# Diabolik {#diabolik .reader-title}
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| Diabolik |
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| Cover of *Diabolik - Momenti disperati* (\"Diabolik - Desperate moments\"), featuring the title character |
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| Publication information |
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| Publisher | Astorina |
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| First appearance | 1962 |
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| Created by | Angela and Luciana Giussani |
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| In-story information |
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| Full name | Unknown |
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| Partnerships | Eva Kant |
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| Abilities | - Genius-level intellect |
| | - Criminal mastermind |
| | - Expert strategist and tactician |
| | - Master martial artist, hand-to-hand combatant, marksman, |
| | swordsman, acrobat, and pilot |
| | - Proficient scientist |
| | - Master assassin |
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'*Diabolik'* (Italian: [\[djaˈbɔːlik,
djaboˈlik\]]{lang="it-Latn-fonipa"}) is an Italian comic series created
by sisters Angela and Luciana Giussani.^\[1\]\[2\]^
One of the most popular series in the history of Italian comics,
*Diabolik* was created in 1962 and consists of more than 900 volumes,
and has led to the birth of the *fumetti neri* comic subgenre. The
series is named after its protagonist, an anti-heroic thief, inspired by
several previous pulp fiction characters from Italy and other countries.
Its stories consist of monthly black-and-white, digest-sized volumes.
The series takes place in the fictional town Clerville and stars the
titular Diabolik, initially represented as a ruthless and cruel thief
who does not hesitate to murder anyone in order to accomplish his deeds,
aided by his partner and lover Eva Kant. Over time, the character
evolved his personality, developing healthy roots and ethical principles
such as honor, the sense of friendship and gratitude, and respect for
noble souls. He focused on robbing and killing other criminals.
Throughout his adventures, he is pursued mainly by the Inspector Ginko.
The series sold more than 150 million copies worldwide,^\[3\]^ becoming
one of the best-known and best-selling comics series from Europe.^\[4\]^
Live-action film adaptations were made: *Danger: Diabolik* (1968) and a
film trilogy consisting of *Diabolik* (2021), *Diabolik: Ginko Attacks!*
(2022) and *Diabolik: Who Are You?* (2023). Its success has also
inspired a radio show, an animated television series, video games,
novels, and countless parodies.
<div>
# Creation and development {#Creation_and_development}
</div>
The idea for the character of Diabolik was born from seeing commuters
every day. Co-creator Angela Giussani, who lived near Milano Cadorna
railway station, thought of making comics in a format designed for
travelling and carrying in one\'s pocket. To better understand the
tastes of her potential readers, Angela made a survey of the market,
from which she concluded that many commuters read mystery novels.
Another version of the story claims that the very idea came from her
finding a Fantômas novel abandoned in a train. Thus, was born the
\"Diabolik format\" (a small 12 x 17 cm (7 in) book),^\[5\]\[6\]^ which
proved popular with other publications in the same genre. The pocketbook
format contributed, in fact, to the success of the character.
Diabolik is a ruthless master thief. He typically steals from criminals
(and has no issue with killing them if need be, but rarely, if ever,
kills the innocent or the police), and has a set of lifelike masks which
he uses to fool his opponents, assuming every identity at will. He seems
to have a deep knowledge in many scientific fields, including chemistry,
mechanics, and computers. In his first appearances, Diabolik was a more
straightforward villain who did not hesitate to murder anyone in order
to accomplish his deeds. He was later given a more \"Robin Hood\"-like
persona and was shown stealing essentially from criminals, in order to
soften the series' violence and amorality.
He was raised as an orphan on a secret island hideout of a criminal
combine, where he learned all his criminal skills, including developing
his special masks, before killing the head of the combine. Diabolik\'s
true name had never been revealed in the series, and he does not know it
himself. Diabolik took his name from a dangerous black panther that the
head of the combine killed on the secret island. From issue #3 of the
series, Diabolik is aided by his \"moll\", Eva Kant, who has gained an
increasing role as his partner and lover.
Diabolik always drives a black 1961 Jaguar E-type. Graphically inspired
by the actor Robert Taylor, he usually wears a skintight black body suit
that leaves only his eyes and eyebrows (very distinctive ones) exposed
when going \"into action\". Diabolik does not use firearms: his main
weapons are the daggers he throws with uncanny ability, as well as a
small dart gun with knockout darts. Eva drives a white Jaguar, and
unusually goes into action wearing a heavy sweater and pants, no mask
and no revealing clothing. The stories are set in a fictional town,
Clerville, loosely inspired by Geneva, Switzerland.
