Jacques Tardi
Author of It Was the War of the Trenches
About the Author
Image credit: from Wikipedia Jacques Tardi en dédicace au Salon du livre de Paris. Author Georges Seguin
Series
Works by Jacques Tardi
The Extraordinary Adventures of Adèle Blanc-Sec: Pterror Over Paris and The Eiffel Tower Demon (2010) 195 copies, 6 reviews
Las Extraordinarias Aventuras de Adèle Blanc-Sec, 4. Momias Enloquecidas (1978) 153 copies, 2 reviews
The Extraordinary Adventures of Adèle Blanc-Sec: The Mad Scientist and Mummies on Parade (1996) 100 copies, 4 reviews
Moi René Tardi, prisonnier de guerre au Stalag II B - Tome 2 : Mon retour en France (2013) 72 copies, 1 review
I, Rene Tardi, Prisoner of War at Stalag IIB Vol. 3: After the War (I, Rene Tardi, Prisoner Of War In Stalag IIB, 3) (2018) 44 copies
Streets Of Paris, Streets Of Murder: The Complete Noir Of Manchette and Tardi Vol. 2 (The Complete Noir Stories of Manchette & Tardi) (2020) 25 copies, 1 review
Streets of Paris, Streets of Murder: The Complete Graphic Noir of Manchette & Tardi Vol. 1 (The Complete Noir Stories of Manchette & Tardi) (2020) 25 copies
Streets of Paris, Streets of Murder Box Set: The Complete Noir Stories of Manchette and Tardi (The Complete Noir Stories of Manchette & Tardi) (2020) 11 copies
L'intégrale: LE PETIT BLEU DE LA COTE OUEST - O DINGOS, O CHATEAUX - LA POSITION DU TIREUR CO (2016) 9 copies, 1 review
Adèle Blanc-Sec : Coffret en 2 volumes : Tome 5, Le Secret de la Salamandre ; Tome 6, Le Noyé à deux têtes (2000) 7 copies
Un cadavere in scena-Notte di sangue a Le Troncy. Nestor Burma e i misteri di Parigi (2011) 5 copies, 1 review
L'Etrangleur, N° 1, Juin 2009 : Nestor Burma : L'envahissant cadavre de la plaine Monceau (2012) — Author — 3 copies
Adèle Blanc-Sec : Coffret en 2 volumes : Tome 7, Tous des monstres ! ; Tome 8, Le mystères des profondeurs (2010) 3 copies
Adle Blanc-Sec - Album poster 2 copies
Adele y la bestia 1 copy
Ter 20 anos em Maio de 1871 1 copy
La Toison d'or — Illustrator — 1 copy
A ma mer — Contributor — 1 copy
To była wojna okopów 1 copy
Associated Works
Raw No. 4: The Graphix Magazine for Your Bomb Shelter's Coffee Table (1982) — Contributor — 13 copies
Ah! Nana № 1-9 — Contributor — 1 copy
Corriere della Sera - Sette: Sei fumetti per l'estate - 11 Agosto 2011 — Author — 1 copy
Corriere della Sera - Sette: Sei fumetti per l'estate - 5 Agosto 2010 — Author — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Tardi, Jacques
- Birthdate
- 1946-08-30
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Ecole Nationale des Beaux-Arts, Lyon
Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs, Paris - Occupations
- artist
writer - Relationships
- Grange, Dominique (partner)
Malet, Léo (original author) - Short biography
- Jacques Tardi is without a doubt one of the most important artists of his generation. He invented a new variation within the clear line style and in this way inspired many artists. Tardi's expressionistic style is perfect for his stories about World War I and about the underworld of the city. Tardi is the father of "the new realism" and a master in depicting both the old city of Paris as the awful life in the trenches of the Big War. After studying fine arts in Lyon and decorative arts in Paris, Tardi joined Pilote magazine in 1970. He started out illustrating several short stories written by Jean Giraud and Serge De Beketch, before he drew the political fiction story 'Rumeurs sur le Rouergue' (text by Pierre Christin). He also worked in the western genre for Record ('Blue Jackett', 'Cheval Gris'). For Dargaud, he produced 'Le Démon des Glaces' and 'La Véritable Histoire du Soldat Inconnu'. He expanded his activities in 1975, and drew for Libération, Charlie Mensuel and L'Écho des Savanes. Several of his short stories were collected in the album 'Mouh-Mouh' in 1979. For Métal Hurlant, Tardi created 'Polonius' with writer Picaret in 1976. That same year, he began the famous mystery series 'Adèle Blanc-Sec' in the Sud-Ouest daily. He also began 'Griffu' (text by Jean-Patrick Manchette) in B.D. and 'Ici Même' (text by Jean-Claude Forest) in À Suivre. For the latter magazine, he adapted Léo Malet's novel character 'Nestor Burma' to comics. His books on World War I have become classics, like his most famous work, 'C'était la Guerre des Tranchées', which strikingly portrayed the disillusionment of the war. In the early 1980s, he produced such titles as 'Tueur de Cafards', 'Jeux pour Mourir', 'Le Trou d'Obus', 'Mines de Plomb' and 'Chiures de Gomme'. He also became an illustrator of books by Céline and he wrote his first novel in 1990. In the 1990s, Tardi began painting and drew several portfolios. He continued his comics work with 'Le Cochon Enchanté' (based on a Rumanian tale), 'Le Sens de la Houppelande', 'L'Enfant de l'Absente', and 'Sodome et Virginie'. He teamed up with Michel Boujut to create several cinematographic stories for Charlie-Hebdo from 1993. He also created the radio series 'Le Perroquet des Batignolles' with Boujet. Although Tardi has repeatedly said that he hates drawing the modern world, his work 'La Debauche', scripted by Daniel Pennac, is a colorful satire of late twentieth-century Paris. In 2002, Tardi and writer Vautrin created 'Cri du Peuple' about the rebellion of the Communards.
