I’m still happily reading up on my collection of Donald Duck albums featuring the work of Disney’s ‘Duck Man’ Carl Barks; discovering how much it has influenced my own cartooning and trying to analyze what it is exactly that makes Barks’ graphic storytelling so compelling.
This time I read ‘Luck of the North’, a story originally published in 1949:
Donald’s annoying cousin Gladstone Gander was a relatively new addition, created just a few years before, and Barks introduces him brilliantly on the first page:
To uncover the graphic choices that Barks made here, I “translated” this scene to this:
This is not necessarily a “bad” way of storytelling. But I can see I am availing myself of a few “easy” comics clichés that Barks has avoided:
My comics style can feature a lot of “talking heads” (which I justify by putting an effort into the expressions). Barks steers away from this by drawing intensifying physical action, even into a simple conversation. I love how increasingly over-the-top Gladstone’s behavior gets in every panel. It’s a nice set-up for the rest of the story, where Donald sends him on a fake errand to the North Pole… and then relents. Which is depicted in this gem of a page:
How brilliant are those silent panels on row three? The story could have done without them, but they add such a wonderful mood, and a bit of a moral, too. Look at the way Donald is looking directly at the reader as remorse sets in!
Since an early age, I have filled my head with Barks’ comics language. Even now that I am consciously analyzing it, his influence comes through unconsciously, like in the last comic I made:
I almost literally copied Barks, including the worm! And I didn’t even realize it until I took a closer look at this story!
If you liked this post, take a look at my other UnBarksings:
I felt like a student in your Comics 101 class at Substack University. 😁 I learned so much and will reread it to take it all in. So good! I just love your work.
Breng dit uit in een boek(je). Je zal de nodige haters krijgen, maar ik vind je visie en opinie positief en vermakkelijk, ook in positieve zin.