Most Helpful Customer Reviews
|
|
46 of 53 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent comic, November 28, 2004
I am wild about Aaron McGruder. He captures the very essence of political satire with his adorable characters in the Boondocks. I have watched him on Bill Maher and can certainly see why he has remained so popular. Huey and Cesar often ponder a world in which the Democrats regained control of the country, but realize that Kerry was just a punk. Grandad's crusty ways make me laugh every morning on the way to work, and Riley's thug attitude brings it all back to Earth, proving that even the most serious political pundit can have a sense of humor and still get his point across. I also think Aaron McGruder is hot.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you?
|
|
|
|
|
|
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Wow! An actual important piece of modern pop culture!, September 4, 2005
The Boondocks is undoubtedly the most important mainstream comic since its obvious and admitted predecessor, Doonesbury. However, the connection these strips share is in purpose, because their contents are dramatically different.
Picture the white-picket fence tranquility of your stereotypical suburb within comfortable driving distance of the thuggish-ruggish city.
Everything is just peaches, and roses, and whatever else, until this family moves in. Now the old fella, Grandpa, he's cool because he's soooo old he's just happy to be living, and indifferent to most current affairs, because hey, at least he doesn't have to run from a crazy mob of Klan members like they had to in the old days.
His grandsons, however, are different. Riley, that pint-sized DMX/50 Cent/Ja Rule wannabe, brings the real ghetto (or so he and they think) to this used to be perfect setting. Even worse is older Huey, whose calls for revolution contain too much fire for this complacent community.
Throughout their daily lives, Huey rails against modern politics, race relations, and pop culture, while Riley embraces these and any other establishments that are either down with, or help his cause to get his swerve on.
What prevents this collection from receiving the five star rating I give the first collection is its incessant reliance on aforementioned topics, in lue of strips which work to expand on the vivid characters of the strip. In the last collection, many strips were dedicated to themes and issues immersed in current affairs, but they only existed within the context of this local community and its citizens. Every strip in this new collection calls attention to more recognizable and global topics/issues/people, and rarely within the context of simply this local community. The result is a sometimes tiring focus on Beyonce, Condoleeza Rice, GW, etc.
Regardless, University of Maryland alumni (Go Terps!) Aaron McGruder is still one of the most important writers of today. Through the genre of comics, he is able to reach a wider audience which includes those with short attention spans. He is one artist in the mainstream media who speaks the inarguable truth with ferocity and no holds barred. He challenges his cultural race, and indirectly the human race in general, to be upfront and honest about all the important issues we lie to ourselves about for comfortability and peace of mind: war, poverty, excessive living, immorality, and perverse freedom.
Pick this collection up as a way to lend laughter to your otherwise brimming dissatisfaction with these issues.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you?
|
|
|
|
|
|
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Funny and insightful, December 2, 2005
This is a collection of the newspaper comic Boondocks. I love this comic! If Doonesbury was the 70s, Bloom County the 80s, and Calvin and Hobbes the 90s (though not as political as the others), Boondocks is now. This collection seems to cover 2003-2004, including, of course, the Bush-Kerry election. McGruder really expresses the anger, disappointment, and fear of the election by those of the left in a way that I totally and completely relate to. There is obviously a debt to Bloom County and Calvin and Hobbes in his comics, though with a bit more righteous anger. His lampooning of pop culture and frankness regarding race also rarely miss the mark. Even when I don't read the paper, I go online to read Boondocks. It makes me feel like I'm not alone, and reminds me of the humor in everything.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you?
|
|
|
|
|
|
Most Recent Customer Reviews
|