What Comic Strips Influenced “Calvin and Hobbes”?

Krazy Kat
The documentary Dear Mr. Watterson (2013) opens this week in theaters and on video on demand. The documentary about the great comic strip Calvin and Hobbes and its creator Bill Watterson is directed by Joel Allen Schroeder. To promote the movie, which started as a Kickstarter project, the filmmakers have released this interesting clip that examines three comic strips that apparently influenced Watterson and Calvin and Hobbes. Check it out.

As you can see from the clip, we do not have the reclusive Watterson, who remains protective of his creation and still refuses to license products related to the comic. So other commentators explain the comic strips whose influences they see in Calvin and Hobbes. The three influences discussed in the clip are Walt Kelly’s Pogo, Charles M. Schulz’s Peanuts, and George Herriman’s Krazy Kat. If you want more on Watterson, check out his recent rare interview on Mental Floss.

What is your favorite Calvin and Hobbes strip? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Aaron Copland & Appalachian Spring

    Aaron Copland American composer Aaron Copland was born in Brooklyn on November 14 in 1900. Although he began his music education in Paris in the 1920s with a strong avante-garde influence on his early works, his compositions starting in the 1930s — including Billy The Kid (1938), Rodeo (1942), Fanfare For The Common Man (1942) — used traditional American sounds to create popular compositions.

    After I got my first CD player and began the process of switching from records and cassettes to the new format, I made my first CD purchase. I bought three of my favorite works that included one by Bruce Springsteen and one by Ludwig van Beethoven. The other CD in my first purchase was Aaron Copeland’s Appalachian Spring (1944). I have since added to my collection other versions of the composition, including one using only the thirteen instruments for which it was written.

    Copland wrote Appalachian Spring as a ballet, with the original working title of Ballet for Martha. Dancer Martha Graham was commissioned to create the choreography and star in the performance (see video above).

    While writing the music, Copland was not thinking about Appalachia. The Appalachian title was added after Graham suggested it after hearing some of the score.

    The story of the ballet follows two newlyweds in the western hills of Pennsylvania in the early 1800s. The music captures their enthusiasm, happiness and anxiety, while also reflecting warnings about life from neighbors and revivalists.

    As the Pulitzer-Prize winning composition ends with quiet notes, the couple settle into their new home.

    Copland once commented on how one could not predict the fate of a composition, and that was true for Appalachian Spring. Audiences connected with the music and its sounds of America, including Copland’s use of tunes like the Shaker song “Simple Gifts” (which plays at the start of part 3 above as well as at other points).

    Yet, maybe one should not be surprised at the popularity of a composition written and released during World War II that evoked and paid tribute to living and surviving in America’s past. NPR calls Appalachian Spring “one of the most inspiring and symbolic works of the century,” noting it “captures the essence of an ideal America, one of open fields and endless possibilities.”

    I have played Appalachian Spring in my car while driving through the Appalachian mountains, and I have played it as a soundtrack while driving open roads out West. But I also can play it in my bedroom or my office and immediately feel the open expanse and history of a country in a simpler time, recalling that the gift to be simple is the gift to be free.

    What is your favorite part of “Appalachian Spring”? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    My Train A Comin’: Watch New Jimi Hendrix Documentary

    My Train A Comin'

    The PBS American Masters series presents My Train A Comin’, a documentary about the life of Jimi Hendrix, who died at the age of 27. The documentary features previously unseen concert footage and home movies. For example, the movie includes recently discovered footage of Hendrix at the 1968 Miami Pop Festival. My Train A Comin‘ also contains interviews with people ranging from Paul McCartney to Hendrix’s girlfriend Linda Keith. I am not sure how long the PBS video will be available online, but for now you may check it out below. [May 2014 Update: Unfortunately, the full PBS documentary is no longer available online, so below is the trailer.]

    The American Masters website features a number of extras related to the documentary, such as outtakes and an interview with director Bob Smeaton.

