Once Upon a Time... Space
By Hervé St-Louis
May 26, 2014 - 10:56
Studios: Procidis, Eiken, France Regions 3, Société Radio-Canada, RAI Radiotelevisione Italiana, Radio Televisión Española, Katholieke Radio Omroep, Crustel S.A.,
Writer(s): Albert Barillé
Starring: Roger Carel, Annie Balestra, Vincent Ropion, Alain Dorval, José Luccioni
Directed by: Albert Barillé
Release Date: 1982
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Airing in 1982 in France, Canada, Japan, Norway, and more Once Upon a Time... Space draws from the star system of characters Barillé established in his first series Once Upon a Time... Man. These characters are archetypes. First is Maestro who is the either a scientist or a great artist. Second is Peter (Pierre), his ally and often the main heroic protagonist in this star system. There is Peter’s best friend Jumbo (Le Gros). Psi (Mercedes) is Peter's girlfriend. Pierrette is his mother or sister or Le Gros’s consort. Finally, the bad guys are The Pest (Le Teigneux) and his acolyte The Dwarf (Le Nabot). Junior versions of each character exist. In Space, Pierrot is the son of President Pierrete and of military commander Pierre. He explores space with his robot sidekick Metro, and best friend Le Petit Gros.
Japanese animation studio Eiken animated the series. Character designer René Borg borrowed from European comics’ ligne claire cartoon style. The characters are tall and thin. Their eyes are dots. They are not slapstick characters although have limited realism. But like traditional ligne claire designs, the backgrounds and prop are realistic and detailed. Famous French science fiction illustrator Manchu (Philippe Bouchet) designed the space ships and stations. Manchu’s designs for Space are intricate and boxier than typical Japanese mecha designs. His ships have graffiti or camouflage painting. The Japanese animators on the series relied on held cells (stills) that they got from Manchu. They rarely animated the ships using full frame animation.
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The series explores many myths of Earth culture, like Greek gods, Atlantis, white skin Inca gods in many stories. The plot of many episodes involves Pierrot, Psi, and Metro visiting a new world. Often they stranded there, they have to unravel a plot by the evil people of Planet Cassiopeia. These are like the Klingons of the series.
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The mores and the treatment of non-white male characters in Space is the work of a previous generation. The series features a lot of diversity of race and culture in the cast. As well as aliens (who usually play secondary roles), humans manning the ships and space stations are from a variety of races. Yet, other Once Upon a Time... series are Euro-centric. The main discourse is Western-based and has a skewed contribution and depiction of non-whites. Women in this series play a huge role. Psi and her telepathic abilities often warn Pierrot of danger and save the day. Pierrot’s mom, Pierrette is the leader of the alliance from Omega. Still, the treatment of many women in this series will annoy feminist viewers.
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Because of the star system, the series is nepotic. Yet, Barillé’s best character is the modern version of Maestro. Metro is a robot duplicate of Maestro's brains and a sharper critical mind. Always complaining, he is the smartest character in the series and the one who rescues Psi and Pierrot in many episodes. Metro is resourceful, inventive and subtle comedic relief. This is where Barillé’s direction is best. Cassiopeia's ongoing secret conquest plans reach a climax in the last four episodes of the series. Barillé’s editing style is different than North American cartoon series. With a plot suitable for adults, he omits many explanatory scenes. By cutting away to more active sequences, he forces the viewer to fill in the storytelling gaps themselves. Barillé assumes that his audience, although composed of children, can keep up with the story well enough. It is not to say that there is no exposition in the series. There is a lot but it is educational. For example, in one episode, Barillé explains Saturn's rings. In another, Metro lists various theories about the disappearance of dinosaurs.
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Once Upon a Time... Space, Il était une fois... l’Espace in French, is available in French in European-friendly region two DVDs. The series used to be available in North American region one DVDs in Canada (French only). But don’t despair. Procidis is on iTunes. You can watch the entire series there. I recommend it.
Rating: 8/10
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