Page 1 of 1

Top Funny

PostPosted:Thu Jun 09, 2005 4:33 pm
by Nev
All right everyone...I want to hear your top 5 funny comic selections - web-based, syndicated, or otherwise! Narrative strips allowed as long as they're mostly comedic. Go!

For me:

1. Sinfest - Tatsuya Ishida - This one gets the tops from me for its wonderful art, relative consistency, and the willingness to take on tough subjects like philosophy and sex almost every day. I particularly love the Dragon.
2. Penny Arcade - Tycho Brahe (Jerry Holkins) and Jonathan Gabriel (Mike Krahulik). It's only three times a week, they're not as consistent as Sinfest, and they don't range outside the gaming area too much, but just on the basis of pure funny, Tycho and Gabe have made me laugh at times harder than anyone else outside an actual live stand-up comedy routine. (See <a href="http://www.penny-arcade.com/view.php3?d ... es=l">this strip</a> for an example.)
3. Calvin and Hobbes - Bill Watterson - Inspiring and hilarious, I think a lot of modern comics may owe a debt to this strip, with great art at times at the end of its run. I think it was one of the first strips (after Walt Kelly's Pogo) to really boast some serious artistic quality, but my comics history isn't too good so I may not be right about that.
4. Bloom County/Outland/Opus - Berkeley Breathed - My absolute favorite strips involving political humor. Funnier than Doonesbury, in my opinion, for all of Gary Trudeau's political respect. But it's only political some of the time, and the rest is good too. Funny and well-drawn.
5. Asterix and Obelix - René Goscinny (stories) and Albert Uderzo - Supposedly most of Europe has read an Asterix title at some point, and I think in France (where it's from) it's just wildly popular, but it never really caught on here. From the issues I've read, I think it may be partially because of the language barrier, as I suspect a lot of the original French jokes are wordplay puns that have to be retranslated or even replaced in the U.S. The only narrative-based strip in my top 5 - some funny stuff.

Honorable Mention: FoxTrot (Bill Amend), The Far Side (Gary Larson), Ph.D. - Piled Higher and Deeper (Jorge Cham), Garfield (Jim Davis), PvP (Scott Kurtz), and Carl Banks and Don Rosa's Scrooge McDuck comics.

Kupek, I really think you ought to check out Ph.D. (www.phdcomics.com), which is purely topical to grad school and still hilarious. I'm not even in grad school and I enjoyed it very much. There's an archive on the site.

Also, I would be extremely remiss if I didn't bring up Little Nemo in Slumberland by Windsor McCay in this discussion. This was a VERY old-time strip (like around the turn of the century to a little later) but boasted some of the most beautiful art I've ever seen. It's not exactly primarily comedic, or it would have been somewhere in my top 5, but there are wonderfully funny and surreal (as well as some wonderfully dark) things there. Most people don't seem to have heard of it. Those who played the NES game made in the late 1980s based on it, my apologies - it doesn't really do the strip justice.

PostPosted:Thu Jun 09, 2005 4:48 pm
by Derithian
1. I can't believe it's not the Justice League/Formerly known as the Justice League

2. Sinfest

3. Penny Arcade

4. Plastic Man

5. She-Hulk

PostPosted:Thu Jun 09, 2005 4:55 pm
by Nev
I had a feeling someone might try to pass off serious narrative comics as funnies as a joke. Come on, Derith - no cheap shots because you're an industry insider now...you have a book deal, or a strip, or something, right?

PostPosted:Thu Jun 09, 2005 5:00 pm
by Agent 57
1. Calvin & Hobbes

2. <a href="www.somethingpositive.net">Something Positive</a>

3. <a href="www.goats.com">Goats</a>

4. <a href="www.nuklearpower.com">8-Bit Theater</a>

5. <a href="www.vgcats.com">VG Cats</a>

PostPosted:Thu Jun 09, 2005 5:05 pm
by Derithian
what serious ones. those were specifically written as comedies. She hulk was funny but the Formerly known as the justice league books are absolutely hilairious....how can they not be the team is called the super-buddies and have booster gold

PostPosted:Thu Jun 09, 2005 5:08 pm
by Nev
Seriously? Maybe I ought to check it out then. Any online links?

PostPosted:Thu Jun 09, 2005 7:49 pm
by Kupek
Exclusively web comics:<ul><li><a href=http://www.penny-arcade.com/>Penny Arcade</a>
<li><a href=http://www.machall.com/>Mac Hall</a>
<li><a href=http://www.pvponline.com/>PvP</a>
<li><a href=http://www.vgcats.com/>VG Cats</a>
<li><a href=http://cheston.com/pbf/index.html>The Perry Bible Fellowship</a></ul>I consider Calvin & Hobbes in a class by itself. The only other print comic that I still appreciate is The Far Side.

Just about every grad student I know has read Ph.D. Comics at some point. I like it, but for reasons I haven't bothered to think through, I don't read it regularly. It is good, and it is satisfying to get the inside jokes about grad life.

PostPosted:Fri Jun 10, 2005 2:47 am
by SineSwiper
PBF is awesome stuff. As far as ones that haven't been posted yet:

MNFTIU
Ctrl+Alt+Del (just starting to get into this)
Red Meat
You Damn Kid (like Dennis the Menace but funny and for adults)

PostPosted:Fri Jun 10, 2005 9:34 pm
by Torgo
Penny Arcade
Perry Bible Fellowship
Monty, formerly Robotman
Maakies
Snake N' Bacon - Not really a series, but they seem to be the mascots for Michael Kupperman's work. He still does comics for Nickelodeon Magazine every now and then.

Lifetime Acheivment Awards go to Calvin and Hobbes, Far Side.

PostPosted:Sat Jun 11, 2005 1:14 am
by EsquE
1) Calvin & Hobbes

2) The Far Side

3) Sinfest

4) Redmeat

5) Penny Arcade