Remix Comic



Remix Comics are to comics as Gag Dubs and Gag Subs are to film and animation.

From another perspective, as the Stick Figure Comic and Sprite Comic tropes show, being unable to draw is not an impediment to pushing your own brand of funny on the world. Thanks to the Remix Comic, neither is the inability to come up with your own characters.

Remix comics can be as simple as taking a frame or frames from your favourite webcomic, blanking out the speech bubbles in MS Paint and overwriting them with new text. They can also be made from scans of printed comics.

Sometimes, alterations to the actual images can also be made. These can range from simple things like changing the expression on someone's face, to reordering frames or even inserting entire new characters, possibly from other media entirely.

Copyright issues may interfere with distribution of remixes. However, some webcomickers are experimenting with Creative Commons licenses that enable them to explicitly allow a specific level of reuse, such as non-commercial derivative works that give attribution to them. Of course, comic writers and artists can also remix their own creations.

Usually remixes are made by fans. They are also known as Strip Slaying, Rescripting or Fanmixing.

Comic Books

 * This Something Awful article features a number of remixed comic book covers. On the Something Awful forums, it's known as "Ruining the Moment".
 * Christopher Bird is known for his Remixes, including the entire Marvel Civil War miniseries.
 * At 4thletter!, Gavok applies this treatment to Jeph Loeb's work in the Ultimate Universe.
 * Siege Reloaded is a remix of Marvel's event comic Siege that has a great deal of fun with just how stupid the idea of invading Asgard really is.
 * Jet Dream is a remix of various comics from the late '60s and early '70s, particularly the actual feature by the same name that appeared as a backup in the The Man from U.N.C.L.E. comic book. Teen humor and romance comics are also remixed in the titles It's Cookie! and My Jet Dream Romance. Presented as a Retraux comic book line whose publisher was obsessed with sex-changes and who in "real life" supported a "Fem Is In!" movement aimed at encouraging all boys to become wholesome heterosexual crossdressers.
 * Dale: The Arousing Adventures of Dale Manx, Trans-Fem P.I. uses source material from Marvel Comics' Dazzler to tell the tale of Dale Manx, formerly a male dick with a girl's name, now just a girl with a girl's name. Retraux '80s fun for all.
 * Truer Than True Romance brilliantly lampoons the romance comics of the 1940s and 1950s by keeping the original panels and rewriting all the speech bubbles.
 * Oddity Collector did a remix of the final pages of Batman #644 in 2005, years before DC Comics did their own Author's Saving Throw for that controversial issue.
 * Apropos Comics featured humorous remixes of various comic book sequences. While many were one-shot gags, there were also recurring characters like Bat-Botanist ("Sworn to avenge his parents' deaths while teaching the citizens of Gotham about botany") and Captain American Government (Captain America (comics), but with more of a focus on lecturing his opponents about the legislative process and the Electoral College.)
 * What Were They Thinking? was a 2006 series, actually published as a comic book by Boom Studios, which gave humorous recaptions to public domain comic book material from the '40s and '50s.
 * There are actually a few examples of Remix Comics (done "seriously" and not for purposes of parody) from major comic book publishers:
 * Circa 1969, DC Comics figured there was room for yet another knockoff of Archie on the stands... but instead of creating a new series, they took old stories from their Dobie Gillis licensed comic, redrew the main character likenesses and relettered the scripts to produce the "new" series Windy and Willy.
 * In the mid-'70s, Planet of the Apes suddenly became a hot property. Marvel Comics had a popular "Apes" series (in its black-and-white Marvel Magazines line). Marvel's British imprint, Marvel UK, eagerly followed suit with its own magazine, reprinting the American stories. But Marvel UK's "Apes" magazine was published weekly, so they quickly ran out of American material to reprint. How then to fill the space? Marvel UK just took stories from Marvel's War of the Worlds/Killraven feature (very loosely inspired by H.G. Wells' original and never printed in the UK), rewrote the scripts and altered the art to turn Killraven's alien adversaries into apes. The result? Killraven became Apeslayer, and Marvel UK could fill out the pages of its Planet of the Apes magazine for the rest of its run.

