Pánico en el zoo

Pánico en el zoo
Date 1975
Series Mort & Phil
Publisher Editorial Bruguera
Creative team
Writers Ibáñez
Artists Ibáñez
Original publication
Published in Mortadelo
Issues 220-230
Date of publication 1975
Language Spanish
Chronology
Preceded by El plano de Alí-Gusa-No, 1974
Followed by Concurso oposición, 1975

Pánico en el zoo (English: Panic at the Zoo) is a 1973 comic written and drawn by Francisco Ibañez for the Mortadelo y Filemón (Mort & Phil) comic series.

Publication history

The comic strip was first published in the Mortadelo magazine, issues #220 (February 10, 1975) to #230 (April 22, 1975).

Plot

At the city zoo, peculiar things begin to happen. An unknown culprit uses an unprecedented process to switch the characteristics of selected animals, trading their special abilities with one another, and then sending them to commit high-level robberies. Examples of this include:

While investigating these strange occurrences (and constantly attempting to evade paying the entrance fee to the zoo), Mortadelo and Filemon gradually discover that a strange old man appears responsible for these personality switches, which also works on humans (as Filemon discovers when the subject imprints him with a bull's ferocity).

At the end of the story, Mortadelo and Filemon attempt to ask the zoo director, Xim Pancé, for any clues, but in the process discover that he is the culprit. Using a device of his own invention, Pancé instills the behaviour patterns of a cat and a dog in Mortadelo and Filemon, but is adversely affected by their subsequent scuffle and chase. When the device is wrecked as a result, Mortadelo and Filemon regain their original personalities, but when Mortadelo, with Filemon in his arms, attempts to jump off the roof they have landed on, he forgets that they no longer have the abilities of cat and dog, and thence make a crashlanding onto the street. In retaliation, a furious Filemon attempts to force Mortadelo to jump off the edge of a cliff, to "teach" him how to make a "proper jump".

Bibliography

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, March 05, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.