Wednesday, January 27, 2010

May 6, 1952: The monster is sighted

Peanuts

This is the first strip in which Lucy does something actively antagonistic against another character (who is not her unseen father). It is also quite a clever little joke on pool ol' Charlie Brown.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Sunday, May 4, 1952: Great Scott! A land mine!

Peanuts

While overall this one is kind of meh, there are some great touches in this one, like CB's reaction to hitting the grate, his goggles, the text on the sign Schroeder hits, and Lucy's determined expression in the third frame, which seems slightly more Lucy-like to my eyes.

Monday, January 25, 2010

May 3, 1952: Charlie Brown is highly suggestible

Peanuts

That is quite the lurid description Violet is giving there. It's like a horror story.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

May 2, 1952: When Schroeder Met Snoopy

Peanuts

I believe Snoopy and Schroeder have been in the same strip before (a Sunday baseball one), but this seems to be the first one in which the two interact.

I suppose we should be thankful that Snoopy isn't a musical prodigy too.

Saturday, January 23, 2010

May 1, 1952: Glub

Peanuts

The inverse of the "girl cares more about Snoopy than she does boy" joke we've seen before.

Friday, January 22, 2010

April 30, 1952: Smaller characters

Peanuts

This strip seems a little under-depicted. Watching Snoopy sliding to a halt in the third panel seems abrupt without seeing him run in the second panel.

Look at the first panel here. The characters viewed from a distance are rendered a little more simply to simulate the increased distance from the reader. Particularly, Lucy's eyes are simple dots instead of circles, making her look a bit more like modern Lucy.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

April 29, 1952: The birth of Charlie Brown's insecurity

Peanuts

We've seen hints of it before, but this is the first one in which Charlie Brown seems actually delighted just to be included with the others', like by default he is some kind of pariah, shunned by all.

This is also the first strip in which Lucy is used as a background character. It might also be the first strip in which Schroeder is used as such. That's an important step towards promoting them to full kid-hood.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

April 28, 1952: Adult word-balloon!

Peanuts

Schulz probably used one of these rarely-seen adult-spoken word balloons due to the difficulties in depicting muted trumpet on the comics page.

Lucy's eyes are growing out of their wide-circled phase slowly.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Sunday, April 27, 1952: That was sensational, Lucy

Peanuts

Lucy refers to herself in the third-person again here. I'm glad she grew out of that. That is not the only other thing, of course, that is different about her here. Between the wide eyes, tendency towards accidents and meek demeanor, there is probably no other character in Peanuts that changes so much between its conception and final version. (Well, except maybe for Snoopy, but that is a question for later....)

I read a lot of Peanuts back in first grade, for our school's library had a good collection of 50s and 60s Peanuts compilations. In a way, these early strips feel more like "real" Peanuts to me than the strips from the 80s and 90s.

I kind of miss that people don't use words like "sensational" in casual conversation these days. Or, if they are, they're not in the conversations that I tend to have.

Monday, January 18, 2010

April 24, 1952: More kite fail

Peanuts

Snoopy exhibits his developing mischievous streak, and Charlie Brown fails at life again. This is a fairly modern strip, except for the art style it wouldn't be out of place in the 60s.

I would just like to call attention to Schulz's question-marks. He drew 'em extra-fancy.