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devilkais β€” An Adulation for an Angry Avian

Published: 2013-02-07 02:41:25 +0000 UTC; Views: 18339; Favourites: 206; Downloads: 100
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Description Well the time has come people ... time to talk about the duck himself : Donald Fauntelroy Duck ! [link]
Donald is one of the 2 greatest, richest cartoon creations of all time, but like any character he has his own set of rules and his own limitations. In his best stories, whether adventures or comedies , Donald was always best as himself. The waterfowl works better as a constant thrown in multiple scenarii, the surroundings change but Donald does not . Of course his personality is so multi-layered that he can be many things , even total paradoxes, and remain himself .
Let us dig into the Don's designs (or at least those I find extremely influential on my way to view the duck ), music maestro ! [link] :

PROTO-DONALD

This character is just maybe where the idea for a duck friend for Mickey started to blossom , in 1931 . Of course it will be drawn 1 year later but is nothing but a prototype and , as such , has very little to do with the refined version ...

LITTLE SAILOR DUCK

With Clarence Nash' hiring (God bless him) in 1933, the studios knew they got their duck voice. They did so after hearing Mr Nash doing the Mary had a little lamb with a duck voice in the radio . So there we have our early Duck , the embryonic Donald ,created by animator Dick Lundy and starring in "The Wise Little Hen", "Mickey's grand opera" and "The Band Concert" .He has some of the traits that will be expanded later: he is a bit of a slacker (like the duck in the wise hen story ), a mischievous trickster and temperemental average Joe .In the cartoons, Mickey Mouse would gradually become a role model for children and Disney wanted a character that could portray some of the more negative character traits he could no longer bestow on Mickey (which of course is a different story in the comics ...).



EXPANSION AND COMIC STRIP (TALIAFERRO )

In 1936 . Donald will be the star of his own comic strip courtesy of Al TAliaferro . He was the most popular character in the Silly Symphonies written by Taliaferro and Ted Osborne , so they thought of giving him his own series . This comic strip will also contain the seeds of the future mythology that will be expanded around the character in his printed world : The nephews , Gus Goose , Daisy (before being put in the cartoon). The new added trait would be a slight parental responsibility and a varying maturity in his behavior. Donald, just like in this period's cartoons, can be the trickster and the fall guy .

The DON'S GOLDEN ANIMATED AGE


With WWII , the popularity of aggressive characters bloomed . Walt did not want the animated Mickey to be a propaganda character (once again , as opposed to Floyd's who fought Nazis in the comics ...) , but Donald was the ideal character for that .
This period not only marks some of Donald's best propaganda cartoons , but also him being an ambassador of sort for south-american countries. This will lead to the creation of Jose Carioca , then Panchito Pistoles thus forming the 3 caballeros (These movies do add another trait; his curiosity and a certain interest towards foreign countries... and their ladies ). Within the 40's Donald would have some of the most brilliant cartoon shorts animation , courtesy of director Jack King (though one should note Lundey and Kinney's efforts too) under gag scripts by Barks and Hannah . King's Donald is what you could call the apex of Donald in animation: He was varied, polyvalent , could succeed or fail depending on the situation he set for himself and can be extremely sympathetic (especially in his best cartoon "Donald's dream voice")).Not only that , but Jack King had hands down the best Daisy ( if you don't believe me, check out "Donald's Dilemma" or "Mr Duck steps out"..)
Unfortunately , by the 50's , the end for Donald's animated career came knocking.
Jack Hannah's early work was pretty promising (Donald's Off Day, Clown of the Jungle,Crazy over Daisy...) but he was also responsible for the creations of Chip n' Dale, as well as other vermins for the sake of making Donald's life miserable. In fact Hannah stated in multiple interviews that he didn't believe Donald was deep enough, how much his voice irritated him, and so on.But the only thing the later cartoons achieved for me was to make us wish seeing Donald ripping the heads of the little pricks with his bare hands because , seriously, the joke wore out very fucking quick !
However , like for the Looney tunes nowadays , salvation would come from the 9th art ...


