Diabolik (TV series)
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Diabolik | |
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Also known as |
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Genre | Action Adventure Police drama Superhero |
Based on | Diabolik by Angela and Luciana Giussani |
Written by |
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Directed by |
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Composers |
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Country of origin |
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Original languages |
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No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 40 |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Producer | Will Meugniot |
Editor | Stéphane Berry |
Running time | 24 minutes |
Production companies | |
Original release | |
Network | |
Release | May 7, 1999 January 28, 2001 | –
Diabolik (also known as Saban's Diabolik and Diabolik: Track of the Panther; French: Diabolik: Sur les Traces de la Panthère, lit. "Diabolik: In the Footsteps of the Panther")[1] is an animated television series based on the Italian comic book series of the same name by Angela and Luciana Giussani.[2] Developed by Charles Corton and written by Jean Cheville and Florence Sandis,[3] the series was an international co-production between Saban Entertainment, Saban International Paris, M6 Métropole Télévision and Mediaset,[4] with Asiatic animation services by Ashi Productions and Saerom Animation.[3][5]
Production on the show began in 1997.[6] In Europe, it premiered on Fox Kids on May 5, 1999, and lasted for 40 episodes before ending on January 1, 2001.[7][8] Ownership of the series passed to Disney in 2001 when the company acquired Fox Kids Worldwide, which also includes Saban Entertainment.[9][10][11] Although it was co-produced in the U.S., it never aired in that country.[12]
The series that focuses on master thief Diabolik and his woman companion Eva, as they fight the criminal organisation Brotherhood and its leader Dane, while evading Inspector Ginko.[3][5] The series differs considerably from the darker-toned comic, making it more suitable for a young audience;[1] the main differences include the rejuvenation of Diabolik and Eva Kant, the introduction of new characters (such as the main antagonist Dane), the replacement of Diabolik's Jaguar E-Type with a fictional modern car, the absence of murders by the title character, and the setting in the real world rather than fictional locations.[1]
Plot
[edit]Diabolik is a master thief with a deep knowledge in many scientific fields, including chemistry, mechanics, and computers. He has a set of lifelike masks which he uses to fool his opponents, assuming every identity at will. He was raised as an orphan on a secret island hideout of a criminal organisation known as the Brotherhood, where he learned all his criminal skills; as a baby, he was found abandoned on a boat by King, the leader of the organisation, and welcomed into his home like a son. Dane, King's legitimate son, never accepted him as a brother. Years later, Dane, jealous of Diabolik, framed him for a crime where he didn't commit (the murder of a man, the father of Diabolik's future partner Eva Kant), and Diabolik remained in prison. Five years later, after King's death, Dane became the leader of the Brotherhood and organised the rescue of his brother, but that was all a cover for his brother's murder, his real plan. Diabolik survived the assassination and swore that he will destroy the Brotherhood and his brother. Together with his partner Eva Kant, who also got personal vendetta against Dane and the Brotherhood, Diabolik manages to make life miserable to Dane and his organisation, while being pursued by Inspector Ginko.
