
Zita the Spacegirl began in 2004 as a Webcomic by Ben Hatke, comprising a series of apparently unconnected online strips featuring the eponymous human girl and her humorous adventures with aliens and robots in outer space. A few of the original strips can still be viewed online here
. Others may still be viewable via the Internet Archive.
Hatke later published a short Zita story, "If Wishes Were Socks", in the graphic anthology Flight Explorer (2008). This was followed by three kid-friendly graphic novels that contextualize the characters. Zita the Spacegirl appeared in 2010, followed by Legends of Zita the Spacegirl in 2012 and The Return of Zita the Spacegirl in 2014. The three books have a self-contained storyline, but end on a blatant Sequel Hook.
In the first book, Zita,, a young Earth girl and her friend Joseph see a strange device fall from the sky. When Zita messes around with it, it opens a portal that takes the two kids to another planet. Joseph gets captured by a Screed, who brings him to a cult that believes he is the key to stopping a meteorite from destroying the planet.
Zita goes on a journey to rescue Joseph and return herself and him back to Earth before the meteor hits the planet, on the way she encounters a Gentle Giant named Strong-Strong, a Pied Piper-esque con artist named Piper, a large flying ball-shaped robot named One, a klutzy and nervous robot named Randy, and a giant mouse named Pizzicato who communicates by printing short messages on paper through the printer on his neck, all who join her in her journey to rescue Joseph and hopefully return home.
Hopefully, it's not too much of a spoiler to reveal that Zita doesn't get home straight away. In book 2, Zita capitalizes on her fame as the planet's savior, but soon discovers that being a hero is far more complicated than she'd expected.
Book 3 opens with Zita on trial for crimes she (mostly) didn't commit, but she soon discovers that being thrown in jail is the least of her worries as some of her friends are in danger and even the planet Earth may not be safe.
In 2016, it was announced that Fox Animation had picked up the movie rights for the Zita trilogy, and films would be produced by Chernin Entertainment. However, with minimal updates since, the movie appears to either be in Development Hell or canceled outright.
Also in 2016, Piper and Madrigal reappeared in Hatke's Mighty Jack (2016), with Zita herself showing up later.
The Webcomics and graphic novels contain examples of:
- Action Girl: Guess who. Also, Madrigal and Robot Zita in Legends.
- Aliens Speaking English: Although there are a few that don't.
- Animate Inanimate Object: Ragpile, who came to life in the dungeons and longs to see the outside world. A throwaway line from Femur implies that he's at least partially biological, though. From the same book, we get some of the rocks (the ones that look like chunks of coal) deep inside the prison planet, which are capable of motion but hide that for unknown reasons.
- One of the web strips
has a sentient alien mailbox, although it might be robotic.
- One of the web strips
- And the Adventure Continues: The end of book 3, after a year has passed after Zita and Joseph have returned to Earth, something crashes nearby them, revealed to be Randy with a jump point attached to his body along with a note from Piper saying "We need you." As Zita reaches for the button, the book ends with "And that...is when my adventures really began."
- Art Shift: This will only be evident if you've seen the early online strips in which Zita had a rounder face and lighter-colored hair. A couple of the early strips were redrawn to match the new style.
- Badass Adorable: Zita, of course.
- Badass Cape: Zita and her robot wannabe.
- Berserk Button: Well, more of an extreme annoyance button, but Piper really doesn't like it when Strong-Strong calls him "Whistle Man", and he's even more annoyed when, later, Robot One picks up on the name.
- Big Bad: The Dungeon Lord in Return.
- Big Damn Heroes: All of the good guys get their moments to shine.
- Big Damn Kiss: Madrigal gives this to Piper in "Return" when he manages to punch out a Screed (despite the hard metal making his knuckles bleed).
- Big "NO!": Piper, when the Screeds show up to capture him in the first book.
- Brought to You by the Letter "S": Zita's costume, sporting a giant black "Z".
- The Bus Came Back: After Zita takes out one that serves as The Dragon in the first book, a whole army of Screed serve as the third book's villains.
- Cliffhanger: The end of Legends sees Zita about to be arrested for crimes she didn't commit. Mostly.
- Colony Drop: The first book has Zita (and Joseph) arrive on the planet when a meteorite is going to land on it in three days. Everyone is either trying to buy their way off-world or, in the Scriptorian's case, trying to destroy the meteor before it lands.
- Crossover: With Mighty Jack later on. A much older Zita tries to help and ends up clashing with one of the protagonists of that story.
- Doomy Dooms of Doom: The space police are called the Doom Squad.
- Early-Installment Weirdness: In the original webcomics, Zita, Randy and One's designs were a little different, as seen here
in Flight Explorer: - Enemy Rising Behind: In Return, Madrigal is too busy watching Glissando save Randy from a Screed to notice one sneaking up behind her.
- Everyone Has Standards: As One says himself when Zita first meets him, he may be designed and built for combat, but even he draws the line at kidnapping children, which is what led to him being imprisoned by his fellow robots.
- Failed a Spot Check: Happens in the first book. Apparently, the guards didn't bother to search Piper when they threw him and Zita into their dungeon, otherwise they might have found his flute and doorpaste that they use to escape.
- Gadgeteer Genius: Piper is a mechanical expert and has created plenty of inventions that have helped him and Zita throughout their adventures. Joseph also becomes this in the third book.
- Gentle Giant: Strong-Strong. He's the first friend Zita makes when she arrives on the new planet and carries her out of a busy crowd.
- Guile Hero: Zita frequently utilizes this trope.
