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Travels in Western and Central Europe (131) – House of the Smurfs in Brussels, Belgium

author:The Orchid of the Regent's Heart

After visiting the store, there was still some time, and the tour guide children took us to the home of the "Smurfs" with "great compassion". On June 25, 2012, in Brussels, belgium, the "Smurfs" dolls were displayed in the "Smurfs" store. It is the birthday of Peyo, the father of the "Smurfs", and the "Global Smurf Day". The first "Smurfs" boutique was inaugurated in the Cartoon Statue Museum in the heart of Brussels, belgium. "The Smurfs" are the belgian cartoon characters that have swept the world, and the "Smurfs" series of comics have been translated into 35 languages in more than 80 countries.

Travels in Western and Central Europe (131) – House of the Smurfs in Brussels, Belgium

To find the source of the Smurfs, the Belgian Comic Book Museum is a must-see. Although the Smurfs have a global influence, they do not yet have a separate theme museum in their hometown. There is a permanent Smurfs section in the Belgian Comics Museum, which finally provides a place for Elf fans to trace the origins of comics, where you can see the original manuscripts of the Smurfs, panoramas of the Elven Village, imitations of mushroom houses and some different images of the Smurfs. This museum became a place for Blues fans to collect Smurf souvenirs.

Travels in Western and Central Europe (131) – House of the Smurfs in Brussels, Belgium

Our tour guide is a post-80s, himself a blue fan, this time to Brussels to bring us here, one is to let everyone visit the most famous Smurfs in Brussels, but also to buy souvenirs for themselves, can be described as killing two birds with one stone.

Travels in Western and Central Europe (131) – House of the Smurfs in Brussels, Belgium

The Smurfs are based on the Belgian cartoonist Peiyou's comic strip and cartoon of the same name, in which the evil Goblins are clumsily guided into the Elven Village, and the Smurfs are teleported through the Blue Moon's whirlwind to New York's Central Park while hiding from the Gingher, where they return to their mushroom village before the Gage Witch and Azrael find them, and the Three-Apple-Tall City of New York.

Directed by Raja Gosnell, the film was produced in a "performance capture + CG animation" format, co-voiced by Jonathan Winters, Katie Perry, Anton Eugene and Fred Armison, and co-starring Neil Patrick Harris, Gemma Metz and Hank Azaria.

The film was released in the United States on July 29, 2011. This movie grew up with the children after the eighties, so there is no post-eighty children who do not like the Smurfs.

Travels in Western and Central Europe (131) – House of the Smurfs in Brussels, Belgium

The "father" of the Smurfs is pierre Cooliford, a Belgian cartoonist who goes by the pseudonym "Bayonet". In 1958, on a whim, he added magic-aware blue men to his newspaper comic strip. However, as the plot progresses, the forest elves disappear from the story after a few weeks. At the urging of the readers, the Smurfs return, and Beyo simply turns them into the protagonists of the story.

Why are the Smurfs blue? To this question, Comic Book Museum librarian Tenetani told reporters: "It's like people buying cars, usually wives choose colors, husbands choose engines. Beyo's wife, who is actually a comic book colorist, made this decision. She felt that the Smurfs could not be yellow, because they might be offensive, not black or red, because red was too aggressive, much less green, because they could not be found in the jungle. So the elves are blue. ”

Travels in Western and Central Europe (131) – House of the Smurfs in Brussels, Belgium

Of course, parents accompany their children to visit the cute Smurfs.

Travels in Western and Central Europe (131) – House of the Smurfs in Brussels, Belgium

Children who grow up with Smurfs and parents are happy.

Travels in Western and Central Europe (131) – House of the Smurfs in Brussels, Belgium

"On the other side of the mountain, on the other side of the sea, there are a bunch of Smurfs..." The thought of this familiar melody always evokes fond memories of childhood.

Travels in Western and Central Europe (131) – House of the Smurfs in Brussels, Belgium

Museum to go in to buy tickets, I do not belong to the blue fans, just in the souvenir area around to see, our tour guide lads chose a 6-piece set, there are 6 different images of the Smurfs, he led the group in Brussels this time, the little blue fans are not worth the trip.

Travels in Western and Central Europe (131) – House of the Smurfs in Brussels, Belgium

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