Characters
[edit]Character | French actor[3] | Italian actor[13] | English actor |
---|---|---|---|
Diabolik | Pierre-François Pistorio | Claudio Moneta Simone D'Andrea (Young) |
Stephen Bogeart |
Eva Kant | Blanche Ravalec | Sonia Mazza | Megan Fahlenbock |
Dane | Bernard Woringer | Marco Balzarotti Patrizio Prata (Young) |
Wayne Best |
Ginko | Marco Balbi | Graham Harley | |
Graffam | Enzo Tarascio | Denis Akiyama | |
King | Gary Krawford | ||
Naomi | Elda Olivieri | Julie Lemieux | |
Micky | Janet Laine-Green | ||
Banderas | Diego Sabre | Diego Matamoros | |
Ranavalona | Marie-Christine Darah | Alison Sealy-Smith | |
Daggett | Gianluca Iacono | Jesse Collins | |
Leonov | Oliviero Corbetta | Dan Chameroy | |
Coren | Michael Lamport | ||
Yuko | Jane Luk |
Production and broadcast
[edit]The series is based on the Italian comic book series of the same name by Angela and Luciana Giussani, although it is significantly different from the source material, as it is more suitable for a young audience.[1] It was developed by Charles Corton and written by Jean Cheville and Florence Sandis,[3] and produced by the French studios Saban International Paris and M6 Métropole Télévision, the American Saban Entertainment, and the Italian Mediaset,[4] with Asiatic animation services by Ashi Productions and Saerom Animation.[3] The production started in 1997.[14] Mario Gomboli (it), Italian script writer and editor of the original comics and artistic consultant of the series, stated: "In 1997, Saban International wanted to project cartoons, I proposed my children's books but they wanted something more adventurous, and so I told them about Diabolik."[14] The series premiered in Europe on Fox Kids on May 5, 1999, and lasted for 40 episodes before ending on January 1, 2001; it also aired on M6 in France and on Italia 1 in Italy. The English dub of the series was initially set to air on Fox Family Channel in the United States in 2000, but was cancelled before being aired, although the series was broadcast in Australia.[15] Disney owns the rights of the series as an exclusive property through BVS Entertainment, (the series itself, copyrights, episodes, plot, merchandising/distribution rights, "TRACK OF THE PANTHER" trademark/label, recurring characters and other fictional/commercial elements or materials exclusively created for the animated TV show and not related with comics) while Astorina S.r.l holding the rights of the original Diabolik IP, franchise, trademark and its original characters like Diabolik, Eva, Ginko and King as an underlying property.
About the series' development and broadcast, Mario Gomboli also said:
The project started well, but when Saban was bought by Fox Kids the production moved [from France] to Los Angeles, and the first problems arose. The Americans didn't want Diabolik and Eva to be, I won't say lovers, but simply to live together. One guy wanted them to be brother and sister to justify unmarried people living under the same roof. We argued in a couple of situations. Especially on the use of daggers since the Toronto regulations say that weapons cannot be used on human beings. So Diabolik could only use daggers to puncture tires, blow out a light bulb or cut a rope, but never against anyone. In the end it was never distributed in the US because, last but not least, Disney bought Fox Kids and they believed that Diabolik was a name that reminded people of Satanism, and therefore not suitable for kids.[16]
Episodes
[edit]No. | Title | Original air date [17] | |
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1 | "For Old Times Sake" | 7 September 2000 | |
Diabolik goes to Paris to meet his former mentor Rana and save her from a terminal illness. The serum to cure her is found in an ancient Egyptian tomb. But Rana's disease is actually just a lie to force him to steal the gold kept in the sarcophagus. | |||
2 | "Under the North Pole" | 9 September 2000 | |
Diabolik and Eva Kant help their former partner Ivan Fedorski recover a deadly Russian particle gun from Leonov's submarine. | |||
3 | "Chinese Puzzle Box" | 10 September 2000 | |
