Monday, October 14, 2024

The Detective Chimp Casebook - a DC Comic Book Collection

Detective Chimp is a comic book character few people are likely to know.  To be honest, I really had no idea who he was until DC started to integrate him into some of their supernatural titles, like Shadowpact and Justice League Dark.  Since I have been reading comics with Detective Chimp in them, he has always been able to talk; however, this collection of the great detective's earliest adventures (pre-Crisis) have given me a lot of new insight into the character. Not only do readers get treated to Bobo's origin story (yes, Bobo is his real name), but you get the opportunity to see what kind of character Detective Chimp originally was and how he went about solving mysteries back in the 1950s - quite frankly, it's a real treat!

The Detective Chimp Casebook
collects Bobo's adventures from his first appearance in The Adventures of Rex the Wonder Dog # 4 (July/August 1952) to his last regular appearance in # 46 of that same series (September/October 1959), as well as his co-starring role in the "Whatever Happened to...?" back-up feature from DC Comics Presents # 35 (July 1981).  With the exception of issue # 5, Detective Chimp was a regular feature in The Adventures of Rex the Wonder Dog, enjoying 42 adventures, each story six pages in length (well, actually five pages of story, since the first page of each story is basically just an introduction to the story).  All 42 of those stories were written by John Broome, with most of them drawn by Carmine Infantino (who I recognize from his many years working as an artist on DC's The Flash series pre-Crisis).  One story was drawn by Alex Kotzky, while six were drawn by Irwin Hasen.  The series had a number of various inkers, such as Joe Giella, Sy Barry, Bernard Sachs, Alex Kotzky, and Gil Kane - although Infantino did ink a a large amount of his own stories.  The back-up story in DC Comics Presents in 1981 was written by Mike Tiefenbacher and drawn by Gil Kane, who definitely stayed true to Detective Chimp's original stories with regard to characterization and even set up (with Bobo's boss introducing the story).  

In the first tale, "Meet Detective Chimp," readers are introduced to Bobo through Sheriff Edward Chase of Oscaloosa County, Florida.  Now, I must note there is no Oscaloosa County in Florida, but there is an Okaloosa County, so I imagine Broome simply changed a couple of letters when creating his setting.  An actual city is never named.  Most of the stories are actually told by Sheriff Chase, although Bobo does have the opportunity once in a while to narrate his own adventures.  Anyway, in this first adventure, we learn that Bobo was a chimpanzee trained by Fred Thorpe to run errands and perform simple tasks around his animal farm there in Florida.  When Thorpe is murdered, Sheriff Chase is called in by Thorpe's niece to solve the crime.  It turns out, however, that Bobo is the one who leads Chase to the real crook and solves the murder!  This is the one and only 8-page story in the series.

There was no Detective Chimp tale in issue 5 of The Adventures of Rex the Wonder Dog, making me wonder if perhaps it was intended to be a one-off story, but it generated enough positive response that DC brought the simian sleuth back for more adventures starting in issue 6 with "The Return of Detective Chimp."  In this story, Bobo solves the murder of Carlton Meade, a wealthy man who lives on a private island with his daughter.  It's funny, one thing I noticed about these first two stories is that Thorpe's niece in the first one and Meade's daughter in this second one are both blondes who wear red dresses.  This seems to be a recurring theme throughout the series, as most of the young females in Bobo's tales are blondes who tend to be dressed in red.  Not sure if this was intentional or just coincidental.

The stories are anything but complicated, and although there are only five pages within which Broome and Infantino had to tell the tales, they manage to pack a whole lot of story into each one.  The mysteries Bobo solves involve wax museums, circuses, ball parks, fishing boats, horse tracks, animal farms, and various other places.  Bobo also manages to develop quite a lot of hobbies over the course of the series, with each hobby entangling him with a new crime to solve - from spear-fishing to stamp collecting to autograph collecting to trains to airplanes and so much more.  And, just like another popular detective in children's fiction, Bobo is given a number of rewards for his ingenuity and quick-thinking in solving cases, such as a baseball uniform, a jockey's outfit, a cowboy suit, an underwater spear-fishing ensemble, and even a $500 check from the bank where he stopped some robbers from making off with a fortune!

As the series progresses, the adventures become less about Bobo actually "solving" a crime and more about Bobo simply trying to capture crooks (often thieves whose pictures the sheriff receives in the mail to be on the lookout for).  He's a spry little chimp, and he does capture the crooks in some rather funny ways, usually by inadvertence when he pushes something he shouldn't, or leans against something that is not stable, etc.  The antics almost make one think of a typical television show with lots of physical comedy.  Near the end of the run, I think Broome was running out of ideas, because he begins to re-use some plot ideas, such as Bobo solving a crime while playing baseball, or when he stops some criminals while pursuing a fire-fighter dream (and it's odd that the second fire-fighter story has Sheriff Chase in the introduction saying, "The last thing I figured on Bobo taking up was the art of fire-fighting" in the March/April 1959 issue, when Bobo had already done this just three years prior in the January/February 1956 issue, albeit with the forest ranger in that earlier story rather than the fire department in the latter tale - in fact, the two stories have similar names: "Where There's Smoke - There's Trouble" in 1956 and "Where There's Smoke - There's Bobo" in 1959!).

In Detective Chimp's last adventure (September/October 1959), he manages to recapture a couple of criminals he accidentally releases from their jail cell while simultaneously helping his little league team win their big game.  His last thought is, "I hope I'm not around when the boss finds out what happened!" referring to the fact that the crooks who the sheriff came back to find safe in their cell were actually released and nearly escaped if it hadn't been for Bobo's quick thinking and a lot of good luck!

Flash-forward twenty-two years, and an aging Bobo is found meeting his long-time hero, Rex the Wonder Dog, in the back-up tale "Whatever Happened to ... Rex the Wonder Dog?" in DC Comics Presents # 35.  Bobo and Rex team-up to stop a couple of thieves from taking off with $10,000 in charity receipts from the circus where Rex was performing, and in the process, they happen across the fabled Fountain of Youth.  After drinking the water from the fountain, both Rex and Bobo are restored to their more youthful days, giving the Detective Chimp a new lease on life in Florida, where he was able to continue "making monkeys out of local criminals," as his DC Comics' Who's Who entry says.

In the back of this collection are a few covers on which the Detective Chimp has appeared over the years, including three issues of Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle, which reprinted three early Detective Chimp tales ("The Return of Detective Chimp," "A Whistle for Bobo!" and "Bobo's New York Adventure").  There is also a reprint of the Detective Chimp page from the original Who's Who: The Definitive Directory of the DC Universe, which gives fans some personal information and a history of the character.

All-in-all, this is a spectacular collection, which spotlights a lesser known character that definitely deserves the spotlight.  These are the types of collections DC Comics should be doing, providing fans with some reprints of the golden and silver age of comics, with a variety of colorful characters that deserve to be revived for new generations to read and enjoy!

RATING:  10 homemade jungle gyms out of 10 for good, clean, fun, and zany adventures of a chimpanzee with more talent for solving crimes than a dedicated small-town sheriff!

No comments:

Post a Comment