Manga

 * Azumanga Daioh lends itself well to remixes: The Comprehensive Kriegsaffe No. 9 is a notable, NSFW one. Warning: contains traces of Cthulu.
 * The website Japanator has taken to editing Yotsuba&! comics to discuss things like the anime industry, the popularity of Moe, and... other things. Cheerful Child, indeed.

Newspaper Comics

 * The Dysfunctional Family Circus may have been the ultimate Remix Comic, spawning a community that generated countless remixed captions for 500 Bil Keane Family Circus strips, until Keane's publisher, King Features Syndicate, told DFC webmaster Greg Galcik to stop. During its run, DFC developed a complete set of tropes and in-jokes all its own- most of them as offensive as possible.
 * There are also Jersey Circus and The Nietzsche Family Circus, which use Jersey Shore and random Nietzsche quotes, respectively.
 * On the Dilbert website there is now a tool to automate this.
 * Garfield has spawned a few different takes on the source material. One is to remove the thought bubbles and let Garfield's expression and body language, as well as Jon's aside glances, tell the story. Another, known as "Garfield Minus Garfield", is to remove Garfield as well, usually to make Jon seem a sad, lonely, delusional man. Yet another is to replace Garfield with a more realistic cat. Still another takes a database of unmodified Garfield panels and randomly generates strips from them on demand.
 * Taking this in about as many directions as possible is Square Root of Minus Garfield.
 * There's also the Garfield Randomizer, which takes random panels from a vast library of Garfield comic strips and puts three of them together to form strips that are, as the theory goes, funnier than the originals. There's been copyright trouble over this one, as predicted, but those resourceful enough to look for it can probably find it.
 * Mallard Fillmore With Funny strips the political rhetoric of the original comic and replaces it with
 * These remixes of the Amazing Spider-Man newspaper strip were done by Jay Pinkerton.
 * 3eanuts simply removes the last panel of Peanuts strips. This tends to make them extremely depressing.

