Belgium is celebrating the 60th birthday of the Smurfs by giving fans the chance to take a ride through mystical forests and caves and experience living in their village.
Cartoonist Pierre Culliford, who wrote under the pseudonym Peyo, struck gold with the incidental creation of the Smurfs in 1958, as he initially had only invented them as supporting characters in his comic of medieval heroes Johan And Peewit.
A boy walks past a Smurf character at the Smurf Experience exhibition. /Reuters Photo
A boy walks past a Smurf character at the Smurf Experience exhibition. /Reuters Photo
After a great public response and demand for more Smurf adventures, the Belgian put the blue-skinned creatures center stage with their own comic book the following year.
That set off the global conquest of the family of Smurf characters as they fight off sorcerer Gargamel, who wants to turn them into gold – culminating in a Hollywood hit grossing half a US billion dollars in box office takings in 2011.
In the Smurf Experience at the Brussels Expo, which will run until late January 2019, visitors are taken through the Smurf village, with human-sized mushroom-shaped homes, given a virtual reality ride and can fight Gargamel.
A Smurf characters is seen at the Smurf Experience exhibition, depicting a larger-than-life recreation of the Smurf village. /Reuters Photo
A Smurf characters is seen at the Smurf Experience exhibition, depicting a larger-than-life recreation of the Smurf village. /Reuters Photo
In a linguistically divided country, the Smurfs have become a unifying symbol in Belgium alongside chocolate, waffles, beer and the national soccer team.
“They (Smurfs) are a symbol of Belgian culture and of Belgian heritage,” said Chloe Beaufays, the spokeswoman of the exhibition.
Organizers hope to take the exhibition to other European countries as well as the United States and Asia over next five years.
Source(s): Reuters