Friday, November 5, 2010

June 20, 1953: Peanuts' evolving sense of humor

Peanuts

A different strip would have Snoopy bite down on the bone, have a sight gag of his reaction, and then maybe him chasing Charlie Brown. In fact, Peanuts itself wouldn't really be above that kind of joke right now.

But where this strip shows growth is that Schulz purposely passed up the chance to draw a funny picture of Snoopy biting a rubber bone to make a strip where he's embarrassed because he expected treachery and didn't find it.

Schulz also avoided Talking Head Syndrome (where a strip's joke is entirely dialogue, using art pretty much solely to attribute speech) by giving us good drawings of mortified Snoopy, laughing Charlie Brown and thoughtful Patty.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

June 18, 1953: Lucy in a chase strip

Peanuts

Charlie Brown is enjoying that ice cream a little too ostentatiously, isn't he? That's why this strip is funny.

Although Lucy certainly becomes the most rancorous Peanuts character, this kind of harassment is not really what we think of as her "style," I think.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

June 16-17, 1953: We Love Lucy: WINNAR FOREVAR

June 16, 1953
Peanuts

This is a brilliant strip. Lucy's ludicrous winning streak inflates bizarrely into megalomania, and all Charlie Brown can do is close his eyes in dismay. Sublimely silly!

June 17, 1953
Peanuts

Well at least he's charitable about it. Why should he deny Lucy the experience of winning another game of checkers?

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

June 13 and Sunday, June 14, 1953: The evil side of Charlie Brown

Charlie Brown isn't a very nice kid in these two comics.

June 13, 1953
Peanuts
Patty and Violet's reaction at the end here (including off-screen violence) is a bit exaggerated. I mean, they didn't have to follow CB's suggestions.

Sunday, June 14, 1953
Peanuts
This one is actually a little disturbing, considering that Schulz actually drew the flashbacks of Charlie Brown's antisocial behavior. Violet's reaction here seems quite justified. We can accept Charlie Brown's rueful chagrimace at the end as due to regret over personal failings rather than a "that's the way it goes" kind of resignation.

Is that how Violet fell off her tricycle? Because CB pushed her?

Who really throws lumps of sod at people? Did Schulz choose a clump of earth because it's less injurious than, say, a rock?

Wait a second, did he say plaid ice cream?

June 12, 1953: Gimmie that milk, fool

Peanuts

Setting aside why CB (using "Good Grief" for the second time) feels he needs to obey Lucy's request for his milk.... is she drinking through her nose? Why doesn't the liquid spill out?

(Sorry this is a little late. Blogger likes to sometimes take posts I mark for "scheduled" and set them to "draft" without telling me.)

Sunday, October 31, 2010

June 11, 1953: You DOG You

Peanuts

Snoopy in the first panel looks so serious. Snoopy in the second and third panels is a little weird. Snoopy looks a bit different when seen in three-quarters perspective, I think. His face changes shape a little, becomes more rounded and flatter. Peanuts is so stylized that the characters have what amounts to different designs when seen from different angles.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

June 9, 1953: Violet throws Charlie Brown out again

Peanuts

This strip is another episode of the "Violet evicts Charlie Brown" saga that has been going for some time. At some point, possibly when the art style became more detailed, this stops seeming cute and starts seeming cruel. It's not now because Violet has a change of heart, but eventually her reservations diminish.

Charlie Brown's playing with blocks seems odd here. Although he's represented as being very young, he and his friends more typically play cowboys or spaceships. Blocks are usually used for the (even) younger characters, Lucy and Linus.

Scribble of ire!

Friday, October 29, 2010

Sunday, June 7: More Than You Ever Wanted To Know About Jumping Ropes

Peanuts

Awesome. I think I even like the joke in the lead throwaway panels better than the main strip!

There are shades here of Linus' pontificating a litany of made-up sightings of the Great Pumpkin.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

June 5, 1953: Back when Charlie Brown had self-esteem

Peanuts

I have to admit to feeling this way myself sometimes. I don't usually take Charlie Brown's tack to resolving it however, because... well, for exactly this reason.

In panel two, compared to the door, notice that Charlie Brown seems very small. There is no way he could reach the door handle. To state it plainly, usually the characters are drawn so they wouldn't have to reach up so far to reach doorknobs.

Made a minor edit....

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

June 4, 1953: Charlie Brown No Longer Exists

Peanuts

There is some kind of logical fallacy at work here, although I can't precisely identify it right now. It's the kind of thing I'd say "Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence" to.