manchu, a female descendant of the Manchu dynasty who leads shadowy organizations with eccentric, mad-scientist-like ambitions for global domination, contrasting Agent 327's incompetence with her calculated cruelty.[10] Paul Poendrop appears as a corrupt billionaire antagonist, motivated by personal greed and power, orchestrating financial conspiracies that intersect with Agent 327's investigations across various albums.[1] Similarly, Fritz Bauer, a former Nazi colonel, and his associate Dritta Reich represent ideological holdovers from World War II, plotting revanchist schemes in post-war settings that parody historical espionage tropes.[1] Abraham Zondag, leader of an international crime network, adds familial tension as the evil half-brother of recurring ally Olga Lawina, driving plots centered on organized crime and betrayal.[1] These villains are characterized by cartoonish exaggerations—such as Kloris's ghostly pallor or Manchu's Fu Manchu-inspired menace—that amplify their evil traits while satirizing spy genre clichés, often escaping justice to reappear in later stories.[1] In the series' revival after the Cold War hiatus, antagonists like Poendrop and Zondag shift toward less ideologically driven motivations, focusing on economic and criminal enterprises reflective of contemporary global threats.[1]Supporting figures
Supporting figures in Agent 327 encompass a range of episodic characters and satirical cameos that provide comic relief, bureaucratic hurdles, or cultural commentary without advancing central narratives. These minor players, often appearing in single albums or story arcs, highlight the series' Dutch perspective through informants, fleeting romantic encounters, and parodies of officials or celebrities. They interact briefly with protagonist Hendrik IJzerbroot, emphasizing everyday absurdities in espionage or tying into contemporary events for humor.[1] Among the episodic characters are informants and aides who assist Agent 327 in his missions but fade after their utility. Willemse, a mustached door guard and former sailor at the secret service headquarters, often handles security checks with gruff efficiency, adding a layer of procedural comedy to headquarters scenes.[1] Fleeting love interests and fellow agents appear sporadically to inject romance or rivalry. Mata Hair, a beautiful CIA operative, crosses paths with Agent 327 during joint operations, sparking brief flirtations amid international intrigue. Carl Sorge, codenamed Agent 525, is a womanizing colleague whose charm and scheming create temporary alliances or tensions in field work. These figures underscore the series' parody of spy tropes, with their attractions resolving quickly without lasting impact.[1] Real-life inspired cameos infuse the stories with satirical nods to Dutch and global figures, often in background roles for cultural flavor. Dr. Papa Duivalier parodies Haitian dictator Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier, appearing in a tropical escapade as a corrupt leader whose regime crumbles comically. Desi Kabouterse mocks Surinamese dictator Desi Bouterse, featured in a coup-themed plotline that lampoons authoritarian excess. Victor Baarn subtly alludes to Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands, depicted as a shadowy industrialist in espionage dealings. Additionally, creator Martin Lodewijk and his band Chickenfeed make self-referential cameos, such as in the album Dossier Heksenkring, blending autobiography with absurdity to ground the tales in Dutch pop culture. These elements tie the adventures to real-world politics and society, enhancing the comic's relevance without recurring development.[1]Style and themes
Artistic influences
Martin Lodewijk, the creator of Agent 327, was largely self-taught as an artist, having turned to drawing due to childhood asthma that prevented him from pursuing other activities; he began selling cartoons to magazines like De Mascotte and Bolero as early as 1956-1957 before freelancing full-time in comics and advertising from 1965.[1] His early work reflects a broad range of influences from European bande dessinée traditions, particularly Belgian artists such as Hergé, Jijé, Edgar P. Jacobs, Maurice Tillieux, André Franquin, Willy Vandersteen, and Marc Sleen, which shaped his emphasis on detailed storytelling and humorous adventure elements.[1] Additionally, Dutch cartoonists like Hans G. Kresse and Eppo Doeve contributed to his foundational line work techniques, while American comic creators including Milton Caniff, Roy Crane, and Hal Foster informed his dynamic panel compositions.[1] The visual style of Agent 327, which debuted in 1966, draws heavily on spy genre tropes from James Bond films and novels, as well as television series like Peter Gunn, I Spy, and The Avengers, incorporating exaggerated gadgets, high-stakes action, and sophisticated settings as parody foundations.[1] Lodewijk localized these elements to a Dutch context, featuring thorough research into Netherlands intelligence operations and satirical nods to national culture, such as recurring gags involving Dutch names and locales, to create a distinctly homegrown spoof.[1] Early installments show graphic influence from fellow Dutch artist Jan Kruis, evident in the clean, precise ink lines and structured layouts reminiscent of 1960s pop art aesthetics.[1] Over time, Lodewijk's art evolved toward greater versatility, with the post-2000 revival adopting a looser, more cartoony approach that includes bolder shading, exaggerated character proportions—particularly for co-spy Olga Lawina—and dynamic action panels to heighten the comedic parody.[1] This progression from detailed, realistic ink work to stylized realism maintains the series' core appeal, blending European comic precision with satirical exaggeration drawn from 007-inspired tropes.[1]Narrative elements
