Calvin and Hobbes Comics About Socially Awkward Kid

Page 4 of 5 [ 78 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1, 2, 3, 4, 5  Next

thumbhole
Sea Gull
Sea Gull

User avatar

Joined: 5 Feb 2014
Age: 43
Gender: Female
Posts: 230

16 Sep 2016, 2:22 am

DataB4, if you have Netflix, there is a documentary on there called Dear Mr Watterson. It is about Calvin and Hobbes. You might enjoy listening to it. The man who drew the comic is called Mr Watterson so the title is a reference to him. Some of the documentary is obviously visual but there is a lot of talking as well so you would be able to get most of it.

Although I am not blind, I have experience of listening to Netflix movies instead of watching them, because I often like to watch Star Trek while doing my housework. I put my bluetooth headphones on while I am doing the housework and because I am looking at the housework I am doing, I can't be looking at the screen as well. So I just listen instead. So I have personal experience of the fact that it is fairly possible to listen to TV programmes rather than watch them, and still get a very good idea of what is going on.

I see from your profile that you are a Star Trek fan as well. I have "listened" to several seasons of Star Trek Voyager and wasn't actually watching much of it at the time because I had to be focussing on my housework so I couldn't look at the screen, but I still managed to figure out the plot because the script writing is often so bad that the characters use words to describe what they are doing, rather than letting the action speak for itself. In scriptwriting terms this is deemed to be a bad thing because there is a cardinal rule for sighted scriptwriters that says "show, don't tell" when writing scripts. This rule implies that whenever possible, things should be communicated by means of action rather than words. However, from the point of view of blind viewers or viewers who can't be looking at the screen because they are doing their housework, it is really good when scriptwriters are so bad that they do not follow this rule properly and they make the characters describe everything they are doing using words, because it means that you can understand what is happening without having to see it. Example: somebody on Star Trek disables a force field. Then the character announces dramatically with dialogue: "I've disabled the force field". This dialogue is redundant because what they are saying has already been shown with actions, and the other characters saw them do it, so there is no need for them to state what they have just done. However, the fact that the characters keep describing their own actions is nonetheless very helpful when you are listening to Star Trek instead of watching it! :)

End off-topic deviation. Resume discussion of Calvin and Hobbes. 8)



DataB4
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 7 May 2016
Age: 38
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,744
Location: U.S.

16 Sep 2016, 4:49 pm

I don't think Calvin really needs a reason to hammer the nails into the coffee table, other than liking tools and hammering. Maybe he was copying one of his parents using tools. :) Anyway, Calvin is definitely very literal in his understanding of grown-up questions and logic. :)

Re: Star Trek scriptwriters explaining everything as it happens, it's helpful for people who aren't visually seeing everything, and also for people who may not always understand the complex world of sci fi. OK, maybe it is a bit overkill though. :)



Kuraudo777
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 20 Sep 2015
Posts: 14,743
Location: Seventh Heaven

22 Sep 2016, 9:08 am

^Have you heard of the Star Trek spoof movie Galaxy Quest? It's one of the funniest movies ever. I highly recommend it!


_________________
Quote:
A memory is something that has to be consciously recalled, right? That's why sometimes it can be mistaken and a different thing. But it's different from a memory locked deep within your heart. Words aren't the only way to tell someone how you feel.” Tifa Lockheart, Final Fantasy VII


DataB4
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 7 May 2016
Age: 38
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,744
Location: U.S.

22 Sep 2016, 10:08 am

Yes, I enjoyed Galaxy Quest very much too. I watched it years ago, so maybe I'll rewatch it at some point. Right now though, I'm slowly getting through Doctor Who because I have a couple of friends who are big fans.



Kuraudo777
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 20 Sep 2015
Posts: 14,743
Location: Seventh Heaven

22 Sep 2016, 3:51 pm

^Which season are you at? Do you have a favourite character or episode so far? :D


_________________
Quote:
A memory is something that has to be consciously recalled, right? That's why sometimes it can be mistaken and a different thing. But it's different from a memory locked deep within your heart. Words aren't the only way to tell someone how you feel.” Tifa Lockheart, Final Fantasy VII


lostonearth35
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 5 Jan 2010
Age: 50
Gender: Female
Posts: 11,896
Location: Lost on Earth, waddya think?

