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Arsène Lupin is a fictional gentleman thief and master of disguise created by French writer Maurice Leblanc.
Lupin was featured in 20 novels and 28 short stories by Leblanc, with the short stories collected into book form for a total of 24 books. The first story, "L'Arrestation d'Arsène Lupin", was published in the magazine Je sais tout on 15 July 1905.
The character has also appeared in a number of books from other writers as well as numerous film, television , stage play, and comic book adaptations.
Arsene Lupin Contre Herlock Sholmes
Aside from the Arsène Lupin stories written by Maurice Leblanc (1864–1941) himself, five authorized sequels were written in the 1970s by the celebrated mystery writing team of Boileau-Narcejac.
The character of Lupin was first introduced in a series of short stories serialized in the magazine Je sais tout, starting in No. 6, dated 15 July 1905. He was originally called Arsène Lopin, until a local politician of the same name protested, resulting in the name change.
Arsène Lupin is a literary descendant of Pierre Alexis Ponson du Terrail's Rocambole. Like him, he is often a force for good, while operating on the wrong side of the law. Those whom Lupin defeats, always with his characteristic Gallic style and panache, are worse villains than he. Lupin shares distinct similarities with E. W. Hornung's archetypal gentleman thief A. J. Raffles who first appeared in The Amateur Cracksman in 1899, but both creations can be said to anticipate and have inspired later characters such as Louis Joseph Vance's The Lone Wolf and Leslie Charteris's The Saint.
The character of Arsène Lupin might also have been based by Leblanc on French anarchist Marius Jacob, whose trial made headlines in March 1905, but Leblanc had also read Octave Mirbeau's Les 21 jours d'un neurasthénique (1901), which features a gentleman thief named Arthur Lebeau, and had seen Mirbeau's comedy Scrupules (1902), whose main character is a gentleman thief.
The official last book of the series, The Billions of Arsene Lupin, was published without the ninth chapter "The Safe" ("IX. Les coffres-forts"), and even the published book was withdrawn at Leblanc's son's request. However, in 2002, by the efforts of some Lupinians and Korean translator Sung Gwi-Su, the missing part was restored and the complete final collection of Arsene Lupin happened to be published first in Korea, from Kkachi Publishing House.
Arsène Lupin and Sherlock Holmes
Leblanc introduced Sherlock Holmes to Lupin in the short story "Sherlock Holmes Arrives Too Late" in Je sais tout No. 17, 15 June 1906. In it, Holmes meets a young Lupin for the first time. After legal objections from Conan Doyle, the name was changed to "Herlock Sholmes" when the story was collected in book form in Volume 1.
Sholmes returned in two more stories collected in Volume 2, "Arsène Lupin contre Herlock Sholmes", and then in a guest-starring role in the battle for the secret of the Hollow Needle in L'Aiguille creuse. Arsène Lupin contre Herlock Sholmes was published in the United States in 1910 under the title "The Blonde Lady" which used the name "Holmlock Shears" for Sherlock Holmes, and "Wilson" for Watson.
In 813, Lupin manages to solve a riddle that Herlock Sholmes was unable to figure out.
Sherlock Holmes, this time with his real name and accompanied by familiar characters such as Watson and Lestrade (all copyright protection having long expired), also confronted Arsène Lupin in the 2008 PC 3D adventure game Sherlock Holmes versus Arsène Lupin. In this game Holmes (and occasionally others) are attempting to stop Lupin from stealing five British valuable items. Lupin wants to steal the items in order to humiliate Britain, but he also admires Holmes and thus challenges him to try to stop him.
In a novella "The Prisoner of the Tower, or A Short But Beautiful Journey of Three Wise Men" by Boris Akunin published in 2008 in Russia as the conclusion of "Jade Rosary Beads" book, Sherlock Holmes and Erast Fandorin oppose Arsène Lupin on December 31, 1899.
Fantasy elements
Several Arsène Lupin novels contain some interesting fantasy elements: a radioactive 'god-stone' that cures people and causes mutations is the object of an epic battle in L’Île aux trente cercueils; the secret of the Fountain of Youth, a mineral water source hidden beneath a lake in the Auvergne, is the goal sought by the protagonists in La Demoiselle aux yeux verts; finally, in La Comtesse de Cagliostro, Lupin's arch-enemy and lover is none other than Joséphine Balsamo, the alleged granddaughter of Cagliostro himself.
Bibliography
1.Arsène Lupin, Gentleman Burglar (Arsène Lupin, gentleman cambrioleur, 1907 coll., 9 stories) (AKA Exploits of Arsène Lupin, Extraordinary Adventures of Arsène Lupin)
2.Arsene Lupin vs. Herlock Sholmes (Arsène Lupin contre Herlock Sholmès, 1908 coll., 2 stories) (AKA The Blonde Lady)
3.The Hollow Needle (L'Aiguille creuse, 1909)
4.813 (813, 1910)
5.The Crystal Stopper (Le Bouchon de cristal, 1912)
6.The Confessions of Arsene Lupin (Les Confidences d'Arsène Lupin, 1913 coll., 9 stories)
7.The Shell Shard (L'Éclat d'obus, 1916) (AKA: Woman of Mystery) Not originally part of the Arsène Lupin series, Lupin was written into the story in the 1923 edition.
8.The Golden Triangle (Le Triangle d'or, 1918) (AKA: The Return of Arsène Lupin)
9.The Island of Thirty Coffins (L’Île aux trente cercueils, 1919) (AKA: The Secret of Sarek)
10.The Teeth of The Tiger (Les Dents du tigre, 1921)
11.The Eight Strokes of The Clock (Les Huit Coups de l'horloge, 1923 coll., 8 stories)
12.The Countess of Cagliostro (La Comtesse de Cagliostro, 1924) (AKA: Memoirs of Arsene Lupin)
13.The Damsel With Green Eyes (La Demoiselle aux yeux verts, 1927) (AKA: The Girl With the Green Eyes, Arsène Lupin, Super Sleuth)
14.The Overcoat of Arsène Lupin (Le Pardessus d'Arsène Lupin, published in English in 1926) First published in 1924 in France as Dent d'Hercule Petitgris. Altered into a Lupin story and published in English as The Overcoat of Arsène Lupin in 1926 in The Popular Magazine.
15.The Man with the Goatskin (L'Homme à la peau de bique (1927)
16.The Barnett & Co. Agency (L'Agence Barnett et Cie., 1928 coll., 8 stories) (AKA: Jim Barnett Intervenes, Arsène Lupin Intervenes)
17.The Mysterious Mansion (La Demeure mystérieuse, 1929) (AKA: The Melamare Mystery)
18.The Mystery of The Green Ruby (La Barre-y-va, 1930)
19.The Emerald Cabochon (Le Cabochon d'émeraude (1930)
20.The Woman With Two Smiles (La Femme aux deux sourires, 1933) (AKA: The Double Smile)
21.Victor of the Vice Squad (Victor de la Brigade mondaine, 1933) (AKA: The Return of Arsene Lupin)
22.The Revenge of The Countess of Cagliostro (La Cagliostro se venge, 1935)
23.The Billions of Arsène Lupin (Les Milliards d'Arsène Lupin, 1939)
24.The Last Love of Arsene Lupin (Le Dernier Amour d'Arsène Lupin, 2012)
Other material by LeBlanc
1.Arsène Lupin (Arsène Lupin (pièce de théâtre) Originally a 4-part play written by Maurice LeBlanc and Francis de Croisset, it was subsequently novelized by LeBlanc and published in 1909. It was then translated into English by Edgar Jepson and published in 1909 by Doubleday as "Arsene Lupin: By Maurice LeBlanc & Edgar Jepson"
By other writers
Boileau-Narcejac1.Le Secret d’Eunerville (1973)
2.La Poudrière (1974)
3.Le Second visage d’Arsène Lupin (1975)
4.La Justice d’Arsène Lupin (1977)
5.Le Serment d’Arsène Lupin (1979)
Notable pastiches
The Adventure of Mona Lisa by Carolyn Wells in The Century (January, 1912)
Sure Way to Catch Every Criminal. Ha! Ha! by Carolyn Wells in The Century (July, 1912)
The Adventure of the Clothes-Line by Carolyn Wells in The Century (May, 1915)
The Silver Hair Crime (= Clue?) by Nick Carter in New Magnet Library No. 1282 (1930)
Aristide Dupin who appears in Union Jack Nos. 1481, 1483, 1489, 1493 and 1498 (1932) in the Sexton Blake collection by Gwyn Evans
La Clé est sous le paillasson by Marcel Aymé (1934)
Gaspard Zemba who appears in The Shadow Magazine (December 1, 1935) by Walter B. Gibson
Arsène Lupin vs. Colonel Linnaus by Anthony Boucher in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine Vo. 5, No. 19 (1944)
L’Affaire Oliveira by Thomas Narcejac in Confidences dans ma nuit (1946)
Le Gentleman en Noir by Claude Ferny (c. 1950) (two novels)
International Investigators, Inc. by Edward G. Ashton in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine (February 1952)
Le Secret des rois de France ou La Véritable identité d’Arsène Lupin by Valère Catogan (1955)
In Compartment 813 by Arthur Porges in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine (June 1966)
Arsène Lupin, gentleman de la nuit by Jean-Claude Lamy (1983)
Auguste Lupa in Son of Holmes (1986) and Rasputin’s Revenge (1987) by John Lescroart
Various stories in the Tales of the Shadowmen anthology series, ed. by Jean-Marc Lofficier and Randy Lofficier, Black Coat Press (2005-ongoing)
Arsène Lupin is also referred to as the grandfather of Lupin III in the Japanese manga series of the same name. He appears in chapter 37 of the series.