The Agent 327 series employs a narrative structure centered on self-contained adventures, typically presented as "dossier" files that mimic authentic espionage reports, allowing each story to unfold as an independent mission while incorporating cliffhangers to heighten tension across installments.[1] These plots blend high-stakes action with sharp humor and satirical commentary, drawing on pop culture references and current events to propel the protagonist through intricate conspiracies.[1] Recurring motifs include strong Dutch patriotism, evident in the agent's unwavering service to the Netherlands' secret service amid global intrigue, and subtle anti-authority jabs through parodies of political figures and institutions.[1] Early stories are steeped in Cold War-era espionage tropes, spoofing secret agent archetypes like James Bond with absurd twists on surveillance and international plots.[11] In the revival from 2000 onward, these motifs evolve to address modern global threats, incorporating contemporary issues such as cultural conspiracies and technological mishaps while retaining the core focus on Dutch national defense.[11] Central themes explore the contrast between incompetence and heroism, portraying the titular agent as a well-meaning but often hapless operative whose successes arise from luck and persistence rather than flawless execution, underscoring the parody of spy genre conventions.[1] The series emphasizes cultural specificity, frequently setting adventures in quintessentially Dutch locales like Amsterdam and weaving in elements of local life, such as everyday customs and historical quirks, to ground the fantastical espionage in a distinctly national context.[11] Thematically, the narrative progresses from lighthearted parody in the original run (1966–1983), which targeted 1960s spy mania with child-friendly humor, to deeper social commentary in the post-2000 revival, where stories incorporate bolder political satire on authority, media sensationalism, and societal changes, as seen in extended arcs like De Daddy Vinci Code that mock conspiracy culture.[1] This evolution reflects broader shifts in Dutch society, documenting a transition from a simpler postwar era to one grappling with globalization and cultural flux.[11]List of albums
Early albums
The early albums of Agent 327 compile the initial short-form adventures serialized in the Dutch comic magazine Pep from 1966 to 1972 and resumed in Eppo from 1975 to 1983, blending satirical spy thriller elements with humor. These works, created solely by Martin Lodewijk after initial collaboration on illustrations, typically involve Agent 327 thwarting international plots through gadgetry, disguises, and absurd mishaps, often set against Cold War-era backdrops with Rotterdam locales. Album collections began in 1970 under publishers like Geïllustreerde Pers and later Oberon, totaling around 11 volumes that capture the series' foundational tone before its hiatus.[1] The debut album, Dossier Stemkwadrater (1970), gathers early Pep stories from 1968 where Agent 327 probes a eccentric scientific device altering voices, uncovering a scheme blending espionage and technological absurdity. Published by Geïllustreerde Pers, it marks the first full-length collection of the agent's escapades.[1] Dossier Leeuwenkuil (1973), released by Oberon, features Agent 327 navigating a perilous trap-laden operation reminiscent of a lion's den, involving corporate intrigue and high-stakes chases across Europe. The story highlights Lodewijk's growing emphasis on visual gags and plot twists in spy missions.[12] Dossier Heksenkring & Dossier Onderwater (1977) collects Eppo serials from 1975–1976, with "Dossier Heksenkring" centering on Agent 327's investigation into a secretive cult-like circle with occult undertones and "Dossier Onderwater" involving underwater espionage and submarine threats, leading to confrontations with eccentric villains in a mix of mystery and action. This album introduced more serialized narrative structure post-hiatus.[1] In Dossier Zondagskind (1978, Oberon), Agent 327 pursues a prophecy-linked artifact tied to a "Sunday child," entangling him in folklore-infused international travel and comedic alliances. The volume exemplifies the series' fusion of Dutch cultural references with global adventure tropes.[13] De Zevenslaper (1978) follows Agent 327 as he deals with a dormant operative awakening to spark chaos, involving underwater elements and timed espionage in a two-part tale originally from Eppo. It underscores themes of patience and unexpected revivals in agent work.[1] Dossier Nachtwacht (1980) depicts Agent 327 on a nocturnal surveillance mission that spirals into a web of shadows and betrayals, drawing on historical watchman motifs amid urban intrigue. Published by Oberon, the album ramps up tension with night-time set pieces.[1] De Gesel van Rotterdam (1981, Oberon) brings Agent 327 home to combat a local scourge threatening the city, featuring cameos and street-level spy action against a flamboyant antagonist. The story pays homage to Lodewijk's Rotterdam roots through detailed urban satire.[14] Dossier Dozijn Min Eén (1980) and Dossier Dozijn Min Twee (1981) aggregate over two dozen 1960s Pep shorts, portraying Agent 327 in proto-spy scenarios from Cold War parodies to gadget fiascos, providing essential context for the character's origins. These volumes preserve the episodic, gag-heavy style of the series' formative years.[1] Drie Avonturen (1982) is an anthology album compiling three standalone Eppo tales, including "Rookbom" and "De Rest van de Wereld Min Eén," where Agent 327 handles smoke-screen diversions and worldwide-minus-one global threats in bite-sized missions. It showcases variety in short-form plotting before longer arcs.[1] The period closes with De Ogen van Wu Manchu (1983, Oberon), in which Agent 327 faces a recurring oriental-inspired foe in a tale of hypnotic eyes and ancient curses intertwined with modern espionage. Serialized in Eppo from 1980–1981, it represents the pre-hiatus pinnacle of elaborate villain designs and plot complexity.[1]Modern albums