Diabolik\'s main opponent is Inspector Ginko, known only by his surname,
a fierce and incorruptible police officer who is almost always thwarted
by astute tricks devised by Diabolik. The only other recurring character
is the noblewoman Altea, Ginko\'s fiancée.
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'Main characters'
- Diabolik - a legendary thief who follows an ancient code of conduct.
- Eva Kant - Diabolik\'s lover and accomplice, she is a skilled and
ruthless criminal in her own right. Their relationship begins as
adversarial, then he becomes her lover. Later in the series she is
reimagined as Diabolik\'s partner and equal.
- Inspector Ginko - a determined and incorruptible Clerville police
detective who attempts, unsuccessfully, to capture Diabolik on
numerous occasions.
'Secondary characters'
- Altea - a titled heiress and Ginko\'s lover.
- King - the leader of a powerful criminal organization, he became
Diabolik\'s foster father and trains him in the skills he will need as
a criminal. King eventually betrays Diabolik and plans to murder him,
but the infallible criminal kills him first.
- Elisabeth \"Tina\" Gay - a nurse who becomes Diabolik\'s first love
after meeting him in the hospital. When she discovers his true nature,
she betrays him to the police. Eventually, Diabolik drives her mad and
Tina is confined to an
asylum.^\[*[clarification\ needed]{title="The text near this tag may need clarification or removal of jargon. (May 2015)"}*\]^
- Dr. Alberto Floriani - a famous neuropsychiatrist who treats Elizabeth
Gay during her stay in the asylum and eventually marries her. Part of
Diabolik\'s assault on Elizabeth\'s sanity involves him visiting her
in the hospital, disguised as
Albert.^\[*[clarification\ needed]{title="The text near this tag may need clarification or removal of jargon. (February 2014)"}*\]^
- Bettina - a girl who should become familiar with Diabolik and Eva,
until she becomes like a
daughter.^\[*[clarification\ needed]{title="The text near this tag may need clarification or removal of jargon. (May 2015)"}*\]^
- Gustavo Garian - son of a wealthy family, which has been decimated by
Diabolik; he sought revenge on several occasions.
Many of the Diabolik stories are set in the fictional city of Clerville,
which is located in a state also named Clerville. However, in the first
issues of the series, Diabolik carried out his heists in Marseille, but
the authors decided to invent a new city, so as to avoid having to do
continual documentation on the city.
It is clear that Clerville is in Europe, since in 2002, it adopted the
Euro as its currency; the city\'s previous currency had never been
named, but had the same value as the Italian lira.
The state of Clerville also includes other cities, such as Ghenf (styled
after the German name for Geneva: Genf), the second most important city
in the state, which is situated on the sea (Clerville, the city, is
located in the interior and is crossed by a river).
Diabolik uses a variety of gadgets and equipment which he uses as an aid
in his robberies, to wiretap conversations and variety of weaponry.
The trademark of Diabolik is his black suit, which completely covers his
body except for his eyes, eyebrows, and black running shoes. He uses it
as an aid in his burglaries or robberies and to protect his identity. He
has variety of gadgets and weapons stashed under it. His outfit can be
used as a diving suit since it can keep him warm while underwater, and
it\'s also fireproof. However, it cannot protect him from lethal harm
(bullets and knives), but he relies on his fighting skills deal with
those.
Diabolik and Eva Kant use a variety of drugs to stun, kill, or force
their enemies into submission. They mostly use Pentothal as a truth
serum to force the victims into obeying and aiding the two in their
burglaries or robberies. They also use scopolamine to cause amnesia and
a variety of sedatives to stun their enemies. They also use cyanide to
kill their enemies during a quick getaway, but mostly for their targets.
<div>
# # Weapons and gadgets {#Weapons_and_gadgets}
</div>
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Diabolik uses a variety of weapons and gadgets to stun or kill his
enemies. He neither owns nor uses firearms, preferring stealth. He uses
stun gas, if necessary, but avoids it when he can. He also uses daggers
to kill his enemies in seconds. He has a variety of gadgets for quick
usage, some of them as an aid in his robbery. Diabolik carries various
radio-controlled equipment, that trigger specific objects into helping
him, placed over Clerville (for example: traffic lights to create green
waves, sprinklers that spray black paint onto incoming police cars,
train ramps). He once inserted a device in Ginko\'s car to activate his
airbag during a police pursuit. He has a variety of weapons inside his
signature black Jaguar E-Type to aid him, such as Gatling guns or
heat-seeking missiles. He uses wiretaps and mini cameras to spy on
others, and he communicates with Eva via a walkie-talkie hidden in his
watch.
