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Asterix, Obelix and Vitalstatistix burst onto the stage in mid-performance, triggering a fight with the Roman guards and a happy reunion between the chief and his wife. Amidst the fracas, Caesar arrives and sentences Isivertuus to death in the arena for his failure, but Asterix successfully pleads for clemency, and Isivertuus is instead sent to ...
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10 1967 Asterix the Legionary: Astérix légionnaire North Africa Asterix and Obelix join the Roman Legion (in a parody of the French Foreign Legion) in an attempt to find the conscripted fiancé of Panacea, a villager on whom Obelix has a big crush. With an eclectic group of foreigners, they are sent to North Africa to fight the traitor Scipio.
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Asterix and the Missing Scroll (French: Le Papyrus de César, "Caesar's Papyrus") is the 36th book in the Asterix comics series, and the second written by Jean-Yves Ferri and illustrated by Didier Conrad. [1] A central theme is censorship and the battle over information. [2]
Danish: Asterix i Østens fagre riger; Dutch: Asterix in Indus-land; Finnish: Asterix Intiassa – Tuhannen ja yhden tunnin matka (Asterix in India – The Thousand-and-One-Hour Journey) German: Asterix im Morgenland; Greek: Ο Αστερίξ και η Χαλαλίμα; Indonesian: Asterix dan Putri Rahazade; Italian: Le mille e un'ora di Asterix
Asterix and the Falling Sky (French: Le ciel lui tombe sur la tête, "The Sky Falls On His Head") is the thirty-second volume of the Asterix comic book series, the ninth solely written and illustrated by Albert Uderzo and the only volume to introduce science fiction elements into the otherwise historical comedy series.