The Chinese Golden Triad teams up with Dane to track down a puzzle box that leads to an immense hidden treasure. Diabolik and Eva steal the box, replacing it with an exact replica and then making sure the Triad can track it down. Discovered that it is a fake, the members of the Triad are convinced that all this is the work of Dane. | |||
4 | "Sea of Gold" | 16 September 2000 | |
Evil arms dealer Mickey is threatening to bomb twelve oil fields, following Dane's orders, but she has other plans in mind to make more profit from this operation. Diabolik and Eva try to frame Mickey by recording her confession of her in which she admits she wants to rip Dane after placing a bomb on the bottom of the sea. | |||
5 | "King's Legacy" | 17 September 2000 | |
Diabolik is hired by Janice Keegan to save her alleged daughter who has been kidnapped by Dane. The child is in fact the "key" to open a safe deposit box of a Swiss bank in which King deposited his entire inheritance. After the rescue, however, Diabolik discovers that the girl is not Keegan's daughter. The woman only intends to use her genetic code to take over the bank account. | |||
6 | "Honor Student" | 23 September 2000 | |
At the prestigious Hillton Academy, promising young student Philip is recruited by the Brotherhood of Dane to steal precious gems from the London Tower. Diabolik discovers that the school is just a cover used by Dane to train and recruit new criminals, and manages to save Philip from corruption while Eva has the boy's teacher blame the theft of the jewelry. | |||
7 | "Track of the Panther" | 24 September 2000 | |
While fleeing an ambush by Dane and his collaborators, Diabolik must hide in order not to be found and remembers the year before, in Paris, he met and recruited his partner Eva Kant to recover an heirloom belonging to the woman's family, stolen by Dane. It was the beginning of a long and fruitful collaboration between the two thieves. | |||
8 | "Panther Uncaged" | 30 September 2000 | |
Diabolik remembers his childhood, when, as a baby, he was found abandoned on a boat by King, the leader of the criminal organisation Brotherhood. He was welcomed into King's home like a son, but Dane, King's legitimate son, never accepted him as a brother. Years later, Dane managed to get Diabolik arrested on charges of aggravated theft. Having escaped from prison and simulated his death, Diabolik has since tried in every way to take revenge on his half-brother by destroying the Brotherhood. | |||
9 | "The Mole" | 1 October 2000 | |
Inspector Ginko is accused of numerous crimes and locked up in prison. Eva and Diabolik investigate the mysterious events and discover that Ginko was framed by someone in internal affairs to prevent a hacking attempt related to the development of a program containing all the secret data of Interpol, and this someone is involved with Dane and the Brotherhood. | |||
10 | "A Sporting Chance" | 7 October 2000 | |
Diabolik and Eva must eradicate a shady criminal plot hatched by Mickey to get a fortune by blackmailing a young Brazilian soccer champion, forcing him to lose his team. With a series of cunning tricks, Diabolik and Eva thus save the champion's family that had been kidnapped. | |||
11 | "Target: Diabolik" | 8 October 2000 | |
Wolf, a ruthless killer in Dane's pay, starts a hunt for Diabolik to carry out his personal revenge against him. The killer, however, was deceived by Dane, who made him believe that it was Diabolik who was responsible for the accident that left him with a disfigured face. But Diabolik is innocent: it was Dane who caused the accident in the factory where Wolf worked. | |||
12 | "Hot Threads" | 14 October 2000 | |
Diabolik and Eva are in Italy to follow a group of counterfeiters led by Danton, and discover that a dress auctioned at a fashion show is woven with money threads. Diabolik and Eva set a trap to attract Danton's attention, unmask him and have him arrested by Inspector Ginko. | |||
13 | "Tokyo Conspiracy" | 15 October 2000 | |
Akira Okada and his father Takashi have a family dilemma: the boy does not intend to succeed his father at the head of the Tokyo mafia clans. Diabolik and Eva Kant arrive in Japan and discover that Dagget is the cause of the continuing feuds between the crime families for the conquest of Tokyo, but they guarantee that his plan will go to waste. | |||
14 | "Rust in Peace" | 21 October 2000 | |