Another of Diabolik\'s trademarks is his photorealistic masks of a
specially designed plastic that he uses to impersonate his victims or
enemies, and he has used a multitude of them to help him. Diabolik uses
the masks in almost every burglary he attempts, and Eva sometimes uses
them while directly acting with him. He has used the masks to
impersonate people that are of great use to him, and sometimes only to
hide his looks. Diabolik and Eva also use them while going somewhere out
in public to avoid being recognized (they used false looks once while
going out to dinner).
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Diabolik was published as a succession of series, most of them one year
long. The Giussani sisters wrote many of the stories until the 1980s,
passing them gradually to Patricia Martinelli's - and others\' - hands.
The main bulk of the artwork is executed by Sergio Zaniboni, who has
been drawing Diabolik since 1969 (lately sharing the role with Giorgio
Montorio) until his death. Other artists working on the series include
Brenno Fiumali, Franco Paludetti, Enzo Facciolo and Lino Jeva.
Prima Serie, 1962-1964. Issues #1-24.
: The first issue, *Il Re del Terrore* (in English: \"The King of
Terror\"), appeared in print on 1 November 1962. This was issue #1
of the first series. The next issue appeared on 1 February 1963,
followed by monthly issues up to issue #24 in December 1964.^\[7\]^
Seconda Serie, 1965. Issues #25-50.
: Publication switched to one issue every two weeks, with each series
being one year and 26 issues long.
Anno V, 1966. Issues #51-76.
: The series began to be named for the year of publication since the
first issue.
Anno XII-XVI, 1973-1977. Issues #233-351
: The first 12 issues of Prima Serie started to be re-released, 2-4 a
year, in place of regular issues. \"Il Re del Terrore\" was
rereleased as Anno XII, No. 6
Anno XVII-XIX, 1978-1980.
: 24 issues a year, published twice a month.
Anno XX-XXV, 1981-1986.
: 14 issues a year: published monthly, plus an extra issue in July and
August.
Anno XXVI-XXVII, 1987-1988.
: 12 issues a year, published monthly.
Anno XXVIII-XXXII, 1989-1993.
: 7 issues a year
Anno XXXIII, 1994. Issues #566-574
: 9 issues were published this year. Starting in July 1994,
publication returned to once a month.
Anno XXXIV-LXII, 1995-2023 (ongoing) ^\[8\]^
: 12 issues a year, published monthly. In October 2013, the 800th
issue was published.^\[9\]^
<div>
+------------------------------------+------------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
| ------------ -------- ---------- | -------------- ------ ---------- | ------------- ------ ---------- |
| Series Year Issues | Series Year Issues | Series Year Issues |
| Prima 1962-4 #1-24 | Anno XXIV 1985 #479-492 | Anno XLV 2006 #707-718 |
| Seconda 1965 #25-50 | Anno XXV 1986 #493-506 | Anno XLVI 2007 #719-730 |
| Anno V 1966 #51-76 | Anno XXVI 1987 #507-518 | Anno XLVII 2008 #731-742 |
| Anno VI 1967 #77-102 | Anno XXVII 1988 #519-530 | Anno XLVIII 2009 #743-754 |
| Anno VII 1968 #103-128 | Anno XXVIII 1989 #531-537 | Anno XLIX 2010 #755-766 |
| Anno VIII 1969 #129-154 | Anno XXIX 1990 #538-544 | Anno L 2011 #767-778 |
| Anno IX 1970 #155-180 | Anno XXX 1991 #545-551 | Anno LI 2012 #779-790 |
| Anno X 1971 #181-206 | Anno XXXI 1992 #552-558 | Anno LII 2013 #791-802 |
| Anno XI 1972 #207-232 | Anno XXXII 1993 #559-565 | Anno LIII 2014 #803-814 |
| Anno XII 1973 #233-256 | Anno XXXIII 1994 #566-574 | Anno LIV 2015 #815-826 |
| Anno XIII 1974 #257-280 | Anno XXXIV 1995 #575-586 | Anno LV 2016 #827-838 |
| Anno XIV 1975 #281-304 | Anno XXXV 1996 #587-598 | Anno LVI 2017 #839-850 |
| Anno XV 1976 #305-327 | Anno XXXVI 1997 #599-610 | Anno LVII 2018 #851-862 |
| Anno XVI 1977 #328-351 | Anno XXXVII 1998 #611-622 | Anno LVIII 2019 #863-874 |
| Anno XVII 1978 #352-374 | Anno XXXVIII 1999 #623-634 | Anno LIX 2020 #875-886 |
| Anno XVIII 1979 #375-398 | Anno XXXIX 2000 #635-646 | Anno LX 2021 #887-898 |
| Anno XIX 1980 #399-422 | Anno XL 2001 #647-658 | Anno LXI 2022 #899-910 |
| Anno XX 1981 #423-436 | Anno XLI 2002 #659-670 | Anno LXII 2023 #911- |
| Anno XXI 1982 #437-450 | Anno XLII 2003 #671-682 | ------------- ------ ---------- |
| Anno XXII 1983 #451-464 | Anno XLIII 2004 #683-694 | |
| Anno XXIII 1984 #465-478 | Anno XLIV 2005 #695-706 | |
| ------------ -------- ---------- | -------------- ------ ---------- | |
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</div>
<div>
# # Reprints and digests {#Reprints_and_digests}
</div>
In 1986, Pacific Comics Club published 2 digest-size issues. Since 1997
a series of annual books with more complex stories has been released.In
2000, Scorpion started to publish digests, reaching 6 issues before
stopping.
