Tuesday, November 17, 2020

Calvin & Hobbes and Dennis the Menace

 


This is a cover that I have been meaning to get to for a while.  Dennis I am sure was part of the inspiration for Calvin after all.  I wonder how much more mischief he would have gotten into in his dog, Ruff, spoke to Dennis while nobody was looking (or at least in his imagination).

23 comments:

  1. kevin from new orleansNovember 17, 2020 at 6:56 AM

    Did you know that there is a British Dennis that was created at the same time as the U.S. Dennis? And the British Dennis lives up to his name by beating up classmates, breaking stuff, & creating all kinds of trouble on purpose because it's fun.

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  2. The only prior appearance of Calvin and Hobbes that surpasses this cover-sim is that of STF #1717.

    Way to go, Ross. :-)

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  3. @Kevin: in which case, I shamelessly prefer the American Dennis.

    @Ross: what a great way for the American Dennis to debut here. :-)

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  4. "Two countries divided by a common language." In this case we are divided by Dennises the Menaces. I have to say your US version looks rather un-menacing next to the British one.

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  5. @Cary: #1717 was indeed a great bit of work, but my personal favorite C&H cover is #2522. Even so, I fully agree that this is a long-overdue pairing. I think it'd be interesting to see these guys as classmates to Charlie Brown.

    (In fact, there are a good number of comic-strip kids who could fill out a classroom: Danae Pyle from Non Sequitur, Agnes and Trout from the former's eponymous strip, Jason Fox from FoxTrot, and probably several others. It's too bad Ross isn't so much a fan of those strips, though the curious can check out those and many others at GoComics.)

    @Dave: Ah, that's part of his charm. Dennis Mitchell is all innocent-looking, and even good natured, but he has ways of generating trouble that can put more malicious kids to shame.

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  6. @kevin: I don't know about Ross, but I knew it. There was a plagiarism lawsuit, but the judge concluded that it was just coincidence. It's not as farfetched as it might seem: A mischievous, trouble-making young "menace" is a fairly obvious premise for a comic strip, and "Dennis" would be a good name for such a character, the rhyming scheme would make it easy to remember. So yeah, I'm with the judge on this.

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  8. Oh...and my favorite C&H cover is #2644. They're pretty much all good, though!

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  9. Bob Greenwade's right. The American DTM is not so much a bad seed as a well-meaning-but-accident-prone good seed.

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  10. @Daviticus: You ain't lying. ;-)

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  11. Ross, I know UK comics are outside your usual orbit, but what the Double Dennises facing off?

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  12. Actually, Dave, American Dennis was much more malicious in his first appearances. Check out the Complete Dennis collections they were putting out for awhile. One example: Dennis and a friend are sailing toy boats on a lake, in the background. Up front we see a pair of swans, one of which has a knot in his neck. He tells his friend, "Stay away from the kid in the overalls!"

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  13. Considering how hyper-territorial swans can be in real-life, I'm sure it was just self-defense.

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  14. Wouldn't it be a gas if one of those puddles turned out to be a portal in Sea Monkey-land (in STF #797)?

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  15. On a digressive note: how about if Megaton Man banded together with Dr. Solar, Man of the Atom; the Golden Age Comet (from Archie Comics); and Cyclops of the X-men?

    The could call themselves..."The Super Visors!"

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  16. The American Dennis used to be a well-intentioned kid with no filters and way too much energy. Over the past decade or two, he's changed to a stereotypical sarcastic brat. The old Dennis was more fun.

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  17. #Bob G.: A good thought, but there's a difference. When Solar, Comet, or Cyclops loft their visors, things blow up. When Geordi lifts his visor, he can't see.

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  18. mayube Dennis and Calvin could, with similarly dressed c kids (like bart Simpson), stage an intervention against Elroy Jetson and the comic book version of Richie Rich, dressing them similarly, instead of like "wieners".

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  19. @Anon 10:03 PM: That's #792!

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  20. Thanks, namesake. :-)

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  21. On a slightly more serious note; how about Batman vs. Princess Python?

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