Diabolik and Eva try to stop Mickey, who wants to use a substance invented by M.L. Tory that makes things rust for a terrorist attack. | |||
15 | "Triple Play" | 22 October 2000 | |
Hoping to frame Diabolik and Eva, Dane orders Wolf to carry out three separate great thefts of three priceless treasures of humanity. Diabolik solves this problem by including Inspector Ginko in the equation and fixing the artifacts in one place, thus allowing him and Eva to step in and thwart Dane's umpteenth plan to damage the Brotherhood. | |||
16 | "Merchant of Menace" | 28 October 2000 | |
Diabolik and Eva chase James Packard and Ben Darris who stole the secret QSB armored car project. Once Diabolik takes control of the QSB, he mows down Ben Darris' house and crashes the armoured vehicle off a cliff to prevent it from being used by the Brotherhood for their criminal projects. | |||
17 | "Question of Survival" | 29 October 2000 | |
Diabolik finds himself stuck in a jungle with little equipment, chased by Ben Darris' men, until he is able to meet up with Eva to fend off Dane's pirates from the Miramar Cruise, a ship carrying the relics of an ancient Mayan treasure that the Brotherhood intends to steal. | |||
18 | "Her Father's Daughter" | 4 November 2000 | |
Eva pursues a man who she believes to be her father, that has long since disappeared due to Dane's machinations. While searching for the register that belonged to King, Diabolik discovers that Eva's father is just an impostor sent by Dane to lure her into a trap. | |||
19 | "Memories" | 5 November 2000 | |
Following an accident, Diabolik beats his head and starts to suffer from partial amnesia, unable to remember the events of the last eight years. Believing that King is still alive and that he is still part of the organization, Diabolik recalls eight years ago and decides to steal some jewels just like he was doing on the last day he remembers. Dane finds out what happened to his brother and deceives him, followed by Eva, who is trying to help her partner. | |||
20 | "Lost City" | 11 November 2000 | |
Diabolik blends in with Ben Darris' expedition to found the Inca treasure of Mesocotyl. | |||
21 | "Eye of Storm" | 12 November 2000 | |
Rana and Wolf use a machine that creates an artificial hurricane to rob a Caribbean bank undisturbed. Diabolik intervenes to stop them. | |||
22 | "Lights! Camera! Diabolik!" | 18 November 2000 | |
Diabolik and Eva uncover plans by Mickey to reverse engineer their mask-making technique and use it to steal millions worth of jewels. | |||
23 | "Hide and Seek" | 19 November 2000 | |
Diabolik tries to steal the lost treasure of an emperor, until his brother Dane intervenes. | |||
24 | "Ultimate Security" | 25 November 2000 | |
Diabolik must prevent Dagget from gaining control of a key military satellite. | |||
25 | "Crowning Glory" | 26 November 2000 | |
Diabolik tries to recover some crown jewels, stolen by Rana's henchmen | |||
26 | "The Kindness of Strangers" | 27 November 2000 | |
A Russian doctor ends up in danger when she accidentally finds a device from the organisation stolen by Diabolik | |||
27 | "Redline: Diabolik" | 28 November 2000 | |
While Diabolik is engaged in a robbery to get some photos with which the Brotherhood is blackmailing Leonov, he begins to remember with Eva an old robbery in which he lost his special car. Diabolik impersonated an Italian mechanic, Osvaldo Ferraresi, to rebuild the car and recover it from Dane's hands | |||
28 | "The Wrong Side of the Tracks" | 28 November 2000 | |
Diabolik tries to steal Napoleon's diary, transported on a train that crosses the Channel Tunnel. | |||
29 | "Master Plan" | 3 December 2000 | |
Diabolik faces a virtual intelligence that processes perfect thefts | |||
30 | "Partners" | 16 December 2000 | |
Diabolik steps into action to prevent Dane from stealing an experimental serum from a military base | |||
31 | "The Thief who stole Tomorrow" | 23 December 2000 | |
Diabolik makes Banderas believe that he has been in a coma for twenty years, thus letting his criminal plans be revealed. | |||
32 | "The Detective's Obsession" | 24 December 2000 | |
Ginko manages to arrest Eva, and Diabolik devises a plan to save her | |||
33 | "Strange Alliance" | 30 December 2000 | |