Arsène Lupin and Sherlock Holmes have been the basis for the popular Japanese manga series Detective Conan. Kaitou Kid (originating from Magic Kaito) resembles and represents Lupin, while Conan Edogawa resembles and represents Sherlock Holmes.
In the Adventure of The Doraemons, the robot cat The Mysterious Thief Dorapent resembles Lupin.
A funny animal pastiche of Arsène Lupin is Arpin Lusène, of the Scrooge McDuck Universe.
Případ Grendwal (A Grendwal Case), a play by Pavel Dostál, Czech playwright and Minister of Culture
Tuxedo Mask from the popular Japanese manga and anime series Sailor Moon, also resembles Arsène Lupin.
Arsène Lupin et le mystère d'Arsonval by Michel Zink
Qui fait peur à Virginia Woolf ? (... Élémentaire mon cher Lupin !) by Gabriel Thoveron
Crimes parfaits by Christian Poslaniec
La Dent de Jane by Daniel Salmon (2001)
Les Lupins de Vincent by Caroline Cayol et Didier Cayol (2006)
Code Lupin by Michel Bussi (2006)
L'Église creuse by Patrick Genevaux (2009) (short story)
The Many Faces of Arsène Lupin collection of short stories edited by Jean-Marc Lofficier & Randy Lofficier (Black Coat Press, 2012)
Other Reading
Dorothée, Danseuse de Corde (1923) (The Secret Tomb) an eponymous heroine solves one of Arsène Lupin's four fabulous secrets.
Films
Arsène Lupin 2004 movie posterThe Gentleman Burglar (B&W., US, 1908) with William Ranows (Lupin).
Arsène Lupin (B&W., 1914) with Georges Tréville (Lupin).
Arsène Lupin (B&W., UK, 1915) with Gerald Ames (Lupin).
The Gentleman Burglar (B&W., US, 1915) with William Stowell (Lupin).
Arsène Lupin (B&W., US, 1917) with Earle Williams (Lupin).
The Teeth of the Tiger (B&W., US, 1919) with David Powell (Lupin).
813 (B&W., US, 1920) with Wedgewood Nowell (Lupin) and Wallace Beery.
Les Dernières aventures d'Arsène Lupin (B&W., France/Hungary, 1921).
813 - Rupimono (B&W., Japan, 1923) with Minami Mitsuaki (Lupin).
Arsène Lupin (B&W., US, 1932) with John Barrymore (Lupin).[1]
Arsène Lupin, Détective (B&W., 1937) with Jules Berry (Lupin).
Arsène Lupin Returns (B&W., US, 1938) with Melvyn Douglas (Lupin).
Enter Arsène Lupin (B&W., US, 1944) with Charles Korvin (Lupin).
Arsenio Lupin (B&W., Mexico, 1945) with R. Pereda (Lupin).
Nanatsu-no Houseki (B&W., Japan, 1950) with Keiji Sada (Lupin).
Tora no-Kiba (B&W., Japan, 1951) with Ken Uehara (Lupin).
Kao-no Nai Otoko (B&W., Japan, 1955) with Eiji Okada (Lupin).
Les Aventures d'Arsène Lupin (col., 1957) with Robert Lamoureux (Lupin).
Signé Arsène Lupin (B&W., 1959) with Robert Lamoureux (Lupin).
Arsène Lupin contre Arsène Lupin (B&W., 1962) with Jean-Pierre Cassel and Jean-Claude Brialy (Lupins).
Arsène Lupin (col., 2004) with Romain Duris (Lupin).
Lupin no Kiganjo (col., Japan, 2011) with Kōichi Yamadera (Lupin).
Television
Arsène Lupin, 26 60-minute episodes (1971, 1973–1974) with Georges Descrières (Lupin), Arsène Lupin at the Internet Movie Database.
L'Île aux trente cercueils, six 60-minute episodes (1979) (the character of Lupin, who only appears at the end of the novel, was removed entirely).
Arsène Lupin joue et perd, six 52-minute episodes (1980) loosely based on 813 with Jean-Claude Brialy (Lupin).
Le Retour d'Arsène Lupin, twelve 90-minute episodes (1989–1990) and Les Nouveaux Exploits d'Arsène Lupin, eight 90-minute episodes (1995–1996) with François Dunoyer (Lupin).
Lupin (Philippine TV series), Philippines (2007) with Richard Gutierrez (Lupin).
Stage
Arsène Lupin by Francis de Croisset and Maurice Leblanc. Four-act play first performed on October 28, 1908, at the Athenée in Paris.
Arsène Lupin contre Herlock Sholmès by Victor Darlay & Henri de Gorsse. Four-act play first performed on October 10, 1910, at the Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris. (American edition ISBN 1-932983-16-3)
Le Retour d'Arsène Lupin by Francis de Croisset and Maurice Leblanc. One-act play first performed on September 16, 1911, at the Théâtre de la Cigale in Paris.
Arsène Lupin, Banquier by Yves Mirande & Albert Willemetz, libretto by Marcel Lattès. Three-act operetta, first performed on May 7, 1930, at the Théâtre des Bouffes Parisiennes in Paris.
A/L The Youth of Phantom Thief Lupin by Yoshimasa Saitou . Takarazuka Revue performance, 2007, starring Yūga Yamato and Hana Hizuki.
Rupan -ARSÈNE LUPIN- by Haruhiko Masatsuka . Takarazuka Revue performance, 2013, starring Masaki Ryū and Reika Manaki (after Le Dernier Amour d'Arsène Lupin)
Comics and animation
Les Exploits d'Arsène Lupin aka Night Hood, produced by Cinar & France-Animation, 26 episodes for 24 min. in (1996)
Lupin III, the grandson of Arsène Lupin, a character created by Monkey Punch for a series of manga, anime television shows, movies and OVA's based in Japan and around the world. Because Monkey Punch did not seek permission to use the character from the Leblanc estate, the character was renamed in the early English adaptations and also had to be renamed when the anime series was broadcast on French TV.
Soul Eater episode 3, the introduction of Death The Kid and the Thompson Sisters initially depicts them chasing the demonic form of Arsène Lupin so that the sisters could claim and devour his soul. When Death The Kid begins panicking about the lack of symmetry with the sisters and their appearances, Lupin escapes down a manhole and is not seen for the rest of the episode.
Hidan no Aria episode 4, Riko Mine reveals that she is a descendant of Arsène Lupin after she hijacked the airplane that Aria took. She also reveals Aria's identity as the descendant of Sherlock Holmes.
The exploits of Arsène Lupin inspired an entire Phantom Thief (Kaitō) sub-genre of Japanese media.
Kaito Kid from the manga series Magic Kaito and Detective Conan is often compared to Arsene Lupin. Lupin is also highlighted in volume 4 of the Detective Conan manga's edition of "Gosho Aoyama's Mystery Library", a section of the graphic novels (usually the last page) where the author introduces a different detective (or in this case, a villain/detective) from literature.
Meimi Haneoka, who "transforms" into Kaitō Saint Tail heavily inspired by Arsene Lupin, a thief with acrobatic and magician skills, from Saint Tail (by Megumi Tachikawa)
Chizuko "Chiko" Mikamo, from The Daughter of Twenty Faces.
There is also an ongoing manga adaptation of Arsene Lupin first published in 2011, from Gundam artist Takashi Morita.
Comics
Arsene Lupin, as he appeared in volume 4 of Case ClosedArsène Lupin, written by Georges Cheylard, art by Bourdin. Daily strip published in France-Soir in 1948-49.
Arsène Lupin, written & drawn by Jacques Blondeau. 575 daily strips published in Le Parisien Libéré from 1956-58.
Arsène Lupin contre Herlock Sholmès: La Dame blonde, written by Joëlle Gilles, art by Gilles & B. Cado, published by the authors, 1983.
