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One day you'll regret you crossed my path! Just remember: My name is Rastapopoulos!
~ Rastapopoulos to Tintin.

Roberto Rastapopoulos, or simply Rastapopoulous, is the main antagonist of the The Adventures of Tintin comic book series. He is the archenemy of the series' titular protagonist Tintin.

Biography[]

Tintin in America[]

Rastapopoulos made a cameo appearance at the official dinner, although he was not revealed to be a villain yet.

Cigars of the Pharaoh[]

Rastapopulos made his villainous debut in Cigars of the Pharaoh. Onboard the cruise ship the Isis, Sophocles Sarcophagus, an absent-minded Egyptologist, accidentally bumped into Rastapopulous. Tintin defended the professor, much to the fury of Rastapopoulos, who warned Tintin that he would regret crossing his path. As Rastapopoulus stormed off, Tintin recognized him as the "King of Cosmos Pictures". Later he appears in a disguise while he and the fakir kidnapped the crown prince of Gaipajama. He falls over a cliff while trying to kill Tintin, but is revealed to have somehow survived later.

The Blue Lotus[]

In the follow-up to Cigars of the Pharaoh, The Blue Lotus, it is revealed that Rastapopoulos is the head of the sinister opium cartel which Tintin has been pitting his wits against in the course of the two books. In the end, he is defeated and arrested for his crimes. Sometime later, Rastapopoulos escaped and assumed a new identity, as Marquis de Gorgonzola.

The Red Sea Sharks[]

He later reappeared in "The Red Sea Sharks", where he was the leader of a slave dealing organization. He fakes his death at the ending and Tintin assumes he was truly killed.

Flight 714[]

His last appearance is an attempt to capture the millionaire Laszlo Carreidas on an island and demand extortion from him. After Tintin rescued Carreidas, Rastapopoulos' memory was deleted by the aliens involved in the events (like the memories of everyone else on the island). He, along with Allan and the traitorous pilots, were whisked off to an undisclosed fate in a UFO, leaving their ultimate fates unknown.

Tintin and the Lake of Sharks[]

In an animated film (that was adapted into a similarly titled book) Tintin and the Lake of Sharks, he is a villain directing operations from a secret underwater base. He is responsible for numerous worldwide robberies of valuable items and plans to steal a duplicating machine invented by Professor Calculus. On the other hand, in an attempt to escape by submarine, Haddock and Tintin both capture him and he is arrested by the Syldavian Police.

Personality[]

Rastapopoulos is a calculating, influential and intelligent character. He is portrayed as particularly dangerous and unscrupulous. He knows how to surround himself with accomplices judiciously chosen for their total lack of morality.

His intelligence is demonstrated when he acted with Tintin the first time they met each other. He was very affable but it was only a cover and he soon reveals himself to be a dangerous, ruthless and psychopathic crime lord. Despite his supposed influence, he is very callous and abusive towards his henchmens, as shown in Flight 714, when he tells under the truth's serum that he would dispose of every of them when his plan will succeed, and always raging towards Allan because of his goofs. He is cruel and is ready to commit many crimes, even heinous ones like attempted child murder, slavery to make money or lying to rebels or promising help to Sondonesians rebels who helped him in his plan to get Carreidas's money, by lying to them and putting bombs in theirs boats when they will be useless to him. He was evil since his youth, proved when he told Carreidas he ruined his brothers and sisters and put his parents on unemployement.

He is portrayed in a more laughably way in his last appearance, with notably a weird dress taste and more comedic moments, composed of angry outbursts and a head's hunch. Though he is not less evil, in any ways.

Gallery[]

Trivia[]

  • As the story Tintin and Alph-Art, in which a man named Endaddine Akass would appear and then be revealed to be Rastapopoulos in disguise, was never finished, Rastapolpoulos' final fate after Flight 714 is unknown. In the Yves Rodier edition (an unauthorized version of the unfinished story), Rastapopulos was killed after accidentally falling from a cliff after he sadistically tried to hang Tintin and Haddock, although this is not considered the "official ending" of the Tintin series.
  • Rastapopoulos appears in the pastiche Destination World by Didier Savard, a disguised Rastapopoulos is shot with a gun by unknown assailants in a car passing in front of the building Le Monde. This pastiche is authorized by the Hergé Foundation to celebrate Tintin's 70th birthday and the Comics Festival in Angoulême.
  • Rastapopoulos is arguably the darkest villain of the series.
  • Despite unwittingly revealing his intentions to kill his accomplices alongside Tintin and his friends in Flight 714, it was never specified whether Rastapopoulos was going to do the same with Allan Thompson, his most trusted henchman. Considering Rastapopoulos' backstabbing nature, however, it's likely that he would have killed Allan once he outlived his usefulness as well.
  • Considering Allan Thompson was part of his original drug smuggling company and that after Rastapopoulos was arrested, he was in another drug smuggling organization during the events The Crabs With the Golden Claws, Allan was helping Omar Bin Salaad smuggle not just any drug, but opium, which Rastapopoulos is also smuggling. Considering these evidences, it is possible that Rastapopoulos escaped and became Marquis di Gorgonzola before that book and rebuild his drug empire which Bin Salaad and Allan are working in and that Allan just hasn't fled to another drug empire. Due to this, it is possible Rastapopoulos is the unseen overarching antagonist of that book.

External Links[]

Navigation[]

           The adventures of tintin logo Villains

Comics and Cartoon
Rastapopoulos | Allan Thompson | Dr. Müller | The Bird Brothers | Red Rackham | General Tapioca | Prince of the Sun | Mitsuhirato | Rupac Inca Huaco | Al Capone | Boris Jorgen | Frank Wolff | Miller | Colonel Sponsz | Alfred Alembick | Trovik | W.R. Gibbons | Dawson | Bobby Smiles | Kurvi-Tasch | Mr. Bohlwinkel | Alonso Perez | Ramon Bada | Rodrigo Tortilla | Bugsy | The Fakir | Lopez | Bab El Ehr | Puschov | R.W. Trickler | Omar Ben Salaad | Corporal Diaz

Movie
Ivan Ivanovitch Sakharine | Allan | Tom | Pedro | Falcon | Aristides Silk | Red Rackham

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