Once Upon a Time... Man explained

Native Name:
Nolink:1
Language:French
Runtime:26 minutes
Creator:Albert Barillé
Composer:Yasuo Sugiyama
Narrated:Roger Carel
Network:FR3
Num Episodes:26
Related:Once Upon a Time... Space (1982)

Once Upon a Time... Man (French: link=no|Il était une fois... l'homme) is an educational animated television series created and directed by Albert Barillé. It is the first series in the Once Upon a Time... franchise. It explains human history in a format adapted for children, with the action focused around one group of characters which appear in every episode dealing with the problems of the period depicted. Although historical figures would typically appear as themselves, occasionally they inherit the appearance and some of the personality of one of the archetypes. The series is known for explaining historic events to children from different viewpoints as the main characters come from different civilizations.

The series was produced by French studio Procidis in co-production with French: [[France 3|France Régions]]|i=no (FR3, France), French: [[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation|Société Radio-Canada]]|i=no and ACCESS Alberta (Canada), Italian: [[RAI|Radiotelevisione italiana]]|i=no (RAI, Italy), the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation (SSR, Switzerland), French: [[RTBF|Radiodiffusion-Télévision Belge]]|i=no and Dutch; Flemish: [[VRT (broadcaster)|Belgische Radio en Televisie]]|i=no (RTBF and BRT, Belgium), Dutch; Flemish: [[KRO|Katholieke Radio Omroep]]|i=no (KRO, Netherlands), Norwegian: [[NRK|Norsk rikskringkasting]]|i=no (NRK, Norway), Swedish: [[Sveriges Radio]]|i=no (SR, Sweden), Spanish; Castilian: [[Televisión Española]]|i=no (TVE, Spain), and Tatsunoko Production (Japan) who was the one who made the animation. The series premiered in France on FR3, between 30 September 1978 and 14 April 1979, and it was subsequently broadcast on the channels of the rest of the broadcasters that participated in the production dubbed into their own language.

Once Upon a Time... Man was purchased by most public broadcasting channels in Europe later, and by many other broadcasters in other countries around the world, and is well-known by a significant percentage of the population. The show aired in the United States on the History Channel starting in January 1996.[1]

Music

The series' opening and ending title sequences famously used Johann Sebastian Bach's Toccata and Fugue in D minor as the main theme music. Shortening the piece to only two minutes in length, the introduction uses the very beginning, which jumps into the start of the middle section and finally the dramatic ending to coincide with the destruction of Earth at the end of the intro. It is generally unknown what is the original soundtrack they used, and whom is the original artist who performed on the organ.

Although this is the theme that is generally used, there are dubbings in some languages that use another one. In the version in Spanish, a pop song based on the third movement of Ludwig van Beethoven's Septet is used instead, adapted by Rafael Trabucchelli and Agustín Serrano, with Spanish lyrics by Marisol Perales and José Luis Perales, and performed by the children's group Spanish; Castilian: Caramelos|i=no.[2] [3]

Characters

The episodes of Once Upon a Time… Man typically would follow one family, which most typically used the same set of archetypes that would be reused for the scenario. These same characters would later be used in the later additions to the Once Upon a Time... franchise, with some changes.

Although historical figures would typically appear as themselves, occasionally one of the archetypes would be used, like Maestro as Leonardo da Vinci.

Home media

A DVD boxed set of all the episodes of the series was produced by the French production company Procidis, and distributed locally by various distributors. The DVD series was produced in French, English (not sold in the UK or US), Finnish, German, Dutch, Hebrew, Norwegian, Spanish, Swedish, and Polish. In 2011, an English-language, Region 1 DVD box set was made available in Canada and the United States. The set was produced and distributed by Imavision.

See also

References

  1. Book: Erickson . Hal . Television Cartoon Shows: An Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1949 Through 2003 . 2005 . 2nd . McFarland & Co . 978-1476665993 . 596.
  2. Érase una vez el hombre. Hispavox. 1979. es.
  3. (In Spanish)

External links