Pif Gadget was a French comic magazine for children that ran from 1969 to 1993 and 2004 to 2009. Its readership peaked in the early 1970s.
Predecessors
Pif has its origins in Le Jeune Patriote, a youth magazine published by French Communists during the German occupation of France during World War II. It was published illegally from January 1942 but became legal from 1944. In 1945 it was renamed Vaillant, Le Jeune Patriote. In 1946 its title was shortened to Vaillant, with the tag, "le journal le plus captivant". For the April issue of 1965, the title was changed to Vaillant, le journal de Pif, due to the popularity of its character Pif, a dog character created by José Cabrero Arnal. Until 1969, Vaillant had, like its competitors, serialized some stories over several issues, but the magazine in this incarnation ended with issue number 1238 on February 23, 1969.
Publication history
Pif Gadget started again as a weekly magazine with issue number 1, released on February 24, 1969, but retained the old number relative to Vaillant. The magazine was called Pif et son gadget surprise for the first few months. The gadget was a 'free gift' toy with each issue, including Pifises. The cover of Pif Gadget had the strapline Tout en récits complets indicating that all the none of the comic strips were serialized over multiple issues. Its featured comics included:
Rahan
Doc Justice
Hugo Pratt's Corto Maltese
Marcel Gotlib's Gai-Luron
Nikita Mandryka's Les Aventures potagères du Concombre masqué
Raymond Poïvet and Roger Lecureux's Les Pionniers de l'Espérance
Le Grêlé 7/13, Nasdine Hodja, Arthur le fantôme justicier, Les Rigolus et les Tristus, Corinne et Jeannot, Dicentim le petit Franc.
Documentary filmmakerFredric Lean created a series based on 'Docteur Justice' for French TV network M6. Pif Gadget's record print run was one million copies, first on April 6, 1970, and again in September 1971. This set a record for a European comic strip that still stands. The paper also benefited from being able to reach the newly industrialized countries, and was one of the select few Western magazines allowed to be sold behind the Iron Curtain due to its left-wing credentials. It went into rapid decline at the same time as the Soviet Union faded, with content thinning and stories extended over several issues. Its last major feature was during the of the French Revolution in 1989. The original version was last printed in February 1993. Pif Gadget was revived as a monthly magazine in July 2004 under the aegis of Pif Editions, with runs of approximately 100,000 units. Saddled with about 4 million euros of debt, the 6-person company went into receivership in March 2007 and was wound up on January 15, 2009. The last issue was published in November 2008. It has been relaunched in 2015 as a quarterly named "Super Pif".
Similar comics
Pif inspired similar comics in other countries including Yps in Germany and Jippo in Scandinavia.