Hubbry Logo
search
logo
1854229

Yves Rodier

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Write something...
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
See all
Yves Rodier

Yves Rodier (born June 5, 1967) is a Canadian comic strip creator known for his many pastiches of The Adventures of Tintin.

Rodier always loved comics, but first set out to become a musician or cinematographer. He soon returned to comics. He started out by imitating the work of his favorite author, Hergé, creating pastiches of The Adventures of Tintin. These copies were illegal and did not earn him much money, although they allowed him to meet many other cartoonists, such as Bob de Moor, Jacques Martin and Michel "Greg" Regnier. In 1995, he met Daniel and Richard Houde and in their magazine Pignouf, he started his comic series Pignouf et Hamlet, about a boy and his pig. The magazine only lasted for five issues, though the series continued.

Rodier always had a passion for The Adventures of Tintin by Hergé and so he embarked on writing some Tintin stories of his own. As Tintin pastiches, they imitated the style of Hergé. They are illegal, as they breach the Tintin copyright owned by the Hergé Foundation (Moulinsart), but some have been published, and they are all found circulating on the Internet. Today he is one of the largest (unofficial) Tintin draughtsmen, along with Harry Edwood.

The unfinished Tintin book Tintin and Alph-Art was unofficially completed by Rodier in black-and-white. Several groups have coloured it, such as 'Alph-junis', and have translated it into English. It was published in Autumn 1986 and then presented to Moulinsart. Rodier asked that it become an official book but Moulinsart refused. In September 1991, Rodier met Bob de Moor, and together they asked for permission to re-draw the book. Moulinsart still disagreed, and De Moor died in 1992. Rodier later re-drew certain parts of it to make them more akin to the style of Hergé. It was only released on CD-ROM, as opposed to being printed like the other edition.

Hergé once suggested that a good idea for his next Tintin story would be to set it in an airport. However, he chose to set it in the art world instead and partially produced Tintin and Alph-art. Rodier started out a new book called A Day at the Airport though it was abandoned, with the first page leaking onto the web. The plot involves a character from the Tintin stories, General Alcazar, being shot, apparently by Dr. Müller, a villain from the Tintin series.

Rodier also did an extra page for Hergé's Tintin in Tibet which Hergé deleted from his comic.

The origin of the story lies in a scenario for a drawing contest in the Journal de Spirou number 1027, from December 19, 1957. Twenty years later, Yves Rodier used the story for another drawing contest, converted it as a Tintin plot and drew 6 half-pages of a story that takes place right before "Tintin and The soviets". Those pages explains how Tintin gets the job as a reporter. For the story Rodier didn't win the contest as he was disqualified for using already existing characters.

This seven-page story was entirely thought up by Rodier and is sometimes called The Sorcerers Lake. It is about a monster in the local lake and is set before Tintin in Tibet. Rodier drew them (with interruptions) from 1996 to 2003.

See all
User Avatar
No comments yet.