Jump to content

Monty (comic strip)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Toughpigs (talk | contribs) at 03:47, 18 June 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Monty
Monty
Author(s)Jim Meddick[1]
Websitewww.gocomics.com/monty
Current status/scheduleRunning
Launch date18 February 1985; 39 years ago (18 February 1985), as Robotman
Alternate name(s)Robotman
Robotman and Monty
Syndicate(s)United Feature Syndicate
Newspaper Enterprise Association
Publisher(s)Topper Books
Andrews McMeel Publishing
Plan 9 Publishing
Genre(s)Humor

Monty is an American comic strip created, written and illustrated by cartoonist Jim Meddick. The strip began as Robotman starting February 18, 1985. The title changed to Monty in 2001.[2]

Robotman

The comic strip began as Robotman on February 18, 1985.[3] It originally depicted the exploits of a small robot from outer space visiting Earth, living with the ordinary Milde family.[citation needed] In the 1990s, Robotman instead began living with a geeky inventor named Monty, introduced in the January 20, 1993 strip.[4]

Robotman left the strip in 2001 to find love on the planet Diskelion, and was replaced in the strip by space alien Mr. Pi.[4]

Robotman's evolution

Robotman originated as a character created by British musician Peter Shelley. Shelley later worked with United Feature Syndicate in an attempt to push Robotman via cross-marketing toys, records, videos, and other merchandise.[5] In 1985, DIC Enterprises produced a 90-minute television special called Robotman & Friends.[6]

The syndicate desired to have a comic strip featuring the character; they had asked Bill Watterson to incorporate the character into Calvin and Hobbes as a condition of syndication, but Watterson refused.[7] The job was then passed on to Jim Meddick, who created the family setting and the other characters. As the strip progressed the design of Robotman changed considerably as Meddick's style evolved.[citation needed]

During contract negotiations, the syndicate approached Meddick with a request to change the name of the strip to Monty and to deemphasize and remove the Robotman character from the strip. This was due to an ongoing difficulty in marketing the strip with the name Robotman (for a brief period, the strip was rechristened "Robotman & Monty").[8]

Robotman was gradually phased out of the strip through a farewell storyline, and the series continued as Monty in April 2001. Robotman's farewell included a return to outer space to live with his love interest, a female robot.

Storylines

As the website announces, the comic strip "spoofs suburbia, trashes tacky TV shows and offers absurdist commentary on everything from hosing down spider monkeys to the latest conspiracy theory." Monty Montahue, the brainy, bumbling bachelor who's unlucky in work and love, is the star of the strip.

Explains Meddick, "I've tried to create the comic strip equivalent of Monty Python's Flying Circus. The name 'Monty' is a nod to the influence that show had on my humor. In my cartoon just about anything can happen — this way, the ideas and characters always stay fresh."[9]

Characters

Current cast

  • Monty Montahue is the protagonist and titular character. He is an odd, optimistic nerd who often comes up with strange inventions and works odd jobs. Monty was introduced to the Robotman strip in the early 1990s. In 1996, it was revealed that Monty was brainwashed of his past life as a government scientist when he invented Robotman. Monty is typically depicted as socially awkward, having poor dress skills and has a prominent nose but no chin. He takes on various (often very nerdy) hobbies and daily occupations, regularly failing because of a mix of goofiness and excessive self-confidence.
  • Fleshy is a skinny, hairless housecat resembling the Pink Panther cartoon character. Fleshy is remarkable for his being the complete opposite of feline attitudes: he is goofy, fearful, unable to catch even the most innocuous of butterflies. Fleshy is frequently shown to be entirely uninterested while in the presence of people, but once alone, he shows his intelligence to be on par with humans. He has a son, who was abducted (and then returned) by the same aliens that took Robotman.
  • Moondog McHorney is the only true friend of Monty. He's a chronic beer drinker, and his house is one of the biggest centers of entropy in the world.
  • Pilsner is Moondog's cynical parrot, who often seems to be smarter than his owner, but still hasn't managed to understand that the other parrot he sees in the mirror is himself.
  • Gretchen is a coffee waitress on whom Monty has a crush. She, however, does not return the feelings. She's a friend and is currently single.
  • Doc is a time traveler from the year 2525 who came to visit the early 21st century and wound up living with Monty for a while and still visits occasionally.
  • EB3 is a cyborg and a friend of Doc's. Small in stature and painted white, he frets incessantly about the fact that he has a "P-word" (in his case meaning pancreas, not what you might think it means). Monty often tries to reassure about his pancreas anxiety ("I have one. Doc has one. It's nothing to be ashamed of!"). Recently, he has shown romantic interest in a vacuum cleaner.
  • Sedgwick Nuttingham III is a privileged child who inhabits a mansion somewhere in Monty's neighborhood. His only companion is his faithful manservant Jarvis, who does anything that Sedgwick desires, from carrying ammunition as Sedgwick hunts Fleshy, to serving as a human target for snowballs, darts etc. Sedgwick's parents do not appear in the strip. The characters have occasional contact with Sedgewick's father, but he is usually away on business and rarely home. Sedgewick's Aunt Polly lives in the mansion and exercises some parental control, but is not seen in the strip. The only other characters that Sedgwick interacts with besides Fleshy are various doctors and psychologists. Sedgwick is highly conservative politically, elitist, and convinced of his innate superiority to all others.
  • Jarvis is Sedgwick's aristocratic butler, with a politely sarcastic sense of humour.

