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IDW's Donald Duck #4 (#371) - Regular and subscription cover |
I got Donald
Duck #371 from my local comic shop today. But I won’t talk about the lead story
this time, for that you can join the discussion on the translators own blog.
Instead I
want to compare the old Mickey Mouse story in this issue to the original print
in the British Mickey Mouse Annual.
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Mickey Mouse Annual 1937 |
At first
glance they look pretty much identical, only that the IDW print has been
colored.
Here’s a photo
of the first page if you want to compare with your own copy.
The story
starts off with some minor dialogue changes and localization:
But on the
last page the changes are more significant. First, there’s a new speech balloon and
dialogue for Goofy.
And the purpose
of this new is dialogue is to censor and rewrite the original gag, because in
the original Goofy seems to have something completely different in mind for
that poor little kitten…
But the
biggest change is in the last panel. Two of the originally four nephews are
edited out of the art! Probably because in modern stories Mickey only have two
nephews.
I can
certainly understand why this gag story had to be censored, and I can understand
the reason for attempting to fix a continuity problem with the nephews. Still,
I’d rather have these oldies reprinted as close to the original as possible.
Or not reprinted at all if they require this kind of editing. I guess the
reason for printing the old British gags is mostly to show rare old material to
new readers, and not to have a great story told. But I’m not sure IDW succeed
in doing that when they make changes like this.
***
Mickey’s
nephews first appeared in Floyd Gottfredson’s 1932 Sunday serial “Mickey's
Nephews “. In that story there are only two of them, and with one exception Gottfredson
never used more than two in his comics. The exeption is “Rumplewatt the Giant”
a Sunday serial from 1934 that (partly) adapts the 1933 animated short “Giantland”.
And that is also the first animated appearances of Mickey’s nephews. But Gottfredson
only penciled that story.
In the “Giantland”
short we can see 14 nephews, while in “Rumplewatt the Giant” there’s
a total of 9.
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From the beginning of "Giantland" (1933) |
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From "Rumplewatt the Giant" (Mar 18, 1934) |
Wilfred
Haughton however was happy to use more than two in his comics. And for those
reading modern stories wondering where all the other nephews went, Haughton
might have a solution for that too! In a 1935 rhyming story he starts off with “Ten
little Mickey’s”, then kills them off one by one until two remains, ending the
rhyme with “That is only natural, at least there must be two. If we ran out of
Mickey kids what would the artist do?”
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Page 1 and 5 from "10 Little Mickey Kids", British Mickey Mouse Annual 1935 |