Tuesday, April 6, 2010

August 14, 1952: Schroeder's address

Peanuts

Another of those little facts to file away for use in trivia contests. Schroeder's address is 1770 James Street.

Monday, April 5, 2010

August 11, 1952: Comic strip logic

Peanuts

Well, it makes a kind of sense. Presumably it wouldn't have worked if it hadn't been a toy telephone, or if Lucy had been talking to a person.

Sunday, April 4, 2010

August 9, 1952: HE SPEAKS

Peanuts

The most interesting thing about this strip is that, finally, Schroeder says something more than a word or two, and in English.

Saturday, April 3, 2010

August 8, 1952: Charlie Brown wins one

Peanuts

Is Snoopy actually playing, or is Charlie Brown playing both sides? For the most part the dog has shown mostly dog-like abilities. But if he's not really playing, then why does he seem invested in the game?

Charlie Brown certainly put the game away fast in the last panel.

Friday, April 2, 2010

August 7, 1952: Music humor

Peanuts

You know, I get the feeling that real musicians probably crack bad composer puns all the time.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

June 23, 1978: Happiness is....


It never ceases to amaze me how different the strip looked in the early days. Well, at least he stopped doing those saccharine "Happiness is..." bits.

Monday, March 29, 2010

August 6, 1952: Charles Brown

Peanuts

Almost as if Schulz himself noticed what it looked like when CB preemptively complained about Snoopy's begging for candy a couple days ago, here he does it with a human character who can audibly express her displeasure.

And Violet now, firmly, finally seems to be done with mudpies.

Sunday, March 28, 2010

August 4, 1952: He still can't stand it

Peanuts

Charlie Brown's joy getting stomped on by another, unthinking character is becoming a common theme for strips. Just three days ago Snoopy "fetched" CB's golf ball in play, and Charlie Brown couldn't stand that either.

Could it be that Snoopy's disdain for the candy here results from Charlie Brown's harping and hawing over the idea that Snoopy will beg for it? The dog has some pride after all.

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Sunday, August 3, 1952: I can taste that ice cream now coursing through my veins!

Peanuts

I love the second panel for this one. Simultaneously delicious and disturbing.

Lucy's confused copying of Patty and Violet, to me, are an unexpectedly important part of this strip. It's a mocking echo of Charlie Brown's torment! She is become Nyarlathotep, the Crawling Chaos! Ia! Ia! ...

Oops, sorry about that. I should probably tone down the Lovecraft references, heh.

In the next-to-last panel, it is weird to see the girls hiding from CB's wrath. There isn't even any lead up to it; the girls are suddenly in the background behind those trees. Then in the last panel they're instantly back.

Oh, and how about that look on Lucy's face in the first panel? She really seems to be into that wagon.

Friday, March 26, 2010

August 2, 1952: Lucy Channels Prometheus

Peanuts

Lucy discovers that skill which is forbidden to the very young: the awesome ability to get out of the crib by herself. This is, I think, one of the last strips in which Lucy interacts with her unseen father. Linus is showing up very soon, freeing Lucy for use in other capacities.

Lucy's eyes are still part-way between their evolution from circles with dots inside them to full parenthesis. Of all the major characters in Peanuts, only Lucy, Linus and Rerun have parenthesis around their eyes. This gives them subtly stronger powers of expression than the other characters, since we can always see the assumed corner of their eyes, instead of only when characters are looking in a direction other than they're facing (which produces eyes-as-apostrophes).