21 Mar 2017, 11:40 pm

I have a collection of Calvin and Hobbes books and I wish I knew how to upload my favorite strips, but I can describe them fairly well:

There is one that is just one panel instead of the usual four panels the daily strip has. It shows Calving sitting up in bed and it is very late at night. Calvin has a set of bongo drums on his lap and is holding a bicycle horn. His parents are both up and in their PJ's, glaring angrily at him from the doorway, implying that he had been making loud noises with the horn and the bongos that woke them up. Calvin looks annoyed and says to them, "Jeez, do I have to have a reason for EVERYTHING?"

Obviously, his parents, or one of them at least, demanded to know *why* Calvin was up playing bongos and tooting a horn in the middle of night, and he really didn't have a reason or couldn't think of a good one, so that was his reply. But you can pretty much tell just by the scene in that one panel that they had just asked him, so only showing Calvin's reply makes the strip a lot more funny.



auntblabby
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 12 Feb 2010
Gender: Male
Posts: 113,731
Location: the island of defective toy santas

21 Mar 2017, 11:45 pm

sounds like perfectly reasonable behavior to me ;)



Kuraudo7777
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 12 Jan 2017
Gender: Female
Posts: 14,959
Location: Seventh Heaven

22 Mar 2017, 1:36 pm

I had forgotten all about this thread. I had no idea it was still going! :o :D


_________________
Quote:
"A memory is something that has to be consciously recalled, right? But it's different from a memory locked deep within your heart. Words aren't the only way to tell someone how you feel...As long as I'm with you, as long as you're by my side, I won't give up even if I'm scared." Tifa Lockheart, Final Fantasy VII


auntblabby
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 12 Feb 2010
Gender: Male
Posts: 113,731
Location: the island of defective toy santas

22 Mar 2017, 3:21 pm

bumpers are a good thing IMHO :wtg:



DataB4
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 7 May 2016
Age: 38
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,744
Location: U.S.

27 Mar 2017, 6:42 am

:) Thanks for reviving the thread, Lostonearth35. "Do I have to have a reason for everything?" is such a cliche phrase for parents to use, so now they get it used right back on them. :P

Hi Auntblabby. It's been a while. Yeah, very reasonable activity. :P

Hi Kuraudo. :) Since it's been so long, the comics are really funny again.



Kuraudo7777
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 12 Jan 2017
Gender: Female
Posts: 14,959
Location: Seventh Heaven

27 Mar 2017, 11:55 am

Image
This strip is one of the earlier ones.

In the first panel, Calvin and Hobbes are sitting at the kitchen table, with a shiny toaster and a plate with bread in front of them. Calvin says, 'Wanna see something weird?" Hobbes looks interested.
In the next panel, Calvin puts the bread in the toaster as he continues talking, "Watch. You put bread in this slot and push down the leaver."
In the third panel, the toaster goes 'Ding!' and the very toasted bread leaps out as if spring propelled, as Hobbes watches. Calvin says, "Then, a few minutes later, toast pops out!"
In the final panel, Hobbes is peering into the toaster in confusion as he says 'Wow. Where does the bread go?" Calvin replies, "Beats me. Isn't that weird?"

[I hope I did an adequate job of describing it... :( ]


_________________
Quote:
"A memory is something that has to be consciously recalled, right? But it's different from a memory locked deep within your heart. Words aren't the only way to tell someone how you feel...As long as I'm with you, as long as you're by my side, I won't give up even if I'm scared." Tifa Lockheart, Final Fantasy VII


DataB4
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 7 May 2016
Age: 38
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,744
Location: U.S.

27 Mar 2017, 4:55 pm

^Cute one Kura, thanks. :)



Kuraudo7777
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 12 Jan 2017
Gender: Female
Posts: 14,959
Location: Seventh Heaven

27 Mar 2017, 5:45 pm

Image
Here's a short yet amusing one.
Panel 1: Calvin is outside in the snow, with his snowsuit and hat on. Susie is marching up to him, furious, and says: "You sent me a hate-mail valentine and a crummy bunch of dead flowers!! !"
Panel 2: Susie then says, "So here's a valentine for YOU, you insensitive clod!' and throws a snowball at Calvin so hard that it knocks his hat off and literally knocks him off his feet, with a 'POW!' sound effect.
Panel 3: Susie, while walking away, thinks, "A valentine and flowers! He likes me!' with two little hearts over her head. Calvin, face first in a snowbank [all you can see of him is his hat and boots], thinks, "She noticed! She likes me!"