Some American reprints have appeared.
Diabolik was translated into Tamil and introduced to India in December
1987 by Prakash Publishers under their imprint Lion Comics. His first
adventure was titled *Danger Diabolik*. Though the story and the
character got tremendous response, for various reasons, this was the
only story published until 2013.
In June 2013, Diabolik made his comeback via the same publisher, but
this effort had more impact. It was launched in the Comic Con 2013 in
Bengaluru with the storyline titled *Kutra Thiru Vizha* (*A Carnival of
Crime*). Based on the positive response for the story arc and the style,
in December 2013, Diabolik made his third appearance in *Operation
Tornado*.
Lion Comics publishes these books in high standard digest format, priced
at INR 40.^\[10\]^
Issues of the series were pubblished in multiple countries, including in
Spain, Germany, France, Greece, Croatia, Belarus, Netherlands, Turkey,
Serbia, Hungary, Brazil and Kenya.^\[11\]^
Diabolik was translated into Croatian on several occasions. First
appearance was in *Superstrip biblioteka* #43 published by Vjesnik - 25
episodes were published (1968-1971). New episodes were published by Art
Print - 1 episode in 1999, Slobodna Dalmacija - 18 episodes (2000-2002)
and Ludens - 4 annuals (2007-2010), 4 episodes (2017-still in print).
A Serbian translation was launched by Maverick Kraljevo in 2002, with 2
episodes being published.
In Dutch 56 stories were published.^\[12\]^
Dutch company Synti Groep has also digitally released Danish, Dutch,
English, French, German, Portuguese,Serbo-Croatian, Spanish and Turkish
translations of Diabolik comics, as well as all the original Italian
comics; 223 volumes were digitally released in English.^\[13\]^
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- Italian filmmaker Mario Bava adapted three *Diabolik* stories for a
1968 feature film, *Danger: Diabolik*, produced by Dino De Laurentiis
and starring John Phillip Law as Diabolik, Marisa Mell as Eva, and
Michel Piccoli as Ginko. The film was used in the final episode of the
10th season of the long-running television series, *Mystery Science
Theater 3000*. Initially it received generally negative reviews from
*The New York Times* and *Variety*, but with the re-evaluation of
Bava\'s filmography in subsequent years, retrospective reception of
the film has been more positive, with its visuals and the score by
Ennio Morricone receiving praise. In studies of the film, critics and
historians have focused on Bava\'s use of mise-en-scène to replicate
the imagery and stylization of comic books, and the film\'s reflection
of the socio-political upheavals of the 1960s in its characterization
and narratology. The credibility of the onscreen chemistry shared
between John Philip Law and Mell also received large praise. In 2008,
it was chosen by *Empire* magazine as one of *The 500 Greatest Movies
of All Time*.^\[14\]^
- *Diabolik sono io* (\"Diabolik is me\"; 2019), a docudrama directed by
Giancarlo Soldi about the comic and its first designer Angelo
Zarcone.^\[15\]^ In addition to showing rare archive materials from
the publishing house, the docu-film also seek a possible explanation
of the mystery linked to Zarcone, who disappeared without leaving
contact details after completing the tables of the first issue.
- A trilogy movie directed by Manetti Bros.:
- *Diabolik*: a 2021 adaptation. It was announced in December 2018 by
Rai Cinema president Paolo del Brocco; the Manetti Bros. directed
and co-wrote the screenplay with Michelangelo La Neve and
Gomboli.^\[16\]^ The cast includes Luca Marinelli as Diabolik,
Miriam Leone as Eva, Valerio Mastandrea as Ginko, and Serena Rossi,
Alessandro Roja and Claudia Gerini.^\[17\]^ The film was originally
scheduled to be released on 31 December 2020,^\[18\]^ and then
postponed to 16 December 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy.
