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Adolescent Radioactive Black Belt Hamsters #6 Dizzyworld
Cover Date: May, 1987
The Hamsters visit Dizzyworld, a parody of Disney World. They are accompanied by Randi, who looks like their wrestling trainer from their first 3D issue, but she has a different name. They are attacked by the P.L.O., or Pot Luck Organization, their oppon ...
Issue Description
The Hamsters visit Dizzyworld, a parody of Disney World. They are accompanied by Randi, who looks like their wrestling trainer from their first 3D issue, but she has a different name.
They are attacked by the P.L.O., or Pot Luck Organization, their opponents from issue 1. It turns out that the military guy is the same guy as the bully from the first 3D issue, and in fact Randi is his ex-girlfriend.
The Hamsters have a hard time beating them. The fight is interrupted by Captain Tree and Bush Boy, two anthropomorphic plants. The fight rages on and the Hamsters end up in the swamp outside the theme park. The P.L.O. takes a hostage, but Captain Tree and Bush Boy manage to free the hostage, sacrificing themselves in the process.
There is a short back-up story featuring Clint and Clarence the Cub.
Adolescent Radioactive Black Belt Hamsters (1986)
- Publisher
- Eclipse
Volume Description
Adolescent Radioactive Black Belt Hamsters was originally launched as a parody of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, itself somewhat of a parody of normal superhero comics. ARBBH was soon followed by numerous other mutated warrior animals, such as Pre-Teen Dirty Gene Kung Fu Kangaroos or Samurai Penguin. However, ARBBH proved itself to be the most popular of the TMNT clones, and in fact soon took on its own character and vitality beyond its parody roots. ARBBH spun off mini-series in Clint: The Hamster Triumphant and ARBBH 3-D. All together, they sold over 500,000 issues!
ARBBH began as a very self-aware comic, where the characters often talked directly with the writer and artist. It used a lot of gross-out humor and self-deprecation. It had continual jokes about race and sexuality, which were sometimes smart barbs that deftly punctured political correctness, and were sometimes offensive and boorish. At the end, it became much more serious, featuring the death of a main character and real emotional depth.
ARBBH was written by Don Chin, and drawn by several artists with very different styles, including its unique co-creator Parsonavich, as well as some of Sam Kieth's early work, soon after his time on Mage.
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