Arsène Lupin, written by André-Paul Duchateau, artist Géron, published by C. Lefrancq. 1.Le Bouchon de cristal (1989)
2.813 — La Double Vie d'Arsène Lupin (1990)
3.813 — Les Trois crimes d'Arsène Lupin (1991)
4.La Demoiselle aux yeux verts (1992)
5.L'Aiguille creuse (1994)
Arpin Lusène is featured as a character in the Donald Duck & Co stories The Black Knight (1997), Attaaaaaack! (2000) and The Black Knight GLORPS again! (2004) by Don Rosa.
In Alan Moore's The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Black Dossier, Lupin is featured as a member of Les Hommes Mysterieux, the French analogue of Britain's League of Extraordinary Gentlemen.
Arsène Lupin is a fictional gentleman thief and master of disguise created by French writer Maurice Leblanc.
Lupin was featured in 20 novels and 28 short stories by Leblanc, with the short stories collected into book form for a total of 24 books. The first story, "L'Arrestation d'Arsène Lupin", was published in the magazine Je sais tout on 15 July 1905.
The character has also appeared in a number of books from other writers as well as numerous film, television , stage play, and comic book adaptations.
Arsene Lupin Contre Herlock Sholmes
Aside from the Arsène Lupin stories written by Maurice Leblanc (1864–1941) himself, five authorized sequels were written in the 1970s by the celebrated mystery writing team of Boileau-Narcejac.
The character of Lupin was first introduced in a series of short stories serialized in the magazine Je sais tout, starting in No. 6, dated 15 July 1905. He was originally called Arsène Lopin, until a local politician of the same name protested, resulting in the name change.
Arsène Lupin is a literary descendant of Pierre Alexis Ponson du Terrail's Rocambole. Like him, he is often a force for good, while operating on the wrong side of the law. Those whom Lupin defeats, always with his characteristic Gallic style and panache, are worse villains than he. Lupin shares distinct similarities with E. W. Hornung's archetypal gentleman thief A. J. Raffles who first appeared in The Amateur Cracksman in 1899, but both creations can be said to anticipate and have inspired later characters such as Louis Joseph Vance's The Lone Wolf and Leslie Charteris's The Saint.
The character of Arsène Lupin might also have been based by Leblanc on French anarchist Marius Jacob, whose trial made headlines in March 1905, but Leblanc had also read Octave Mirbeau's Les 21 jours d'un neurasthénique (1901), which features a gentleman thief named Arthur Lebeau, and had seen Mirbeau's comedy Scrupules (1902), whose main character is a gentleman thief.
The official last book of the series, The Billions of Arsene Lupin, was published without the ninth chapter "The Safe" ("IX. Les coffres-forts"), and even the published book was withdrawn at Leblanc's son's request. However, in 2002, by the efforts of some Lupinians and Korean translator Sung Gwi-Su, the missing part was restored and the complete final collection of Arsene Lupin happened to be published first in Korea, from Kkachi Publishing House.
Arsène Lupin and Sherlock Holmes
Leblanc introduced Sherlock Holmes to Lupin in the short story "Sherlock Holmes Arrives Too Late" in Je sais tout No. 17, 15 June 1906. In it, Holmes meets a young Lupin for the first time. After legal objections from Conan Doyle, the name was changed to "Herlock Sholmes" when the story was collected in book form in Volume 1.
Sholmes returned in two more stories collected in Volume 2, "Arsène Lupin contre Herlock Sholmes", and then in a guest-starring role in the battle for the secret of the Hollow Needle in L'Aiguille creuse. Arsène Lupin contre Herlock Sholmes was published in the United States in 1910 under the title "The Blonde Lady" which used the name "Holmlock Shears" for Sherlock Holmes, and "Wilson" for Watson.
In 813, Lupin manages to solve a riddle that Herlock Sholmes was unable to figure out.
Sherlock Holmes, this time with his real name and accompanied by familiar characters such as Watson and Lestrade (all copyright protection having long expired), also confronted Arsène Lupin in the 2008 PC 3D adventure game Sherlock Holmes versus Arsène Lupin. In this game Holmes (and occasionally others) are attempting to stop Lupin from stealing five British valuable items. Lupin wants to steal the items in order to humiliate Britain, but he also admires Holmes and thus challenges him to try to stop him.
In a novella "The Prisoner of the Tower, or A Short But Beautiful Journey of Three Wise Men" by Boris Akunin published in 2008 in Russia as the conclusion of "Jade Rosary Beads" book, Sherlock Holmes and Erast Fandorin oppose Arsène Lupin on December 31, 1899.
Fantasy elements
Several Arsène Lupin novels contain some interesting fantasy elements: a radioactive 'god-stone' that cures people and causes mutations is the object of an epic battle in L’Île aux trente cercueils; the secret of the Fountain of Youth, a mineral water source hidden beneath a lake in the Auvergne, is the goal sought by the protagonists in La Demoiselle aux yeux verts; finally, in La Comtesse de Cagliostro, Lupin's arch-enemy and lover is none other than Joséphine Balsamo, the alleged granddaughter of Cagliostro himself.
Bibliography
1.Arsène Lupin, Gentleman Burglar (Arsène Lupin, gentleman cambrioleur, 1907 coll., 9 stories) (AKA Exploits of Arsène Lupin, Extraordinary Adventures of Arsène Lupin)
2.Arsene Lupin vs. Herlock Sholmes (Arsène Lupin contre Herlock Sholmès, 1908 coll., 2 stories) (AKA The Blonde Lady)
3.The Hollow Needle (L'Aiguille creuse, 1909)
4.813 (813, 1910)
5.The Crystal Stopper (Le Bouchon de cristal, 1912)
6.The Confessions of Arsene Lupin (Les Confidences d'Arsène Lupin, 1913 coll., 9 stories)
7.The Shell Shard (L'Éclat d'obus, 1916) (AKA: Woman of Mystery) Not originally part of the Arsène Lupin series, Lupin was written into the story in the 1923 edition.
8.The Golden Triangle (Le Triangle d'or, 1918) (AKA: The Return of Arsène Lupin)
9.The Island of Thirty Coffins (L’Île aux trente cercueils, 1919) (AKA: The Secret of Sarek)
10.The Teeth of The Tiger (Les Dents du tigre, 1921)
11.The Eight Strokes of The Clock (Les Huit Coups de l'horloge, 1923 coll., 8 stories)
12.The Countess of Cagliostro (La Comtesse de Cagliostro, 1924) (AKA: Memoirs of Arsene Lupin)
13.The Damsel With Green Eyes (La Demoiselle aux yeux verts, 1927) (AKA: The Girl With the Green Eyes, Arsène Lupin, Super Sleuth)
14.The Overcoat of Arsène Lupin (Le Pardessus d'Arsène Lupin, published in English in 1926) First published in 1924 in France as Dent d'Hercule Petitgris. Altered into a Lupin story and published in English as The Overcoat of Arsène Lupin in 1926 in The Popular Magazine.
15.The Man with the Goatskin (L'Homme à la peau de bique (1927)
16.The Barnett & Co. Agency (L'Agence Barnett et Cie., 1928 coll., 8 stories) (AKA: Jim Barnett Intervenes, Arsène Lupin Intervenes)
17.The Mysterious Mansion (La Demeure mystérieuse, 1929) (AKA: The Melamare Mystery)
18.The Mystery of The Green Ruby (La Barre-y-va, 1930)
19.The Emerald Cabochon (Le Cabochon d'émeraude (1930)
20.The Woman With Two Smiles (La Femme aux deux sourires, 1933) (AKA: The Double Smile)
21.Victor of the Vice Squad (Victor de la Brigade mondaine, 1933) (AKA: The Return of Arsene Lupin)
22.The Revenge of The Countess of Cagliostro (La Cagliostro se venge, 1935)
23.The Billions of Arsène Lupin (Les Milliards d'Arsène Lupin, 1939)
24.The Last Love of Arsene Lupin (Le Dernier Amour d'Arsène Lupin, 2012)
Other material by LeBlanc
1.Arsène Lupin (Arsène Lupin (pièce de théâtre) Originally a 4-part play written by Maurice LeBlanc and Francis de Croisset, it was subsequently novelized by LeBlanc and published in 1909. It was then translated into English by Edgar Jepson and published in 1909 by Doubleday as "Arsene Lupin: By Maurice LeBlanc & Edgar Jepson"
By other writers
Boileau-Narcejac1.Le Secret d’Eunerville (1973)
2.La Poudrière (1974)
3.Le Second visage d’Arsène Lupin (1975)
4.La Justice d’Arsène Lupin (1977)
5.Le Serment d’Arsène Lupin (1979)
Notable pastiches
The Adventure of Mona Lisa by Carolyn Wells in The Century (January, 1912)
Sure Way to Catch Every Criminal. Ha! Ha! by Carolyn Wells in The Century (July, 1912)
The Adventure of the Clothes-Line by Carolyn Wells in The Century (May, 1915)
The Silver Hair Crime (= Clue?) by Nick Carter in New Magnet Library No. 1282 (1930)
Aristide Dupin who appears in Union Jack Nos. 1481, 1483, 1489, 1493 and 1498 (1932) in the Sexton Blake collection by Gwyn Evans
La Clé est sous le paillasson by Marcel Aymé (1934)
Gaspard Zemba who appears in The Shadow Magazine (December 1, 1935) by Walter B. Gibson
Arsène Lupin vs. Colonel Linnaus by Anthony Boucher in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine Vo. 5, No. 19 (1944)
L’Affaire Oliveira by Thomas Narcejac in Confidences dans ma nuit (1946)
Le Gentleman en Noir by Claude Ferny (c. 1950) (two novels)
International Investigators, Inc. by Edward G. Ashton in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine (February 1952)
Le Secret des rois de France ou La Véritable identité d’Arsène Lupin by Valère Catogan (1955)
In Compartment 813 by Arthur Porges in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine (June 1966)
Arsène Lupin, gentleman de la nuit by Jean-Claude Lamy (1983)
Auguste Lupa in Son of Holmes (1986) and Rasputin’s Revenge (1987) by John Lescroart
Various stories in the Tales of the Shadowmen anthology series, ed. by Jean-Marc Lofficier and Randy Lofficier, Black Coat Press (2005-ongoing)
Arsène Lupin is also referred to as the grandfather of Lupin III in the Japanese manga series of the same name. He appears in chapter 37 of the series.
