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Once Upon a Time... Life

Il était une fois... La vie[a] is an animated series created by Albert Barillé from Procidis studios (France) in 1987 for Canal+ France talking about the human body and its functions in a simplified and educational way. The series consists of 26 episodes originally aired on the French channel Canal+, and then on the state-owned channel FR3. It is the third part of the Once Upon a Time... series. This is the second co-production between Procidis and the Japanese studio Eiken subsequent to Once Upon a Time... Space and is thus, considered as an anime. However, unlike the previous series, it was only released on a VHS in Japan.

Once Upon a Time... Life brought back the edutainment formula that had largely been left out on Once Upon a Time... Space. The series combined entertaining story lines with factual information, presented metaphorically.[citation needed]

Overview

The series Once Upon a Time... Life used the same recurring lead characters as the other Once Upon a Time... series: certain represent the cells that make up the body's systems and defense mechanisms, such as red blood cells, white blood cells and platelets, while antagonists represent viruses and bacteria that threaten to attack the human body. Every episode of the series featured a different organ or system within the human body (like the brain, the heart, the circulatory system, etc.).[citation needed]

In the French-language version of the series, the opening theme song "L'hymne à la vie" (French for "hymn for life") by Michel Legrand was performed by Sandra Kim,[1] winner of the 1986 Eurovision Song Contest.[2] In the English-language dub, the song was translated into English and retitled "This life is life that's life", sung to the same tune as the French.[3]

The series was aired in the Arab states of the Persian Gulf, Armenia, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Croatia, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Finland, France, Gabon, Germany, Greece, Haiti, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kenya, Liechtenstein, Mauritius, Mexico, Morocco, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, the Soviet Union, Senegal, Singapore, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Syria, Taiwan, Thailand, Turkey, the United Kingdom, Venezuela, Yugoslavia and Zimbabwe.[citation needed]

Characters

The series makes use of recurring human characters originally from both Once Upon a Time... Man and Once Upon a Time... Space. Every character in the series appeared as a real person (the old intelligent doctor, the dedicated blonde mother, the boy and the girl, their obese friend, and the pair of bullies) and anthropomorphic representations of cells and cellular functions within the human body.

The series describes a "society inside the body" with a strong pyramidal stratification of work.[4]

Episodes

Regional home-video releases

In some English-language versions, the title is rendered as "Once Upon a Time – Life" in the opening credits.

A partwork version called How My Body Works was produced for the United Kingdom in 50 hardback volumes, each with about 30 A4-sized pages, described as "an Orbis play & learn collection". In it, some of the characters have different names: The Professor for the Maestro; Captain Courageous and Ace for the lymphocyte B crafts' pilots; Plasmus and Globina for Hemo and Globin, Corpo for Jumbo; Toxicus, Germus and Infectius for the bacterium characters; Virulus for the virus character. VHS copies of the English-language television episodes were included with issues.

A DVD box set of all the episodes of the series was produced by Procidis, and distributed locally by various distributors.[5] The DVD series was produced in French, English, Polish, Finnish, German, Italian, Hebrew, Norwegian, Hungarian, Dutch and Swedish, but was not released in the United Kingdom. In 2011, the DVD box set was available in English in Canada, distributed by Imavision.

Biological accuracy

Most biological terminology is translated with care, but a few mistakes were made and there are some anachronisms.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Known in Japan as The Science of Life: Micro Patrol (Japanese: 生命の科学ミクロパトロール, Hepburn: Seimei no Mikuro patorōru)

References

  1. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Il était une fois... La Vie - Le Générique". YouTube.
  2. ^ "Final of Bergen 1986". European Broadcasting Union. Archived from the original on 16 April 2021. Retrieved 16 April 2021.
  3. ^ Once Upon a Time... Hello Maestro. (2011) Once upon a time: Life - Opening Theme. 30 March 2011. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=imP2MZxoM-s
  4. ^ Brodesco, Alberto (2011). "I've Got you under my Skin: Narratives of the Inner Body in Cinema and Television". Nuncius: Journal of the Material and Visual History of Science. 26 (1): 214. doi:10.1163/182539111x569829. PMID 21936210. Retrieved 24 August 2012.
  5. ^ "Procidis - Collection DVD". Archived from the original on 2007-10-16. Retrieved 2007-10-21.

External links