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| | First appearance | "Teddygozilla" | | Portrayed by | Sharon Mann (English voice) | | Information | | Nickname(s) | Einstein, Brainiac | | Age | 13 | | Occupation | Junior high school student, Leader of the Lyoko Warriors | | Family | Michael Belpois (father) | Jeremie Belpois (also spelled Jeremy or Jérémie) is a fictional character from the French animated television series Code Lyoko. Jeremie is voiced by Sharon Mann (who also voices Aelita) in the English version of Code Lyoko. Image File history File links Jeremie-lyoko. ...
Teddygozilla is the premiere episode of the French animated television series Code Lyoko. ...
Sharon Mann is a voice actress whose work includes several video games such as Rama (1996), Dark Earth (1997), Syberia (2002), Egyptian Prophecy: Fate of Ramses (2004), and Indigo Prophecy (2005). ...
Middle school and junior high school cover a period of education that straddles primary education and secondary education and serve as a bridge between them. ...
An outside view of Lyoko. ...
An animated series or cartoon series is a television series produced by means of animation. ...
Code Lyoko is a French animated television series featuring both conventional animation and CGI animation. ...
Sharon Mann is a voice actress whose work includes several video games such as Rama (1996), Dark Earth (1997), Syberia (2002), Egyptian Prophecy: Fate of Ramses (2004), and Indigo Prophecy (2005). ...
Code Lyoko is a French animated television series featuring both conventional animation and CGI animation. ...
Description Jeremie is the brains of the group (as he is occasionally called "Einstein" and "brainiac"). He is 13 years old (after the episode "Franz Hopper"), in grade 9, 4.82' tall, and weighs 68.3 pounds (31 kilograms). âEinsteinâ redirects here. ...
Brainiac may mean: Brainiac, a common modern term used to describe someone exceedingly smart in a certain field. ...
On Earth, Jeremie wears a light blue turtleneck sweater and khaki capris. He also has blue shoes and round glasses. He wears dark blue pajamas when he goes to sleep. In season 4, his appearance changes, he now wears a red/brown turtleneck sweater and light brown pants with blue lines along the side—basically a recolored version of his original outfit. Still, his identifiable color in most respects is light blue. A jumper from Marks & Spencer A sweater (also called sweatshirt, pullover, jumper, and jersey) is a relatively heavy garment intended to cover the torso and arms of the human body (though, in some cases, sweaters are made for dogs and occasionally other animals) and typically to be worn over a...
Capri pants (often just called capris) are a style of trousers worn during the summer. ...
Look up Pajamas in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
For other uses, see Sleep (disambiguation). ...
A jumper from Marks & Spencer A sweater (also called sweatshirt, pullover, jumper, and jersey) is a relatively heavy garment intended to cover the torso and arms of the human body (though, in some cases, sweaters are made for dogs and occasionally other animals) and typically to be worn over a...
For other uses, see Blue (disambiguation) Blue is one of the three primary additive colors; blue light has the shortest wavelength range (about 420â490 nanometers) of the three additive primary colors. ...
Jeremie has never been seen on Lyoko in a 3-D virtual form (he appears in a 2-D virtual form in the episode "Ghost Channel"), though he does have one. Both Odd and Ulrich described his appearance as "ridiculous". Jeremie swore never to go back after first testing the form, and the only reason he went was to ensure he would never be taken over by Xana again, so he may never be seen in it. Currently, the symbol on the back of Jeremie's Lyoko ID card has not been seen. The front of his ID card is simply a picture of his regular, 2-D face, and has a different color scheme than the others. An outside view of Lyoko. ...
Odd Della Robbia is a fictional character in the French animated television series Code Lyoko. ...
Information Age 13 Occupation Junior high school student, Lyoko Warrior Family Mr. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Discussion Jeremie is attracted to Aelita despite her initially assumed virtual nature, finding her innocence charming. This attraction is reciprocated by Aelita. In fact, when she is materialized on Earth (in the episodes "Code: Earth" and "False Start"), he even starts romancing her. Aelita and Odd in the scanner room. ...
