Inspired by the first comment stack on this picture of Banjo-Kazooie where Jolly Jack remarks that he wasn't too fond of Rare's tendency to put googly eyes on everything.
I am the first to comemehtr. This looks demonic. I did a cartoon early in my career where an anthro (rat) kid name of Jimmy Marsh sees a burlesque poster outside a strip club in town, where a censorship rectangle is across the exotic dancer's breasts. He imagines that each breast has a fanged mouth !
I am the first to comemehtr. This looks demonic. I did a cartoon early in my career where an anthro
Taking into account all the galleries I posted this in, you are literally the first to comment. Unfortunately, you are also the only one to comment, so far. :\
I don't know about demonic, but a case can be made for it being monstrous. In previous centuries, travelers' tales of fantastic beings from faraway lands included Blemmyes, a type of humanoid that had its face upon its chest, which was fortunate as it had no head. Certainly Bazookie-Tuu is no mousified Blemmye, but the eyeballs on the chest shtick isn't new.
As for fang-mouthed breasts, I've seen pictures of them, too, on e621. Such monsters appear to be popular among some Japanese, but I don't currently know more beyond that.
Taking into account all the galleries I posted this in, you are literally the first to comment. Unf
I also recall, but from memory (as the reprint comic was stolen along with hundreds of others late last year),a captain Marvel Jr. story. He fought a man who was surgically made into a Blemmye as his head had been damaged. He wore a dummy head and app. allowed it to get shot at, and wore a different one each time he robbed a bank. I found this repulsive ! BUT then again, I read in Parents that CaptMarvJr's stories were uglier and more violent, than the Capt.Marv.SENIOR ones.
I also know of a Captain America villain who had his brain moved into his chest for the same reason. He is known as Arnim Zola the BioFanatic. (Capt.Americas and the Marvel indexes all stolen !).
Possible third Blemmye character but can't recall him or it...
I also recall, but from memory (as the reprint comic was stolen along with hundreds of others late l
I suppose you have a point. (Although the existence of a neck, or a body for that matter, was suspect. Bugs shaved him at one point, revealing Gossamer really was nothing more than hair and a pair of sneakers.)
Another possibility is that Blemmyes were distorted recollections, perhaps second- or fourth-hand, of natives who spent a lot of time bent over when observed by explorers. The explorers would say that the effect was like the natives had their head on their chests, and the people back home would take that literally. Each further retelling would distort things further, perhaps with impressions from other sources filtering in until the final product looks little like what the explorers originally saw. It would be something like a cultural game of Chinese whispers.
I suppose you have a point. (Although the existence of a neck, or a body for that matter, was suspe
I think Wally Wood did a strip where his heroine is dressing in front of a "littrle green man" alien who stares at her breasts. Her putting on a sweater prompts him to say "How can you see with your eyes covered ?". Pointing to her face, she says "THESE are my eyes !"
I think Wally Wood did a strip where his heroine is dressing in front of a "littrle green man" alien
Your anatomy is alien to all vertebrate anatomy where I come from. Also where I come from sea-mice are not mice at all, not mammals at all, not vertebrates at all. They are a worm, a squatty worm. (the term worm is very liberally aplied, dating from antique days where the highly artificial phylum, VERMES, was a dumping ground for worm-like animals...)
Xcuse me, Ms. Bazookie- Tuu .... Your anatomy is alien to all vertebrate anatomy where I come from.
As the name suggests, My Little Mousie is partly a parody of My Little Pony with aspects of other sources thrown in. There are five normal races of mousies. Mousie-mouses are the basic anthropomorphic mice race, pegamousies are mousified bird-winged flying horses, fledermousies are the bat-winged version, mousicorns are mousified western unicorns*, and the seamousies are basically mermice**, mousified hippocampi rather than seahorses. Continuing with the theme of equines-turned-into-mice, I've looked into myth, legend, and elsewhere for subjects to mousify, such as kelpies, Nightmare the Galloping Ghost, pookas, and Discworld's Binky. Non-equines aren't exempt, from the Beagle Boys to the Dormouse of Wonderland. Other people's mouse characters can potentially get the MLM treatment. I also have notes for other mousies that I have yet to bring online. There is an overarching story world, although I haven't presented any stories beyond a single vignette.
Bazookie-Tuu's appearance is a composite of characteristics of the two main characters of the Banjo-Kazooie video games, hence her being a pegamousie. (Presumably, she has a brother named Bazooky-Joe, who's a bit of a bubblehead. :p) ______________
* Were they real, western unicorns would technically not be equines, rather closer to antelopes. However, modern popular culture has long since portrayed them as horses with horns, so, eh. ** A notable non-MLM example would be the mermouse from the Tom & Jerry cartoon.
Welcome to fantasy. :p As the name suggests, My Little Mousie is partly a parody of My Little Pon
Naturally. :p Of course, even for a one-off picture, I'd have to develop the character a little bit so he doesn't come across as a cheap knock-off. Perhaps he could be wearing two eyepatches, one normally and one over his (uneyeballed) chest. :p
Naturally. :p Of course, even for a one-off picture, I'd have to develop the character a little bit