Hobbestetrician
Member
A movie about the greatest creation of all-time? It should be obvious that I will be all over this.
That was never the message of Calvin & Hobbes.That's a problem I have with people worshiping his anti-consumerism, anti-technology message and developing this cult of personality around him. He's not doing it because he thinks corporations hurt artists and wants folks to wake up and live free of name brands dominating their lives, but likely because he hates people and thinks he's the only sane man on the planet
Of course he has no obligation. I have no obligation to be happy with that, though.
There is such a thing as human decency. When somebody makes a movie about you, it'd be nice of you to tell someone to tell everyone "hey, thanks." You're not obligated to do that, no, but it'd sure be courteous.
This one makes be bawl.My favorite cartoon strip.
I love this tribute someone did:
Hope this isn't as terrible as that recent JD Salinger documentary. It seriously looks to be a film with random talking heads and celebrities discussing their love for Watterson which doesn't sound very appealing to me.
This one makes be bawl.
motivational poster
we will explain the thing you're looking at, and be repetitive while we do it.
My favorite cartoon strip.
I love this tribute someone did:
These...always really bother me. More then other fan-art. Then again, as much respect as I have for the man and his care about his own art I also don't worship Calvin and Hobbes quite as much as other people, so I don't know
Very cool. I remember reading attack of the mutant snow goons and I couldn't stop laughing back in my day. Good times....
I remember the first time I picked up a C&H collection at the library. Probably was 9 or 10. I couldn't put it down. I introduced my brothers to C&H and we would go to the library down the block, pick out the different collections and spend the afternoon reading them and passing them around.
Wake me when there's a Hagar documentary.
Terrible comic. Makes no sense. Is the tiger real or what? Wake me when there's a Hagar documentary.
What does Watterson do for money these days? I would be suprised if he can live off Calvin and Hobbes book sales
Dear Mr. Watterson at times feels a bit shallow. While Schroeder touches on many different topics, he rarely drills down deeply into any of them. He hints at some of the struggles between Watterson and his syndicate but doesn’t get into the details. Some of the artists he interviews discuss the ways in which Watterson’s groundbreaking visual style shattered expectations of what a Sunday strip could be. But Schroeder doesn’t get into why Watterson had to fight for his work or how his strip changed the medium.
But this isn’t an exposé, and you shouldn’t go into it expecting deep examinations of “Calvin and Hobbes’s” philosophical underpinnings—of which there are many. This is an appreciation steeped in nostalgia, something for fans of the strip to sit back and simply enjoy.
As its affectionate title would suggest, Joel Allen Schroeder’s documentary Dear Mr. Watterson is no attempt at an expose a la the recent Salinger. The filmmaker made no attempt to contact the cartoonist, and imparts virtually no information about him. Rather, the film is a deeply personal examination of the strip’s apparently vast popularity and cultural impact, especially the one it had on Schroeder himself, who at one point shows us his childhood bedroom which he says used to be generously festooned with Calvin & Hobbes strips on its walls.
Fortunately, many of these fans are also comic strip artists, who can at least share some insights into their profession. (Most compelling is “Bloom County’s” Berkeley Breathed, Watterson’s friend and closest competitor in the late ’80s.) Even so, your money would be better used — and Schroeder’s points better made — if you spent it on any “Calvin and Hobbes” collection instead.