Vicky the Viking

Vicky the Viking
Japanese cover art of the series DVD release
GenreAdventure
Comedy
Based onVicke Viking
by Runer Jonsson
Directed byChikao Katsui (eps. 1-26)
Hiroshi Saitô (eps. 27-52)
Kōzō Kusuba (eps. 53-78)
ComposersSeiichirō Uno (Japanese version)
Karel Svoboda (German version)
Country of originAustria
West Germany
Japan
Original languagesGerman
Japanese
No. of seasons3
No. of episodes78
Production
Production companiesTaurus Film
Zuiyo Eizo (eps. 1-52)
Nippon Animation (eps. 53-78)
Original release
NetworkORF (Austria)
ZDF (Germany)
Fuji TV (Japan)
ReleaseJanuary 31, 1974 (1974-01-31) –
April 8, 1976 (1976-04-08)

Vicky the Viking, known as Wickie und die starken Männer (listen) in Germany and Austria and Chiisana Viking Bikke (小さなバイキング ビッケ) in Japan, is an animated television series which tells the adventures of Vicky, a young Viking boy who uses his wits to help his Viking fellows. It is based on the novel Vicke Viking (1963) written by the Swedish author Runer Jonsson. It premiered on the German TV channel ZDF on 31 January 1974 and aired in various countries. In 2013–2014, the series also existed in 3D animation produced by Studio 100.

Plot

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Vicky is a small boy with shoulder-length reddish-blonde hair who lives with his parents Ylva and Halvar, the latter being the chief of the small village of Flake. Vicky is not a typical Viking boy, being naturally fearful and not particularly strong. However, he impresses with his pronounced intelligence, with which he regularly supports adults and friends in seemingly hopeless situations and helps them find a solution. Together with Halvar and his ship's crew of more or less strong men, Vicky experiences dangerous and humorous adventures each episode. Initially he must assert himself against the crew's skepticism, but he quickly develops into an essential figure whom the Vikings cannot go without.

Cast

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  • Yōko Kuri as Vicky, the titular character, a boy of about nine years of age. He is physically frail, timid and has a special fear of wolves, but his brains eventually help him solve any problem with which he is confronted.
  • Kōsei Tomita as Halvar, Vicky's father and chief of Flake. A rather braggish warrior, who prefers to solve problems with brawns, but who has since learned to listen to and value Vicky's ideas.
  • Taeko Nakanishi as Ylva, Vicky's mother, who is far more supportive of her son's intelligence than his father is.
  • Yoneko Matsukane as Ylvie ("Ticky" in the U.K. version), a young girl in Flake who is Vicky's neighbour and most ardent supporter. In the German movie adaptation this adoration is portrayed as a childhood crush.
  • Junko Hori as Gilby, the strongest boy in Flake and Vicky's ambitious prime rival in his age, though a terrible rascal and intellectually clearly Vicky's inferior.
  • Takashi Satomi and Junpei Takiguchi as Tjure and Snorre, two Vikings in Halvar's crew who constantly quarrel about something.
  • Kōichi Kitamura as Urobe, the village druid and oldest Viking in Halvar's crew. While he is rather old and not as imaginative as Vicky, he is quite knowledgeable in sagas and legend lore, and he is respected as a fair judge and mediator.
  • Shun Yashiro as Gorm, a rather over-excited fellow among the Flake Vikings who occupies the position of the lookout on Halvar's ship.
  • Setsuo Wakui as Ulme, the village bard, a rather neat person and poetic soul, who carries a harp to play on joyous occasions, alas invariably wasted on his Nordic barbarian audience.
  • Toku Nishio as Faxe is the biggest and strongest, but also the slowest, of Flake's Vikings who enjoys a close big-brother relationship with Vicky.
  • Masayuki Katō and Chikao Ōtsuka as Sven the Terrible, a vicious Viking pirate captain, who does not hesitate robbing even his fellow Vikings of their hard-earned plunder.
  • Pokka, Sven's devious second-in-command.

Production

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Vickyland at Plopsaland

The script was developed from the children's book Vicke Viking (1963) written by the Swedish author Runer Jonsson, who won the Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis (German Children's Book Award) for it in 1965. The Japanese animation studio Zuiyo Enterprise Company (from which Nippon Animation was formed) adapted the original version (1972–1974) and developed from it an 85-minute-long movie (original title: Chiisana Baikingu Bikke) as well as the series with 78 episodes, each 25 minutes long. The animation of the first episodes was commissioned by Zuiyo Eizo to Mushi Production, directed by Chikao Katsui. Following the failure of the latter, Zuiyo Eizo continued the production of the series alone hiring director Hiroshi Saitô. Later Zuiyo Eizo will split into Zuiyo Co., and Nippon Animation which will complete the rest of the episodes with director Kōzō Kusuba, while Zuiyo will maintain the rights to the series (copyright has been registered in 1972).[1]

Responsible for the German dubbing was Eberhard Storeck, who spoke as one of the characters (Snorre) himself. The music in the German version was composed by Christian Bruhn and Karel Svoboda. The text of the title song (Hey, hey, Wickie! Hey, Wickie, hey! ...) was written by Andrea Wagner. The German version also features new brief portions of animation. The English dubbing was largely poor, with characters talking endlessly to fit the lip movements of the characters, not pausing for a breath or using verbal punctuation. In the years that followed this was not uncommon for some voice actors who dubbed Japanese-produced series, up to the 1990s' anime boom in the West.

