343:. Throughout the course of the story he suffers more and more injuries. First when Haddock breaks his gun chasing Rastapopoulos, he throws part of it away, and it hits the hiding Rastapopoulos on the head. When he continues to run away and is called to by Allan, he is distracted and crashes into a tree. He experiences pain to the face when Allan pulls the sticking plaster off. When Allan is about to throw a grenade at Tintin and Co, he remembers that Rastapopoulos wants Carreidas alive and throws it away. Rastapopoulos is caught in the blast, leaving his clothes in tatters. When Allan pulls Carreidas' hat from under a stone head, he accidentally elbows Rastapopoulos, giving him a black eye. Later his bump on the head goes away, which he takes as a good omen. However a piece of rock falls onto his head just after he notices this as the result of an earthquake, causing another bump. When explosives are used by the gang to break through a stone barrier, a volcanic eruption is set off, forcing them to flee from the Island in a rubber dinghy. He and his gang are hypnotized by
356:, an animated film and later adapted into a similarly titled book. In this story written by a friend of Hergé, Rastapopoulos is a criminal gang leader directing operations from a secret underwater base. He is behind numerous robberies of valuable items around the world and plans to steal a duplicating machine invented by Professor Calculus, allowing him to replace the items with perfect fakes so that nobody will know of his crimes. However while trying to escape by submarine after his activities are exposed, he is captured by Tintin and Haddock, and arrested by the Syldavian Police.
220:
244:
Tintin, accusing him of being an "Impudent whipper-snapper!" Tintin recognises
Rastapopoulos, commenting that he is "the millionaire film tycoon, king of Cosmos Pictures... And it's not the first time we've met..." Later in the story, Tintin runs into Rastapopoulos again, this time running into his desert film set, interrupting an apparent assault on a young woman before realizing that it was only part of the film. Although many of the actors are annoyed, Rastapopoulos is affable, and invites Tintin into his tent where, over a pot of
1668:
277:, Rastapopoulos' film that Tintin witnessed being filmed in the preceding story, later learning that Rastapopoulos, currently staying in the city, was the last person to see a famous doctor who Tintin believes could cure the dangerous poison of madness (Although he accepts Rastapopoulos' story that he dropped the doctor off at his house after a party). At the end of
243:
from 8 December 1932 to 8 February 1934. Tintin runs into him at the start of the adventure aboard the M.S. Isis, a cruise ship docking at Egypt. Here, the
Egyptologist Sophocles Sarcophagus bumps into Rastapopoulos, and Rastapopoulos threatens to beat him until Tintin intervenes. He then shouts at
186:
asserted that this was indeed a depiction of
Rastapopoulos, and that it would be expected for a film director to be seated next to a Hollywood actress. The name "Rastapopoulos" had been invented by one of Hergé's friends; Hergé thought it was hilarious and decided to use it. He devised Rastapopoulos
259:
Rastapopoulos reappears— this time disguised in a trench-coat and hat— at the end of the story, where he and a fakir kidnap the crown prince of
Gaipajama in vengeance for the Maharajah's war against the opium trade. Tintin pursues them, and a car chase ensues, before Tintin encounters the
248:, Tintin informs him of everything that has happened to him since leaving the cruise ship, and Rastapololous subsequently provides him with clothes and directions to another village. Farr noted that this idea of the hero mistakenly trusting the villain was one that had been used by
311:), he tricks them into getting on Allan's ship, which he later tries to have torpedoed after the crew evacuate and a plan to destroy it in a fire fails. Rastapopulos fakes his death by making his boat sink, while escaping in a submarine from the bottom. (In
207:
stereotypes of Jews; Hergé was adamant that the character was not Jewish. With his lampooned Greek surname, large nose and morally dubious involvement in shipping, it is evident that Hergé modelled
Rastapopoulous off Greek shipping tycoon
334:
to gain the number of his multi-million Swiss Bank account, concluding that it is easier to steal
Carreidas's money than make his own fortune all over again. When he is accidentally injected with truth serum by
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1321:
178:, where he is among the assembled dignitaries at a Chicago banquet held in Tintin's honour. Here he is seated next to the actress Mary Pikefort, an allusion to the real-life actress
339:, he reveals various evil deeds, such as his plan to kill Dr. Krollspell afterwards. He is taken hostage by Tintin. Like Krollspell and Carreidas, he is tied up and gagged with
1727:
260:
still-disguised
Rastapopoulos on a rocky mountainside, with the criminal boss apparently falling to his death when the cliff-ledge he is on breaks under his foot.
303:, having been forced to assume a new identity after he was arrested for his previous crimes. When Tintin, Haddock, and Skut end up on his yacht (a caricature of
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430:'s stories. Farr thought that Rastapopoulos was the one enemy who "it must be feared, might one day get the better of him."
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mentions that the media has inaccurately claimed she was engaged to be married to the
Marquis di Gorgonzola.)