Web Comics

 * Megatokyo is possibly the place to go for rescripts. Fans have been at it since 2004 and may have improved over time. Their monthly rescript challenge started spontaneously when someone threw down the gauntlet to rescript using only Shakespeare. Since then, the theme changes each month. Recent examples have included bloopers, famous movie lines and ... umm... tvtropes.
 * And there's also Negatokyo, the comic where Largo is turned into an Uncle Tomfoolery rapist who is aware of his surroundings, Piro is even more of a loser, and Subasa speaks You No Take Candle.
 * Over 200 remixes (counting image macros, but not forum avatars) were made from the webcomic Erfworld. Thanks to a Creative Commons license, they can be legally shared without having to ask for permission in advance; most can be found in two threads on the official forums
 * The creators of No Need for Bushido have separate official sections on their website for fanmixes made by other people and non-canon remixes made by themselves.
 * Dinosaur Comics is entirely based on this concept. The first strip was a Cut and Paste Comic of clip-art, but almost every one after that has been a remix of the first, with only the dialogue changed. (See also... the Dinosaur Comics page.)
 * Special mention has to go to when Dinosaur Comics gets turned into a class project in an English class in Japan.
 * Similarly, there's Penny Arcade Remix
 * The fan forum for CRFH has a running 'Perviverse' thread in which the fans (and in some case, the original author) post 'rescripts' in which the dialog has been replaced with rather unsubtle innuendo . This eventually spawned a thread of clean rescripts in reply.
 * ''POKETTO MONSUTAA SPECIAL SUPER EX ADVENTURE XXXVX THE CHRONICLES OF RED BLUE GREEN AND A BUNCH OF OTHER KIDS WITH COLORS FOR NAMES is a remix comic using the Pokémon Special manga. This one tends to edit the art to a degree as well.
 * The El Goonish Shive forum also has one of these: the Strip Slaying thread (the old forum's thread can be found here).
 * A certain panel of Justin became especially popular to the point of it being an in thread meme. A gif containing a number of the Justin images can be found here. Erfworld updates more frequently than that GIF does.
 * "Gluece" meme - characters in EGS rarely have empty hands not touching anything. It's because Grace glued them.
 * Like EGS, "strip slays" of Dominic Deegan: Oracle for Hire are quite popular among the comic's "fans".
 * Vitriolic blogger John Solomon also attempted a Remix of the entire comic strip, entitled Dominic Durgan as a parody of its writing and art style. He himself admits it was created in one night and is profoundly juvenile.
 * A particularly infamous image board has instituted something called the CAD rule for "improving" the webcomic Ctrl+Alt+Del. In its most common incarnation, you remove the middle two panels and put the first and last in sequence, and then remove the dialogue from the last. Good luck with this one, guys...
 * A large repository can be found on Encyclopedia Dramatica, which is not safe for work and probably not safe for people with marginally weak stomachs, too.
 * The same image board also likes to play with Sonic comics, and a single panel from another unidentified comic; in the latter case, the original dialogue was probably "This is a sandwich."
 * That panel is from a Jack Chick tract. Something Awful started it.
 * DM of the Rings and Darths and Droids both follow this concept... working with screencaps of the LoTR and Star Wars films and adding their own dialogue.
 * The Nanoha GamerS comic does this with screencaps of Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha StrikerS and rewrites it as an RPG Anime of sorts, in the vein of .hack// and City of Heroes.
 * The Bob and George forum has a custom comic thread that's over 250 pages long as of this writing, with its own in-jokes.
 * Looking for Group fans have been rescripting more and more when producing motivators.
 * Irregular Webcomic has recently invited people to do remixes.
 * Brawl in the Family has a large "mashup" thread on the forums.
 * On the Freefall forum the practice is known as "filking" (allegedly because a comic remix is like a Filk Song in the sense that new words are added to existing music/graphics.
 * Early in '04, a particularly active filker looking for a bigger challenge invented the klif, a reverse filk that not only did all the strips from the beginning in chronological order but flipped each strip left/right. Strange as it may sound, the experiment continued with some intervals for a whole three years, eventually doing all (some 900) strips that had been released before the thread started.
 * These have become increasingly popular on the Gunnerkrigg Court forums, with two whole threads devoted to posting them. A few distinct memes have evolved: editing Boxbot into a scene thereby making it "terrible", adding party hats to character's heads, giving the characters laser eyes, and altering dialogue to read "Okay that is quite enough thank you".
 * In The KAMics the author himself did this with some of his comics under the title Remix Theatre.
 * A popular activity on the Awkward Zombie forums is to remix the most recent comic with past comics. Typically, the Dominion Rod will come up at least once.
 * Recently, Katie's dad asking about gas has came to popularity.
 * The Penny and Aggie forum has the Random Strip Manip thread, in which fans use the Random.org True Random Number Generator to choose a random strip for this purpose (or simply pick any strip they like). This has inspired the creation of collaborative Crack Fic remix storylines with Spy Fiction, Science Fiction, Horror twists, and a heaping helping of Ho Yay.
 * The "Law 4 Kids" comics produced by the Arizona state government have been popular targets for LUE and 4chan users.
 * Twokinds fans do the panel shuffle.
 * The Photo Comic A Softer World gives us a variation has been attracting these lately. See for yourself.
 * The Bitstrips-associated Stop Bullying gives users the option to make their own comics and many have taken advantage of this.
 * Making XKCD slightly worse is, well making Xkcd slightly worse.
 * TGCaps.com is devoted to remix comics with transgender themes.
 * Remixes of Questionable Content are sometimes posted to the /r/questionablecontent/ subreddit. In particular, Reddit user Squirrelclamp has posted over 180 remixes as of 2022-04, usually satires of that day’s comic.

Western Animation

 * Ridiculously easy to exploit with My Life Me and its online "manga" maker.

Other Media

 * Several Jack Chick scripts have had this done to them. For example, darquedungeon.
 * The mini-comic that came with the first wave of Transformers Armada toys has become a milestone in Memetic Mutation history thanks to TF fan Matt Marshall (aka Blueshift/Yartek/Mr. Turtlewind). Originally stuffed with the same (highly edited) dialogue in three languages, the speech bubbles now tell the story of the mentally-impaired but well-meaning Autobot Hot Shot's quest for something known only as 'JaAm. The resulting phenomenon has inspired fanart, kitbashes, and gone so far as to be referenced on the packaging for a new Hot Shot toy, which also has the numberplate 'JAAM'.