BARKS THE SPIRITUAL FATHER


In 1942, Western Publishing began creating original comic-book stories about Donald and other Disney characters. Bob Karp worked on the earliest of these, a story called Donald Duck Finds Pirate Gold.This story (on which Barks worked on with Hannah ...) will introduce the treasure hunter trait is Donald's personality .
THIS IS WHERE LEGEND WAS MADE ! What would assure the duck's perennity for decades to come !

It should be noted Barks did not create a new Donald. He just extended the traits that the cartoons already showed and upped Donald's story range. He also accentuated the realism to Donald's character and the situations around him . His mutations made him more real, not less, because they made him more like us: we also remain fundamentally the same despite what may be tremendous changes in our surroundings and our habits.
Barks stated : "I broadened his character out very much. Instead of making just a quarrelsome little guy out of him, I made a sympathetic character. He was sometimes a villain, and he was often a real good guy and at all times he was just a blundering person like the average human being. ”
The range of Donald became tremendous in these stories. The shorter ones would usually focus on Donald's everyday life and on comedy (thus having him becoming more temperemental like in the cartoons ), while the longer ones were usually adventures set in exotic locales (where he becomes more foolhardy and adventurous.)

Barks placed Donald in the city of Duckburg, which he populated with a host of memorable characters, including Gladstone Gander (1948), Gyro Gearloose (1952), Uncle Scrooge McDuck (1947), Magica de Spell (1961), Flintheart Glomgold (1956), The Beagle Boys (1951), April, May and June (1953), Neighbor Jones (1944) and John D. Rockerduck (1961). When Donald's uncle Scrooge's popularity grew, Barks concentrated his major efforts on the Scrooge stories, and Donald's appearances became more focused on comedy or he was recast as Scrooge's reluctant helper, following his rich uncle around the globe (but he never quite lost his edge ... ).

Also in case anyone wonders ; YES I read the comics with Nash's voice in mind and NO, the cartoon and comics duck are the exact same guy (whoever says otherwise is saying absolute crap , and it is insulting to all of those I've cited above ... ) ! It all depends on the setting once again ...


ROSA'S PSYCHODRAMA

A lot of writers have used Donald in a very close way to Carl Barks (actually whenever I talk about comics Donald now , all his traits find their roots in Barks's refinement of the character). Don Rosa is , rightfully , seen as one the best duck writers and one that did not lose much time in going from good to downright EXCELLENT . (Even though I absolutely HATE the bigots that bash on other talented Disney writers just to say that Barks and Rosa are the only good duck writers . That is an absolute fallacy and I will show you soon why ...).

As for Rosa's treatment of Donald himself, he incorporates what has been set in Barks 's stuff ( for short stories : Donald has a bigger temper , for adventures : he is bolder ) but adds in his own spin. I for one absolutely LOVE the slapstick done in Rosa's style ! The expressions he gives to Donald are downright priceless: From the broad anger to the subtlest grimace, everything clicks right for! And of course you have the moments where you feel both sad and laugh at what is happening on panel .... and that is the key of great comedy
However , if there is one thing that Don Rosa does masterfully well with Donald , it's the sympathy . True , the cartoons had that , Barks did that in a more implicit way and Martina occasionally uses that , but in Rosa's case he has in his bet stuff a Donald who life has constantly spat on . Like any trooper , Donald has his breakdown moments and those give us some of his finest tales : "The Duck who never was" , "The Magnificent Seven (Minus Four) Caballeros!" and "Super Snooper Strikes". So to make a long story short , with Don Rosa you'd believe a duck can make you cry ... or at the very least make you teary .

UNDERAPPRECIATED DUCK DAZE

YES , I know a lot of fans will say they prefer Duck tales or say "Booouuuuh it ain't like the comics ..."....
Well SCREW THAT ! Yes , it 's true that I wish we'd have animated features based on Barksian adventures among other things , but Quack Pack deserves to be appreciated on its own terms . It is its own animal and has to be seen as such . Quack Pack doesn't care and has the flippant attitude of: "Hey. It's a cartoon. That means we can do ANYTHING WE WANT! BWAHAHAHA!", but since I am here to talk about Donald , I really find his treatment here just as underrated as the show itself.
Having rewatched the show recently , I could not help but notice that Donald's multi-layered aspect come to the front more than once . Behind all the whackiness he is put through , he is mostly a frantic , impatient , and (rightfully) suspicious, but still very loving parent. In fact it really makes up to the way his career got sabotaged in cartoons by the late 50's , so it's nice to see a middle-aged version of the Jack King's design.
And like the comics you have a constant battle between maturity and immaturity with an intact Donald that can shift between protagonist and antagonist depending on the episode ... And I am grateful for it because it'd be the last time (barring Fantasia 2000) to see a properly multi-layered Donald on-screen . So tell those purist to get off their high horses and enjoy the Show !


