Saturday, August 7, 2010

February 7, 1953: Lucy's Fussiness

Peanuts

At this point we've heard Lucy described as a "fussbudget" once, but the only times she's really been fussy are with Charlie Brown, and even then not much.

In the second panel it's unclear that Charlie Brown is actually holding two glasses. The shading makes it look strangely like he has arm hair.

Friday, August 6, 2010

February 6, 1953: Snoopy's Thought Bubbles Return

Peanuts

It's been a few months since Snoopy had thought balloons. They still have the speech balloon tail. (If I remember correctly, one strip so far has had the standard "thought balloon" tail, with all the others having a tapering speech balloon tail.)

The contents of the bubble is more typically Snoopy this time, dissatisfied with the world of dogness.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

February 5, 1953: Schroeder the Alliterative Musician

Peanuts

Sometimes I think Schulz uses Schroeder as a way of subtly revealing his own artistic ambitions. It would have been funny to see Schroeder's opinion of American Idol.

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

February 4, 1953: Schroeder the Ordinary Kid

Peanuts

Nothing to do with music at all! Even at this early date a high percentage of the Schroeder strips concern music in some way, so it's nice to see the kid have normal childhood experiences.

Monday, August 2, 2010

February 10, 1953: Why, you're just dragging a mechanical duck

Peanuts

Another great strip, Schulz is on a roll.

(ACK, didn't mean to post this one right away, it's kind of out of order and my comment doesn't make sense without the other ones right before it. Still, I love the strip!)

February 3, 1953: Charlie Brown Learns the Hard Way

Peanuts

Lucy's arm, and the fist at the end of it, becomes quite a terror in the years to come.

Sunday, November 23, 1952: CTHULHU RISES

Blogger sometimes takes posts I've set to publish and makes them drafts instead, which once in a while results in strips getting overlooked. Sometimes it doesn't matter much, but this strip is incredibly important, so I'm using it even though it's a couple months old by this point:

Peanuts

This seems to be the first act of full-on spite Lucy commits that cannot be explained by familial antipathy or mere childishness. It is an act of pure evil by her, and it's glorious. Look at that little smile on her face in panel six. It's against her favorite punching dummy, too. And Charlie Brown was so happy in the throwaway panels!

We even get that "down on his luck" slanted mouth in the last panel.

Schulz had many, many positive attributes as a cartoonist, but there are a couple of things in these early days he could have used some improvement on. One of them was in varying his phrasing; here, Lucy uses the "slaughter" line twice, which is a bit awkward. This isn't the only strip in which this defect can be seen. As Schulz gains experience writing dialogue I believe these errors eventually go away.

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Sunday, February 1, 1953: Lucy is sarcastic

Peanuts

I love Lucy's deadpan remarks in this one.

Saturday, July 31, 2010

January 30, 1953: Charlie Brown, Jr.

Peanuts

I've seen this strip about a half-dozen times now, and the thing about it that always strikes me is how much like modern Charlie Brown the doll is in the last panel. I always end up wondering if Charles Schulz edited the strip long after its original publication, because with that hat it's a dead ringer for Charlie Brown in his baseball days.

Friday, July 30, 2010

January 29, 1953: GET OUT OF MY HEAD, TELEVISION

Peanuts

The TV has a point I guess. This is a rare strip in which the source of humor comes from outside the characters. While no adult is seen here, one can only guess that an adult wrote that sign and put it on the air.

By the way, it is not true that Peanuts has never pictured an adult figure! We'll see that for ourselves before very long.

Shermy's hair seems darker here than before.