Sunday, September 26, 2010

TARZAN AND NUMA: TURKISH-MADE TARZAN COMICS FROM 1943


In the below post on this blog, I had covered Turkish artist Ekrem Dülek's 'Boğaç Han' comics serialized in Çocuk Haftası in 1943-44. Dülek is also credited as the artist for an odd Tarzan comics published in the no. 43 (dated Sept. 3rd, 1943) of the monthly "special issue" series of 1001 Roman from the same publisher, Tahsin Demiray. Titled as 'Tarzan ve Numa' [Tarzan and Numa], this is the only instance I am aware of where a comics credited to a Turkish artist had been published in 1001 Roman.
'Tarzan ve Numa' appears to be partially based on the 'Lion' story in E.R. Burrough's Jungle Tales of Tarzan (1919). The first 8 pages of the comics where Tarzan sets out to save a gorilla snatched by Numa the lion is a fairly faithful adaptation of the introductory section of this story.




Afterwards, the plot of the comics digresses from that of the original story. Tarzan sees natives carrying the carcass of a lion, but finds out that it is not Numa:
Just when Numa appears on the scene, the natives come back to assault Tarzan and his apes..
.. but Numa joins in the fight against the natives and hence Tarzan befriends the lion in the end:
I suspect Dülek might have created this comics by tracing from and/or redrawing one or more foreign source. If anyone recognizes any one or set of images from elsewhere, please let us know. For example, a possible source might be the French Tarzan et le lion (1937) album from Hachette, which I haven't (yet) seen.
Source for Jungle Tales of Tarzan plot summary: http://www.erblist.com/erblist/jtalessummary.html
Coming soon in this blog: Turkish-made Son of Tarzan comics serial from 1945!!..

2 comments:

john adcock said...

Both these and the previous 'Boğaç Han' comics show distinct swipes from Hal Foster's Tarzan comic strips, most noticeable in the human figures (black and white) and in the horses. Was the American comic strip serialized in Turkey?

Kaya Özkaracalar said...

Yes, the Foster Tarzans were serialized in Turkey. I've just made a new post on this.