FROM YOUR AVERAGE JOE TO SUPERHERO...

This will be the longest part , and yes I am cheating a bit . Because it is time to talk about the way the italian masters handled the Don and boy did they do a wonderful job with him ! Yes their Donald is the same guy as Barks's but the aspects they focus on lead to different stories . If you ever are new to Disney comics, MARK MY WORDS : Martina,Bruno Concina,Gianfranco Cordara , Rodolfo Cimmino, Carpi, Scarpa, De Vita, Rota and Cavazzano among many deserve a fuckload of praise !So never dismiss them ! NEVER !
But to properly understand Paperinik (well both versions ) we have to start with the great Guido Martina :
Guido Martina is a scholar, gifted with a great imagination and a true knack for dark humor.He loved writing about aggressive characters , making Donald one of his favorite characters . He masters 2 types of tales : The "What If"s that are Great literary parodies, where Duckburg is placed in a new setting or becomes the recreation of literary works , thus combining the art of comics and the art of writing . The other kind he excells at are the social battles : Martina's Scrooge is the character as an exploiter that loves using his position to make Donald work for him (which is an aspect Barks stopped using by the 60's... Don Rosa On the other hand did that a lot more than you'd expect , While Donald is either the symbol of the average Joe OR a colossal slacker ... and the best part : Martina KNOWS HOW TO MAKE IT HILARIOUS ! Like Barks , he knew how to make the characters appealing while unashamedly showing their flaws !
And along Elisa Penna and Giovan Battista Carpi, he introduced Paperinik in the two-part, 60-page story "Paperinik il diabolico vendicatore" ("Paperinik the Diabolical Avenger") published on June 8 and June 15, 1969. I know THIS version as Fantomiald : It was mostly a way for Donald to get revenge on Scrooge and Gladstone, but would later take on criminals through his own illegal means . His most important ally in his (anti-)heroic identity is Gyro Gearloose, who fabricates most of his special equipment, but in some stories, without knowing his identity.

The other Paperinik , would come later as a testbed for a generation of new authors to create a blend of the "classical" Disney comics and the American superhero comic books. THAT one I know as Powerduck , and yes I am aware that there are 3 series so here is my thought on each one :
- PKNA : The longest and most well-crafted one (I am currently collecting and reading it ...)
- PK2: The direct sequel to PKNA (I need to finish PKNA before that...)
- PK Pikappa: The reboot or simplified one ...Yet is still have a lot of it epicness intact ! If anything I would choose THIS one If I ever had to make an animated adaptation of it...
And within this series, we discover a side of Donald that was hinted at earlier in Barks's comics : his adventurous side would grow into a heroic one , and a serious one at that !But this is what makes Donald so great : he is still himself , but is varied enough to play in comical or tragic stories and do it well in both cases .
Throughout the 3 series' run, the themes were : the relationship between man and robot or what makes humanity "human"; the struggle between logic and ethics ; the essence of true love; the difference between mankind and other alien races; what makes a true superhero; and the importance of History and past historical events.
This is exactly why the Disney studios astonish me. For years, they've turned out a fuckload of bad movies, all the while literally sitting on storyboards for what could give us MASTERPIECES OF ANIMATION ! (You name it Don Rosa's The Life and Times of Scrooge McDuck, Gottfredson's Mickey outwits the Phantom Blot , Dragon Lords by Erickson and Giorgio Cavazzano , Barks 's A Christmas for Shacktown AND THIS among other things ). Seriously look at this [link]

So there it is , my love letter towards the greatest Disney character ever created period. A character that got me into drawing for the first time and that I will still keep drawing ... Tune in next time folks , as I said , there were 2 of the greatest cartoon creations of all time SO we will get to the ESSENCE of animation itself and GOD of all anti-heroes ... you know full well who I am talking about , don't you ?
Related content
Comments: 70

devilkais In reply to ??? [2023-01-22 20:58:10 +0000 UTC]

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SonySakura [2019-04-13 14:42:25 +0000 UTC]

A nice picture and a very interesting description (dare I say an article even?)! I agree with you on Quack Pack specifically... You actually reminded me about that episode where Donald de-aged, and we got to see his old design once again xD
A question: if you were writing this piece nowadays what would you write about DuckTales 2017's Donald?