Arsène Lupin and Sherlock Holmes have been the basis for the popular Japanese manga series Detective Conan. Kaitou Kid (originating from Magic Kaito) resembles and represents Lupin, while Conan Edogawa resembles and represents Sherlock Holmes.
In the Adventure of The Doraemons, the robot cat The Mysterious Thief Dorapent resembles Lupin.
A funny animal pastiche of Arsène Lupin is Arpin Lusène, of the Scrooge McDuck Universe.
Případ Grendwal (A Grendwal Case), a play by Pavel Dostál, Czech playwright and Minister of Culture
Tuxedo Mask from the popular Japanese manga and anime series Sailor Moon, also resembles Arsène Lupin.
Arsène Lupin et le mystère d'Arsonval by Michel Zink
Qui fait peur à Virginia Woolf ? (... Élémentaire mon cher Lupin !) by Gabriel Thoveron
Crimes parfaits by Christian Poslaniec
La Dent de Jane by Daniel Salmon (2001)
Les Lupins de Vincent by Caroline Cayol et Didier Cayol (2006)
Code Lupin by Michel Bussi (2006)
L'Église creuse by Patrick Genevaux (2009) (short story)
The Many Faces of Arsène Lupin collection of short stories edited by Jean-Marc Lofficier & Randy Lofficier (Black Coat Press, 2012)
Other Reading
Dorothée, Danseuse de Corde (1923) (The Secret Tomb) an eponymous heroine solves one of Arsène Lupin's four fabulous secrets.
Films
Arsène Lupin 2004 movie posterThe Gentleman Burglar (B&W., US, 1908) with William Ranows (Lupin).
Arsène Lupin (B&W., 1914) with Georges Tréville (Lupin).
Arsène Lupin (B&W., UK, 1915) with Gerald Ames (Lupin).
The Gentleman Burglar (B&W., US, 1915) with William Stowell (Lupin).
Arsène Lupin (B&W., US, 1917) with Earle Williams (Lupin).
The Teeth of the Tiger (B&W., US, 1919) with David Powell (Lupin).
813 (B&W., US, 1920) with Wedgewood Nowell (Lupin) and Wallace Beery.
Les Dernières aventures d'Arsène Lupin (B&W., France/Hungary, 1921).
813 - Rupimono (B&W., Japan, 1923) with Minami Mitsuaki (Lupin).
Arsène Lupin (B&W., US, 1932) with John Barrymore (Lupin).[1]
Arsène Lupin, Détective (B&W., 1937) with Jules Berry (Lupin).
Arsène Lupin Returns (B&W., US, 1938) with Melvyn Douglas (Lupin).
Enter Arsène Lupin (B&W., US, 1944) with Charles Korvin (Lupin).
Arsenio Lupin (B&W., Mexico, 1945) with R. Pereda (Lupin).
Nanatsu-no Houseki (B&W., Japan, 1950) with Keiji Sada (Lupin).
Tora no-Kiba (B&W., Japan, 1951) with Ken Uehara (Lupin).
Kao-no Nai Otoko (B&W., Japan, 1955) with Eiji Okada (Lupin).
Les Aventures d'Arsène Lupin (col., 1957) with Robert Lamoureux (Lupin).
Signé Arsène Lupin (B&W., 1959) with Robert Lamoureux (Lupin).
Arsène Lupin contre Arsène Lupin (B&W., 1962) with Jean-Pierre Cassel and Jean-Claude Brialy (Lupins).
Arsène Lupin (col., 2004) with Romain Duris (Lupin).
Lupin no Kiganjo (col., Japan, 2011) with Kōichi Yamadera (Lupin).
Television
Arsène Lupin, 26 60-minute episodes (1971, 1973–1974) with Georges Descrières (Lupin), Arsène Lupin at the Internet Movie Database.
L'Île aux trente cercueils, six 60-minute episodes (1979) (the character of Lupin, who only appears at the end of the novel, was removed entirely).
Arsène Lupin joue et perd, six 52-minute episodes (1980) loosely based on 813 with Jean-Claude Brialy (Lupin).
Le Retour d'Arsène Lupin, twelve 90-minute episodes (1989–1990) and Les Nouveaux Exploits d'Arsène Lupin, eight 90-minute episodes (1995–1996) with François Dunoyer (Lupin).
Lupin (Philippine TV series), Philippines (2007) with Richard Gutierrez (Lupin).
Stage
Arsène Lupin by Francis de Croisset and Maurice Leblanc. Four-act play first performed on October 28, 1908, at the Athenée in Paris.
Arsène Lupin contre Herlock Sholmès by Victor Darlay & Henri de Gorsse. Four-act play first performed on October 10, 1910, at the Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris. (American edition ISBN 1-932983-16-3)
Le Retour d'Arsène Lupin by Francis de Croisset and Maurice Leblanc. One-act play first performed on September 16, 1911, at the Théâtre de la Cigale in Paris.
Arsène Lupin, Banquier by Yves Mirande & Albert Willemetz, libretto by Marcel Lattès. Three-act operetta, first performed on May 7, 1930, at the Théâtre des Bouffes Parisiennes in Paris.
A/L The Youth of Phantom Thief Lupin by Yoshimasa Saitou . Takarazuka Revue performance, 2007, starring Yūga Yamato and Hana Hizuki.
Rupan -ARSÈNE LUPIN- by Haruhiko Masatsuka . Takarazuka Revue performance, 2013, starring Masaki Ryū and Reika Manaki (after Le Dernier Amour d'Arsène Lupin)
Comics and animation
Les Exploits d'Arsène Lupin aka Night Hood, produced by Cinar & France-Animation, 26 episodes for 24 min. in (1996)
Lupin III, the grandson of Arsène Lupin, a character created by Monkey Punch for a series of manga, anime television shows, movies and OVA's based in Japan and around the world. Because Monkey Punch did not seek permission to use the character from the Leblanc estate, the character was renamed in the early English adaptations and also had to be renamed when the anime series was broadcast on French TV.
Soul Eater episode 3, the introduction of Death The Kid and the Thompson Sisters initially depicts them chasing the demonic form of Arsène Lupin so that the sisters could claim and devour his soul. When Death The Kid begins panicking about the lack of symmetry with the sisters and their appearances, Lupin escapes down a manhole and is not seen for the rest of the episode.
Hidan no Aria episode 4, Riko Mine reveals that she is a descendant of Arsène Lupin after she hijacked the airplane that Aria took. She also reveals Aria's identity as the descendant of Sherlock Holmes.
The exploits of Arsène Lupin inspired an entire Phantom Thief (Kaitō) sub-genre of Japanese media.
Kaito Kid from the manga series Magic Kaito and Detective Conan is often compared to Arsene Lupin. Lupin is also highlighted in volume 4 of the Detective Conan manga's edition of "Gosho Aoyama's Mystery Library", a section of the graphic novels (usually the last page) where the author introduces a different detective (or in this case, a villain/detective) from literature.
Meimi Haneoka, who "transforms" into Kaitō Saint Tail heavily inspired by Arsene Lupin, a thief with acrobatic and magician skills, from Saint Tail (by Megumi Tachikawa)
Chizuko "Chiko" Mikamo, from The Daughter of Twenty Faces.
