Dennis the Menace (UK comic strip): Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
 
(5 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{work|wppage=Dennis the Menace and Gnasher}}
{{work}}
[[File:Dennis-N-Gnasher.jpg|frame|Dennis and his sidekick dog, Gnasher.]]
[[File:Dennis-N-Gnasher.jpg|frame|Dennis and his sidekick dog, Gnasher.]]


Line 49: Line 49:
* [[Shell-Shocked Veteran]]: Dennis' other neighbor The Colonel.
* [[Shell-Shocked Veteran]]: Dennis' other neighbor The Colonel.
* [[Super Dickery]]: Inverted.
* [[Super Dickery]]: Inverted.
* [[Theme Naming]]: In addition to Gnasher the dog, he also had a pig named Rasher, a spider named Dasher, and a fish named Splasher.
* [[Theme Naming]]: In addition to Gnasher the dog, he also had a pig [[Unfortunate Names|named Rasher]], a spider named Dasher, and a fish named Splasher.
** Gnasher's children are named Gnipper, Gnora, Gnancy, Gnatasha, and Gniamh.
** Gnasher's children are named Gnipper, Gnora, Gnancy, Gnatasha, and Gniamh.
* [[Totally Radical]]: An extremely [[Egregious]] example, in that the characters talked in 1950s slang, "chortling" away at "corking" things and saying "What a swizz!" well into the 2000s!
* [[Totally Radical]]: An extremely [[Egregious]] example, in that the characters talked in 1950s slang, "chortling" away at "corking" things and saying "What a swizz!" well into the 2000s!
Line 55: Line 55:
* [[Trademark Favourite Food]]: Pie-face and, well, [[Captain Obvious|pies]].
* [[Trademark Favourite Food]]: Pie-face and, well, [[Captain Obvious|pies]].
* [[Uncanny Family Resemblance]]: Denise the Menace and his female cousin Denise the Menace.
* [[Uncanny Family Resemblance]]: Denise the Menace and his female cousin Denise the Menace.
* [[Unnamed Parent|Unnamed Parents]]: Dennis' parents are known as Dennis' Mum and Dennis' Dad, they call each other Mum and Dad. One comic even reveals that those are their actual names.
* [[Unnamed Parent]]s: Dennis' parents are known as Dennis' Mum and Dennis' Dad, they call each other Mum and Dad. One comic even reveals that those are their actual names.
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:CBBC]]
[[Category:CBBC]]
Line 61: Line 61:
[[Category:Print Long Runners]]
[[Category:Print Long Runners]]
[[Category:The Fifties]]
[[Category:The Fifties]]
[[Category:Dennis The Menace UK]]
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:The Hub]]
[[Category:The Hub]]
[[Category:Newspaper Comics of the 1950s]]
[[Category:Newspaper Comics of the 1960s]]
[[Category:Newspaper Comics of the 1970s]]
[[Category:Newspaper Comics of the 1980s]]
[[Category:Newspaper Comics of the 1990s]]
[[Category:Newspaper Comics of the 2000s]]
[[Category:Newspaper Comics of the 2010s]]
[[Category:Newspaper Comics]]

Latest revision as of 22:13, 30 August 2020

Dennis and his sidekick dog, Gnasher.

One of two Comic Book characters known as Dennis the Menace, both being primary school-age boys who frequently get into trouble and make mischief, aided by a pet dog, that were first published in March 1951. This page is about the British version as published in the Anthology Comic The Beano.

This Dennis has no known surname and is slightly older than the Dennis from across the Atlantic, 10 years old rather than 6 (though at times he has been portrayed as slightly older again). He also has dark spiky hair and an iconic black-and-red horizontal-striped jumper, and he is joined by his similarly drawn spiky-haired dog, Gnasher. He truly revels in doing naughty or mischievous things and is at odds with his parents, the local police, his neighbors and the "softies" of his neighborhood.

Unlike the U.S. Dennis, he is more actively malicious than simply mischievous. If you look at it the right way, it is not hard to interpret his actions toward the so-called "softies" as bullying based merely on the fact that those boys are more effeminate and quiet than he is. This has meant that a manipulative and calculating streak has been given to Dennis' main rival, Walter, in hope of balancing this out.


Tropes used in Dennis the Menace (UK comic strip) include: