If you were going to get an old Western issue of Donald Duck, and you couldn't get one of infrequent ones that included Barks stories, I don't think you could do much better than 33-36, which contain mainly Dick Moores-drawn stories that are really truly not half bad, taken for what they are. Both "Dirty Work at the Crossroads" and "Show Biz" come from this period. And I know I just said "mainly Dick Moores-drawn," but this is Phil DeLara again. I hope you're enjoying or at least basically tolerating these old Western things. I guess it's just a nostalgia kick for me. Sometimes the world gets to be a bit much, you know? You just want to retreat into a more innocent, if dumber, past.
I realize that "Scavenger Hunt"
is the most painfully uncreative title you can think of--you may be
able to guess what the story is about!--but that's just how it goes.
The foreign titles aren't much better, though a few of them are at
least weird: inducks lists a Chilean publication called "Donald
Duck and the Unexpected Passenger," which DOES relate to the
story, kind of, but in a weirdly tangential, beside the point way; if
you were describing the story to someone, that would NOT be one of
your points of reference. And then we have a Spanish publication
called "Cruel Punishment," which, seriously, you've got me.
That one's totally inexplicable, unless "Cruel Castigo"
has some very specific idiomatic meaning that Google Translate is
unaware of. Sure, some of these stories COULD get a bit sadistic in
places, but not this one.
So many questions: does Donald really
not know what a scavenger hunt is? Is a "scavenger hunt
contest" supposed to be somehow different than a plain ol'
scavenger hunt? And in what sense is this one "sorta special?"
You seem to be describing an extremely normal scavenger hunt.
FIFTY DOLLARS! Now admittedly, that's
not chump change; adjusted for inflation, it's almost five hundred.
Still, it feels oddly small; I feel to feel substantial, a prize
total has to be at least triple digits.
In any event, no prizes for guessing
what Donald's gonna do next.
"You couldn't afford a trip to the
meat market" is a REALLY strange turn of phrase. I want to
think it's an acutal idiomatic expression I'd never heard, but alas,
it gets zero google hits. Though by the time you're reading this,
that won't be the case. I guess such weirdness is good! I'd prefer not to contemplate that expression on Gladstone's face in the top right.
But the REAL question is: what the heck
kind of trip is he planning on taking for fifty dollars?
Sure, that was more in 1954 than it is now but if this
is any indication, still not enough to actually fly anywhere:
I guess he could drive to a nearby
modestly-priced resort and spend a few days there, but that seems
awfully chintzy, and I don't think it's what's being implied. I
really don't know what the writer was thinking, unless they were just
severely underestimating the cost of air travel.
This part makes me laugh, because
where are they all dashing off to like that? Do
they for some reason imagine that all the things they need to find
are HERE! In this direction! Gotta get there as quickly as
possible, even if we lose our blue top hats! It seems like the
writer had the idea that this was a race, and then took that concept
literally in a completely nonsensical way. The obvious thing to do
is to look at your list of items and think of where you're likely to
find them, not to all blast off like a buncha jet-powered lemmings.
See, LOOK at this: apparently, Donald just,
like, charged blindly out into the countryside before even bothering
to look at his list. Fortunately, his old friend Farmer John can
help! Ah yes, Farmer John! That popular recurring character we all
know and love. You can really tell that a writer is just frantically
improvising when they stick these generic helpful NPCs into their
stories. And yet, I have the vague feeling that if they needed to
include a farmer in a small role, there might have been someone else
they could use? An actual recurring character
that maybe even has some relationship to Donald and would make more
sense than just a random dude? Oh well. I guess we'll never know.
ANOTHER thing that makes me laugh: so
Donald needs these specific things, and Farmer John doesn't have any
of them, but he does have other things that are
sort of like them. And yeah, Donald later realizes that he can
cheat, but before that, he apparently has no idea what to actually
do with these items that he so enthusiastically
accepted. How did he possibly think having things that were kind of
like the things he needed would help him? I swear: I know it's just
because of authorial laziness, but the characters in this story are
all just behaving in incredibly bizarre and--I think it's fair to
say--stupid ways, if you think about it for more than a second.
Sailor Bill, another beloved recurring
character! You know him: he's a swell guy! How could you forget?
Seriously, man, ONE of these stock characters is bad enough; two just
seems excessive.
See? You know his name is Sailor Bill
because his...house? Place of business? is labeled "Sailor
Bill's Place." Though given that this "building"
actually just looks like a flat facade, I'm a little suspicious of
this whole thing.
How come they need four things whereas
Donald only needs three? Seems unfair. Also, everyone else is
seemingly working alone, so how come they're allowed to be a team?
Just because they're always together and splitting them up would be
inconceivable? All things considered, it's probably not useful to
fixate on these tiny issues.
Yeah, so this would be the "unexpected
passenger" bit, if you'll cast your mind back to the beginning
of this entry. Well, it is what it is, and it's a good thing it's
not real life, or they would've broken that poor goat's back by
dropping on him like that. I mean, probably. What do you think they
weigh? I know stories are not consistent on whether they're meant to
have human-ish weights or be more like actual waterfowl. But at a
minimum, you've gotta think, like, ten pounds each, yeah? That'd be
enough to flatten a goat.