Diabolik and Ginko are infected with a deadly virus, and Eva sets out to find a cure to save them. | |||
34 | "Daggers And Swords" | 31 December 2000 | |
Diabolik sets out in search of the legendary Durandal sword. | |||
35 | "Rainbow Warriors" | 13 January 2001 | |
Diabolik intervenes in a race to decide the new chief of an Indian tribe named Ogala. | |||
36 | "From the Depths" | 14 January 2001 | |
Diabolik and Eva devise a plan to recover an Inca statuette from a sunken vessel. | |||
37 | "Kid's Stuff" | 20 January 2001 | |
Sophie, a little girl, discovers Diabolik's hiding place and is kidnapped by Dane's men, who want the information. Diabolik goes to rescue her. | |||
38 | "Future Imperfect" | 27 January 2001 | |
Dane uses a clairvoyant to uncover Diabolik's plans, but the thief uses it to his advantage | |||
39 | "Final Justice: Part 1" | 27 January 2001 | |
Diabolik decides to launch the final attack on Dane. With Eva's help, he tries to steal the organisation's vault keys from its six bosses. Diabolik searches for King's Ledger, who is locked in a high-security safe that requires five keys and security codes, while an investigation against Dane begins. | |||
40 | "Final Justice: Part 2" | 28 January 2001 | |
Diabolik and Eva steal the five security keys and replace them with duplicates, turning the Brotherhood leaders against Dane. Diabolik confronts Dane and helps Inspector Ginko to obtain King's Ledger. Dane and his men are eventually arrested by Ginko thanks to Diabolik, exposing the Brotherhood once and for all. |
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "Diabolik - Track of the Panther". Guide Supereva (in Italian). 2015.
- ^ Animation Magazine. 1997. p. 59.
- ^ a b c d e f "Diabolik sur les Traces de la Panthère". Planete Jenusse (in French).
- ^ a b TV World. Alain-Charles Pub. 1997. p. 16.
- ^ a b "Cartoni animati: in autunno arriva Diabolik" (in Italian). 19 June 2000.
- ^ "Programming power house". 15 September 1997.
- ^ Scott Roxborough (20 February 2014). "21st Century Fox's Sky Deutschland Greenlights Superhero Series 'Diabolik'". The Hoolywood Reporter.
- ^ Nick Vivarelli (February 20, 2014). "Rupert Murdoch's European Payboxes Join Forces on 'Diabolik' TV Drama Series". Variety.
- ^ "U.S. Copyright Public Records System".
- ^ "Disney+ and Missing Saban Entertainment & Fox Kids-Jetix Worldwide Library - StreamClues". 14 September 2022. Archived from the original on 26 December 2022. Retrieved 2 October 2022.
- ^ "Liste - BVS Entertainment | Séries".
- ^ Gerard Raiti (July 1, 1999). "Comics to Animation: What's Coming Next?". AWN.
- ^ Antonio Genna. "Diabolik: Track of the Panther". Il mondo dei doppiatori.
- ^ a b M. Dallavalle (20 May 2015). "Intervista a Mario Gomboli" (in Italian).
- ^ Lucas, Tim (2007). Mario Bava: All the Colors of the Dark. Video Watchdog. p. 755. ISBN 978-0-9633756-1-2.
- ^ Luca Maragno (7 March 2017). "Cinema e fumetti made in Italy: Diabolik, una storia infinita". BestMovie (in Italian).
- ^ "I cartoni di Diabolik". Diabolikclub (in Italian).
External links
[edit]- 1990s American animated television series
- 1990s French animated television series
- 1990s Italian animated television series
- 1999 American television series debuts
- 1999 French television series debuts
- 1999 Italian television series debuts
- 2000s American animated television series
- 2000s French animated television series
- 2000s Italian animated television series
- 2001 American television series endings
- 2001 French television series endings
- 2001 Italian television series endings
- American anime-influenced animated television series
- American children's animated action television series
- American children's animated adventure television series
- American English-language television shows
- Fox Kids
- French anime-influenced animated television series
- French children's animated action television series
- French children's animated adventure television series
- Italian anime-influenced animated television series
- Italian children's animated action television series
- Italian children's animated adventure television series
- Jetix original programming
- Television series by Disney–ABC Domestic Television
- Television series by Saban Entertainment
- Television shows based on Italian comics
- Diabolik