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devilkais In reply to SonySakura [2019-04-15 20:18:53 +0000 UTC]

Oh it is a fantastic episode !


I dunno, DuckTales 2017 ended up being a disappointment. I am one of the few Disney fans that did not want a new ducktales show BUT straight up animated adaptations of the comics (Mickey stuff INCLUDED...). Thankfully, THIS happened Ay, Jalisco, no te rajes!

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Spetsnaz08 [2018-12-21 20:15:44 +0000 UTC]

My compliments, an excellent tribute for an awesome character!


p.s: about PK (by the way: in Italy he's simple an acronym, the complete hero's name is still Paperinik) I don't know if you know it, but since 2014 the fourth series of the saga is being published under the name PKNE (Paperinik New Era).

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devilkais In reply to Spetsnaz08 [2018-12-24 07:34:55 +0000 UTC]

Why thank you ! Know that the Duck is prevalent in this here galleryΒ Ay, Jalisco, no te rajes!

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Spetsnaz08 In reply to devilkais [2018-12-24 07:37:36 +0000 UTC]

You're welcome.


p.s: if you want to take a look at PKNE: bankingtheduck.blogspot.com/p/…

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AnneMate [2017-07-23 09:01:06 +0000 UTC]

Evolution of my precious child

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devilkais In reply to AnneMate [2017-07-24 21:37:33 +0000 UTC]

Indeed !

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ZanarNaryon [2017-06-15 09:23:09 +0000 UTC]

Carl Barks may have been the greatest writer in the traditional sense, and I love all his stories, but he always seemed more focused on making the audience laugh, which there is nothing wrong With, that was Disney's goal all along, but Don Rosa really added the epicness and layer of Depth to all the characters. His stories are some of the few pieces of fiction to ever make me cry.

*PK2 spoilers*
Oh my god, I nearly cried at the opening issue of PK2, when One/Uno "died". Masterful writing on the subject of man and machine, what truly makes a character human/duck

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devilkais In reply to ZanarNaryon [2017-06-15 13:54:54 +0000 UTC]

Much as I like Rosa, I never compared him to Barks (and yes, the Rosa/Barks continuity is bullshit BTW. Carl only gave a damn about the story and how it amuses and entertains ! That's it ! He worked in animation and it really shows.). Both have waaaay different styles.
While I agree that Rosa loves the sentimentalist tales, I don't find it deeper than comedy (between us, depth in fiction was always subjective... the reason it makes me emote is my attachment towards the Ducks. And said attachment was forged through comedy !).
Β In fact some of his stories are more akin to big Disney movies than anything close to classic Donald cartoons or comics. However Rosa's biggest issue were the nephews... man they're boring later on in his comics...

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Urvy1A [2017-03-22 06:36:13 +0000 UTC]

Not to mention in the US, he had his own brand of Orange Juice.

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AnneMate In reply to Urvy1A [2017-07-23 09:02:05 +0000 UTC]

He also got his brand of bread

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devilkais In reply to Urvy1A [2017-03-24 10:02:39 +0000 UTC]

And still no long feature ! THAT is revolting !

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AngusMcTavish [2015-04-13 20:21:22 +0000 UTC]

I really like that you threw in the prototype duck as well! Never really thought of that...

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devilkais In reply to AngusMcTavish [2015-04-15 11:48:48 +0000 UTC]

Well I had to go for an integral evolution... I should have drawn 2 Paperiniks though ...

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MrKrookodile [2015-03-11 14:12:51 +0000 UTC]

Good Job!

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DarthWill3 [2013-06-23 03:16:57 +0000 UTC]

Very cool!

