"The Stone Money Mystery"
My place in the Sun: I got an email the
other day informing me that Duck Comics Revue is the internet's fifty-ninth-best
comics blog. I am humbled and honored by this, uh, honor.
They gave me one of those tacky little gifs of a medal to put up, but
I must humbly decline on the basis that coming in fifty-ninth isn't
actually very impressive, and also on the basis that feedspot is just
a skeevy spam/email harvesting operation. Still, it was an honor to
be nominated, or something.
Anyway, if I want to continue to be
used by questionable dudes to get strangers' emails, I should
probably update more often, shouldn't I? According to that list, "it
is a blog on wonderful comic stories about Donald Duck."
Well...from time to time. Let's see if this, a 1960 story drawn by
the indefatigable Tony Strobl, counts as "wonderful." At
any rate, it's currently the fifteenth-highest-ranked Strobl story on
inducks. Those are some heady heights!
We open in the Duckburg Museum. I've
always liked museums, and therefore I like this. It's a nice vibe; I
really do dig the fact that the duck family is into learning cool
shit. Mind you, it's hard to be TOO impressed by the curators: "Sea
shells used as money by island natives." Yeah, that's some
impressive anthropological rigor, guys. Still, even if there's not
that much to it, and even though the depictions of actual cultures
can be problematic, I think--from my own personal experience--that
things like this can actually be helpful in widening children's minds
and increasing their curiosity, perhaps--showing them that there are
whole other worlds and culture out there. Take that, Dorfman and
Mattelart!
(Yes! First How to Read
Donald Duck reference of the year!)
This Yap Island money business is a
totally fascinating
thing, and a natural subject for a Disney comic, though
unsurprisingly, it's been a bit squashed and mutated in the
retelling. It probably goes without saying that it was not actually
moved around like kids with old-timey sticks and hoops. Still fun,
though!
(I will pass over Donald's "if
stuff like that could be used today" comment in silence because
it is really not clear to me whether this is Donald's
fatuousness, or the author just has a really shaky understanding of
economics. Could go either way! Also, what do you mean, "you're
not passing it over in silence; you're writing this paragraph?"
Can't you see it's in parentheses? So it doesn't count! Jeez!)
Unsurprisingly, the stone gets loose,
and I cannot not laugh at such dopey slapstick as this. Hooray!
And now, we get a recurring motif in
these old non-Barks stories: writers not being clear on what sort of
rich guy Scrooge is supposed to be--what with the limousine and
driver and all. You'd think by 1960, people would've had a better
handle on the issue. Oh well! I DO like his rare bit of generosity
to Donald here: as I think I've suggested elsewhere there HAVE to be
times, off-panel, when he's not a total dick to his nephews;
otherwise, it would be really pushing it to
imagine they'd keep hanging around him. I especially like it here
because of these non-Barks Western writers' proclivity for having him
engage in incredible, gratuitous, Guido-Martina-esque sadism. And, as
we'll see, it's balanced out rather effectively in the end. I don't
think the writer was aiming at this; I think it
just happened for plot-expediency reasons.
(And man, sometimes I step back and
realize: what I'm writing here would be total gibberish to anyone not
marinated in duck comics. Questions might include: What does "what
sort of rich guy Scrooge is supposed to be" mean, and what do
the limo and driver have to do with anything? What does 1960 have to
do with it? Why are you referring to comic authors as "Western
writers?" Who the hell is "Guido Martina?" Sometimes
I worry that this all may be a bit too insular.)
Ha ha, Scrooge sucks compared to "the
museum!" I like seeing Donald and HDL needling him like that.
Also, what's this "outside of some historical value, that rock
is worthless in terms of money" nonsense? MOST old money is
"worthless in terms of money!" Historical value is, like,
the main thing! Do you really just measure value
in terms of what something would be worth if you melted it down and
sold it? Don't be daft. Though I suppose this is an implicit theme
that you see even in Barks: he may not want to sell
Genghis Khan's crown, but he wouldn't want it if it weren't made of
valuable materials either. WHATEVER, DUDE.
This story isn't a heartbreaking work
of staggering genius or anything, but I must say, for a story of its type, it
does amazingly well in setting up a real-world setting and mystery.
Okay, that's grading on a substantial curve, but most stories don't
even try. Look at that thing with the wheel having left mysterious
sigils in the concrete. There's never anything more to it than the
above, but it's STILL quite impressive. For what it is. As I keep
feeling the need to qualify my praise. BUT I LIKE IT, OKAY?
And, I mean, look at this stuff! It's totally trying to be Barks. If more of these
stories would do that, we would be happier.
Seriously, it's like a dry run for Don
Rosa. Only not as good-looking. Or well-written. Or
interesting...okay, I should stop damning this with faint praise,
because I mean it for serious: this is substantially, noticeably
better than the norm. Hooray for a writer whose name has been lost
in time! Don Christensen, maybe? That'd be my guess. The timing is
good, and he also wrote another
of my non-Barks Western (there's gotta be a more concise way to say
that) favorites.
It's...difficult to say what to make of
this. The natives are properly civilized, but then when this one
subject is brought up, they regress to their savage ways okay it's not THAT difficult to say what to make of this. Still...we've
seen worse. And better! But worse is more likely.
Unfortunately, the story fails to live
up to the potential that the surprisingly decent set-up suggested.
The mystery is never addressed in any interesting way, let alone
solved. WHY exactly is gold now forbidden, and terrifying to
everyone? This question is not even nodded at. It just...is what it
is.
Donald finds da cartwheelz! Bully for
him. I mean, the image is all right. But the
question remains: why? Why why why?