I'm going to try to describe this next one as best I can. It's one of the most visual strips, but also one of the funniest. Here goes.

Image

This strip is completely in colour, and has eight panels.
The artwork is done in this mockingly serious tone, completely different from how Calvin and Hobbes is usually drawn.
The setting, the little we see of it, is a somewhat conventional home, with the lamps and pictures and furniture arranged 'just so'.
Panel 1: An attractive-ish, thirty-odd woman arrives at the house, wearing a magenta coat and matching lavender shirt/blouse with a bow, and a magenta shirt; her lipstick is also magenta. She says [imagine her 'trilling' her words as she speaks]: "Daaaaarling, I'm home! And I brought a surprise!"
Panel 2: A forty-ish, rough looking blonde man, with a square-ish jaw, obviously her husband, thinks to himself, "Let's hope it's a divorce!"
Panel 3: The woman, in the act of closing the door [while still acting artificially cheery], says, "Darling, I stopped at the hospital at my way home from work." The man wearing a brown suit and tie, is lighting his pipe, deliberately turned away from her, and says, "Don't call me 'darling', okay?"
Panel 4: The woman, smiling in a plastic way, announces, "I brought home our new baby!" The man stares at her in outraged horror, his eyes wide, and yells, "A baby?! I don't want a baby!"
Panel 5: The woman, cradling a bunny rabbit in her arms, wrapped in a blanket, says brightly, "What shall we name him?' The man, bending slightly to look at the bunny, yells in utter disbelief, "Our baby is a rabbit?!?!? How come we have a rabbit?!"
Panel 6: The woman, her eyes narrowed and mouth open in anger, pets the bunny protectively as she says indignantly, "He's not at rabbit, he's a little boy! We'll call him Jeffry, okay?" The man, from offscreen, replies snarkily, "He looks like a rabbit to me!"
Panel 7: The woman turns to face her husband and shouts, "Well, just pretend he's a baby!" The man, with his pipe in his mouth, points angrily at her with one hand on his waist and shouts, "NO! This is idiotic! I refuse!!"
Panel 8: The artwork abruptly shifts to regular Calvin and Hobbes style. Calvin is storming away from Susie in a huff, saying "Playing house makes me sick! I'm leaving!" Susie is holding her stuffed bunny, and protests, "I don't see why you'll play pretend with your dumb ol' tiger, but not with Mr. Bun!"

[If anyone else wants to try describing it more accurately, go right ahead.]
I hope I did it justice.


_________________
Quote:
"A memory is something that has to be consciously recalled, right? But it's different from a memory locked deep within your heart. Words aren't the only way to tell someone how you feel...As long as I'm with you, as long as you're by my side, I won't give up even if I'm scared." Tifa Lockheart, Final Fantasy VII


auntblabby
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 12 Feb 2010
Gender: Male
Posts: 113,731
Location: the island of defective toy santas

27 Mar 2017, 10:18 pm

^^^^ :wtg:



mr_bigmouth_502
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 12 Dec 2013
Age: 30
Gender: Non-binary
Posts: 7,028
Location: Alberta, Canada

28 Mar 2017, 5:35 am

I loved Calvin & Hobbes when I was a kid. What's cool about C&H is that you laugh at all the obvious funny stuff when you're young, and as you get older you start to understand all the deep philosophical themes. It actually astonishes me that a comic as intelligent as C&H was a newspaper strip of all things.


_________________
Every day is exactly the same...


DataB4
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 7 May 2016
Age: 38
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,744
Location: U.S.

28 Mar 2017, 7:31 am

^I wish I would've had access to the comic when I was a kid. I would've enjoyed it. In some ways though, it's more fun to check it out now as an adult, thanks to the awesome people in this thread describing the panels for me. :D

Kuraudo, the playing house one is priceless! :lol: I bet lots of kids play divorce now instead of house. :twisted: Funny how Calvin won't play along with the pretend game, even though he's always in his own imagination. That's the thing about imagination: people wonder if others will think their creativity is silly because well, in a way, it's all silly. It only works when other people play along.

Not sure about the three-panel one though. I can't really imagine they like each other if Calvin bullies her. Kinda hard to tell from the few snippets I've read so far how much is good-natured teasing and play versus ridicule.