Friday, July 28, 2006

It's So Glandular II


This is the grand finale, I guess, so grab a cup of coffee and a plate of last night's lasagna. We're gonna be here awhile.

This one's for the fans. The composition echoes Jon's first kiss with Liz some 25 years ago. The poor guy's fashion sense has either degenerated or improved, depending on your stance on '80s cut suits and wide ties. Frankly, there's nothing inherently wrong with a plaid suit if you don't mix patterns with your tie.

Panel 1:
Now I've had my fair share of kisses under the waxing moon, but never found call to execute the stiff-armed death-grip wrist-grab Jon's pulling on Liz. Also it's funny that it force's Jon's lapel to curl up over his arm. The desperation of this stance ("you will NOT get away") leads me to believe this development doesn't force us to reinterpret the last 28 years as Liz totally masking her affection for Jon, but represents a slow erosion of her standards for a mate.

Liz's attire, a modernized, accessorized, sexier update of her 1981 eveningwear, could have been foreshadowingng for the most astute of Garfield students. Said students are probably wondering what Liz did with her yellow purse since leaving the restaurant, though. For those with a continuity bent, July 28 was never established as Jon's birthday until 2001, skipped again in 2002, and has only been granted silly minor gags ever since. Until today it's never been a landmark date.

Good Lord, check out the trolley on Doc Wilson! Maybe I stare at Garfield strips too much, but it's hard to recall anything sexier than Liz's arched back and sultry expression. Nor can I recall any reason for Liz and Jon to call their emotionally wrenching failed dates a "wonderful time."

Panel 2: The difference between the 1981 kiss and 2006 is a floating comics shorthand heart: it means "love". Although today's embrace is not as full-contact and PG-rated, the emotions are different. Except Garfield, that unflappable Buddha of negative virtue, who still stares with chilly disinterested cynicism at his master's folly. What's whirring in that cat-brain is not the shock we were promised by the promotional advertising for this story, but the timeless, coldly bemused refrain: Human love. It's so glandular.

Also: Is Liz talking while she's got a mouthful of Arbuckle tongue?

Panel 3:
So the newspaper headline that graced the Garfield homepage the last 11 days, "COMIC STRIP SHOCKER!" turned out to be an elaborate mislead. It is certainly what passes for a major development in this strip about inaction, but if something is to "doom" Garfield, it will be the ramifications from a Jon/Liz union, not this sweet and wistful little ending.

And the moon cycle changes as we watch, the glands pulse, the cat grins at us, and two people enter a new phase. Did you feel a little warm tingle in your heart? Do you find Garfield's closing sentiment cute? It's not a fare-the-well, folks: it's a punchline. When Garfield stares through the fourth wall, lids half-closed, mouth twisted into predatory sneer, that's when our boy is telling The Truth through sarcasm. If you think anyone in Garfield lives happily ever after, you haven't been reading Garfield long. Two people enter a new phase that looks like happiness. Ever been in love? The glandular rush is a tide that masks a shoreline of bloody shipwrecks like you've never seen. Yah tah tah tah.

Jon's Horoscope: Day Eleven
Hey Birthday Boy! For once your dreams come true! Say goodbye to the last 28 mind-numbing years of frustration and loneliness and celebrate your manly manhood with the love of your life... and your cat. Today's lucky number: 28 (duh)

It is not for Permanent Monday to subject its delicate readers to graphic descriptions of the activity implied by "celebrate your manly manhood". I do not discourage you from mailing me detailed, detailed fanfic on the topic though. It is up to you if Liz asks Jon to wear his fake moustache.

It's very silly that the newspaper publishes a horoscope written for one specific man. More silly is the implication today that Jon is 28 years old just because the strip is 28 years old. This makes less sense than Garfield's one-to-one aging with the strip, because it means Jon wasn't even born when Garfield debuted. So on June 19, 1978, Garfield is a 30-pound newborn kitten and Jon is a talking fetus.

13 comments:

the not so "new" mom on the blog said...

A Garfield Blog - I love Garfield!!! I will definately visit on a regular basis

Anonymous said...

Nmotb... look...

Geez, guys, should I tell him?

DaveyK said...

I apologize in advance for this comment, but when I first looked at this strip, I read Jon's hand position in panel one as forcing Liz's hands towards his...well...groinal region.

I think I was just looking for something earth-shattering. Or I have a filthy mind.

Anonymous said...

This is my new favorite corner of the internet. Also: I agree with daveyk.

Anonymous said...

I had same thought as daveyk.But I interpreted as Doc Wilson attempting to fondle Jon's junk, and Jon restraining her while whispering, "Not in front of the cat."

cortex said...

Perhaps in the interim between strips, those two got good and drunk whilst discussing their long-unsatisfied and lopsided attraction—hence the wonderful time referenced but not seen—and so now they stand awkwardly on unsure feet, gripping one another's hands with locked arms in order to better keep steady.

Or the composition has just gone way downhill as the strip's art has evolved.

Dr. Shoggoth said...

Well, maybe Jon hasn't been lonely for as many years as he's been alive. His life was perfectly fine - farm boy moved into the suburbs, got a job as a cartoonist, doing alright for himself - and then Garfield waltzed into his life. And ruined everything.

28 years of hell later, Jon's finally got a bit of respite. Or he'll just drag Liz kicking and screaming into his never-ending nightmare.

My money's on the second option.

Allen's Brain said...

Check out the poses in frames 1 & 3. Identical! Only Garf has changed.

Anonymous said...

Garfield may be 28, but Jon is probably a few years older. At a guess, he'd just moved out of his parents' home, a place where he felt good but not-quite-fulfilled. Maybe he was starting to make some good money. And then he found this cat who tries to eat him out of house and home every day - and every now and then succeeds...

catastrophile said...

Shoggoth . . . the day Arbuckle's life started on its out-of-control death spiral was the day he decided to forget about drawing comics and start posing his cat and talking to the wall.

Anonymous said...

Is it me though or are they trying to get the comic strip to match up with the movies?

Anonymous said...

This blog has not been updated for a few days. Have I missed something??

Richie, go to the July archives. The blogger hasn't updated the front page for whatever reason, but I just found more recent strips there.

By the way, this is my new favorite thing on the interwebs, and if you had told me a month ago it would be, I'd have snorted in your face.

Dagny said...

About comparing the first two comic strips: I think Jon's style in clothing degenerated. Maybe it's because you don't see the older one in color but that suit Jon is wearing in the top one is hideous!