    What is your favorite part of My Train A Comin’? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    12 Years a Slave (Short Review)

    12 Years a Slave The new movie 12 Years a Slave (2013) dramatically recreates the true events from Solomon Northup’s 1853 autobiography of the same name. The story recounts how Northup, living as a free man in New York, was tricked into traveling to Washington, D.C., where he was abducted and sold into slavery.

    In describing the film, one has to be careful not to ruin the story, but like the miniseries Roots (1977) or the movie Schindler’s List (1993), you sort of know what to expect when you decide to watch it. Not surprisingly, the movie features scenes of nearly unwatchable brutality, and generally the line between good guys and bad guys is clear, and the bad people are really bad.

    Solomon Northop Yet, there are two main reasons to see 12 Years a Slave. One reason is the fine performers, especially actor Chiwetel Ejiofor, who portrays Northup, bringing a complicated humanity to the man. Ejiofor makes Northup a three-dimensional human being that helps the audience understand the man’s agony as he discovers his fate and struggles to find a way home. In more than one scene, Director Steve McQueen lets the camera linger on Eliofor’s face and eyes, relying upon the actor to carry a scene without movement or dialogue. Eliofor, who has made small parts memorable in such movies as Children of Men (2006) and Love Actually (2003), here shows that he is an actor who should be commanding more lead roles. Similarly, other performers like Lupita Nyong’o as Patsey (who the New Yorker calls the hero of the film) and Michael Fassbender as an unstable slave owner are outstanding. Producer Brad Pitt also makes a welcome appearance.

    The other main reason to see 12 Years a Slave is that it is a true story. Were the movie fictional, it would carry less gravitas and in some ways would border on unbelievable. But the movie, with a screenplay by John Ridley, presents an essential reminder of the American legacy of slavery and how humans can treat each other in immoral and brutal ways.

    Although in the past I have written how I hate when movies manipulate viewers into cheering for violence against characters, while watching 12 Years a Slave, I found myself longing for Jamie Foxx as Django from Django Unchained (2012) to suddenly appear and render his bloody justice. But unfortunately 12 Years a Slave is not a fantasy, and real life does not end so neatly.

    Conclusion: 12 Years a Slave is essential viewing. The high Rotten Tomatoes rating (critics: 97%; audience: 94%) may partly reflect how a movie with such a subject is beyond criticism, but it also reflects powerful filmmaking.

    Bonus Real-Life Information (Spoiler Alert: Do Not Read If You Have Not Seen the Movie): For some reason, one of the most moving moments in the movie for me was the epilogue where the titles explained what happened to Northup. I found it disturbing that nobody knows what happened to him. Wikipedia explains that some people believe that he may have been kidnapped into slavery again, apparently dying in anonymity on a Southern plantation. Others believe that he died of natural causes in the North. I choose to believe the latter because the former is too horrible to imagine. And so I pray that Northup’s final line in his book came true: “I hope henceforward to lead an upright though lowly life, and rest at last in the church yard where my father sleeps.”

    What did you think of 12 Years a Slave? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Marty Brown on “Words & Music”

    Continuing his comeback tour after his appearances on America’s Got Talent, Marty Brown recently appeared on Nashville’s Channel 5 on the show Words & Music. On the show, artists discuss and play their songs. On this episode, Marty Brown played his new single “Whatever Makes you Smile” and “I’m From the Country.” In this segment, he introduces and sings “I’m From the Country.”

    Here he sings his single, “Whatever Makes You Smile.” In introducing it, he explains how his wife Shellie tricked him into appearing on America’s Got Talent.

    Interestingly, in the clip Brown explains how the producers of America’s Got Talent knew about his 1990s recordings from the very beginning. In these Internet days, that news is not very surprising, but the revelation helps further debunk some Internet commenters who had surmised the show’s producers did not know Brown had earlier recorded some records.

    I’m hoping we see Brown performing on some more TV shows. Marty Brown’s got talent.

    What do you think of Marty Brown’s new single? Leave your two cents on the comments.

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