- Heart Symbol: Comically subverted. In this
web strip, Zita meets a small creature that seems to be saying it loves her. In fact it's trying to warn her about a deadly heart-shaped monster that's just sneaked up on her (a Star Heart - a species that also plays a key role in the second graphic novel).- Played straight with some of the notes Mouse uses to communicate with Zita.
- Heroic Sacrifice: The giant mecha defending a planet against the Star Hearts will merge with its pilot irreversibly. Robot Zita chooses to sacrifice herself by piloting it in Zita's place. Previously the mecha had rejected the robot because she was just a hero wannabe, leaving Zita as the only other alternative. It is only when the robot chooses to sacrifice her identity to save Zita that she qualifies as a true hero, and the mecha accepts her instead of Zita.
- The sentient rock containing the jump crystal smashes itself apart in order for Zita to receive the crystal.
- Hero Stole My Bike: Zita's hijacking of a spaceship in Legends; unfortunately for her, she got hit with a heavy dose of Surprisingly Realistic Outcome, and that deed gets her arrested, tried, and jailed.
- Hero with Bad Publicity: In "Legends", Zita was forced to hijack someone's spaceship to try to reunite with her friends, word of the deed, however, did spread quickly, and Zita wound up having police robots frequently chase after her for her theft of a spacecraft.
- Hoist by His Own Petard: The Scriptorians created a weapon that turned out to be Randy to destroy the meteor threatening their planet in the first book. However, it was so powerful it destroyed their city.
- The Homeward Journey: Zita and Joseph's primary goal in the first three books is to get back home.
- Hot Gypsy Woman: G-rated version. Lady Madrigal, traveling space circus owner-performer, and (it turns out) Piper's estranged girlfriend.
- Humongous Mecha: In Legends, Zita and the robot that's imitating her gets to drive one in defence of planet Lumponia. The Lumpies also use smaller steam-powered mecha on the planet's surface.
- Involuntary Dance / Mind-Control Music: Piper's flute-playing can make listeners dance until they drop, or just fall unconscious on the spot.
- Insectoid Aliens: The true form of the Screeds seem to be this, as when Zita defeats one in the first book, a tiny beetle-like creature scurries out of its helmet.
- Ironic Echo: In Legends, when Mouse is reluctant to board a stolen spaceship with Zita, she tells him, "In or out, Mouse." Later on, Madrigal uses the same phrase when Zita is reluctant to board Madrigal's circus ship.
- Living Ship: Madrigal gives Zita a small one in Legends.
- Lost Superweapon: In the first book, One tells Zita the story of the Scriptorian's superweapon that was designed to destroy the incoming meteor but accidentally destroyed an entire city, with the weapon being lost in the process. Later on, Randy reveals that he is the weapon and, after being fixed by Zita, fulfills his purpose and destroys the meteor before it hits the planet.
- Magical Flutist: Piper, obviously given his namesake. His flute can make people briefly dance until they faint.
- Made a Slave: What happened to Joseph after he wasn't returned home. Or so he explains when he reappears. He also picked up enough useful skills as one to Take a Level in Badass.
- Mega Neko: Glissando, Mouse's former partner. He gets shrunk, but it wears off in the last book.
- Narnia Time: Despite apparently spending months in space Zita and Joseph arrive home seemingly just minutes after they left.
- Or Was It a Dream?: Zita and Joseph have a moment of this at the end of Book 3 but later acquire proof that it wasn't.
- Platonic Boy/Girl Heroes: Zita and Joseph start out this way, but are soon separated, though they are later reunited.
- Prophecy Twist: In the first book, the prophecy of Joseph destroying the meteorite is an illustration that shows him firing a large beam of energy from his chest. The scene does play out as the drawing describes, but the perspective only shows half the story: it's actually Randy firing the weapon.
- Rodents of Unusual Size: Pizzicato, or "Mouse" is BIG, about the size of a bear.
- Self-Duplication: Doppelganger in Legends, a diminutive circus performer who can make multiple copies of himself, distinguished by different-colored outfits.
- Shout-Out: One and the design of the H.A.M.B.O. units in general look vaguely similar to Voltorb.
- Shrink Ray: Doom Squad has a robot (or cyborg) called Shrinkey, whose right arm is a shrink ray. Amongst those who get shrunk is Glissando the cat, who goes from being bigger than a lion to the size of a house cat. After a while, he seems to get used to the idea.
- In book 3, the effect wears off, causing Glissando to regain his normal size just when he's needed.
- Situational Sword: The giant fighting robot.
- Stealth Pun:
- In Legends, the Star Hearts have a hive-like society with a queen, though nobody actually calls her The Queen of Hearts.
- Femur in Return is a not-completely-dead skeleton whose finger bones can be used to pick any lock. They're skeleton keys.
- Steampunk: See Humongous Mecha above.
- Take a Level in Badass: Joseph, when reappearing in Return
- Technical Pacifist: Piper, until Madrigal is threatened.
- Theme Naming: Madrigal and her cat, Glissando and Pizzicato (Mouse's real name) are all named after various musical terms.
- Token Evil Teammate: One serves as this for the main group, being the one who resorts to violence at the slightest inconvenience and is the most hungry for battle. That said, he's also the Token Good Teammate of his fellow H.A.M.B.O. units; he was the only one programmed with honor and loyalty.
- "Wanted!" Poster: The cover
◊ of Legends of Zita the Spacegirl shows a couple of personal appearance posters for Zita, with large "Wanted" banners pasted over them.