There is also an ongoing manga adaptation of Arsene Lupin first published in 2011, from Gundam artist Takashi Morita.
Comics
Arsene Lupin, as he appeared in volume 4 of Case ClosedArsène Lupin, written by Georges Cheylard, art by Bourdin. Daily strip published in France-Soir in 1948-49.
Arsène Lupin, written & drawn by Jacques Blondeau. 575 daily strips published in Le Parisien Libéré from 1956-58.
Arsène Lupin contre Herlock Sholmès: La Dame blonde, written by Joëlle Gilles, art by Gilles & B. Cado, published by the authors, 1983.
Arsène Lupin, written by André-Paul Duchateau, artist Géron, published by C. Lefrancq. 1.Le Bouchon de cristal (1989)
2.813 — La Double Vie d'Arsène Lupin (1990)
3.813 — Les Trois crimes d'Arsène Lupin (1991)
4.La Demoiselle aux yeux verts (1992)
5.L'Aiguille creuse (1994)
Arpin Lusène is featured as a character in the Donald Duck & Co stories The Black Knight (1997), Attaaaaaack! (2000) and The Black Knight GLORPS again! (2004) by Don Rosa.
In Alan Moore's The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Black Dossier, Lupin is featured as a member of Les Hommes Mysterieux, the French analogue of Britain's League of Extraordinary Gentlemen.
Arsène Lupin is a fictional gentleman thief and master of disguise created by French writer Maurice Leblanc.
Lupin was featured in 20 novels and 28 short stories by Leblanc, with the short stories collected into book form for a total of 24 books. The first story, "L'Arrestation d'Arsène Lupin", was published in the magazine Je sais tout on 15 July 1905.
The character has also appeared in a number of books from other writers as well as numerous film, television , stage play, and comic book adaptations.
Arsene Lupin Contre Herlock Sholmes
Aside from the Arsène Lupin stories written by Maurice Leblanc (1864–1941) himself, five authorized sequels were written in the 1970s by the celebrated mystery writing team of Boileau-Narcejac.
The character of Lupin was first introduced in a series of short stories serialized in the magazine Je sais tout, starting in No. 6, dated 15 July 1905. He was originally called Arsène Lopin, until a local politician of the same name protested, resulting in the name change.
Arsène Lupin is a literary descendant of Pierre Alexis Ponson du Terrail's Rocambole. Like him, he is often a force for good, while operating on the wrong side of the law. Those whom Lupin defeats, always with his characteristic Gallic style and panache, are worse villains than he. Lupin shares distinct similarities with E. W. Hornung's archetypal gentleman thief A. J. Raffles who first appeared in The Amateur Cracksman in 1899, but both creations can be said to anticipate and have inspired later characters such as Louis Joseph Vance's The Lone Wolf and Leslie Charteris's The Saint.
The character of Arsène Lupin might also have been based by Leblanc on French anarchist Marius Jacob, whose trial made headlines in March 1905, but Leblanc had also read Octave Mirbeau's Les 21 jours d'un neurasthénique (1901), which features a gentleman thief named Arthur Lebeau, and had seen Mirbeau's comedy Scrupules (1902), whose main character is a gentleman thief.
The official last book of the series, The Billions of Arsene Lupin, was published without the ninth chapter "The Safe" ("IX. Les coffres-forts"), and even the published book was withdrawn at Leblanc's son's request. However, in 2002, by the efforts of some Lupinians and Korean translator Sung Gwi-Su, the missing part was restored and the complete final collection of Arsene Lupin happened to be published first in Korea, from Kkachi Publishing House.
Arsène Lupin and Sherlock Holmes
Leblanc introduced Sherlock Holmes to Lupin in the short story "Sherlock Holmes Arrives Too Late" in Je sais tout No. 17, 15 June 1906. In it, Holmes meets a young Lupin for the first time. After legal objections from Conan Doyle, the name was changed to "Herlock Sholmes" when the story was collected in book form in Volume 1.
Sholmes returned in two more stories collected in Volume 2, "Arsène Lupin contre Herlock Sholmes", and then in a guest-starring role in the battle for the secret of the Hollow Needle in L'Aiguille creuse. Arsène Lupin contre Herlock Sholmes was published in the United States in 1910 under the title "The Blonde Lady" which used the name "Holmlock Shears" for Sherlock Holmes, and "Wilson" for Watson.
In 813, Lupin manages to solve a riddle that Herlock Sholmes was unable to figure out.
Sherlock Holmes, this time with his real name and accompanied by familiar characters such as Watson and Lestrade (all copyright protection having long expired), also confronted Arsène Lupin in the 2008 PC 3D adventure game Sherlock Holmes versus Arsène Lupin. In this game Holmes (and occasionally others) are attempting to stop Lupin from stealing five British valuable items. Lupin wants to steal the items in order to humiliate Britain, but he also admires Holmes and thus challenges him to try to stop him.
In a novella "The Prisoner of the Tower, or A Short But Beautiful Journey of Three Wise Men" by Boris Akunin published in 2008 in Russia as the conclusion of "Jade Rosary Beads" book, Sherlock Holmes and Erast Fandorin oppose Arsène Lupin on December 31, 1899.
Fantasy elements
Several Arsène Lupin novels contain some interesting fantasy elements: a radioactive 'god-stone' that cures people and causes mutations is the object of an epic battle in L’Île aux trente cercueils; the secret of the Fountain of Youth, a mineral water source hidden beneath a lake in the Auvergne, is the goal sought by the protagonists in La Demoiselle aux yeux verts; finally, in La Comtesse de Cagliostro, Lupin's arch-enemy and lover is none other than Joséphine Balsamo, the alleged granddaughter of Cagliostro himself.
Bibliography
1.Arsène Lupin, Gentleman Burglar (Arsène Lupin, gentleman cambrioleur, 1907 coll., 9 stories) (AKA Exploits of Arsène Lupin, Extraordinary Adventures of Arsène Lupin)
2.Arsene Lupin vs. Herlock Sholmes (Arsène Lupin contre Herlock Sholmès, 1908 coll., 2 stories) (AKA The Blonde Lady)
3.The Hollow Needle (L'Aiguille creuse, 1909)
4.813 (813, 1910)
5.The Crystal Stopper (Le Bouchon de cristal, 1912)
6.The Confessions of Arsene Lupin (Les Confidences d'Arsène Lupin, 1913 coll., 9 stories)
7.The Shell Shard (L'Éclat d'obus, 1916) (AKA: Woman of Mystery) Not originally part of the Arsène Lupin series, Lupin was written into the story in the 1923 edition.
8.The Golden Triangle (Le Triangle d'or, 1918) (AKA: The Return of Arsène Lupin)
9.The Island of Thirty Coffins (L’Île aux trente cercueils, 1919) (AKA: The Secret of Sarek)
10.The Teeth of The Tiger (Les Dents du tigre, 1921)
11.The Eight Strokes of The Clock (Les Huit Coups de l'horloge, 1923 coll., 8 stories)
12.The Countess of Cagliostro (La Comtesse de Cagliostro, 1924) (AKA: Memoirs of Arsene Lupin)
13.The Damsel With Green Eyes (La Demoiselle aux yeux verts, 1927) (AKA: The Girl With the Green Eyes, Arsène Lupin, Super Sleuth)
14.The Overcoat of Arsène Lupin (Le Pardessus d'Arsène Lupin, published in English in 1926) First published in 1924 in France as Dent d'Hercule Petitgris. Altered into a Lupin story and published in English as The Overcoat of Arsène Lupin in 1926 in The Popular Magazine.
