Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Sunday, September 27, 1953: Snoopy vs. The Yard: The Slide
There's not an awful lot in this neighborhood that doesn't have it in for Snoopy.
That's a good question mark in the second panel. Schulz had a kind of ornate style to his type-inspired iconography: serif Zs, fancy question marks, tapered exclamation points. It's one of the little tells that the simplicity of the rendering is an artistic choice and not a cheat.
I've mentioned before that the top row in a Sunday strip are designed to be removed at an editor's option, say to make more room on a crowded comics page. Usually Peanuts will use these in a throwaway joke or just to lengthen the buildup a little, but here I think it actually harms readability a smidge to excise them. Without the top three panels here, we don't have it established that this is Snoopy's first slide, and without that knowledge his Slide Malfunction seems more like an accident than an element of his lack of slidal* experience.
* Not really a word.
Labels:
klunk,
lucy,
questionmark,
slide,
snoopy
Monday, January 24, 2011
September 26, 1953: That's the way it goes
Second time Charlie Brown has said "That's the way it goes" in a week.
Shermy gets a taste of the lovelorn longing that CB would adopt later. One interesting thing here is the subplot, concerning Snoopy and a Scribble of Ire, which is rather rare in a four-panel strip. It serves as a commentary on the main plot, yes, but it isn't what I'd call important. For the record, dogs don't really make good arm-rests.
Snoopy goes through the Four Stages of Annoyance here: Observation, Recognition, Exasperation and Rejection.
Labels:
charliebrown,
exclamationpoint,
longing,
love,
questionmark,
rejection,
scribble,
scribbleofire,
shermy,
snoopy,
thatsthewayitgoes
Sunday, January 23, 2011
September 25, 1953: Lucy, behind the davenport, with the pop gun
This is one of the few pre-crush strips which deal with both Lucy and Schroeder, and the piano kid isn't even in this one.
Saturday, January 22, 2011
September 23 & 24, 1953: Charlie Brown and Violet, the slow decay of a friendship
September 23:
September 24:
The cracks are showing. In that second strip BTW it's kind of jarring how cocky Charlie Brown is. Look at his posture throughout it; from sleeping, to yarning, to that propped-leg pose. Scribble of ire, indeed.
CB's expression in the last panel is not a chagrimace, but it's a similar expression.
The MIGHTY PEDE informs us that "Cocoanut" is an old-fashioned spelling of the word.
September 24:
The cracks are showing. In that second strip BTW it's kind of jarring how cocky Charlie Brown is. Look at his posture throughout it; from sleeping, to yarning, to that propped-leg pose. Scribble of ire, indeed.
CB's expression in the last panel is not a chagrimace, but it's a similar expression.
The MIGHTY PEDE informs us that "Cocoanut" is an old-fashioned spelling of the word.
Labels:
admiration,
candy,
chagrimace,
charliebrown,
cocoanut,
friendship,
scribbleofire,
violet
Friday, January 21, 2011
Thursday, January 20, 2011
September 21, 1953: NOT FOR ONE MOMENT!
When I was a kid I checked out every Peanuts compilation in our elementary school's library. Some of the jokes I got; almost anything having to do with Snoopy is written pretty broadly. Sometimes I was left scratching my head.
One of the things I didn't get had to do with Lucy's proud claims to be a "fussbudget." Not having ever heard of the term (in fact I wasn't even sure if I was pronouncing it right), I had no way of knowing that Lucy was taking inadvertent pride in an insult. None of the compilations I had read published a strip in which it's revealed that Lucy's mother had called her that, or with a comment from Charlie Brown like the one here tipping off the word's meaning, so I had insufficient context for understanding the strip.
While reading strips like this one makes clear to me the point of these strips, it remains that I have never heard the term "fussbudget" applied in a non-Peanuts context.
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Sunday, September 20, 1953: Photographing Snoopy
We get a lot of funny drawings of Snoopy in this one, as well as establishing the dog's mischievous personality. Bill Watterson would reprise this strip much later, with Calvin in Snoopy's place and Calvin's dad in the role of photographer. I couldn't find a copy of that one on the internet, but one difference between the two approaches to the idea is that Calvin's dad tries to fool Calvin by saying "click" several times, and the strip ends with Calvin's making a funny face; there is no reaction shot at the end.
Labels:
calvinandhobbes,
camera,
charliebrown,
funny,
photography,
snoopy,
sunday
Monday, January 17, 2011
September 19, 1953: The end of the picnic school saga
Concerning school, none of the characters have been shown in school (pre- or real) yet. It's a little weird considering how often Linus sighed over Ms. Othmar, Sally spazzed-out over impending classes and Peppermint Patty fretted about D-minuses. Technically, I think none of the characters are old enough for first grade, or if they are it's just barely.
Labels:
lucy,
nurseryschool,
picnicschool,
school,
violet
Sunday, January 16, 2011
September 18, 1953: Made in Taiwan
Wait, what?! Is Snoopy wearing an ear-wig? And how does he blush through fur? WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU SNOOPY?!
Labels:
charliebrown,
embarassment,
funny,
imitationleather,
patty,
respect,
snoopy,
weird,
whoareyoumerrittstone
Saturday, January 15, 2011
September 17, 1953: Flimsy reason
Charlie Brown and Patty discuss why they like each other. I think this one is fairly interesting for that. How many of us like someone just because they like you back. Is that enough? Should it be? I actually think that yes, it should be, given that the initial liker isn't guilty of any gross defects that would preclude reciprocal liking. (Favorite phrase of the hour: "reciprocal liking.")
Patty's incidental jumping rope here is interesting because the characters are more realistically-proportioned than in the earliest days of the strip. Schulz doesn't have to distort the length of Patty's arms in order to get the rope around her huge, bulbous head, although she still must hold her arms at an angle that looks a little weird when you think about it.
Specifically, in the first panel. Maybe my knowledge on rope-jumping technique is faulty, but most kids don't hold their arms straight out, or let the rope fold in the air like Patty does. Schulz has to cheat it a little. These cheats are not a sign of artistic defeat, quite the opposite: it shows that he's put thought into depicting these weird little figures and how they could participate in typical childhood pastimes.
Chagrimace!
Labels:
art,
chagrimace,
charliebrown,
jumprope,
liking,
patty,
reciprocalliking
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