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Rastapopoulos subsequently resurfaces in the guise of the
Marquis di Gorgonzola, a millionaire magnate and
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Michael Farr argued that the relationship between Tintin and
Rastapopoulos was akin to that between
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372:—appears. Although a page revealing Akass to be Rastapopoulos was started (and printed in the 2004
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with multiple identities, whose activities frequently bring him in conflict with his
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674:. Charles Ruas (translator). Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.
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740:. Tina A. Kover (translator). Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
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edition), as the book was never completed, Rastapopoulos' fate following
139:
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273:. In one scene, Tintin hides in a Shanghai cinema that is screening
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History and Politics in French-Language Comics and Graphic Novels
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to celebrate Tintin's 70th birthday and the Comics Festival in
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and taken onto a UFO. What happens next to them is unrevealed.
263:
Hergé reintroduced Rastapopoulos in the following adventure,
231:
Hergé first introduced the character of Rastapopoulos in
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has Rastapopoulos vs Tintin in one last final showdown
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is unknown. In the 2004 Yves Rodier adaptation of the
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The Adventures of Tintin: The Secret of the Unicorn
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Tintin – Le Temple du Soleil – Le Spectacle Musical
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172:A visual prototype for Rastapopoulos appears in
256:, the latter of whom was an influence on Hergé.
396:by Didier Savard, a pastiche authorized by the
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199:, or simply as a Greek born on the island of
8:
269:, which was set in China and dealt with the
16:Comic character by Belgian cartoonist Hergé
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138:, the comics series by Belgian cartoonist
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128:is a fictional character who is the main
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1728:Fictional marquesses and marchionesses
350:In 1972 Rastapopoulos also appears in
389:In 1996 Rastapopoulos appears in the
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1698:Comics characters introduced in 1934
1314:Kuifje – De Zonnetempel (De Musical)
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526:"Roberto Rastapopoulos — Tintin.com"
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223:The prototype for Rastapopoulos in
1723:Fictional businesspeople in comics
566:McKinney, Mark (3 February 2011).
285:, and is subsequently imprisoned.
14:
836:Tintin in the Land of the Soviets
672:Hergé, the Man Who Created Tintin
324:He later kidnaps the millionaire
1667:
1666:
1171:Tintin and the Temple of the Sun
762:. London: Hodder and Stoughton.
142:. He first appears in the album
1298:The Mystery of the Blue Diamond
227:, seated next to Mary Pikefort.
1163:The Crab with the Golden Claws
900:The Crab with the Golden Claws
760:Tintin: Hergé and his Creation
694:Tintin: The Complete Companion
572:. Univ. Press of Mississippi.
271:Japanese invasion of Manchuria
1:
1629:Jean-Marc and Randy Lofficier
1404:Tintin and the World of Hergé
1365:Tintin: Destination Adventure
1179:Tintin and the Lake of Sharks
353:Tintin and the Lake of Sharks
1306:Mr. Boullock's Disappearance
1244:Hergé's Adventures of Tintin
1213:Tintin and the Golden Fleece
1221:Tintin and the Blue Oranges
670:Assouline, Pierre (2009) .
203:, but the character fitted
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237:, which was serialised in
1743:Male characters in comics
1662:
1031:(unfinished, unpublished)
916:The Secret of the Unicorn
31:
1252:The Adventures of Tintin
1187:The Adventures of Tintin
810:The Adventures of Tintin
442:The Adventures of Tintin
135:The Adventures of Tintin
1603:Little, Brown & Co.
932:The Seven Crystal Balls
696:. London: John Murray.
114:Supporting character of
108:List of main characters
41:Publication information
1733:Fictional Greek people
1708:Fictional drug dealers
1703:Fictional crime bosses
1514:Parodies and pastiches
1012:Tintin and the Picaros
996:The Castafiore Emerald
924:Red Rackham's Treasure
892:King Ottokar's Sceptre
314:The Castafiore Emerald
228:
69:(1931, non-officially)
1478:Jacques Van Melkebeke
1420:Tintin postage stamps
964:Explorers on the Moon
860:Cigars of the Pharaoh
283:Cigars of the Pharaoh
234:Cigars of the Pharaoh
222:
145:Cigars of the Pharaoh
126:Roberto Rastapopoulos
99:Roberto Rastapopoulos
73:Cigars of the Pharaoh
1738:Comic strip villains
1718:Fictional kidnappers
1357:Prisoners of the Sun
1068:Thomson and Thompson
1004:Flight 714 to Sydney
940:Prisoners of the Sun
738:Hergé: Son of Tintin
378:Flight 714 to Sydney
331:Flight 714 to Sydney
91:In-story information
1713:Fictional smugglers
1020:Tintin and Alph-Art
972:The Calculus Affair
844:Tintin in the Congo
652:Tintin and Alph-Art
383:Tintin and Alph-Art
365:Tintin and Alph-Art
150:criminal mastermind
1582:Le Petit Vingtième
1576:Methuen Publishing
1527:Tintin in Thailand
1398:Books about Tintin
1341:Tintin on the Moon
1063:Professor Calculus
1023:(1986, unfinished)
980:The Red Sea Sharks
948:Land of Black Gold
718:. London: Egmont.
