The Far Side
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Template:This Image:Wdogart.jpg The Far Side is a popular one-panel comic created by Gary Larson. Its surrealistic humor is often based on uncomfortable social situations, improbable events, an anthropomorphic view of the world, logical fallacies, impending bizarre disasters, or the search for meaning in life. The strip ran from January 1, 1980, to January 1, 1995, when it was retired (there were a few sabbaticals and vacations along the way). The series was preceded by a similar panel called Nature's Way, also by Larson.
Around the world, The Far Side is perhaps better known for the compilation books and merchandise (especially calendars, T-shirts and mugs) than it is for its original incarnation as a daily newspaper feature.
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The comic
Most Far Side cartoons are single panel, with the caption or dialogue usually appears under the panel, as typed text, although sometimes word balloons were utilized for conversations. Sunday comics were done in water color or colored pencils, with captions hand written in Larson's own cursive.
Most of Larson's comics relied on some combination of a visual and verbal gag, rather than just one or the other.
Larson was recognized for his work on the strip with the National Cartoonist Society Newspaper Panel Cartoon Award for 1985 and 1988, and their Reuben Award for 1990 and 1994.
Recurring themes
Far Side cartoons, though diverse in their humor, often rely on certain familiar situations. These include:
- Life on the farm, featuring the antics of farmers and their animals, especially cows and chickens
- Dogs and/or cats and/or other family pets
- Castaways on a desert island
- Cavemen and dinosaurs
- Scientists in labs, invariably wearing white lab coats
- Explorers and cannibals
- Vikings and Warriors
- Nerds (with whom Larson admittedly identifies)
- Aliens from outer space
- God, complete with white hair and flowing beard, as in Michelangelo's artworks
- Devils and life in Hell, as in folklore stereotypes and Dante's Inferno
- Protozoa and other microscopic creatures
- Mixed metaphors of all kinds
- Common sayings or figures of speech
- Historical events
- Insects and many other wild animals living in human society or in human homes.
- The Old West
- Deep sea divers
- Godzilla
Far Side cartoons are also known for similarities that appear throughout the series:
- Many of the characters are overweight.
- A majority of the characters wear glasses; most notably, the women almost always wear catseye glasses. In situations with non-human characters, the glasses usually indicate the character's gender.
- When no glasses are worn, the eyes usually consist of a simple line.
- The women usually have a beehive hairdo.
- There are always doilies on couches and living room chairs.
- There are usually framed photos of the character's species hanging on the wall of the living room or dining room.
The recurring caption Trouble Brewing appeared on a few cartoons throughout the series, as "trouble brewing" was always a fundamental aspect of Larson's humor. This theme was used for the 2005 release of the Far Side calendar, with situations like:
- Ed's Dingo Farm next door to Doreen's Daycare
- A falconer meeting next to the 12th Annual Teacup Poodle Fanciers Picnic
- An angry mob leaving a migraine headaches center towards a marching band school, with the caption The dam breaks, which seems to be one iota further than Trouble Brewing.
- Crutchfield's Crocodile Farm next door to Anderson's Sky-Diving School
Larson's sense of humor, while original, can also be confusing, as in a comic dubbed "Cow Tools" (Vol 1. Pg 251, The Complete Far Side) that caused masses of readers to speculate on the use of depicted crudely formed tools, while the cartoonist had just found humor in the idea that if a cow could make a tool, they would most likely look as he had drawn them; in other words, readers were looking for a deeply-embedded punchline which simply wasn't there.
Another famous example (Vol 2. Pg 302, The Complete Far Side, also discussed in the 1991 introduction) requires the reader to know obscure facts about sea life, a comic that was inspired by a marine-biologist friend of Larson's. The cartoon depicts two shipwreck survivors clinging to a small island. One survivor tells the other, “Well, we’ll never want for food, Doris. ... This rock is absolutely encrusted with oysters and mussels – all the way to the top!" The joke is that these creatures live below high tide and that they will end up underwater when the tide comes in.
Other times he was a little more obvious, though some knowledge was assumed, such as the family of spiders driving a car down the street. The point of that fanciful situation was the car's bumper sticker, "Have a Nice Day", featuring a smiley face with eight eyes.
He also occasionally drew cartoons commenting on celebrities or current events, although these are rare. An example is a corollary to the Crutchfield joke: What really happened to D.B. Cooper, showing a wide-eyed parachutist, laden with extortion money and heading down into the heart of a Rottweiler farm. Political-themed cartoons were also rare, though during the Gulf War he drew a comic of Saddam Hussein ordering the "mother of all pizzas."
