Wednesday, 8 July 2015

Amazing What They Do With Corrugated Cardboard

Who is your favourite pair of characters?

Tweedledum and Tweedledee from Through the Looking Glass? Fred and George from Harry Potter? Asterix and Obelix? Laurel and Hardy? Hiccup and Toothless from How To Train Your Dragon? Kristoff and Sven from Frozen? John and Phillipa from Children of the Lamp? Hallie and Annie from Parent Trap? Jo and Laurie from Little Women?

I love all these guys. But my favourite?
Guess.

Keep guessing.
Want a clue?

One's an animal. One's a human.
No. Not Mowgli and Baloo from The Jungle Book (ooh, love those guys too).
Still didn't get it?
Okay, maybe THIS will help.


CALVIN AND HOBBES!!!!

I have been reading Calvin and Hobbes for so long I can't even remember when I started.

Calvin and Hobbes say and do such awesome things. I mean, look at this one.


Brilliance. I wish I had the guts to write that on a test.

During those just-before-lunch classes, when physics equations are deep-frying my brain like a mirchi bajji, and my stomach is playing a Sivamani and Zakir Hussain jugalbandi, and visions of my favourite foods float in front of my eyes, I can totally relate to this strip:

Ha. Calvin, you're only six. Wait till you get to my age. Then you'll see. And, judging by darkly uttered accounts from trusted sources, it only gets worse. *sigh*

Calvin and Hobbes are funny for various reasons.
Calvin thinks he's above everyone else, an unrecognized genius, and so a lot of the justification he gives for his stupid actions is based on that, which is absolutely ridiculous and very funny. Take a look at this one.
Yeah, why can't the world change to suit us?

And then of course there's his astonishingly advanced vocabulary.
I don't know what that title even means
Honestly speaking, my consistently good grades in the vocab section of my writing tasks is largely due to my love of Calvin and Hobbes.

The way Calvin and Hobbes look at the world is kind of...different from the way most people do. Which is a bit of an understatement.
One thing I want to do, with someone who won't get bored by it, is play CALVINBALL. The coolest, most mysterious sport in the world. Most mysterious, that is because only Calvin and Hobbes know how to play it. Heck, even Bill Watterson doesn't know the rules.
Playing Calvinball is probably one of the most realistic things on my list of "Things I Want To Do Because Fictional Characters Have Done It".



Calvinball, in my opinion, is truly intriguing. What's a bonus box? Where's the Song Zone? What sort of a scoring system involves Qs with numbers? Why yell Olly-wolly polliwoggy ump-bump fizz?
Of course, since "you can't play it the same way twice", we can make up whatever we want and play it. This. Totally. Rocks.

Okay, I can fangirl for ages over Calvinball, but let me move on...
Who are the inhabitants of the strip's world?
Other than Calvin and Hobbes, there are only four people I consider important to the strip...
Calvin's parents...
Must be hard, raising a kid like Calvin...
Calvin drives them totally crazy...as is evident, just by reading this one strip.

Now meet Susie, Calvin's neighbour and classmate.

And quite often, she gets the better of him, making him pretty mad.

The fourth person is Calvin's babysitter Rosalyn, whom he hates and fears:


And for good reason...


Because she's the only one who can scare Calvin and actually make him listen. Look at how she threatens him! Reading a strip involving a Calvin-versus-Rosalyn fight gives me about as much pleasure as watching the Avengers beating up Loki in 3D.

I can actually become lyrical about Calvin and Hobbes, which is boring and weird to people who are not such ardent fans. So, let me end with a few of my favourite C&H strips:







   
And to close, a strip that sums up the spirit of Calvin and Hobbes...


There's treasure everywhere.

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