Jeremie can be very overprotective of Aelita, which sometimes annoys and angers her. In "Déjà Vu", he asked her to stay put so he could escort her to the factory. She responded by saying she was capable of going there by herself. There are also numerous smaller incidents when he tried to keep her out of danger despite the consequences it would have for others. Also, his position as leader can sometimes go to his head, making him rather stubborn, untrusting of others, and impulsive. For example, in "Temptation" he is unwilling to listen to anyone else with regards to the return trips, though this was due in part to his irritability from using the return trips to increase his intelligence. In "Déjà Vu", he orders Aelita to hand over the interface controls to him. When she doesn't, he orders Ulrich and Yumi to drag Aelita out of Carthage out of concern for her safety. They don't comply, of course, instead dealing with the Mantas while she searches through the interface. In the French animated television series Code Lyoko, one of three important places in the show is the factory, which houses the supercomputer that contains Lyoko. ...
The affection that Jeremie feels for Aelita, despite it being of good intentions, can sometimes cloud his thinking and judgement. For example, in the episode "The Girl of the Dreams", a girl named Taelia that looks just Aelita when materialized showed up in class. Jeremie was convinced, wrongly, that she was Aelita. Aelita had been trapped within a Guardian the entire time, which prevented communication between her and the rest of the group. Taelia was rude and mouthy (referring to Jeremie's and Odd's comments about Lyoko as "pick-up lines"), and ended up calling the police on Jeremie after he took her to the factory. Aelita was able to deactivate the tower and trigger a return trip before the cops could drag him away. Afterwards, Jeremie tried to act like he had never mistaken the two in the first place, even saying the others mistook the two. This is a list of secondary characters in the French animated television series Code Lyoko. ...
This is a list of monsters seen in the French animated television series Code Lyoko. ...
Odd Della Robbia is a fictional character in the French animated television series Code Lyoko. ...
The outside of a tower with the white aura from the third season onwards A tower is an object within the virtual world of Lyoko in the French animated television series Code Lyoko. ...
In the French animated television series Code Lyoko, time travel is used to repair any damage caused by Xana and to protect the secret of Lyoko. ...
Despite the encouragement from his father and the rest of the group, Jeremie may be somewhat lacking in self-confidence, especially when his participation in physical education is concerned. In "Temptation", he built a machine designed to increase his intelligence, even though he's already quite intelligent. In the first season, he told Aelita (several times) that he wonders if he's really "up to the job" (referring to her materialization program). She reassured him that he was. Physical education (PE) is the interdisciplinary study of all area of science relating to the transmission of physical knowledge and skills to an individual or a group, the application of these skills, and their results. ...
Aelita and Odd in the scanner room. ...
Skills Jeremie acts as the coordinator for the group throughout the series, planning their missions and dealing with any unexpected bugs that might pop up. From the terminal in the lab, he can monitor their progress in Lyoko and warn them of any incoming threats. In a continuing effort to shut down Xana, Jeremie uses most of his free time in the first season trying to find a way to free Aelita from the supercomputer. An outside view of Lyoko. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
In the second season, he creates vehicles that enable faster travel in Lyoko, as well give a tactical advantage to those piloting them. He also worked on an anti-virus to remove Aelita's link to the supercomputer so the group could finally shut down the supercomputer and end Xana's threat to the real world, though in the end she was freed before he was able to do so. Jeremie is the only one that is fully-versed in all the supercomputer's functions (probably due to his innate skill in using it). Aelita has a similar amount of training, but is not nearly as capable with it as he is. The other three have taken over Jeremie's position temporarily, with less than spectacular results. Almost every incident featured some unforeseen problem. Ulrich, however, has activated two return trips without any trouble. The first time he used Jeremie's manual. He was guided over the phone by Jeremie the second time. Jeremie's experience in Lyoko is limited. In the episode "Frontier", he tried to enter Lyoko to apologize to Aelita in person for a recent fight they had. Yumi ran the supercomputer to send him there, but made a data capture error and trapped him in a virtual limbo. He was eventually rescued through the combined efforts of the group. In "Ghost Channel", he successfully entered Lyoko to rescue Odd, Ulrich, and Yumi from captivity by Xana, but he appeared as he does in the real world. Finally, in "Mister Pück", he entered Lyoko in order to build up some resistance to Xana's possessing ghosts. He was never actually shown inside Lyoko in this case, but his performance there was suggested to be nothing special, as it is implied that he had trouble with a pair of Megatanks. After this trip, he swore never to return to Lyoko, citing the fact that he'd "never be able to hack it." His appearance in Lyoko was described by Odd and Ulrich to be "ridiculous." In the season 4 episode "Dog Day Afternoon", it is implied through dialogue that he also encountered some Kankrelats and promptly ran away from them out of fear. An outside view of Lyoko. ...
