Prisoners of the Sun

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Tintin: Prisoners of the Sun
(Le Temple du Soleil)


Cover of the English edition

Publisher Casterman
Date 1949
Series The Adventures of Tintin (Les aventures de Tintin)
Creative team
Writer(s) Hergé
Artist(s) Hergé
Original publication
Published in Tintin
Date(s) of publication September 26, 1946 - April 22, 1948
Language French
ISBN ISBN 2-203-00113-5
Translation
Publisher Methuen Publishing
Date 1962
ISBN ISBN 1-4052-0625-X
Translator(s) Leslie Lonsdale-Cooper and Michael Turner
Chronology
Preceded by The Seven Crystal Balls, 1948
Followed by Land of Black Gold, 1950

Prisoners of the Sun (Le Temple du Soleil) is the fourteenth of The Adventures of Tintin, a series of classic comic-strip albums, written and illustrated by Belgian writer and illustrator Hergé, featuring young reporter Tintin as a hero. It continues the story begun in The Seven Crystal Balls.

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Contents

Tintin and Captain Haddock arrive in Peru to look for Professor Calculus, following the events in The Seven Crystal Balls, which ended with Calculus being kidnapped for putting on the bracelet of the mummified Inca, Rascar Capac. Calculus slips through their fingers, and they set off in track of the natives who have taken him. But once they have arrived in South America and ask for Calculus' whereabouts, none of the Indios are inclined to help them - save two.

Tintin finds himself protecting a young Indio boy named Zorrino from two bullying Spaniards. Following that, a mysterious Indio gives him a medallion, telling him it will save him from danger. Later, Zorrino helps them find the entrance to the Temple of the Sun, where he claims their friend has been taken. The Temple lies deep in the Andes, and the journey there is eventful - it involves hindrance from natives and Captain Haddock being terrorised by the local wildlife.

Finally they come upon it - and stumble right into a group of Inca who have survived until modern-day times. Zorrino is saved when Tintin gives him the medallion (the Indio who had given it to him reveals himself as one of the Incan high priests), but Tintin and Haddock are sentenced to death for their sacrilegious intrusion and end up on the same pyre as Calculus. Tintin has, however, chosen the hour of their death to coincide with a solar eclipse, and the terrified Inca believe he can command their God, the Sun. Afterwards, the leader of the Incas tells them the "magic liquid" mentioned in the preceding volume was a coca-derivative used to hypnotize the explorers who had excavated Rascar Capac's tomb as punishment for their sacrilege. Tintin convinces him to break the curse, and they return to civilization with a gift of Incan gold and jewels, while Zorrino decides to stay with the Incas.

For the most part Hergé's research is evident in this book, however the Inca were experienced astronomers, who would have been able to predict a solar eclipse almost as well as any modern scientist. This sequence of the story was inspired by tales of a similar incident involving Christopher Columbus, though in Columbus' case, the Caribbean natives in question were less scientifically sophisticated than the Inca and the eclipse was lunar rather than solar. Realizing this in hindsight Hergé wanted to go back and think of a new ending but he was convinced otherwise and Prisoners of the Sun was produced with the inaccurate ending.

Prisoners of the Sun was the first Tintin adventure to be published in the newly-created Tintin Magazine in 1946. The original version begins with Tintin on his way to Marlinspike following his visit to the hospital where he witnessed the mass panic attack of the explorers in The Seven Crystal Balls.

The pages appeared vertically in the magazine rather than the standard horizontal way.

In order to fit the story into 62 pages when published in book form, many scenes had to be edited out. These scenes include:

  • Tintin, walking to Marlinspike, is so engrossed by a newspaper report of recent events that he misses a plank of wood and falls into a river.
  • While waiting for Zorrino near the bridge in Peru, Tintin and Haddock meet the mysterious Indian who gave Tintin the medallion. He smiles at Haddock's insults with the words "Anger is bad for one's health, senhor."
  • While walking through the mountains, Haddock discovers a skull mounted on a pole. A terrified Zorrino says that it is a warning that he is under sentence of death for guiding foreigners to the Temple of the Sun.
  • During their trek through the jungle, Tintin shoots a jaguar as it leaps towards them, and Zorrino strikes a snake with a stick when it attempts to bite Haddock.
  • Haddock discovers and pockets gold in the Inca's cave behind the waterfall. He is later forced to give up the gold in order to get through the hole into the Inca tomb.

This original version was published in book form in France and Belgium in 2003.

A video game and an animated film were made based on this book.

A stage musical was also made and premiered in Antwerp on the 15th of September 2001 [1].

The Adventures of Tintin
Creation of Tintin · Books, films, and media · Ideology of Tintin
Characters: Supporting · Minor · Complete list
Miscellany: Hergé · Marlinspike · Captain Haddock's exclamations
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