15.The Man with the Goatskin (L'Homme à la peau de bique (1927)
16.The Barnett & Co. Agency (L'Agence Barnett et Cie., 1928 coll., 8 stories) (AKA: Jim Barnett Intervenes, Arsène Lupin Intervenes)
17.The Mysterious Mansion (La Demeure mystérieuse, 1929) (AKA: The Melamare Mystery)
18.The Mystery of The Green Ruby (La Barre-y-va, 1930)
19.The Emerald Cabochon (Le Cabochon d'émeraude (1930)
20.The Woman With Two Smiles (La Femme aux deux sourires, 1933) (AKA: The Double Smile)
21.Victor of the Vice Squad (Victor de la Brigade mondaine, 1933) (AKA: The Return of Arsene Lupin)
22.The Revenge of The Countess of Cagliostro (La Cagliostro se venge, 1935)
23.The Billions of Arsène Lupin (Les Milliards d'Arsène Lupin, 1939)
24.The Last Love of Arsene Lupin (Le Dernier Amour d'Arsène Lupin, 2012)
Other material by LeBlanc
1.Arsène Lupin (Arsène Lupin (pièce de théâtre) Originally a 4-part play written by Maurice LeBlanc and Francis de Croisset, it was subsequently novelized by LeBlanc and published in 1909. It was then translated into English by Edgar Jepson and published in 1909 by Doubleday as "Arsene Lupin: By Maurice LeBlanc & Edgar Jepson"
By other writers
Boileau-Narcejac1.Le Secret d’Eunerville (1973)
2.La Poudrière (1974)
3.Le Second visage d’Arsène Lupin (1975)
4.La Justice d’Arsène Lupin (1977)
5.Le Serment d’Arsène Lupin (1979)
Notable pastiches
The Adventure of Mona Lisa by Carolyn Wells in The Century (January, 1912)
Sure Way to Catch Every Criminal. Ha! Ha! by Carolyn Wells in The Century (July, 1912)
The Adventure of the Clothes-Line by Carolyn Wells in The Century (May, 1915)
The Silver Hair Crime (= Clue?) by Nick Carter in New Magnet Library No. 1282 (1930)
Aristide Dupin who appears in Union Jack Nos. 1481, 1483, 1489, 1493 and 1498 (1932) in the Sexton Blake collection by Gwyn Evans
La Clé est sous le paillasson by Marcel Aymé (1934)
Gaspard Zemba who appears in The Shadow Magazine (December 1, 1935) by Walter B. Gibson
Arsène Lupin vs. Colonel Linnaus by Anthony Boucher in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine Vo. 5, No. 19 (1944)
L’Affaire Oliveira by Thomas Narcejac in Confidences dans ma nuit (1946)
Le Gentleman en Noir by Claude Ferny (c. 1950) (two novels)
International Investigators, Inc. by Edward G. Ashton in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine (February 1952)
Le Secret des rois de France ou La Véritable identité d’Arsène Lupin by Valère Catogan (1955)
In Compartment 813 by Arthur Porges in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine (June 1966)
Arsène Lupin, gentleman de la nuit by Jean-Claude Lamy (1983)
Auguste Lupa in Son of Holmes (1986) and Rasputin’s Revenge (1987) by John Lescroart
Various stories in the Tales of the Shadowmen anthology series, ed. by Jean-Marc Lofficier and Randy Lofficier, Black Coat Press (2005-ongoing)
Arsène Lupin is also referred to as the grandfather of Lupin III in the Japanese manga series of the same name. He appears in chapter 37 of the series.
Arsène Lupin and Sherlock Holmes have been the basis for the popular Japanese manga series Detective Conan. Kaitou Kid (originating from Magic Kaito) resembles and represents Lupin, while Conan Edogawa resembles and represents Sherlock Holmes.
In the Adventure of The Doraemons, the robot cat The Mysterious Thief Dorapent resembles Lupin.
A funny animal pastiche of Arsène Lupin is Arpin Lusène, of the Scrooge McDuck Universe.
Případ Grendwal (A Grendwal Case), a play by Pavel Dostál, Czech playwright and Minister of Culture
Tuxedo Mask from the popular Japanese manga and anime series Sailor Moon, also resembles Arsène Lupin.
Arsène Lupin et le mystère d'Arsonval by Michel Zink
Qui fait peur à Virginia Woolf ? (... Élémentaire mon cher Lupin !) by Gabriel Thoveron
Crimes parfaits by Christian Poslaniec
La Dent de Jane by Daniel Salmon (2001)
Les Lupins de Vincent by Caroline Cayol et Didier Cayol (2006)
Code Lupin by Michel Bussi (2006)
L'Église creuse by Patrick Genevaux (2009) (short story)
The Many Faces of Arsène Lupin collection of short stories edited by Jean-Marc Lofficier & Randy Lofficier (Black Coat Press, 2012)
Other Reading
Dorothée, Danseuse de Corde (1923) (The Secret Tomb) an eponymous heroine solves one of Arsène Lupin's four fabulous secrets.
Films
Arsène Lupin 2004 movie posterThe Gentleman Burglar (B&W., US, 1908) with William Ranows (Lupin).
Arsène Lupin (B&W., 1914) with Georges Tréville (Lupin).
Arsène Lupin (B&W., UK, 1915) with Gerald Ames (Lupin).
The Gentleman Burglar (B&W., US, 1915) with William Stowell (Lupin).
Arsène Lupin (B&W., US, 1917) with Earle Williams (Lupin).
The Teeth of the Tiger (B&W., US, 1919) with David Powell (Lupin).
813 (B&W., US, 1920) with Wedgewood Nowell (Lupin) and Wallace Beery.
Les Dernières aventures d'Arsène Lupin (B&W., France/Hungary, 1921).
813 - Rupimono (B&W., Japan, 1923) with Minami Mitsuaki (Lupin).
Arsène Lupin (B&W., US, 1932) with John Barrymore (Lupin).[1]
Arsène Lupin, Détective (B&W., 1937) with Jules Berry (Lupin).
Arsène Lupin Returns (B&W., US, 1938) with Melvyn Douglas (Lupin).
Enter Arsène Lupin (B&W., US, 1944) with Charles Korvin (Lupin).
Arsenio Lupin (B&W., Mexico, 1945) with R. Pereda (Lupin).
Nanatsu-no Houseki (B&W., Japan, 1950) with Keiji Sada (Lupin).
Tora no-Kiba (B&W., Japan, 1951) with Ken Uehara (Lupin).
Kao-no Nai Otoko (B&W., Japan, 1955) with Eiji Okada (Lupin).
Les Aventures d'Arsène Lupin (col., 1957) with Robert Lamoureux (Lupin).
Signé Arsène Lupin (B&W., 1959) with Robert Lamoureux (Lupin).
Arsène Lupin contre Arsène Lupin (B&W., 1962) with Jean-Pierre Cassel and Jean-Claude Brialy (Lupins).
Arsène Lupin (col., 2004) with Romain Duris (Lupin).
Lupin no Kiganjo (col., Japan, 2011) with Kōichi Yamadera (Lupin).
Television
Arsène Lupin, 26 60-minute episodes (1971, 1973–1974) with Georges Descrières (Lupin), Arsène Lupin at the Internet Movie Database.
L'Île aux trente cercueils, six 60-minute episodes (1979) (the character of Lupin, who only appears at the end of the novel, was removed entirely).
Arsène Lupin joue et perd, six 52-minute episodes (1980) loosely based on 813 with Jean-Claude Brialy (Lupin).
Le Retour d'Arsène Lupin, twelve 90-minute episodes (1989–1990) and Les Nouveaux Exploits d'Arsène Lupin, eight 90-minute episodes (1995–1996) with François Dunoyer (Lupin).
Lupin (Philippine TV series), Philippines (2007) with Richard Gutierrez (Lupin).
Stage
Arsène Lupin by Francis de Croisset and Maurice Leblanc. Four-act play first performed on October 28, 1908, at the Athenée in Paris.
Arsène Lupin contre Herlock Sholmès by Victor Darlay & Henri de Gorsse. Four-act play first performed on October 10, 1910, at the Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris. (American edition ISBN 1-932983-16-3)
Le Retour d'Arsène Lupin by Francis de Croisset and Maurice Leblanc. One-act play first performed on September 16, 1911, at the Théâtre de la Cigale in Paris.
Arsène Lupin, Banquier by Yves Mirande & Albert Willemetz, libretto by Marcel Lattès. Three-act operetta, first performed on May 7, 1930, at the Théâtre des Bouffes Parisiennes in Paris.
A/L The Youth of Phantom Thief Lupin by Yoshimasa Saitou . Takarazuka Revue performance, 2007, starring Yūga Yamato and Hana Hizuki.
Rupan -ARSÈNE LUPIN- by Haruhiko Masatsuka . Takarazuka Revue performance, 2013, starring Masaki Ryū and Reika Manaki (after Le Dernier Amour d'Arsène Lupin)
Comics and animation
Les Exploits d'Arsène Lupin aka Night Hood, produced by Cinar & France-Animation, 26 episodes for 24 min. in (1996)
Lupin III, the grandson of Arsène Lupin, a character created by Monkey Punch for a series of manga, anime television shows, movies and OVA's based in Japan and around the world. Because Monkey Punch did not seek permission to use the character from the Leblanc estate, the character was renamed in the early English adaptations and also had to be renamed when the anime series was broadcast on French TV.
Soul Eater episode 3, the introduction of Death The Kid and the Thompson Sisters initially depicts them chasing the demonic form of Arsène Lupin so that the sisters could claim and devour his soul. When Death The Kid begins panicking about the lack of symmetry with the sisters and their appearances, Lupin escapes down a manhole and is not seen for the rest of the episode.
Hidan no Aria episode 4, Riko Mine reveals that she is a descendant of Arsène Lupin after she hijacked the airplane that Aria took. She also reveals Aria's identity as the descendant of Sherlock Holmes.
