Santa’s Christmas Comic No. 1
Interesting funny animal comics for the time. Some good humorous art. I was going to comment on each story, but as I went on, some similar things kept coming up, so I’ll just comment specifically on a few and then make some general comments.
Supermouse in ‘A Super-Merry Christmas’
Fun story with some original elements. (1) Though if Terrible Tom had guns and bombs and cannons, wouldn’t they be able to take care of all the arctic friends that Supermouse rounded up? Though I can understand why a Christmas bloodbath might not have been the best story option In spite of plot holes galore, Supermouse was probably my favourite of the characters in this comic book. I probably would have liked this story when I was a little kid.
Goofy Gander in ‘Ship-A-Hooey’
Fun in a slapstick sort of way, with a few good one-liners. Would make a funny cartoon with visual gags.
Just a question for you comic historians, though. I’m not familiar with Goofy Gander, but (2) I was wondering how Walt Disney felt about this character when his Goofy seems to have predated this guy. Though I guess it also has that meaning that the gander is a bit goofy, so maybe it’s okay to have two funny animals with the same name. I just thought ‘Goofy’ was a more unique name for two characters than more common names like Mickey or Peter.
Bonny Bunny in ‘Tragic Magic’
This one did make me smile. Always fun when a trick backfires.
Happy Rabbit in ‘Revenge is Sweet’
Fairly involved plot that could fit the category ‘be careful what you wish for’. Interesting how scammers are still using some of the same ploys today, only with further reach on the internet. I’ve received one of those emails about a rich relative in Japan dying, and they will send me the million dollars as long as I provide my bank details. I wonder if those scammers started out by reading Dad’s and Grandad’s copies of Happy Rabbit?
Percy Pig in ‘A Vicious Cycle’
‘Half the time, women baffle me … and the rest of the time they puzzle me’. My husband would probably still say that
Extras
I liked all the extra bits like the Christmas puzzles and board game, though it looks like the little tyke who owned this comic wasn’t so keen on them. I didn’t read the short stories, but they also added a bit extra. It would have been a good value-for-money comic back in the day.
General Comments
(3) This would have come later than the ‘Tom and Jerry’ type comics where it was fine to beat everyone up and do terrible things to each other. I never read those comics, but I remember seeing Tom and Jerry shorts at the movies, and I was never a big fan of those types of cartoons, even when I was a kid. A few of the stories in this book are in that category (e.g., the boss abusing Coocoo), and a lot of the characters are pretty mean to each other even when they’re supposed to be friends (e.g., the girlfriends who dump the boyfriends because they’re not rich or down on their luck; and the friends who hit Merton on the head with a mallet because he’d given his money away). I’m quite happy to read comic book violence where the good guys beat the bad guys, but I’ve never really been a fan of comics where friends, romantic partners and colleagues can also be mean to each other. Okay, I know these are comics and that real people can be mean, just not my favourite kinds of stories. But the art was good and there were some cute tales too. I probably wouldn’t seek out any more of these to read, and I don’t think I would have been crazy about these when I was a kid. That was a later era and I was a bigger fan of the Hanna-Barbera characters.
Thanks for the pick, Robb.
Cheers, QQ
(1) Supermouse was an almost exact clone of Paul Terry's "Mighty Mouse", who, at first, ironically was called "Super Mouse". "SuperMouse" actually started in comic books BEFORE "Mighty Mouse". His whole character was about the downtrodden, weak mice, who were constantly victimized by the much bigger, and more powerful, Cats, finally getting a champion (from among their own ranks), who could defend them and also triumph over the cats (and also get sweet get revenge upon them). That is similar to mice Jerry and Tuffy continuously physically mauling Tom Cat in films and comic books.
Yes, 1952 was significantly after the slapstick-based mainly animation-style violence against Tom was toned way down , and mostly dropped out of the Tom and Jerry comic book stories, which since 1947 or '48, changed mainly to funny, but less harmful, tricks, and embarrassing situations.
(2) Goofy Gander was based on being a "Goofy" (e.g. dull-witted, silly, dizzy, imprudent, innocent) character. It was a nickname, as was Dippy Dawg's nickname, "Goofy". Disney's "Goofy" was a dog, and Ned Pines' was a Gander. So, I think it is hard to justify Pines having stolen a character Disney had copyrighted. I doubt that Disney Worried about Pines' "Goofy Gander", as Pines' character was a side character, who at his highest point of popularity, only had his own regular story feature inside one comic book series (Goofy Comics), but never had his own book, named exactly after him, and including even more than one story featuring him. Not to mention that Disney's series that featured Duck stories sold hundreds of times more issues than pines' did.
(3) We shouldn't be surprised that Ned Pines' books were filled with slapstick action-based stories, which were mainly a string of visual gags, and no decently-thought out plots. Pines was Ben Sangor's son-in-law, whose whole operation, like Sangor's ACG, was built on using Sangor's Studio animators/comic book artists, as not only the story artists, but also the story writers. Almost all Pines' storywriters had previously been in the storyboarding (so-called "story) departments" of the major cartoon studios. Most of them had no training in literature-style writing. So the so-called stories were mainly a bunch of visual gags with no real lines of logic to believable motivations. They were nonsensical, and often come off as insulting to the reader.