Carl Barks invented a large number of
objects for his Disney duck comic book stories. Examples are the Money Bin, the
Number One Dime, and the Junior Woodchucks Guidebook. They were all dreamed up from necessity; whenever Barks needed a
special object or a specific gimmick he just made it up as he went along. The
colossal impact they all still have is clearly notable in the fact that Disney
duck
artists after Barks have taken them to heart - along with the readers.
Another such invention was, of all things, a cannon! Cannons are designed to
bring down walls and to kill people, but Barks nevertheless made Scrooge's
cannon work without us even reflecting over the ominous presence of such a
destructive object in the stories.
THE DATA |
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THE STORIES Presenting, in chronological order, all the stories in which the cannon took part. |
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NB.: The varying colours of the same cannon in this section are because the different panels were coloured by this website at varying times.
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FC0282 The Pixilated Parrot - 1950 Scrooge is using his cannon as a guard dog pointing at possible burglars that might turn up in his office. Besides gunpowder and an assortment of cannonballs we also see - for the first and only time - the necessary ramrod used to push the ingredients to the bottom of the gun barrel. |
Surprisingly, this is in fact the second story with Scrooge's cannon, which he here calls his Burglar-stopper. It is going to prevent the Beagle Boys from stealing his money. The cannon is actually the primary object throughout the story, but it is only fired once - towards the end. |
In the very next story Barks introduces his newest invention, Scrooge's gigantic Money Bin. It has all the intruder deterrents imaginable including several cannons (seen both inside and outside!), suggesting that Scrooge, in fact, may have bought more than one in 1902! |
FC0367 Christmas for Shacktown - 1952 Although this is basically a non-warlike and peaceful Christmas story Barks manages to use his ominous cannon on no less than three separate occasions - all in the capacity of a family deterrent! And he is willing to fire it every time... |
![]() FC0386 Only a Poor Old Man - 1952 Scrooge has brought an arsenal of defense articles to guard his money in a faraway lake. The arsenal includes his cannon that can thwart the devious attack schemes of the Beagle Boys. Although we are only shown one cannon, Scrooge cries out in the heat of battle: Load the cannons! |
![]() U$28 The Paul Bunyan Machine - 1959 Scrooge transports his cannon to Talltree, Idaho, in order to use it against the Beagle Boys' giant tree chopping machine. But the fired cannonballs are intercepted by the Boys and are nicely melted into multiple miniature toy cannons... |
![]() U$35 Gift Lion - 1961 The lock to Scrooge's safe has broken so he will have to stand guard armed with his cannon and a double-barrelled gun. Still, the Beagle Boys manage to cheat their way past him disguised as a lion tamer - and a lion... |
U$43 For Old Dime's Sake - 1963 The sorceress Magica de Spell is about to perform an attack on the Money Bin in order to get her hands on the Number One Dime, so Scrooge moves his cannon down to the front door. But she manages to slip by anyway disguised as Scrooge himself. |
U$45 Isle of Golden Geese - 1963 This time Scrooge sails his cannon on a long trip to Featherbrain Island off the coast of Chile to subdue Magica de Spell. This time Barks decorated the cannon with an embellishment. |
U$58 The Giant Robot Robbers - 1965 Again, Scrooge uses his cannon in an attempt to deter the Beagle Boys from snatching his money. But one of their giant robots unceremoniously grabs the cannon and crushes it. |
Maybe the cannon was not repaired. At least it was never seen or heard of again... |
THE REAL SOUTH AFRICAN CANNONS | |||||
In U$15 The Second-richest Duck Scrooge travels to South Africa on a mission to compete with another fantasillionaire, Flintheart Glomgold, who greets his miser opponent with a cannon, which can be said to be genuinely South African! Still, Barks did not get the appearance quite right as it has a distinct, far too big collar muzzle, that is not credible. Also, it must be of a newer type than Scrooge's cannon as it has two interconnecting barrels. Barks' version of the Boer War cannon
was not based on hard facts. It is obvious that he did not draw it from
pictures in his encyclopedia or his otherwise much consulted National
Geographics magazines, because it is nothing like the real thing. It is
unusually potbellied and furnished with a broad muzzle rim, but the worst
mistake Barks made was that he furnished it with a gun-carriage on small
wheels, which would not have functioned at all on the ground. Barks'
carriage version is in fact almost spot-on for former centuries' cannons on a
ship's deck, where they were not meant to move any great distance! |
BONUS | |
![]() 59/73 Who's Out There? PAINTING |
![]() Who's out There? (1998) FIGURINE |
Here is a real long shot linking Carl
Barks to the Boer Wars: |
http://www.cbarks.dk/THECANNON.htm |
Date 2013-05-31 |