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Knarand [2013-06-08 15:26:11 +0000 UTC]

Wauw, good drawing, and good ideas back the drawings ;D
What do you use to inke the drawings with? Your drawings have a special effect with that pen/makers

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devilkais In reply to Knarand [2013-06-09 21:06:55 +0000 UTC]

Actually those were by a really basic black pen ! The next ones will be more consistent .

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Knarand In reply to devilkais [2013-06-10 07:22:31 +0000 UTC]

Hmm, nice

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DCLeadboot [2013-06-07 22:02:46 +0000 UTC]

Always a wacky duck in every form!

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devilkais In reply to DCLeadboot [2013-06-09 21:08:01 +0000 UTC]

Just like this guy [link]

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DCLeadboot In reply to devilkais [2013-06-09 21:57:50 +0000 UTC]

They sure had a lot in common, indeed!
They couldn't even work together in "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?" without fighting for the spotlight!

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Ohthehumanityplz [2013-05-17 07:14:02 +0000 UTC]

Your own view on "Quack Pack" makes me think of E-rod's(Blockbuster Buster) review of Darkwing Duck and the titular character's points. I suppose Darkwing created the traits, and then Quack Pack kind of moved the traits over to Donald yet kept them both different characters.

I really do need to see both series myself since I used to watch the other Disney lineup in the 90s like Goof Troop and Bonkers.

I'll check out the second article later. Thanks for sharing this with me.

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devilkais In reply to Ohthehumanityplz [2013-05-17 13:37:59 +0000 UTC]

Heh, thank you very much !
Actually "Quack Pack" used the same Donald you see under Jack King or some of the comics, it was not a new Donald, nor was he inspired by Darkwing's traits (Besides Donald's superheroic identity is completely different from Drake's). But I will talk about that show in more details with its best episodes.
As for E-rod... I never bothered watching his stuff ( do they all need to yell ?!) especially after he COMPLETELY missed the point of Back In Action, then again here is my review of BIA [link]

No need to thank me, I am glad that you read it !

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Ohthehumanityplz In reply to devilkais [2013-05-18 02:40:07 +0000 UTC]

I was referring more to Drake when he's out of the costume. A father to his little girl, like with Donald with the way he treats his family. Different yet similar.

I'll take a look at that review later, thanks for the detailed analyses.

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thepagansun [2013-04-02 22:05:35 +0000 UTC]

Awesome job! Look like the real deal!

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devilkais In reply to thepagansun [2013-06-23 02:50:45 +0000 UTC]

Well here is someone that should be more known ! [link]

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thepagansun In reply to devilkais [2013-06-27 21:26:35 +0000 UTC]

Haha...true!

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devilkais In reply to thepagansun [2013-06-30 00:31:54 +0000 UTC]

And here is a bonus [link]

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thepagansun In reply to devilkais [2013-07-08 05:08:14 +0000 UTC]

Awww....that's nice! You draw really well!

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Iheb96 [2013-03-31 11:50:35 +0000 UTC]

Donald duck with the black swuit it the best

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devilkais In reply to Iheb96 [2013-06-23 02:51:00 +0000 UTC]

Like this ? [link]

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mouselady [2013-03-21 18:58:30 +0000 UTC]

Awesome job!!!!

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devilkais In reply to mouselady [2013-03-21 19:11:17 +0000 UTC]

Welcome Back ! How you've been ? Here is a bonus ! [link]

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mouselady In reply to devilkais [2013-03-21 19:41:03 +0000 UTC]

Super!!! You draw the Duck so nicely!

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Iyzeekiil [2013-03-18 05:36:24 +0000 UTC]

I love how distinct they are, how I can tell which era, artist or style it came from, great work

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devilkais In reply to Iyzeekiil [2013-03-18 11:33:22 +0000 UTC]

Thanks a lot ! I even did my personal versions , take a look and tell me which ones you like [link]

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Iyzeekiil In reply to devilkais [2013-03-18 11:44:00 +0000 UTC]

No hesitation: DEADPOOL

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TheDreweMaster [2013-03-08 08:01:56 +0000 UTC]

A wonderful, duck-tastic to my most favourite duck (and also my favourite cartoon character). Thank you very much!