The exploits of Arsène Lupin inspired an entire Phantom Thief (Kaitō) sub-genre of Japanese media.
Kaito Kid from the manga series Magic Kaito and Detective Conan is often compared to Arsene Lupin. Lupin is also highlighted in volume 4 of the Detective Conan manga's edition of "Gosho Aoyama's Mystery Library", a section of the graphic novels (usually the last page) where the author introduces a different detective (or in this case, a villain/detective) from literature.
Meimi Haneoka, who "transforms" into Kaitō Saint Tail heavily inspired by Arsene Lupin, a thief with acrobatic and magician skills, from Saint Tail (by Megumi Tachikawa)
Chizuko "Chiko" Mikamo, from The Daughter of Twenty Faces.
There is also an ongoing manga adaptation of Arsene Lupin first published in 2011, from Gundam artist Takashi Morita.
Comics
Arsene Lupin, as he appeared in volume 4 of Case ClosedArsène Lupin, written by Georges Cheylard, art by Bourdin. Daily strip published in France-Soir in 1948-49.
Arsène Lupin, written & drawn by Jacques Blondeau. 575 daily strips published in Le Parisien Libéré from 1956-58.
Arsène Lupin contre Herlock Sholmès: La Dame blonde, written by Joëlle Gilles, art by Gilles & B. Cado, published by the authors, 1983.
Arsène Lupin, written by André-Paul Duchateau, artist Géron, published by C. Lefrancq. 1.Le Bouchon de cristal (1989)
2.813 — La Double Vie d'Arsène Lupin (1990)
3.813 — Les Trois crimes d'Arsène Lupin (1991)
4.La Demoiselle aux yeux verts (1992)
5.L'Aiguille creuse (1994)
Arpin Lusène is featured as a character in the Donald Duck & Co stories The Black Knight (1997), Attaaaaaack! (2000) and The Black Knight GLORPS again! (2004) by Don Rosa.
In Alan Moore's The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen: Black Dossier, Lupin is featured as a member of Les Hommes Mysterieux, the French analogue of Britain's League of Extraordinary Gentlemen.
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by @c_labrador_photos on Instagram.
Après Mika et Ben l’Oncle Soul, le génie Pharrell Williams et son groupe
N*E*R*D enflamment le salon de LIVE @ HOME.
N*E*R*D (No One Ever Really Dies): le trio composé de Pharrell Williams, Chad
Hugo et Shay Haley sort un nouvel album: Nothing. Un événement musical.
Pharrell Williams et Chad Hugo font une pose en tant que producteurs faiseurs de
tubes (The Neptunes ont été désignés meilleurs producteurs des années 2000 par
Billboard) et offrent à leurs fans un album très bien reçu par la critique. Le meilleur
est à découvrir en exclusivité dans Live @ Home.
Un savant mélange de funk, de rock, de soul, de hip hop : c’est le secret du son
incomparable du groupe de Virginia Beach. Son qui a envahi la demeure de Live
@ Home, avec les interprétations de Party people, The Man, God bless us all,
Hypnotize you etc.
Ce Live @ Home est également l’opportunité de voir Pharrel Williams et ses acolytes
se livrer de manière très personnelle, sur leur conception de la musique, la manière
dont ils créent.
« Un accomplissement » : c’est la manière dont le leader qualifie cet album. A vous
de juger sur Direct Star.
Live @ home ? C’est un concept de programme musical inédit né en avril dernier
et conçu pour le net. Le principe : laisser un artiste et ses musiciens faire ce qu’ils
veulent dans une maison où tout est entièrement dédié à la musique.
Après un vif succès remporté sur la Toile (de 800 000 à 1 million de vues par
session), Live @ Home passe au petit écran et c’est sur Direct Star.
LIVE @ HOME N*E*R*D - Star Story - Lundi 22 novembre à 23h45 - Produit par Daylic
N*E*R*D @home, Watch the Official Show on Dailymotion:
www.dailymotion.com/LiveAtHome
“LIVE@HOME” is a home for music – a comfortable space to play it, talk about it, and live it.
Tous les 15 jours, retrouvez en toute intimité sur Live@Home vos artistes préférés dans un cadre musical prestigieux. Live@Home a réuni les meilleures conditions pour que les plus grands musiciens actuels libèrent pleinement le groove qui est en eux, et ce, comme vous ne l'avez jamais vus !
Follow @Live_at_Home #liveathome
Έκθεση Φωτογραφίας
Φωτογραφική Ομάδα ΔΙΑΦΡΑΓΜΑ 26 & ΠΟΡΤΟΚΑΛΙ ΚΛΕΙΣΤΡΟ
Cinemarian (Αθήνα)
13 – 15 Μαϊου 2016
6-10μμ
Οι φετινοί μαθητές του Ανδρέα Κατσικούδη (αρχάριοι και προχωρημένοι) παρουσιάζουν τις καλύτερες φωτογραφίες τους και σας προσκαλούν να τους γνωρίσετε!
Εικόνες από τις αγαπημένες μας πόλεις, μοναδικά φυσικά τοπία, πορτρέτα που ψάξαμε πολύ για να τα βρούμε, γυμνά με πειραματικό βλέμμα, σκηνοθετημένες φωτογραφίες, αλλά περισσότερες είναι οι αυθόρμητες που ψάχνουν την αποφασιστική στιγμή, δρόμοι φωτεινοί, αλλά κυρίως ... σκοτεινοί, χρώμα πολύ, φυσικά όμως και ασπρόμαυρη απεικόνιση... Το θέμα της έκθεσης αυτής είναι η αγάπη μας για τη φωτογραφία!
17 Νέοι Φωτογράφοι!
ΠΕΝΝΥ ΦΡΑΓΚΑΚΗ, ΑΓΓΕΛΙΚΗ ΠΡΕΝΤΖΑ, ΓΙΩΡΓΟΣ ΤΣΟΧΑΝΤΑΡΗΣ, KARIN SKOTINIYADIS, ΙΩΑΝΝΑ ΤΣΟΥΜΑ, ΝΙΚΟΣ ΝΙΚΟΛΟΠΟΥΛΟΣ, ΖΑΧΑΡΟΥΛΑ ΚΑΛΟΜΙΝΙΔΟΥ, ΚΩΣΤΑΣ ΣΚΟΠΕΛΙΤΗΣ, ΣΟΦΙΑ ΓΡΕΚΑ, ΞΑΚΟΥΣΤΗ ΧΕΛΑΚΗ, ΕΛΕΥΘΕΡΙΑ ΚΟΥΝΤΖΟΥ, ΣΩΤΗΡΗΣ ΤΟΥΛΗΣ, ΜΠΑΜΠΗΣ ΝΤΙΡΙΝΤΗΣ, ΠΕΤΡΟΣ ΠΑΠΑΠΕΤΡΟΣ, ΚΟΝΔΥΛΩ ΜΠΟΥΣΜΠΟΥΡΑ, ΣΤΡΑΤΟΣ ΣΚΟΤΕΙΝΙΑΔΗΣ, ΦΙΛΟΘΕΗ, ΜΑΡΙΝΑ ΠΑΧΗ, ΓΕΩΡΓΙΑ, ΘΑΝΟΣ ΛΕΚΚΟΥ, ΧΡΗΣΤΟΣ ΤΣΑΤΑΛΜΠΑΣΗΣ
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PARIS SOUND CLASH (17.11.2018) au Trabendo - SOUL STEREO VS HEARTICAL SOUND avec une victoire sans conteste du Heartical Sound !!!
Une 1ère édition anthologique, félicitation à Sergio et encore bravo à tous…
Remerciement: Cartel Concerts, Party Time Radio & Tv, Soul Stereo Sound Paris, Heartical Sound & Label, l’arbitrage Zelord Zeljko, l’animation MC Francky, l’équipe du Trabendo ainsi que les photographes, techniciens et artistes que j’ai croisés toute au long de la soirée. Spécial big up à tous les massives venus soutenir l’évènement !!!
#PxSound #PartyTime #CartelConcerts #ParisSoundClash #France #Battle #Dj #Reggae #Dancehall #SoundSystem
PARIS SOUND CLASH (17.11.2018) au Trabendo - SOUL STEREO VS HEARTICAL SOUND avec une victoire sans conteste du Heartical Sound !!!
Une 1ère édition anthologique, félicitation à Sergio et encore bravo à tous…
Remerciement: Cartel Concerts, Party Time Radio & Tv, Soul Stereo Sound Paris, Heartical Sound & Label, l’arbitrage Zelord Zeljko, l’animation MC Francky, l’équipe du Trabendo ainsi que les photographes, techniciens et artistes que j’ai croisés toute au long de la soirée. Spécial big up à tous les massives venus soutenir l’évènement !!!