The series was produced for the German TV network ZDF and Austrian TV network ORF. In the United Kingdom, it was shown on ITV.

Sequel productions

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TV remake

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A modern television 'remake' is entitled Vic the Viking.

Film adaptations

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German director Michael "Bully" Herbig filmed a live action adaptation of the series called Wickie The Mighty Viking (aka "Wickie und die starken Männer"). It was produced by Christian Becker of Rat Pack Filmproduktion for a 2009 release.[2] Vicky is portrayed by Jonas Hämmerle. Günther Kaufmann portrays Sven, the antagonist of the Vikings. The Vikings of Flake are portrayed by Jörg Moukkadam (Faxe), Mike Maas (Gorm), Christian Koch (Snorre), Nic Romm (Tjure), Patrick Reichel (Ulme) and Olaf Krätke (Urobe).[3]

The film premiered on 9 September 2009, in Munich.[4] On its opening weekend, it grossed approximately $5,595,895.[5] On 3 October, during a show of Wetten, dass..?, Herbig was presented with the Goldene Leinwand award for the film's viewership of three million within its first 18 weeks. The film sold nearly 5 million tickets in Germany, for a total gross revenue of approximately $40,582,384.

Following the success of the first film, a sequel, Wickie auf Großer Fahrt, was released on 29 September 2011.

A CG animated film Vic the Viking: The Magic Sword was released on December 8, 2019.[6]

Legacy

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  • Christian Lorenz, keyboardist of the industrial metal band Rammstein took his nickname ("Flake") from the village of the same name in Vicky the Viking, which he watched as a child.[7]
  • Japanese manga artist Eiichiro Oda was heavily influenced by the program, which led him to serialize One Piece in Shueisha's Weekly Shōnen Jump anthology magazine starting in 1997.
  • Japanese manga artist Makoto Yukimura has cited Vicky the Viking as an inspiration for his series Vinland Saga, particularly in the case of the character Hild.

VHS release (United Kingdom)

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  • In the UK on 14 May 1990, Video Collection International Ltd released a single video cassette of Vicky The Viking (Cat. No. VC1177) with the first two episodes that were "The Contest" and "The Trap" and it was re-released on 22 July 1991 in Video Collection International Ltd's "Children's Club" range of kids tiles (Cat. No. KK0013).

Primary literature (German)

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  • Runer Jonsson: Wickie und die starken Männer. München: Herold 1964.
  • Runer Jonsson: Wickie und die Blauschwerter. München: Herold. 1966.
  • Runer Jonsson: Wickie und die großen Drachen. München: Herold. 1967.
  • Runer Jonsson: Wickie und die Rothäute. Ravensburg: Ravensburger Buchvlg. 1984. ISBN 3-473-38776-2
  • Runer Jonsson: Wickie und das hölzerne Pferd. Ravensburg: Ravensburger Buchvlg. 1984. ISBN 3-473-38791-6
  • Runer Jonsson: Wickie und die Stadt der Tyrannen. Ravensburg: Ravensburger Buchvlg. 1984. ISBN 3-473-38822-X

Secondary literature (German)

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  • Ina Kurth/Joachim Schmaeck: Wickie und der dänische Zoll. Arbeiten mit Anteilen und Prozenten. Appelhülsen/Mülheim: Verlag "Die Schulpraxis". 1990. ISBN 3-927279-64-1
  • Susanne Pauser/Wolfgang Ritschl: Wickie, Slime und Paiper. Wien: Böhlau. 1999. ISBN 3-205-98989-9
  • Wickie und die starken Männer, Kinderkochbuch. Frechen: Schwager & Steinlein. 2001. ISBN 3-89600-450-6
  • Wickie und die starken Männer - Pop-Up Masken Spielbuch. Frechen: Schwager & Steinlein. 2003. ISBN 3-89600-554-5
  • Wickie und die starken Männer - Geschichtenbuch. Fränkisch-Crumbach: Verlag EDITION XXL. 2003. ISBN 3-89736-417-4
  • Wickie - Stanzpappe Buch Fränkisch-Crumbach: Verlag EDITION XXL. 2004. ISBN 3-89736-652-5

References

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  1. ^ watz, Matteo (2021-06-13). "Yama Nezumi Rocky Chuck". Animétudes. Retrieved 2022-09-21.
  2. ^ Meza, Ed (2008-01-07). "Herbig to direct 'Vicky the Viking'". Variety. Reed Elsevier. Retrieved 2008-01-08.
  3. ^ "Comedy". 11 September 2013.
  4. ^ "Stars - Kino". 9 July 2013.
  5. ^ "Germany Box Office, September 17–20, 2009". www.boxofficemojo.com.
  6. ^ "VIC THE viking".
  7. ^ Jović, Mario "Flake" Archived 2017-07-11 at the Wayback Machine (in Croatian). Rammstein.hr Retrieved 2015-01-24.
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(German)
(Japanese)