- *Diabolik: Ginko Attacks!* (*Diabolik - Ginko all\'attacco!*):
scheduled to be released on 17 November 2022, starring Giacomo
Gianniotti instead of Marinelli.^\[19\]^
- A third movie titled *Diabolik: Who Are You?* (*Diabolik - Chi
sei?*) was released on 30 November 2023.
On 5 May 1999,^\[20\]^ an animated series, animated by Ashi Productions
and produced by Saban Entertainment and Saban International Paris,
premiered in Europe and Latin America on Fox Kids, and lasted for 40
episodes before ending on 1 January 2001.^\[20\]^ The series featured
Diabolik and his companion Eva, as they fought and gradually exposed the
Brotherhood and Dane, while evading Inspector Ginko. It was directed by
Jean Luc Ayach with Paul Diamond and Larry Brody as head
writers.^\[21\]\[22\]^ Ownership of the series passed to Disney in 2001
when Disney acquired Fox Kids Worldwide, which also includes Saban
Entertainment.^\[23\]\[24\]\[25\]^ Although it was co-produced in the
U.S., it never aired there in that country.^\[26\]^ Disney owns the
rights of the series as an exclusive property through 'BVS
Entertainment', (the series itself, copyrights, episodes, plot,
merchandising/distribution rights, \"*TRACK OF THE PANTHER*\"
trademark/label, recurring characters and other fictional/commercial
elements or materials exclusively created for the animated TV show and
not related with comics) with Astorina S.r.l holding the rights of the
original *[Diabolik]{.underline}* IP, franchise, trademark and its
original characters like *Diabolik, Eva, Ginko and King* as an
underlying property.
<div>
# # Live-action TV series {#Live-action_TV_series}
</div>
In 2012, Sky TV in conjunction with Sky France and Sky Italy, started
work on a TV version of *Diabolik*. A teaser trailer was made for the
production, but by 2015 the production had not been released and there
was no further information released by the studio.^\[27\]^
A total of 12 *Diabolik* games were developed and released in 1993 by
Simulmondo for the Commodore 64 and Amiga. The games were in Italian and
were made specifically for the Italian domestic market, seeing only
limited distribution elsewhere.^\[28\]\[29\]^
*Diabolik: The Original Sin* is a 2009 video game developed by
Artematica and published by Black Bean Games for Wii, PlayStation
Portable, Microsoft Windows, Nintendo DS, and PlayStation 2 systems.
The popularity of Diabolik spurred a long series of characters directly
or indirectly inspired to him, generally noticeable by the
\"criminalizing K\" in their name; some of them are a kind of
satire.^\[30\]^
- Max Bunker (writer) and Magnus created in the 1960s two of these \"K\"
characters, Kriminal and Satanik, the second being a feminine and
horror version. Both are distinguished for their greater realism and
for a more substantial sexy style.
- *Killing*, an Italian comic book.
- Paperinik (Duck Avenger) is the volatile superheroic alter-ego of
Donald Duck created by Elisa Penna, Guido Martina and Giovan Battista
Carpi in 1969. Initially an antihero parody/homage to Fantômas and
Diabolik, he quickly became a crimefighter.
- Cattivik is a humorous version of Diabolik created by Franco Bonvicini
in 1967: *cattivo* means evil/bad in Italian, while *diabolico* means
diabolical.
- *Dorellik* is the name of a film starring singer and actor Johnny
Dorelli.
- Fantomex is a character created by Grant Morrison during their run
writing *X-Men*. He is a master thief using technological gadgets and
his uniform is similar to Diabolik\'s, but coloured white. He is
assisted by an artificial intelligence called E.V.A.
- Mike Patton had decided on either Fantômas or Diabolik for his
avant-garde metal band, ultimately called Fantômas.
- The Beastie Boys music video for the song \"Body Movin\'\" is a direct
parody of *Danger: Diabolik* and features many clips from the movie
itself.
- *Millar & McNiven\'s Nemesis*
- A racing driver named \"Diabolik\" who races in the Superstars Series,
who never takes off his balaclava.
In real life, Matteo Messina Denaro, a prominent figure in the Sicilian
Mafia who was considered to be a candidate to become the next *capo di
tutti capi*, was nicknamed \"Diabolik\", after the comic book
character.^\[31\]^
^\^
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