germund wrote:Selecting favourites from Murry's vast production (65 "true" Mickey serials if I remember correctly) is quite difficult but, as Rob wrote, The Idol of Moaning Island (WDC214-16) is a favourite, and especially the night and sand storm scenes on the tropical island. Also the Pineapple Poachers (WDC234-36) with the menehunes and all the falling rain is great. Another great scene is featured in Alaskan Adventure (WDC223-25) where Mickey and Goofy are captured by indians and walking through fog and stem into the hidden valley. For nostalgic reasons I also have to mention the fur trader story The River Pirates (WDC336-338) and The Strange Case of Professor Zero (WDC 339-341) which to me represent the very best of the late 60s time travel/science fiction scripts in the US Disney comic books. The River Pirates appear to be one of the few late Fallberg scripts though, so its high standard may not be too surprising.
Contrary to many others here (apparently) I am endlessly fascinated with Murry's artwork. I consider Gottfredson and Scarpa far more dynamic Mickey Mouse artists, but Murry had polished feel and control of his ink lines that was practically unsurpassable. Murry's Goofy is, despite his often quite thick ink lines, the most distinct and well proportioned Goofy I know. True, Murry very often resorted to the "hand-in-front-of-mouth" pose but when he did handle Goofy's lanky body in awkward positions, the result was nearly always a delicate balance of humour and complex controlled movements. I agree that Murry's art grew stiffer and more repetitive over the years but until the early 1960s the man has my greatest respect.
I'm so happy to find a Disney comic forum in English by the way. Great initiative!
germund wrote:Contrary to many others here (apparently) I am endlessly fascinated with Murry's artwork.
germund wrote:True, Murry very often resorted to the "hand-in-front-of-mouth" pose but when he did handle Goofy's lanky body in awkward positions, the result was nearly always a delicate balance of humour and complex controlled movements. I agree that Murry's art grew stiffer and more repetitive over the years but until the early 1960s the man has my greatest respect.
Zekenwolf wrote:I grew up on Paul Murry's Mickey Mouse like most people outside Europe & North America. I always liked his 'everyman' version of the Mouse, which was a nice contrast to the likes of Donald Duck & Uncle $crooge in the WDC&S comics. The serial that I liked best was the very unsual story "The Strange Case of Professor Zero" in WDC&S 339-341.
Egg wrote:germund wrote:Contrary to many others here (apparently) I am endlessly fascinated with Murry's artwork.
I like Paul Murry's art very much. I think he's the best Mickey Mouse comic book artist, and that Floyd Gottfredson was the best newspaper artist.germund wrote:True, Murry very often resorted to the "hand-in-front-of-mouth" pose but when he did handle Goofy's lanky body in awkward positions, the result was nearly always a delicate balance of humour and complex controlled movements. I agree that Murry's art grew stiffer and more repetitive over the years but until the early 1960s the man has my greatest respect.
I dislike the repetitive "hand-in-front-of-mouth" pose. Goofy laughing the same way, with a hand in front of his face.
This Goofy laugh was the subject of a story in which a double Goofy is unmasked because of laughing differently than the real Goofy. I remember this as a Murry-story. Does someone here know it?
Is Supergoofy also by Paul Murry? The series where Goofy, wearing some pyjamas-suit, is able to fly after eating some peanuts?
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