Controversy
Larson's comic has been attacked by people and groups who found it offensive, for religious content (God is often depicted in a humorous or sarcastic light; a strip dubbed "Acts of God" and containing God doing various vaudeville routines on a stage is cited as one of the most notorious in this category) or because people were appalled by the joke. In The Complete Far Side, interspersed with the comics, there are letters from angry citizens to their newspaper's publishers, demanding the removal of The Far Side from their pages, and often citing a cancelled subscription if this was not met. However, these protesters constituted a small enough minority that papers were able to continue to run the strip, with the matter becoming moot when compilation books were produced. Larson himself often laughs at the controversies of his comic as evidenced in the Far Side's Prehistory.
Publishing history
Gary Larson has produced 23 Far Side books, all of which made it to the New York Times bestseller list. The cartoons were first collected in small books (see list below), and some were then republished in larger "best-of" collections (The Far Side Galleries). Additional "best-of" collections were published, such as The Prehistory of The Far Side, culminating in the final, most complete publication, The Complete Far Side.
The small collections:
- 09-1982 The Far Side
- 08-1983 Beyond The Far Side ISBN 0836211499
- 08-1984 In Search Of The Far Side ISBN 0836220609
- 04-1985 Bride Of The Far Side ISBN 0836220668
- 08-1985 Valley Of The Far Side ISBN 0836220676
- 08-1986 It Came From The Far Side ISBN 0836220730
- 04-1987 Hound Of The Far Side ISBN 0836220870
- 10-1987 The Far Side Observer ISBN 0836220986
- 07-1988 Night of the Crash Test Dummies ISBN 0836220498
- 04-1989 Wildlife Preserves ISBN 0836218426
- 10-1990 Wiener Dog Art ISBN 0836218655
- 11-1991 Unnatural Selections ISBN 0836218817
- 11-1992 Cows Of Our Planet ISBN 0836217012
- 11-1993 The Chickens Are Restless ISBN 0836217179
- 11-1994 The Curse of Madame "C" ISBN 0836217632
- 10-1996 Last Chapter And Worse ISBN 0836221311 — this last collection was published after the end of the strip
Other books:
- 11-1984 The Far Side Gallery ISBN 0836220625
- 10-1986 The Far Side Gallery 2 ISBN 0836220854
- 10-1988 The Far Side Gallery 3 ISBN 0836218310
- 01-1989 The Prehistory of the Far Side: A 10th Anniversary Exhibit ISBN 0836218515
- 10-1993 The Far Side Gallery 4 ISBN 0836217241
- 09-1995 The Far Side Gallery 5 ISBN 0836204255
- 04-1998 There's a Hair in My Dirt! ISBN 0060932740 — this book is not a collection of single panels
- 08-2003 The Complete Far Side: 1980-1994 ISBN 0740721135
The five Far Side Galleries are the most popular of the books, each of them collecting together the best cartoons from three smaller books, along with a humorous foreword by a celebrity fan, e.g. Stephen King, Robin Williams, or Jane Goodall (who herself was the subject of a controversial Far Side cartoon).
In 1989, The Prehistory Of The Far Side was published to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the strip. In this book, Gary Larson discussed the development of The Far Side, the public's reaction to it, and presented a selection of his personal favorites from the cartoon's history, as well as previously unpublished sketches and strips rejected by his editor.
In 1994, Larson produced an animated special, Tales From the Far Side, featuring his art style and gags from the strips. He followed with a sequel in 1997.
In 2003, The Complete Far Side was released, which contains nearly every Far Side comic ever published. (The collection is missing parody art pieces from Wiener Dog Art and some of The Prehistory Of The Far Side material) The set featured two volumes (1980-1986 and 1987-1994), a foreword by Steve Martin, and an introduction by Larson's long-time editor Jake Morrisey. The first-edition hardcover boxed set weighs nineteen and a half pounds (8.8 kilograms).
Online
It is difficult to find many Far Side cartoons online since Larson (and/or his publishers and lawyers) have been very effective at persuading people to not infringe on his copyright. There is a widely distributed letter online, attributed to Gary Larson, in which he explains the "emotional cost" to him of people displaying his cartoons on their websites, and asks them to stop doing so.