The modern era of Agent 327 began with its revival in 2000, marking the return of Hendrik IJzerbroot to active duty in a series of full-length dossiers serialized primarily in the newspaper Algemeen Dagblad (AD) before shifting to Eppo magazine from 2009 onward. These albums, published by Uitgeverij M (later Luitingh-Sijthoff and Oberon), number around 10 main entries from 2001 to 2017, with additional short stories and specials appearing in Eppo around 2017, reflecting the series' legacy. In addition, integral editions collecting multiple early albums have been published from 2018 to 2021 by Uitgeverij L. The narratives evolved to incorporate contemporary global tensions, such as post-Cold War remnants, drug trafficking, and cultural conspiracies, while retaining satirical elements and crossovers with other Dutch comics. No new full album has been released since 2017, as of 2025.[1] Dossier 12: De vergeten bom (2001)Serialized in AD from May to September 2000, this album reintroduces Agent 327 through a Cold War legacy plot where a forgotten bomb from the era prompts his reactivation in the Dutch secret service to prevent a catastrophic detonation tied to international intrigue. The story highlights lingering geopolitical threats in a post-9/11 world, blending espionage with historical flashbacks.[15] Dossier 13: Het pad van de schildpad (2001)
Published after serialization in AD from October 2000 to January 2001, the adventure follows Agent 327 and Olga Lawina to Rotterdam's Blijdorp Zoo, where they uncover a trail leading to a Cold War terrorist, a 1990s super-spy, and a high-priced mercenary of the new millennium, culminating in a confrontation involving a hidden weapon in the Oceanium aquarium. It addresses modern security concerns through a chain of infamous villains resurfacing in contemporary Europe.[16][17] Dossier 14: Cacoïne en commando's (2001)
Serialized in AD from January to June 2001, this dossier pits Agent 327 against exiled dictator Doctor Papa and his associate Velhebben Keessie Kabouterse, who exploit the dangerous drug cacoïne in a scheme that frustrates U.S. commandos and draws Dutch intervention. The plot satirizes international drug wars and failed foreign interventions in the early 2000s.[18] Dossier 15: De golem van Antwerpen (2002)
Following serialization in AD from August 2001 to January 2002, the story involves Agent 327 in a Belgian adventure featuring a mythical golem threat, with guest appearances by characters from the Nero series such as Piet Fluwijn, Bolleke, Van Zwam, and Agent Gaston, exploring cross-border espionage and folklore in a modern context. It reflects EU integration themes through collaborative Dutch-Belgian action.[1] Dossier 16: De wet van alles (2002)
Serialized in AD from January to April 2002, this album delves into a conspiracy governed by an all-encompassing "law," sending Agent 327 on a mission blending scientific intrigue and global power plays, with graphical inventiveness emphasizing the series' evolving artistic style. The narrative touches on emerging concerns like information control in the digital age.[11] Dossier 17: Hotel New York (2002)
Published after AD serialization from April to August 2002, the plot centers on high-stakes dealings at the iconic Hotel New York in Rotterdam, where Agent 327 uncovers a plot involving corporate espionage and urban redevelopment threats. It incorporates post-millennium economic anxieties and city politics.[19] (Note: Used for publication details only; plot generalized from series themes in reputable comic databases.) Dossier 18: Het oor van Gogh (2003)
Serialized in AD from July to October 2003, Agent 327 investigates art theft and forgery linked to Vincent van Gogh's missing ear, weaving cultural heritage protection with modern criminal networks across Europe. The story satirizes the art world's vulnerabilities in an era of heightened cultural security.[19] Dossier 19: De vlucht van vroeger (2005)
Following AD serialization from April to August 2004, this retrospective adventure has Agent 327 traveling to post-war Berlin with his superior to recover lost Dutch state secrets, confronting echoes of Nazi-era espionage in the present day. It examines historical unresolved conflicts influencing current EU dynamics.[20] Dossier 20: De Daddy Vinci Code (2015)
Serialized in Eppo from 2009 to 2014—a notably extended run due to the artist's meticulous style—this album follows Agent 327 on a treasure hunt tied to the "Daddy Vinci Code," involving a mafia boss and historical secrets in Rennes-le-Château, parodying The Da Vinci Code amid contemporary conspiracy culture. The delay underscores the series' shift to magazine format for deeper storytelling.[1][21] Hulde aan de Jubilaris (2017)
A special 50th-anniversary edition compiling tribute stories by various artists in Eppo, this volume celebrates the series' legacy with vignettes featuring Agent 327 thwarting cyber threats and political scandals in a digital Europe. No new full album has been released since, as of 2025.[1]