Previous characters

  • The Milde Family was the original supporting cast for Robotman during the 1980s. They portrayed an American middle-class family that lived in suburbia. It was made up of Robotman's best friend Oscar who was an insecure boy about 10 years old, his cynical teenage brother Gary, and their parents. When the strip shifted focus away from Robotman, they stopped appearing.
  • Bruce; Robotman's evil twin. He too was phased out after Monty's debut.
  • Olga; was one of Monty's girlfriends in the mid-90s. She was a personal trainer, large-boned and muscular, in contrast to the out-of-shape Monty.
  • Loco Ohno was Monty's on-again/off-again girlfriend, a parody of Yoko Ono. She was cynical and artistic, very different from the optimistic and technology-minded Monty. She was a devoted feminist, often finding men being the root of evil.
  • Chimpy was a talking chimpanzee. Chimpy constantly attempted to demonstrate his superiority to (or at least parity with) human intelligence and culture, but in fact, he was not particularly bright. For example, he attempted to use a circular saw as a hammer.
  • Dave-7, formerly known as Mr. Pi, was an alien from Rigel and served as Monty's straight man. Dave-7 lived with Monty. He was very logical and deeply involved in studying sciences such as quantum mechanics. There were occasionally ominous references to his race's plans to take over the earth. Nothing has come of them yet. The closest they ever got was to the moon. Then Chimpy got his hands on Dave-7's fleet-command-device, thinking it was a video game, and annihilated the entire fleet.
  • Giggles the Gumdrop-Eating Bear was introduced when Robotman met him in a "coping with cuteness" support group. His relentlessly cheerful personality is embraced by readers and syndicate executives who love him and his tie-in merchandise, but the other characters find him creepy and off-putting.

Books

Several strip collections have been published:

  • Robotman Takes Off: 1986 by Topper Books.
  • Robotman: The Untold Story 1988 by Topper Books.
  • Cyberpunktrek: With Robotman and his Evil Twin Bruce 1990 by Topper Books.
  • Primary Crullers: A Robotman Book 1997 by Andrews McMeel Publishing.
  • The Prehistoric Robotman 2003 by Plan 9 Publishing.

Plot milestones

  • Patrick Stewart, the actor who portrayed Jean-Luc Picard in Star Trek, once tried to kidnap Fleshy. It appears Stewart was his former owner. Eventually Monty manages to take Fleshy back, thanks to his abilities in race walking.
  • While attempting to emulate Spider-Man, Monty was bitten by a radioactive ladybug and became Ladybugman, whose superpowers include ladybug senses (the ability to sense when and where rainbows will form, which caterpillars are aggressive, when a leprechaun is lying, and when somebody is crabby and needs a nap), a hard shell, the ability to sew, the ability to instill guilt in others, the ability to flutter through the air, and the ability to emit a malodorous fluid ("Actually... he's always had that ability" - Dave-7).[10]

Notable spoofs

  • A three-week spoof of Lord of the Rings: Monty's "Lord of the Thing".[11]
  • In March 2006, a two-week spoof of the television series Lost, where Monty found himself shipwrecked on the island. In this spoof, Monty discovers that the Others are actually the castaways from Gilligan's Island.[12][13]
  • Following a transporter accident, Robotman and Mr. Spock exchanged ears. This had to be rectified by the Vulcan Ear meld.
  • After assuring Monty that he would be unaffected by the Y2k bug, Robotman became a Theodore Roosevelt-like character.

References

  1. ^ Strickler, Dave (1995). Syndicated Comic Strips and Artists, 1924-1995: The Complete Index. Cambria, California: Comics Access. p. 180. ISBN 0-9700077-0-1.
  2. ^ Holtz, Allan (2012). American Newspaper Comics: An Encyclopedic Reference Guide. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. p. 333. ISBN 9780472117567.
  3. ^ Holtz, Allan (2012). American Newspaper Comics: An Encyclopedic Reference Guide. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. p. 333. ISBN 9780472117567.
  4. ^ a b Monty at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on March 8, 2016. Robotman (1984) at Don Markstein Toonopedia. Archived from the original on January 24, 2017.
  5. ^ "Robotman Items".
  6. ^ Lenburg, Jeff (1999). The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons. Checkmark Books. p. 317. ISBN 0-8160-3831-7. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  7. ^ Christie, Andrew (1 January 1986). "Bill Watterson". Honk!. Vol. 1, no. 2. Fantagraphics Books. pp. 28–33.
  8. ^ "Man and Robotman: The Jim Meddick Interview". Hogan's Interviews. MSNBC. Retrieved 2007-01-17. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |month= and |coauthors= (help)
  9. ^ Monty at Comics.com Archived 2006-05-13 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ Comics.com - Monty - Ladybugman
  11. ^ Comics.com - Monty - "Lord of the Thing" spoof
  12. ^ Meddick, Jim (wa). Monty (March 1, 2006 – March 18, 2006). United Feature Syndicate.
  13. ^ Comics.com - Monty - "LOST" spoof