Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Sunday, January 30, 1933: Tum De Tum Te Da Te Dum ♫
Read this strip at gocomics.com.
Put a crayon in Lucy's hand and the world is her kitty. Comic characters are susceptible to manias that would get real people committed. Can't you just imagine a Batman villain whose schtick was drawing lines between dots? "The Connector." It can't be any less silly than the Riddler, whose gimmick is providing clues by which he can be caught.
Every once in a while Schulz allows himself a metajoke. The strips in which people make fun of the size and shape of Charlie Brown's head are among these ("Is that a beach ball?"), as are the ones where Charlie Brown can't hide behind a tree because his head is too wide. One strip Schroeder even threatened to put in a transfer to a different comic strip. The last panel here is another such joke.
Some time later, Lucy will ask Charlie Brown if he thinks she has beautiful eyes, and, perhaps risking a pounding, Charlie Brown says they look just like little dots of india ink.
The first frame here is one of Schulz's more abstract lead panel designs.
Saturday, July 30, 2011
Week of August 2-7: Linus is very good at building card houses
This week, there is no sign of Patty, Shermy or Violet.
The existence of fingerprints is a little convenient, don't you think?
In 1954 Linus would be called a prodigy. Now, he'd probably get labeled autistic, or diagnosed with ADD. Although his ability to build things like card houses so quickly, or gravity-defying stacks of blocks, borders on the magical.
The first baby in the strip was Schroeder, who developed into a musical genius. Here we kind of see Schulz taking the same steps with Linus, although his personality became rather different.
Do they have little flourishes at the edges of the ridges? Do the whorls form a delightful swooping pattern?
Be careful what you beg for, Snoopy. I hope Linus didn't go back to sucking on that thing afterward. Notably, we don't actually see Snoopy link the thumb; we infer it from his reaction.
Charlie Brown seeks to branch out into adventure comics. Adventure comic strips are a sad and moribund category any more so some of you might not be familiar with them. The real money now, such as it is, is in comic magazines*, with their X-people and their Superfolk and their Batguys and their....
* I've decided: I'm reviving this usage. Who's with me?
Silly Lucy, everyone knows only the index finger contains a gun barrel.
Saturday, June 4, 2011
Sunday, March 21, 1954: Eight stages of grief
Read this strip at gocomics.com.
Beginning with panel eight:
1. Shock
2. Disbelief
3. Confirmation
4. Anger
5. Blankness
6. Taking off your shirt(?)
7. Wide-mouthed frowning
8. Sighing
They might not be the official stages, but they work for Charlie Brown.
This is possibly the most directly hostile act so far seen in Peanuts. It would be worthy of Lucy. There are no extenuating circumstances, and nothing sets Patty off, yet she accomplishes her self-appointed task with relish. It's kind of out of character. Even when she's part of the team act with Violet against CB, their methods are less overt.
Switch the gender roles here and the strip would turn out quite different. Even this early, it doesn't seem to be in Charlie Brown's nature to do something this mean. It's the kind of thing Calvin might do to Susie, but not without some form of judgmental comeuppance from the cartoonist.
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Sunday, February 28, 1954: Willful Little Lucy
Read this strip on gocomics.com.
How much of this is meant to depict Lucy herself being stubborn, and how much just a very young kid rebelling against her parents? I think often, in Peanuts, cases of the latter evolve over time into cases of the former. That is, strips intended as general observations end up getting sorted by character, and so the kids accrete characteristics over time and in this way become complex.
In the lead-in panels, Schulz shows Lucy being contented with a word balloon containing a musical note. I suppose it's meant to represent her humming. It's not the first time he's done this.
Saturday, April 2, 2011
December 14, 1953: Lucy goes that extra mile
Read this comic at gocomics.com.
In this strip, we begin to see that Schulz is becoming more careful about showing emotions. It's not just the hilariously shaken image of Linus in the last panel, it's that we can't get a good read on why Lucy did this. She betrays no satisfaction or joy throughout the process. It's like she's just doing what her mother told her like a good little girl. But why is she sneaking up on her blissful brother? Why is she shouting at him? Later on the thrust of whole strips turn on whether a character's mouth was drawn with a slightly upturned stroke.
This is the third strip to use the "somersault" visual shorthand for violent disruptive motion. The first time was in the first football strip (which has still yet to become a yearly thing). The second time was, interestingly, another instance involving Lucy shouting near Linus.