What Comic Strips Influenced “Calvin and Hobbes”?

Krazy Kat
The documentary Dear Mr. Watterson (2013) opens this week in theaters and on video on demand. The documentary about the great comic strip Calvin and Hobbes and its creator Bill Watterson is directed by Joel Allen Schroeder. To promote the movie, which started as a Kickstarter project, the filmmakers have released this interesting clip that examines three comic strips that apparently influenced Watterson and Calvin and Hobbes. Check it out.

As you can see from the clip, we do not have the reclusive Watterson, who remains protective of his creation and still refuses to license products related to the comic. So other commentators explain the comic strips whose influences they see in Calvin and Hobbes. The three influences discussed in the clip are Walt Kelly’s Pogo, Charles M. Schulz’s Peanuts, and George Herriman’s Krazy Kat. If you want more on Watterson, check out his recent rare interview on Mental Floss.

What is your favorite Calvin and Hobbes strip? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Calvin and Hobbes: The Movie?

    Calvin and Hobbes Movie

    Below is a fan video a fan imagined for a trailer for a Calvin and Hobbes movie. No, it is not a real movie, but Gritty Reboots! made a funny look at what the characters might be like if Calvin grew up. Check it out.

    Unfortunately, after reclusive cartoonist Bill Watterson ended the syndicated comic strip in 1995, he has kept a notoriously tight rein on the rights to the characters. Then, again, that might be a good thing. But there is a Calvin and Hobbes movie, of sorts, on the horizon. A new documentary, Dear Mr. Watterson (2013), comes out April 9 and explores the impact of Calvin and Hobbes through the eyes of fans.

    Would you like to see a Calvin and Hobbes movie? Leave your two cents in the comments.

  • What Comic Strips Influenced “Calvin and Hobbes”?