Calamity, Jane!
Posted on September 26th, 2008 by Anthony Cardno in Anthony, Talekyn, comics, one star
“Calamities of Nature” has one of the shortest archives of any of the webcomics we’ve reviewed. That’s a good thing in my book. Not because my attention span struggles with longer-lived (or more frequently updated) series, but because …. well, Piro actually explains it well in one of his earliest pages. Yeah, reading the archives felt kinda like that.
I get that these funny animals are supposed to be outside of humanity and commenting on it; the problem is they’re too much a part of the civilization they’re meant to be mocking. There’s the super-cool aloof one, the insecure one, the obnoxiously dumb one, and the outcast oddball one … all the standard “types” for a strip like this. Turn them into people instead of funny animals and readers would be complaining about how stereotypical they are. And none of them seem to really like each other very much. The aloof one complains about how stupid the rest of them are; the obnoxious one treats everyone badly; and they all pick on the outcast oddball one.
Then there’s the fact that I can’t really tell what animals they’re supposed to be. It turns out Harold is a pig (but I honestly needed a guest strip by a different artist to help me realize that), Ferd is a groundhog (okay, could have called that one as he is drawn to look at least a little like Bloom County’s Portnoy), Brian …. I mean, Aaron is apparently a dog (although I don’t think that’s every made clear; he looks like the dog on Family Guy if he wore oversized earmuffs that hid his eyes), and Alp is … well, even the character page says no-one really knows what Alp is.
The fact that most of the jokes aren’t incredibly original doesn’t bother me (didn’t Lewis Black do this joke a few years back? so much as the odd pacing of the comic. Early on there are several jokes that take two pages to develop, with the downside that not only is the end of the first page not funny it also gives no indication that it’s leading to a second page. Not that I need to be spoon-fed directions to “turn the page” so to speak (insert your own “the reviewer is old” joke here … I’ll wait.), but something to show that the page is a set up for an upcoming punchline seems to be called for.
So … for me, this comic just doesn’t work. Odd pacing, characters I don’t really find interesting, and art that seems kind of squashed … I’m going to have to give it 1 star for me, but your mileage may vary. Rating: 




Calamities of Nature
http://www.calamitiesofnature.com
by Tony Piro
review by Anthony R. Cardno



(6 votes, average: 3.83 out of 5)