Pretty silly--I think it's safe to say
that CROCODILES DO NOT WORK LIKE THAT--but I've always liked the
visual.
So there you go. The idea that
Scrooge is going to row all the way home
seems...unrealistic, somehow. But as stinginess goes, it's less
unreasonable than some depictions you'll see. Anyway, let's face it,
at some point, he's gonna get tired out; there's no getting around
it. And then Donald can make some of that money back.
The one thing that always REALLY,
REALLY bothered me about this as a kid was the fact that Scrooge ONLY
takes a gold wheel. THERE ARE TWO UNIQUE PIECES
OF CURRENCY YOU NEED FOR YOUR COLLECTION AND YOU ONLY TOOK ONE
OF THEM JEEZ.
But what the hey! I like the story
enough that I will generously donate my Top 75 Comics Blog medal to
it:
Labels: Tony Strobl
20 Comments:
I guess the scheme worked on you then :) as you did exactly what they wanted an put up a link to the webpage, making their google ranking higher etc. I got the same Top 75 message too, not as an e-mail but as a comment on the last blogpost (now marked as spam)
Well, if Scrooge *is* going to be shown as having a chauffeur, I approve of his name being "Bleeker."
Agree that this is a significant cut above the typical NBW story. Add a brief historical explanation for the gold taboo (with a flashback to people casting golden cartwheels into the water) and it could be seen as Barks lite. What do you say, Joe, do you think Christensen wrote it?
It never occurred to child-me that Scrooge failed to procure a stone cartwheel-coin for his collection. So maybe that strange comment of Scrooge's about the stone wheel having nothing more than historical value is a set-up for what is to come. The challenge to his preeminence as a collector is enough to get Scrooge to investigate the sigils, but only *golden* cartwheels are enough to get him to plan the expedition.
@Hex I guess the scheme worked on you then :) as you did exactly what they wanted an put up a link to the webpage, making their google ranking higher etc.
Nope, check again :). I didn't copy the whole code; I only posted the image. No link to nowhere.
The link in the very first sentence you wrote works fine. Doesn't matter where you put it, you are still helping them.
Mmm...fair point; try it now. But IN ANY CASE, what they WANT is a link on my sidebar or something, not a little thing in one single entry.
Wasn't there another comic based on the Yap Island money? I'm not sure who did it, but I think it was about Scrooge tracking down a debt and being paid in Yap stone coins.
The one I'm thinking of was probably written by William van Horn.
@Christopher: There was that Barks-scriped story about 'Dragon Cookies' where Scrooge ended up being paid in furs that turned out to be the currency of Inner Monghoulia.
By the way, GeoX, I can't help but notice that the whole "Scrooge disregards numismatical value of old coins" thing was used by Don Rosa in The Money Pit, where Scrooge outright says that for him, money costs only the value written on it. Granted, he was talking about old American coins, not about ancient foreign currencies.
CONGRATULATION GEOX! :) :) :) I always had faith you will make it someday! :)
It's like I always say to people : "GeoX blog is the funnyest! He is so funny that if there was an award for the most funny blog ever and he didn't win, he would had a big chance of winning next year! He is THAT good!" :)
To Elaine and Everyone:
One of the great crimes against comics-reading humanity is that so many of the original authors of both seminal and secondary works are forever lost to time – save our idle speculation.
Don R. Christensen (he would have insisted on the “R.”) is as good a guess as any. I see nothing at all to count him out. The fact that Scrooge would bail Donald out of trouble at the beginning, indicates someone who MAY not have as rich a history with Duck stories as Carl Fallberg might have had - but I can see one of Don Arr's many, many Bugs Bunny or Porky Pig adventures going that way.
Also supporting a vote for Christensen is a prevailing sense of humor that is on greater display than in the usual Fallberg or Vic Lockman opus. The runaway museum coin, Donald falling into native-gibberish mode, the slapstick business with the croc that would come naturally to a former animation storyman are all good supporting examples.
Personally, I loved "Vasco Da Gasket"! That's the kind of thing I would do in a Duck or Mouse story today!
Finally, how many noticed the “Lost in the Andes” vibe of the “Gold is Illegal” bit?
Congrats on the “award”, Geo! Display is proudly, my friend!
Just a thought- going by Rosa at least, isn't all (his) money only of historical value to Scrooge ("historical" referring only to his personal history)?
But since these theories never totally make sense, it really doesn't matter.
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Right, so the above comment read:
EXPOSE THE CONSPIRACY! GOD AND THE DEVIL ARE BACKWARDS!! DON'T LET GUILT-FEELINGS, FEAR AND OTHER KINDS OF EMOTIONAL MANIPULATION RULE YOUR CHOICES IN LIFE!!
...followed by some links to anti-religious sites filled with crazed conspiracy theories that looked like old geocities pages. I was going to leave the comment up for its sheer bizarreness, but then I saw that some of it was pro-nazi stuff, and I decided, nope! Kindly fuck off and die, thanks so much!
I'll bet that guy dosentt even read a Disney Uncle Scrooge comics :(
By the by, GeoX, will you resurrect "Duck Cartoons Review" when the new DuckTales premieres?
Oh yes! Please please please! :) :) :)
(Maciej Kur/Pan Miluś - who's at work so can't log in)
I do have at least some ambition to finish Darkwing Duck one of these days, but yes, the new Ducktales might be a good opportunity to get back into things.
GOODNESS, how did this particular post attract so much spam? And some of it posted very recently, too. WEIRD.
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Mogethin guys, I like this comic because it features my home island's historical currency. I think it's cool. And I do find some it funny since we sometimes do fake not understanding English. Cheers and thanks for the find.
Kefel from Yap
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