Dick Tracy by Mike Curtis and Charles Ettinger for August 23, 2016

  1. Komi 0001
    AnyFace  over 8 years ago

    Is that Sean Connery …?

     •  Reply
  2. Img 6884
    Rod Gonzalez  over 8 years ago

    It’s supposed to be Dr. Watson.

     •  Reply
  3. Komi 0001
    AnyFace  over 8 years ago

    Witness …

    … or accomplice?

     •  Reply
  4. 1682106 inline inline 2 mel brooks master
    Can't Sleep  over 8 years ago

    I don’t get the significance of dog’s head cane guy?-———————————I think he’s just another tourist who’s thinking just what we did on Sunday – yep, into the river, dead meat.-I wonder if we’re trying too hard to connect everybody with a cameo (I know, I used to do it).

     •  Reply
  5. Komi 0001
    AnyFace  over 8 years ago

    Nigel Bruce …?

     •  Reply
  6. Komi 0001
    AnyFace  over 8 years ago

    If it is a descendant of Watson, does he know something we don’t?

     •  Reply
  7. Image
    stsparky  over 8 years ago

    I suspect it’s either a Watson & Holmes partner, or even a descendent of James-Moriarty who knows how to survive the falls is to be in the river.

     •  Reply
  8. Image
    stsparky  over 8 years ago

    https://goo.gl/images/6Cjw5P gives us a single stick with a Wolf’s head — Auguste Lupa AKA Nero Wolfe is supposedly the great Detective’s son

     •  Reply
  9. I am the captain
    Steven Wright  over 8 years ago

    A new man entersSeems to know more than othersWill he help or hurtKnowledge yes but which to helpSeeing strangers what to do

     •  Reply
  10. Komi 0001
    AnyFace  over 8 years ago

    Dark Shadows’ Barnabas Collins is known to carry a wolf’s head cane …

     •  Reply
  11. Neil2009
    Neil Wick  over 8 years ago

    By the way, here’s a similar trekking pole on amazon.ca: Store Indya Wooden Walking Stick Cane Hand Crafted with Dog Face Shape Handle

     •  Reply
  12. Missing large
    poore.ronnie  over 8 years ago

    perhaps the walking stick from Hound of the Baskervilles: http://www.basilrathbone.net/films/shhound/hb004.jpg

     •  Reply
  13. Tracy
    coratelli  over 8 years ago

    It’s Tracy dead?

     •  Reply
  14. Reedrichards
    jimakin  over 8 years ago

    I think we’ve resumed our Grand Tour of classic fictional detectives — except now the sleuths have come to Tracy instead of vice-versa. The tourists all speak English — and I suspect both men are Brits. The robed-and-tonsured gent in the first panel looks to me like a man of the cloth, and G.K. Chesterton’s Father Brown seems a likely candidate. That in turn suggests at least the possibility that the mustachioed gent is Gideon Fell, an amateur sleuth who specializes in “locked room” mysteries, whom creator John Dickson Carr patterned on the real-life Chesterton.

    There’s nothing familiar to me about Louise, but something about her “Yeah” makes me think she’s a yank. Googling a bit turned up no likely fictional characters, but I did come across a description of Louise Rensil, a real-life former film-studio executive who claims she’s discovered the inspiration for two of fiction’s greatest gumshoes, Sam Spade and Philip Marlowe, in the person of one Sam Marlowe, an African-American detective who worked in Hollywood in the 30s and 40s. That Louise was described, in the 2014 L.A. Times feature story “Finding Marlowe,” as “a wisp of a redhead with high cheekbones and appraising eyes.”

     •  Reply
  15. Mmdash6
    Pequod  over 8 years ago

    Geez, Louise, pleaseTake a picture of the river.To fall so far and land in thatIt makes a body shiver.The dogged headUpon the caneIts eyes so fiercely lockedUpon the churning watersIts owner far from shocked.His calm demeanorSays so muchYet the man remains so silent.The men he sawPlunge to the mawDid battle oh so violent.

     •  Reply
  16. Untitled 1
    flowerpainter  over 8 years ago

    I am loving this story! :D

     •  Reply
  17. Samdouble
    mikeg52  over 8 years ago
    Nigil Bruce:

    https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/originals/3f/bb/6a/3fbb6a16a80c717b52dc25d2b7d81929.jpg

     •  Reply
  18. Gc logo
    carlzr  over 8 years ago

    The way this strip is going, Simon Templar will be making an appearance.

