Showing posts with label toons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label toons. Show all posts

26 May 2008

[toons] Speed Racer Then & Now #1: Speed & Trixie

1573. One of the true joys of the new Speed Racer movie is the incredibly apt casting. I don't think they could have done any better.


Emile Hirsch was very believable as Speed, and brought the right amount of boyish sincerity to the role. Also, the physical resemblance is very uncanny.


The M on Speed's car and his helmet, by the way, are reputed to stand for the M in Mach (as in Mach 5). That's the American story. The Japanese story (the original version) is that the M stood for Mifune, the family name in the Japanese Mach GoGoGo, and the character's name is Go Mifune (go here being a homonym for the Japanese number 5, which is the number on the car, of course. Wheels within wheels.


Christina Ricci, to us one of the proverbial women who could make a burlap sack look glamorous, is note-perfect as the perky, strong, and capable Trixie:



Perfect, as far as we're concerned. And she not only flew the Mach 5's spotter copter (just as she did in the cartoon) but she also did some dead brilliant driving. In other words: our kinda woman.


Her name in Mach GoGoGo is Michi Shimura, and the anime version had an M on her blouse, standing for her first name.


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27 March 2008

[art, toonage] Funky Winkerbean: Well, My Head Asplode ...

1447.  Does anyone around here remember the hi-school comic strip Funky Winkerbean? It hasn't run around here in the Portland market for ... what, twenty years or more?

I read it and remember it as one of those eternally-unchanging comic strips, like Blondie, where the characters were funny for a very long time, but since they never changed, the jokes slowly got old and, just like a lot of people whose graphic tastes evolve, eventually, I put away my childish things.


I also remember the artist's (Tom Batiuk) recognizable style across more than one or two spinoffs. Crankshaft (the original curmudgeonly senior-citizen school bus driver) we enjoyed during our time in Corvallis, where it ran in the Gazette-Times. There was also a strip set at a television station called Chuck Darling, IIRC.


Well, as I mentioned, I moved on from ol' Funky and by the by the strip was dropped from The Big O. Didn't think a thing about it. But now, for some weird potrzebie reason, I hit the strip's website.


Well, the first shock was that Funky still had a website. I'd assumed that the strip just kind of rode off into the sunset.


Secondly, well, Funky's gone all adult on us. Kind of like a soap-opera-y Luann. All original characters are fortysomething adults with real lives of triumph and defeat now:



  • Funky Winkerbean (pictured above right) has been married and divorced and married again, is a recovering alcoholic, and now co-own's Montoni's Pizza (where they all hung out as kids).

  • Cindy Summers, his first wife, is a telejournalist with ABC.

  • Les, the geeky, dorky hall monitor (remember the primitive machine-gun he had bolted to his hall monitor desk?) has become a history and English teacher as Westview High. He has a daughter and a rather cool Van Dyke beard.

  • Les's wife, Lisa, fought breast cancer twice, losing the final bout. Les now raises his child as a single parent.

  • Mr Dinkle, the "worlds greatest band director", much as BD in Doonesbury no longer has that silly helmet on, no longer wears his band regalia 24/7/365 (of course, it may be because he's retired, but still).


The style has grown up, just as other funny-page staples have. The characters look more interesting. The eye wants to linger a bit more. Paraphrasing Charles Schulz, for a comic to really succeed, to really be good, it has to look interesting. You have to like the way the characters are drawn. The characters are much more likably drawn, with just enough realistic touches to be believable, though not quite going as far as the paradigm-shifting redesign of the Archie Andrews universe via Betty and Veronica back in 2007.


After getting over my initial head asploding, I've decided I quite like it. It's nice to see actual time being represented in a comic strip – that's why we like Luann and Safe Havens (actually, we think Bill Holbrook is genius anyway, but that's a sidetrack).


Sit down, strap in, hold on ... if you remember Funky, maybe it's time you got reacquainted.


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12 February 2008

[sf, teh_funny] Torchwood Cuuute!

1357. Of those who know of the 'Adult' Doctor Who spinoff, Torchwood, there are three sorts of whom we're aware: Those who loves it, those who hates it, and those who will never watch it because they aren't either Who fans right now or don't care to pay for television service.

At one time The Wife™ was a major Who fan, but this was back in the Tom Baker reign. Altho a group calling itself the Whovian Alliance of Salem did result in some friendships which sustain to this day, so it was definitely not a bad thing.


Anyway! One of the more amusing things I've found about Torchwood is, more than its name merely being an anagram of Doctor Who (this was a case of the working title becoming the title, something of a fashion these days), but the arguments between the lovers and haters of the Torchwood team.


So it's perhaps inevitable that the tension between the two would provide the ironic funnay that is "Torchwood Babiez". It's well-done, it's well-drawn, the artists have hit the right notes (especially the kid's playhouses and landscapes that look one way to the reader and the fun way to the kid's imagination), and even non-Torchwooders can get the joke after a little orientation.


They're posting it in a LJ here. Funny!


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