Trick Or Treat
Daniel van Eijmeren
dve at kabelfoon.nl
Mon Sep 1 15:27:08 CEST 2003
FRANK BUBACZ to me, 31-08-2003:
>> [Trick Or Treat, DD 26, 32-page version] BTW. Is Donald also sceptical
>> towards witches in the animated "Trick or Treat"? Or is it something
>> that Barks put into his comic boom version?
> Apart from the first encounter between Donald and Hazel, when Donald
> thinks she is a child in disguise, there's no hint in the animated
> short that he doesn't believe she's a witch. He just acts rebellious,
> because Hazel hurt his pride.
On page 7, Donald shortly believes that Hazel is a fake witch with a
rubber nose. Page 8 to 10 show the making of the witch brew. From page 11
to 12, Donald is wondering what is going on outside. ("A paint brush
without a painter?" Etc.) At the end of page 13, he concludes: "WITCHCRAFT!
That's what it is!" Donald gets frightened, but page 15 he's offended by
being called a "pushover" and becomes rebellious. I guess this all follows
the same path as in the cartoon?
It takes 13 pages before Donald is convinced that he faces a real witch,
though there's only one encounter where he really clearly expresses that.
(Counting from this first encounter on page 7, it "only" takes 7 pages of
preparation and action to convince Donald. Phew!)
> For those who are interested, here is a list of Barks' own ideas he
> added to the storyboard he got (I'm referring to the original
> 32-pages-version of the comic): [...]
Thanks for this thorough comparison! It's very useful!
--- Daniël
"Witch, goblin, pretty girl - I wonder what's out there now?"
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