Maybe this isn't worth thinking
about--okay, obviously nothing here is worth
thinking about, but you know--but I can't help wondering about the
mechanics of Donald and Gladstone hitting the finish line. We see
them running towards it from opposite directions, but, like, what are
the exact mechanics of there being a "tie?" They
simultaneously break the tape from opposite directions? Well, we'll
never know, because good ol' DeLara opted not to show us this pivotal
moment, probably having realized that he wasn't able to picture it in
his head any better than I was. Whee.
Boy, who could've seen that coming?
Also, is the fifty dollars all in the form of small change? I don't
see how else it could fill up that bag like that. It's really quite
a childish idea of what "money" looks like. Surely the
author knew better; did they do it like this to appeal specifically
to childish sensibilities? Or was it just lazy received wisdom about
what money should be? The world may never know, although it has a
pretty good guess.
Well yes anyway, Gladstone doesn't win
either onaccounta he "borrowed" the monkey from an Italian
organ-grinder stereotype, so here's the ending: this completely
out-of-nowhere trip to the amusement park (do you think being forced
to ride a rollercoaster is the "cruel punishment" in
question?). I mean, okay, amusement parks are fun, granted, but
shouldn't the ending bear at least some connection
with the rest of the story? I mean, even if HDL had just expressed a
desire earlier in the story to go to the swell new amusement park
that's opening, that at least would be something. But no! Just this
and a limp gag about backseat drivers!
Do you think DeLara ever imagined that
someone would one day write a fifteen-hundred-word article on this
dumb little story he drew (and possibly wrote; who knows)? I wonder
if he'd be honored or just bemused. Probably the latter. Here's the
weird thing: Barks stories are sometimes sort of too smart
if what you're looking for is escape. Sure, they were written for
kids, but they have sophisticated plots with nuanced characters and rich subtexts, so if you
read them as an adult, you can't help but engage with them on a
deeper level than you did as a child. Not so here: with these
non-Barks things, there's no other way to read
them; they are purely childish pursuits, and
you're forced to sort of engage with them as such. I mean okay
obviously I mock them in a decidedly not-childish way (OKAY OKAY it
IS childish in a sense, but not as-a-child, if you see the
distinction), but I still read them differently than Barks, and, secretly, I actually sort of enjoy them. Well, some of them. Some are just utterly meritless even by the most lenient standards. You decide which category this one falls into. But anyway, this nonsense is what you get, as opposed to a different
kind of nonsense. Please enjoy, because, god help me, there's more
coming.
I'll make it my headcanon that" Farmer John" is the brother of "Farmer Frank," the one who once invited Daisy to a dance in one of those lame text-only stories. Try and stop me! :p
ReplyDeleteI certainly won't. What text story?
ReplyDeleteThis one.
ReplyDeleteAh, yes! I remember the days when the spin-off "Disney's Farmer John" Comics sold better then "Super Goof" and "Uncle Scrooge" titles put together, before "Swell Sailor Bill Adventure Parade" series over-shadow it. I belive good old Farmer John was the first character from the comics that didn't appear in animation yet who had a greetable mascot at Disneyland (ofcourse now that a new rad version was introduced in current Duck Tales show it's not that big deal of a shocker)
ReplyDeleteIt's a bit odd it took You this long to get to such iconic character.
Alternate title: Five Jet-Powered Lemmings, Three Stock Characters, and One Well-Nigh Flattened Goat
ReplyDeleteI do think it's a seriously bad idea to have one of the objects of a scavenger hunt be a skunk. That cannot end well. The hunt's judge AND EVERYONE ON THIS SIDE OF TOWN should be grateful to Donald for painting a cat.
I wounder if the authors of the videogame "The Day of the Tentacle" read this story (one of the puzzles in the game are about "cat", "skunk" and "white ink"); and the scene of Donald picking items that don't seem to be useful at the moment but it will have utility after seems typical adventure videogame (30 years before videogames exist).
ReplyDeleteCat + white paint/ink = skunk is one of those ancient gags that's been around since forever in dozens of way more famous pieces of media than this story, including pretty much every single Pepe le Pew cartoon.
ReplyDeleteMan, this new "CORONA virus" or whatever it's called has made me wondering whether or not is GeoX alive and/or well. I must need an answer, as he has not been posting here since mid-February, and now it's March.
ReplyDeleteFear not, he's alive. He's still posting on Inchoatia, after all.
ReplyDeleteAnd is active on Facebook :)
ReplyDeleteDon't let the media spreed paranoia get to You ;)
Not dead, or otherwise corona'd, yet. :p I'll try to have a new entry in the near future, but don't quote me on that.
ReplyDeleteYou still do owe me a Sarah Jolley review… and other people, other anniversary reviews! But take your time. Your reviews of operas are just as fascinating, and certainly a rarer thing on the Internet.
ReplyDeleteTo be fair, the last time you where quite for very long I asumed the Beagle Boys kidnapt you and are holding you ransom for 28 (!) boxes of prunes. It happens.
ReplyDeleteMay I suggest this somewhat topical classic, "Uncle Scrooge and the Mushroom Shelter"? (That's mushroom as in "mushroom cloud", and it's the kind of story I don't think would ever be approved today. And yes, it's Italian, of course)
ReplyDeletehttps://inducks.org/story.php?c=I+TL++359-B