#PxSound #PartyTime #CartelConcerts #ParisSoundClash #France #Battle #Dj #Reggae #Dancehall #SoundSystem
PARIS SOUND CLASH (17.11.2018) au Trabendo - SOUL STEREO VS HEARTICAL SOUND avec une victoire sans conteste du Heartical Sound !!!
Une 1ère édition anthologique, félicitation à Sergio et encore bravo à tous…
Remerciement: Cartel Concerts, Party Time Radio & Tv, Soul Stereo Sound Paris, Heartical Sound & Label, l’arbitrage Zelord Zeljko, l’animation MC Francky, l’équipe du Trabendo ainsi que les photographes, techniciens et artistes que j’ai croisés toute au long de la soirée. Spécial big up à tous les massives venus soutenir l’évènement !!!
#PxSound #PartyTime #CartelConcerts #ParisSoundClash #France #Battle #Dj #Reggae #Dancehall #SoundSystem
PARIS SOUND CLASH (17.11.2018) au Trabendo - SOUL STEREO VS HEARTICAL SOUND avec une victoire sans conteste du Heartical Sound !!!
Une 1ère édition anthologique, félicitation à Sergio et encore bravo à tous…
Remerciement: Cartel Concerts, Party Time Radio & Tv, Soul Stereo Sound Paris, Heartical Sound & Label, l’arbitrage Zelord Zeljko, l’animation MC Francky, l’équipe du Trabendo ainsi que les photographes, techniciens et artistes que j’ai croisés toute au long de la soirée. Spécial big up à tous les massives venus soutenir l’évènement !!!
#PxSound #PartyTime #CartelConcerts #ParisSoundClash #France #Battle #Dj #Reggae #Dancehall #SoundSystem
PARIS SOUND CLASH (17.11.2018) au Trabendo - SOUL STEREO VS HEARTICAL SOUND avec une victoire sans conteste du Heartical Sound !!!
Une 1ère édition anthologique, félicitation à Sergio et encore bravo à tous…
Remerciement: Cartel Concerts, Party Time Radio & Tv, Soul Stereo Sound Paris, Heartical Sound & Label, l’arbitrage Zelord Zeljko, l’animation MC Francky, l’équipe du Trabendo ainsi que les photographes, techniciens et artistes que j’ai croisés toute au long de la soirée. Spécial big up à tous les massives venus soutenir l’évènement !!!
#PxSound #PartyTime #CartelConcerts #ParisSoundClash #France #Battle #Dj #Reggae #Dancehall #SoundSystem
PARIS SOUND CLASH (17.11.2018) au Trabendo - SOUL STEREO VS HEARTICAL SOUND avec une victoire sans conteste du Heartical Sound !!!
Une 1ère édition anthologique, félicitation à Sergio et encore bravo à tous…
Remerciement: Cartel Concerts, Party Time Radio & Tv, Soul Stereo Sound Paris, Heartical Sound & Label, l’arbitrage Zelord Zeljko, l’animation MC Francky, l’équipe du Trabendo ainsi que les photographes, techniciens et artistes que j’ai croisés toute au long de la soirée. Spécial big up à tous les massives venus soutenir l’évènement !!!
#PxSound #PartyTime #CartelConcerts #ParisSoundClash #France #Battle #Dj #Reggae #Dancehall #SoundSystem
PARIS SOUND CLASH (17.11.2018) au Trabendo - SOUL STEREO VS HEARTICAL SOUND avec une victoire sans conteste du Heartical Sound !!!
Une 1ère édition anthologique, félicitation à Sergio et encore bravo à tous…
Remerciement: Cartel Concerts, Party Time Radio & Tv, Soul Stereo Sound Paris, Heartical Sound & Label, l’arbitrage Zelord Zeljko, l’animation MC Francky, l’équipe du Trabendo ainsi que les photographes, techniciens et artistes que j’ai croisés toute au long de la soirée. Spécial big up à tous les massives venus soutenir l’évènement !!!
#PxSound #PartyTime #CartelConcerts #ParisSoundClash #France #Battle #Dj #Reggae #Dancehall #SoundSystem
PARIS SOUND CLASH (17.11.2018) au Trabendo - SOUL STEREO VS HEARTICAL SOUND avec une victoire sans conteste du Heartical Sound !!!
Une 1ère édition anthologique, félicitation à Sergio et encore bravo à tous…
Remerciement: Cartel Concerts, Party Time Radio & Tv, Soul Stereo Sound Paris, Heartical Sound & Label, l’arbitrage Zelord Zeljko, l’animation MC Francky, l’équipe du Trabendo ainsi que les photographes, techniciens et artistes que j’ai croisés toute au long de la soirée. Spécial big up à tous les massives venus soutenir l’évènement !!!
#PxSound #PartyTime #CartelConcerts #ParisSoundClash #France #Battle #Dj #Reggae #Dancehall #SoundSystem
PARIS SOUND CLASH (17.11.2018) au Trabendo - SOUL STEREO VS HEARTICAL SOUND avec une victoire sans conteste du Heartical Sound !!!
Une 1ère édition anthologique, félicitation à Sergio et encore bravo à tous…
Remerciement: Cartel Concerts, Party Time Radio & Tv, Soul Stereo Sound Paris, Heartical Sound & Label, l’arbitrage Zelord Zeljko, l’animation MC Francky, l’équipe du Trabendo ainsi que les photographes, techniciens et artistes que j’ai croisés toute au long de la soirée. Spécial big up à tous les massives venus soutenir l’évènement !!!
#PxSound #PartyTime #CartelConcerts #ParisSoundClash #France #Battle #Dj #Reggae #Dancehall #SoundSystem
PARIS SOUND CLASH (17.11.2018) au Trabendo - SOUL STEREO VS HEARTICAL SOUND avec une victoire sans conteste du Heartical Sound !!!
Une 1ère édition anthologique, félicitation à Sergio et encore bravo à tous…
Remerciement: Cartel Concerts, Party Time Radio & Tv, Soul Stereo Sound Paris, Heartical Sound & Label, l’arbitrage Zelord Zeljko, l’animation MC Francky, l’équipe du Trabendo ainsi que les photographes, techniciens et artistes que j’ai croisés toute au long de la soirée. Spécial big up à tous les massives venus soutenir l’évènement !!!
#PxSound #PartyTime #CartelConcerts #ParisSoundClash #France #Battle #Dj #Reggae #Dancehall #SoundSystem
PARIS SOUND CLASH (17.11.2018) au Trabendo - SOUL STEREO VS HEARTICAL SOUND avec une victoire sans conteste du Heartical Sound !!!
Une 1ère édition anthologique, félicitation à Sergio et encore bravo à tous…
Remerciement: Cartel Concerts, Party Time Radio & Tv, Soul Stereo Sound Paris, Heartical Sound & Label, l’arbitrage Zelord Zeljko, l’animation MC Francky, l’équipe du Trabendo ainsi que les photographes, techniciens et artistes que j’ai croisés toute au long de la soirée. Spécial big up à tous les massives venus soutenir l’évènement !!!
#PxSound #PartyTime #CartelConcerts #ParisSoundClash #France #Battle #Dj #Reggae #Dancehall #SoundSystem
PARIS SOUND CLASH (17.11.2018) au Trabendo - SOUL STEREO VS HEARTICAL SOUND avec une victoire sans conteste du Heartical Sound !!!
Une 1ère édition anthologique, félicitation à Sergio et encore bravo à tous…
Remerciement: Cartel Concerts, Party Time Radio & Tv, Soul Stereo Sound Paris, Heartical Sound & Label, l’arbitrage Zelord Zeljko, l’animation MC Francky, l’équipe du Trabendo ainsi que les photographes, techniciens et artistes que j’ai croisés toute au long de la soirée. Spécial big up à tous les massives venus soutenir l’évènement !!!
#PxSound #PartyTime #CartelConcerts #ParisSoundClash #France #Battle #Dj #Reggae #Dancehall #SoundSystem
PARIS SOUND CLASH (17.11.2018) au Trabendo - SOUL STEREO VS HEARTICAL SOUND avec une victoire sans conteste du Heartical Sound !!!
Une 1ère édition anthologique, félicitation à Sergio et encore bravo à tous…
Remerciement: Cartel Concerts, Party Time Radio & Tv, Soul Stereo Sound Paris, Heartical Sound & Label, l’arbitrage Zelord Zeljko, l’animation MC Francky, l’équipe du Trabendo ainsi que les photographes, techniciens et artistes que j’ai croisés toute au long de la soirée. Spécial big up à tous les massives venus soutenir l’évènement !!!
#PxSound #PartyTime #CartelConcerts #ParisSoundClash #France #Battle #Dj #Reggae #Dancehall #SoundSystem