- Nationality
- France
- Birthplace
- Valence, Drôme, France
- Places of residence
- France
- Associated Place (for map)
- Drôme, France
Members
Discussions
French graphic novel, steampunk (?) heroine; recent film in Name that Book (August 2013)
Reviews
The Extraordinary Adventures of Adele Blanc-Sec: The Mad Scientist / Mummies on Parade by Jacques Tardi
This second Fantagraphics reprint volume collects the third and fourth numbers of Jacques Tardi's Adele Blanc-Sec stories: "The Mad Scientist" and "Mummies on Parade." "The Mad Scientist" is very much in line with the earlier numbers with its modest pacing, bewildering plot, and droll character interactions. It focuses on the reanimation of a Pithecanthropus and his surprising behavior, and culminates in some spectacular violence on the streets of 1912 Paris. In "Mummies on Parade" Tardi show more really pulls out the stops, bringing together plot threads from almost all of the earlier stories, adding a mass revivification of Egyptian mummies, connecting Adele's troubles with the wreck of the Titanic, and providing a downbeat ending after a somewhat hilarious cascade of mayhem. The art in "Mummies" is especially fine: there were several panels that I would be happy to enlarge and hang on my wall -- though my tastes are rather outré! show less
This is so dark, so visceral, and so ordinary and real, it's terrifying.
If ever you were raised on the glory of war through Commando comics, Action Man, and every war movie pre-Kubrick/Lean, this is the antidote. This will shake you to your senses; a Come And See of comics.
If ever you were raised on the glory of war through Commando comics, Action Man, and every war movie pre-Kubrick/Lean, this is the antidote. This will shake you to your senses; a Come And See of comics.
One day, I will work out why I continue to buy bandes dessinées in English when I’m perfectly capable of reading them in (my schoolboy) French (with, I admit, the help of a dictionary). I mean, given the choice between men-in-tights superhero shenanigans out of the US and French sf comics, I know which I hugely prefer. And, okay, Tardi tends not to write genre, and I, Rene Tardi, Prisoner of War in Stalag IIB is actually biography, that of his own father, with some incidents from the life show more of the father of his wife, the singer Dominique Grange. Buying it in French would at least allow me to keep up to date with some of my favourite series, especially those whose publication history in English has been erratic at best. They’d probably be cheaper too. Anyway, I, Rene Tardi, Prisoner of War in Stalag IIB does pretty much exactly what it says on the cover. Tardi’s father served in tanks in the French Army during WWII, was captured early and spent pretty much the entire war in a prisoner of war camp. One thing the story illustrates is the stark difference between the treatment of French and British POWs and American POWs. We’ve all seen the movies and the cheap sitcoms, and POWs breaking out of their camps… but the French were so under-fed and mistreated they’d never have succeeded had they escaped. And, of course, once back home they were likely to be immediately reported to the occupying Germans… Recommended. show less
Tardi’s bande dessinée are more often mainstream thrillers than genre, and it makes for a pleasant change from your typical Anglophone graphic novel. A young woman from an institution is hired by a wealthy and philanthropic industrialist to be the nanny for his nephew. The industrialist inherited the wealth, and care of the boy, when his brother and sister-in-law died in a car crash. Shortly after taking up her duties, while the uncle is away on business, the boy and nanny are kidnapped show more by a dyspeptic hitman and his dim henchmen. But the two manage to escape, and head across France to the eccentric retreat of the industrialist, where they hope to find sanctuary. En route, the nanny proves more than a match for the henchmen, and then the hitman. This is a pretty gruesome story, and Tardi’s art doesn’t shrink from the gore. It’s not the cartoon violence you’d seen in some superhero comic, but more like that of an 18-certificate brutal thriller. Good, though. I shall continue to buy these for as long as Tardi and Fantagraphics churn them out. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 147
- Also by
- 16
- Members
- 5,481
- Popularity
- #4,544
- Rating
- 4.0
- Reviews
- 95
- ISBNs
- 533
- Languages
- 18
- Favorited
- 13
