     •  Reply
  19. Stan lee2
    tsull2121  over 8 years ago

    i find it amazing how seemingly nobody just “reads the strip” anymore and wants to “decipher the clues” or “try to outwit the writer by guessing the road the story will take” before it’s unveiled.

    whatever happened to just ENJOYING a comic strip?!?

     •  Reply
  20. Kw eyecon 20190702 091103 r
    Kip W  over 8 years ago

    First thought was that the stick’s a clue or a totem. Then I thought he was just giving it a good look.

     •  Reply
  21. Bill 1960
    Vista Bill Raley and Comet™  over 8 years ago

    .Good morning guys!.Have no fear, Vista Bill is here!

     •  Reply
  22. Tumblr mbbz3vrusj1qdlmheo1 250
    Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo]  over 8 years ago

    Maybe a Baskerville? Not Barnabas Collins…?

     •  Reply
  23. Oddball
    Morrow Cummings  over 8 years ago

    Z-z-z-z-z. I’d have been more impressed if his cane had a goat’s head on it. Maybe, “honored” is a better word.

     •  Reply
  24. Ignatz
    Ignatz Premium Member over 8 years ago

    I don’t recall Watson having such a cane.

    He looks a bit like William J. Burns “America’s Sherlock Holmes,” too.

     •  Reply
  25. Missing large
    Larry L Stout  over 8 years ago

    Is he quoting lines from the Sherlock Holmes story?

     •  Reply
  26. Missing large
    abdullahbaba999  over 8 years ago

    We Are All Dick….TBC…

     •  Reply
  27. 3c5489f7 fee3 4df6 aca6 bff93749dc57
    artsyguy65  over 8 years ago

    Dr. Watson makes several references to a similar cane, Holmes’ “alpine stock”, in The Adventure of the Final Problem. In the accompanying original illustrations it is depicted as having a curved dog’s-head handle.

     •  Reply
  28. Thinker
    Sisyphos  over 8 years ago

    Though other, more erudite, speculation in earlier comments here may better describe the first panel, I cannot help but hear a (sly?) reference to Ethel, here Louise, in Ray Stevens’ The Streak (how low-brow of me!).As for the gentleman in panels 2 and 3, who seems to know the Holmes & Moriarty story well, he looks to me like A.I.C. Doyle himself, who at times used a cane (though with limited, online research, I cannot find reference to one with a dog’s or wolf’s head). See the Doyle statue (from Wikipedia)….Did Tracy and Kadaver really plunge into the river?

     •  Reply
  29. Missing large
    timbob2313 Premium Member over 8 years ago

    looks like dog head cane guy is a brand new character. A brand new super villain no doubt.

     •  Reply
  30. Missing large
    smartman  over 8 years ago

    Being greedy, can we have both Vincent Price (radio) and Roger Moore (TV) play Simon Templar? I loved both their portrayals. (No, I’m nowhere near old enough but thanks to retro-TV channels and Satellite radio I got to enjoy both) And I agree that that has to be either Watson or Doyle in the last frame. Only makes sense due to Holmes not actually dying there in the books.

     •  Reply
  31. 0151
    glynis37  over 8 years ago

    Looks a lot like Sir Arthur Conan Doyle to me.

     •  Reply
  32. Neil2009
    Neil Wick  over 8 years ago

    I don’t get the significance of dog’s head cane guy ?

    I believe that it’s meant to be an intriguing puzzle. You are not supposed to get the significance.
     •  Reply
  33. Bill 1960
    Vista Bill Raley and Comet™  over 8 years ago

    .Lawrence Talbot used a silver wolf’s head cane to kill the gypsy lady’s husband, a werewolf, that attacked him. Alas, Larry was bitten in the fight..Enter: “The Wolfman”!.

     •  Reply
  34. Missing large
    abdullahbaba999  over 8 years ago

    Into the Mighty River…TBC

     •  Reply
  35. Large tmdic190127 straightedge trustworthy
    Gweedo -it's legal here- Murray  over 8 years ago

    Go with the humour !!!

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Dick Tracy