428:Arthur Conan Doyle
424:Professor Moriarty
300:The Red Sea Sharks
240:Le Petit Vingtième
229:
76:(1934, officially)
1693:Tintin characters
1680:
1679:
1236:Television series
1231:
1230:
1078:Bianca Castafiore
908:The Shooting Star
852:Tintin in America
769:978-0-340-52393-3
747:978-1-4214-0454-7
725:978-1-4052-3264-7
703:978-0-7195-5522-0
681:978-0-19-539759-8
579:978-1-60473-761-5
515:, pp. 64–65.
414:Critical analysis
394:Destination World
319:Bianca Castafiore
305:Aristotle Onassis
289:Later appearances
275:The Sheik's House
225:Tintin in America
214:hellenophobically
210:Aristotle Onassis
175:Tintin in America
168:Early development
163:Character history
123:
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66:Tintin in America
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1670:
1669:
1612:Literary critics
1499:Hergé Foundation
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1121:Marlinspike Hall
1083:Chang Chong-Chen
956:Destination Moon
884:The Black Island
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398:Hergé Foundation
341:sticking plaster
326:Laszlo Carreidas
307:luxurious yacht
254:Alfred Hitchcock
189:Italian-American
148:(1934) and is a
60:First appearance
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1492:Legacy of Hergé
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1386:and memorabilia
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716:Tintin & Co
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550:Assouline 2009
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511:, p. 41;
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337:Dr. Krollspell
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266:The Blue Lotus
246:Turkish coffee
197:Greek American
195:surname, as a
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1263:Documentaries
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1148:Feature films
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1073:Rastapopoulos
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1028:Le Thermozéro
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27:Rastapopoulos
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1634:Tom McCarthy
1619:Michael Farr
1595:
1587:
1580:
1566:Golden Press
1525:
1518:
1504:Ligne claire
1468:Roger Leloup
1425:Tintin coins
1412:
1402:
1393:Tintin media
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1279:Tintin and I
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554:Peeters 2012
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533:. Retrieved
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212:, allegedly
205:anti-Semitic
184:Michael Farr
173:
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133:
125:
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104:Partnerships
71:
64:
18:
1649:Numa Sadoul
1644:Yves Rodier
1509:Musée Hergé
1448:Bob de Moor
1384:Other media
1333:Video games
1205:Live-action
1098:Jolyon Wagg
250:John Buchan
1687:Categories
1571:Le Lombard
1539:Publishers
1194:soundtrack
1040:Characters
450:References
444:characters
361:unfinished
130:antagonist
81:Created by
1556:Casterman
1271:I, Tintin
1255:(1991–92)
1247:(1962–66)
826:of Tintin
736:(2012) .
654:pdf story
639:Farr 2001
627:Farr 2007
615:Farr 2007
598:Farr 2007
509:Farr 2001
493:Farr 2007
472:Farr 2001
455:Footnotes
402:AngoulĂŞme
309:Christina
154:archenemy
96:Full name
54:(Belgium)
52:Casterman
47:Publisher
1672:Category
1598:magazine
1436:of Hergé
1415:magazine
1155:Animated
1126:Syldavia
1116:Borduria
1108:Settings
1088:Abdullah
758:(1991).
714:(2007).
692:(2001).
535:19 March
440:List of
434:See also
407:Le Monde
391:pastiche
1589:Le Soir
1190:(2011)
1133:Unicorn
359:In the
191:with a
1596:Tintin
1561:Egmont
1413:Tintin
1376:(2011)
1368:(2001)
1360:(1997)
1352:(1996)
1344:(1987)
1325:(2002)
1317:(2001)
1309:(1941)
1301:(1941)
1282:(2003)
1274:(1976)
1224:(1964)
1216:(1961)
1182:(1972)
1174:(1969)
1166:(1947)
1093:Nestor
1048:Tintin
1015:(1976)
1007:(1968)
999:(1963)
991:(1960)
983:(1958)
975:(1956)
967:(1954)
959:(1953)
951:(1950)
943:(1949)
935:(1948)
927:(1944)
919:(1943)
911:(1942)
903:(1941)
895:(1939)
887:(1938)
879:(1937)
871:(1936)
863:(1934)
855:(1932)
847:(1931)
839:(1930)
766:
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576:
374:Egmont
187:as an
157:Tintin
118:Tintin
1290:Stage
1053:Snowy
815:Hergé
201:Leros
193:Greek
140:Hergé
85:Hergé
1463:Greg
1130:The
764:ISBN
742:ISBN
720:ISBN
698:ISBN
676:ISBN
574:ISBN
537:2022
422:and
252:and
813:by
426:in
328:in
297:in
132:of
1689::
605:^
588:^
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479:^
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317:,
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159:.
801:e
794:t
787:v
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539:.
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