Odd Della Robbia is a fictional character in the French animated television series Code Lyoko. ...
Information Age 13 Occupation Junior high school student, Lyoko Warrior Family Mr. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Jeremie's experiments
The first Marabounta (center), surrounded by the spheres it created. In the second season, Jeremie has used information from Franz Hopper's diary and some of the more powerful functions of the supercomputer to do various experiments. Because of his lack of experience and the complicated nature of the information in the diary, his experiments often backfired and caused problems for the group. Image File history File links Marabounta_image. ...
Image File history File links Marabounta_image. ...
Franz Hopper in the lab. ...
His first experiment was the Marabounta, which was created with information from Franz Hopper's diary. It was meant to help the group fight Xana. It worked well at first, devouring every one of Xana's monsters with lethal efficiency. Unfortunately, it negated its own usefulness when it detected Aelita's link to the supercomputer and mistook her for one of Xana's monsters. When Odd fired upon it to save her, it went haywire and tried to devour all of Lyoko, starting with the Forest. Xana had to help them destroy it, though it was only concerned because it needed Aelita's memories. This is a list of monsters seen in the French animated television series Code Lyoko. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Odd Della Robbia is a fictional character in the French animated television series Code Lyoko. ...
An outside view of Lyoko. ...
The second experiment he tried was a device he built that increases intelligence with each return trip (according to a video diary made by him that Aelita hacked into). It worked, but negated its own usefulness by making him careless. It also made him irritable and almost hateful towards his friends, even Aelita. His carelessness caused him to do all of his calculations incorrectly, making his progress worthless. It also caused physical and mental damage with repeated use. This manifested itself as a recurring dream in which Jeremie was walking, then running, down a long white corridor. As he ran, darkness began to engulf the hallway, eventually covering everything in sight, except for a white flash of light at the end of the corridor. It eventually left him in a sleep-like state, due to the damage to his mind. It was only through Yumi's pleading that he found a way out of the darkness and woke up from his dream. After the ordeal, he destroys the machine and swears off using the diary, knowing that its mysteries are beyond his understanding. In the French animated television series Code Lyoko, time travel is used to repair any damage caused by Xana and to protect the secret of Lyoko. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
In another experiment, Jeremie learned how to activate towers like Xana. His activated towers turn green instead of Xana's trademark red (this is slightly ironic, as green is the color opposite of red). He can use these to create ghosts similar to Xana's. The ghosts he creates increase the abilities of those they possess but don't control them. Forced to test this ahead of schedule due to the possessed Yolande Perraudin, the school nurse, kidnapping Aelita, he tested it on Odd, who volunteered. This was actually his most successful experiment, but he lost control of it to Xana after a short time. Once Xana had control of it, it reversed the ghost's effect to cause it to drain all of Odd's energy, which would have resulted in Odd's death had Aelita not deactivated the tower in time. The outside of a tower with the white aura from the third season onwards A tower is an object within the virtual world of Lyoko in the French animated television series Code Lyoko. ...
This is a list of secondary characters in the French animated television series Code Lyoko. ...
In the episode "Revelation", Jeremie activated another tower in an attempt to decipher Franz Hopper's diary. Xana had planned for this, and replaced Odd with a polymorphic clone. The clone was then sent to Lyoko. As the tower deciphered the data, Xana attempted to take it over. Xana's attempt combined with the sheer volume of data being deciphered caused the system to lock, leaving Aelita and Jeremie unable to stop the process. On top of that, the tower was still linked to the restricted access portion of the supercomputer. If Xana succeeded in taking it over, not only would the diary be deleted, but all the data pertaining to the outfits, weapons, skills, vehicles, and the materialization program would be deleted, too. The polymorphic clone managed to devirtualize Yumi, but was then defeated by Ulrich. Ulrich was then devirtualized by a Tarantula. It seemed as if Xana would succeed, but Franz Hopper took over the tower to prevent that from happening. Franz's taking over of the tower also enabled Jeremie to complete the decoding of his diary. Aelita and Odd in the scanner room. ...