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devilkais In reply to TheDreweMaster [2013-03-09 12:11:16 +0000 UTC]

Why thank you ! Have another one [link]

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MrsHorowietzky [2013-03-02 21:41:07 +0000 UTC]

I really think these tributes of yours are a wonderful thing to do! I particularily love the descriptions -- you write them with so much knowledge and such an amount of true passion for the subject, it's a great joy to read.
I truly hope that your intriguing and enjoyable textes inspire people around here who stumble across this to go and read some comics by the authors and artists you mention, as they, and I agree here wholeheartly with you, are more than worth being discovered. It's a pity that many people think about Duck-comics as a sort of 'stuff for little kids' although I am convinced they would change their opinion very quickly if they would only risk to dip a bit into some of the stories you mention here! Many elements of the comics are only fully understandable if you are quite a bit older than what is regarded by many as the 'appropriate age' to read 'little funny comics about talking ducks'...
Well, whining aside, I wanted to add some subjective remarks: Personally, I like your paragraphs about 'Rosa's Psychodrama' ( Well, one could describe it like this -- but like you wrote, it's high-quality psychodrama -- one of the best there can be read or seen anywhere) and the first half of 'Average Joe' most -- simply because they give such well-written, analysing accounts of my three personal heros of the Duck-comics-universe: Rosa, Carpi and Martina. Speaking of Martina, I always adored his literary parodies most, but I also love Paperinik... some might say that the whole concept of 'taking the law into ones own's hands' might be rather antiquated, but this is what makes the character interesting... and it is this manifestation of irritable temperament and injured pride which connects Paperinik's personality with (the italian) Donald's in the first place.

Alright, thank you for your enjoyable and important work and keep spreading the enthusiasm for (sometimes underappreciated) characters and creators!!

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devilkais In reply to MrsHorowietzky [2013-03-02 22:48:04 +0000 UTC]

As I said one thing I will never understand is why doesn't Disney give animation long features to guys like Scrooge , Mickey or Donald ... They have some of the greatest characters of all times but they don't properly use them ! And yeah , I said Mickey mainly because I hate it when people put him down all the time without knowing the truth about him (and yep , Don Rosa definitely doesn't know the true Mickey [link] ... Then again as I should have pointed out , while I love Don Rosa , I call bull on the whole "Barks gave Donald a true personality..." : As I said , take a look at his cartoons and you'll see why Comics Donald is just an expansion of the Cartoon Donald (And I do include Quack PAck ! That show is severely underrated !). Exact same duck , different settings ...
I will try making a compilation of my favorite stories or Disney Cartoons ...
Also , Click here if you wanna read about the other greatest character of all time [link]

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Ohthehumanityplz In reply to devilkais [2013-05-17 07:18:53 +0000 UTC]

I noticed that they even cut Mickey and the Beanstalk in half to give some time to another hacked up story(the good short Bongo). In the ending of Mickey and the Beanstalk, the giant doesn't die but becomes a small handservant to Queen Minny. Shame that the product couldn't be filled.

Somehow I wonder if Song of the South was supposed to be fully animated and decided to add the Uncle Remus framing story later... In this collection of Disney Tales from the 40/50s, they mention a story about a Lion character who meets Brer Rabbit.

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fireheart1001 [2013-02-14 23:18:48 +0000 UTC]

I honestly don't know if I'm more impressed with the artwork, or the incredibly detailed description in the artist's comments. You REALLY know your characters.

Also, I had no idea that was Donald's prototype. Really strange. I do remember the "The Wise Little Hen" short though and Donald's rendition in it ("I have a bellyache!" XD ).

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devilkais In reply to fireheart1001 [2013-02-23 02:27:46 +0000 UTC]

Oh but there is this one now [link]

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LordNegaduck [2013-02-09 21:08:39 +0000 UTC]

All Donald Ducky does look so very cute, no matter which time period he's from

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devilkais In reply to LordNegaduck [2013-02-09 22:17:10 +0000 UTC]

Thank you a lot ! Tune in next time to see the other greatest character I spoke of !

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LordNegaduck In reply to devilkais [2013-02-21 04:56:54 +0000 UTC]

You're so very welcome

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devilkais In reply to LordNegaduck [2013-02-23 02:36:18 +0000 UTC]

Well here it is then [link]

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