The Followers of Rupert Bear : Official "Rupert the Bear" Website |
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"So (Hee! Hee! Hee!) ... You're a Follower of Rupert, Eh?""It's just a bit of fun". "It takes me back to my childhood". "It's for the children really". "It keeps me out of mischief". Have you uttered one of these excuses? I have. I raised the issue in Nutwood#10, so I'll kick off the soul-baring ... why are we so absorbed by a small bear in checked yellow trousers? I guess 1. Escapism and NostalgiaThis one's obvious. Nutwood is so much more interesting, pleasant, desirable and real than the "real world", that we are drawn into it by the same emotions that draw us into Narnia, Middle-Earth, Hardy's Wessex and the Wild West. It's a sub-created world, to use Tolkien's term, in which the rules are all different, and magical (or at least alien) things can happen. It's easy to portray this attraction as a desire to run away from reality. In fact it touches upon one of the deepest of human expressions of creativity - the joy of a fully self-consistent alternative reality. Rupert's Nutwood is less elaborate, well-documented and carefully-crafted than Tolkien's Middle Earth. There are neither maps nor genealogical tables. However, it has an almost unmatchable continuity over several decades that gives it a level of credibility that match the sub-created worlds of the greatest writers. No-one would sensibly compare Rupert prose or storylines with those of Tolkien or C.S. Lewis, but the world created by Tourtel, Bestall and Harrold is of that quality. 2. Design
Design? There are many examples of classic design. There's the Mini, the Parker Duofold, the GPO postbox and the traditional teapot. In each example, it has been got spectacularly right first time. Rupert (as an objet d'art - not as a personality) is one such. I do not know of any other character that has survived for so long essentially in the original form Certainly, there has been evolution. He's filled out a little, his colour scheme has changed, but the basic formula - white-faced bear, checked trousers, sweater, scarf and pre-Doc-Marten boots - endures. 3. SurrealismThis is related to (1) above, but is not the same. Within the sub-created world of Nutwood, it makes perfect sense to juxtapose anthropomorphic Nutwooders and "normal" humans and animals. Medieval knights and primeval sprites share the page with rocket-powered flying machines, and it all makes perfect sense. Most heroically, Rupert reappears at the end of the story with tales of exotic places and characters, and Mummy Bear is not even perturbed! This contrast of the prosaic and the preternatural is very addictive. It's what makes Dali's paintings arresting, and what made Monty Python funny. 4. Story QualityThis aspect of Rupert has evolved more than the rest. The era in which Rupert lives has remained essentially unchanged, but Tourtel, Bestall and Harrold stories are not the same. As the storyline baton has passed from Mary Tourtel down to Ian Robinson the flavour and length of the stories themselves has evolved considerably. The Grimm (and grim) ogres of Tourtel have made way for the more Disneyesque Sage of Um, but the quality of storytelling has remained high throughout. Certainly, there have been ups and downs - even the Bestall team wrote a few "pot-boilers", but the overall quality has not diminished. This is truly remarkable. 5. Artwork Quality
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Published by the Followers of Rupert Internet Elf. |
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