This is a list of monsters seen in the French animated television series Code Lyoko. ...
Information Age 13 Occupation Junior high school student, Lyoko Warrior Family Mr. ...
This is a list of monsters seen in the French animated television series Code Lyoko. ...
Jeremie ran two more experiments in the third season to further benefit the team. The first experiment was in "Triple Trouble". Jeremie programmed the ability to teleport for Odd who was, at the time, complaining over his lack of special powers. While the ability proved successful, it left copies of Odd in the places where he teleported from. After trying it twice, Jeremie devirtualized Odd to go over what went wrong, but ended up devirtualizing his clones as well, leaving the group with a total of three Odds. Jeremie later recombined them through virtualization. Although he later fixed the program after a return trip, Odd decided against Jeremie readding the ability, believing himself to be strong enough. This article is about the satellite communications facility. ...
In "Nobody in Particular" Jeremie had begun working on a program that would enable the gang to virtualize into Carthage directly. On his first run of the program, Ulrich was sent to test the program, but a bug in the procedure left Ulrich's mind in a noncorporeal form while his body was sent to Lyoko and possessed by Xana. It was later recovered through the scanners. After Xana finished deleting all four sectors of Lyoko in "Double Trouble", Jeremie had finally perfected the program and was able to send the group to Carthage directly in "Final Round". Unfortunately, the destruction of Sector 5 and the realm of Lyoko proved this to be a temporary success until Carthage's recreation. During the fourth season, Jeremie sucessfully restored every sector to working order by the episode "Opening Act". He also continued working with the towers, learning how to fight off Xana's control of the towers by using energy from Carthage. In "Skidbladnir", Jeremie and Aelita had also began working on a virtual submarine that would allow the gang to track Xana in the Digital Sea. After phase one (the actual creation of the ship), the group had until four o' clock the following day to launch it, otherwise it would collapse into itself. Xana also attempted to destroy it, but the ship was finished and the group christened it Skidbladnir. Jeremie later managed to create a program that used all four Way Towers to reinforce the Skid's shields if it came under attack. He continued to upgrade the Skid later, including modifying his Superscan program to locate additional Replikas in the Digital Sea. In Norse mythology, SkÃðblaðnir (Often Anglicized as Skidbladnir) is the ship of Freyr. ...
After the group encountered the first Replika, Jeremie began work on a new program known as Translation, allowing the group to materialize on Earth in their Lyoko forms directly from the Skid, enabling them to destroy the supercomputers housing the Replikas. He completed the program just a few episodes later.
William's Clone In "Double Take", Jeremie created a clone of himself so he could avoid getting in trouble with his teachers for missing classes and would have time to work on fixing Lyoko. However, the clone possessed a few flaws in its character, actually trying to romance Yumi. The clone was later taken over by Xana after a struggle between Jeremie and the possessed William over control of the tower that created the clone. After this, Jeremie created another clone, this one of William, to keep Jim and Principal Delmas from being suspicious of what happened to William. Like the clone before him, that clone also had flaws, such as a lack of basic comprehension (In "Wreck Room", when interviewed by Milly and Tamiya about how winning his election to the Kadic recreational room supervisor was a good example of democracy, he responds with, "Democracies? Who's he? I thought it was me who won this time.") and was basically an idiot in most regards. In "Dog Day Afternoon", Jeremie added an extra layer of security to the tower that kept the clone active. In "A Lack of Goodwill", he added some new programs to enhance the clone's intelligence, though it still had problems with its learning curve, imitating Odd by using a fork to launch a glass into the air. However, after the clone accidentally told Milly and Tamiya about the supercomputer and Xana, it held its own in one-on-one combat against the Xana-controlled William when he tried to destroy the supercomputer. Though its efforts were unable to prevent William from getting to the lab and shutting off the cooling system and the tower that controlled the clone, it did manage to stall him long enough for the others to return to the factory, allowing Aelita to reactivate the system. After reversing time, Jeremie removed the programs he'd added and admitted he'd found them in the supercomputer. He also stated his beliefs that these programs had been used in creating Xana. Despite insisting that the clone was just a program and could never develop real feelings, the final scene seems to suggest otherwise, as the clone nearly repeats its earlier action with the fork and glass, but stops and gives the group a grin and a thumbs-up.
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