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{{Short description|Italian black comedy comics}}
{{Infobox comic strip
{{Infobox comic strip
| title=Squeak the Mouse
| title=Squeak the Mouse
Line 4: Line 5:
|caption= ''Squeak the Mouse'' #1, featuring the principal characters, Squeak the Mouse and the unnamed cat.
|caption= ''Squeak the Mouse'' #1, featuring the principal characters, Squeak the Mouse and the unnamed cat.
|author= [[Massimo Mattioli]]
|author= [[Massimo Mattioli]]
|first= August 1982 <ref name="lambiek.net">{{Cite web|url=https://www.lambiek.net/artists/m/mattioli.htm|title = Massimo Mattioli}}</ref>
|first= 1980 <ref>Gravett, Paul, "1001 Comics You Must Read Before You Die", Universe, 2012, page 426. </ref>
| publisher = [[Catalan Communications]]
| publisher = [[Éditions Albin Michel]]
| genre = [[Black comedy]], [[funny animal]], [[erotic]], [[horror comics|horror]]
| genre = [[Black comedy]], humor, [[Eroticism|erotic]], [[horror comics|horror]], [[pantomime comics]],<ref name="lambiek.net"/> [[adult comics]]
}}
}}


'''''Squeak the Mouse''''' is an Italian [[black comedy]] [[comic strip]] and later [[comic book]] created by artist [[Massimo Mattioli]]. The comic was set in a fictional [[funny animal]] setting, depicting attempts by its title character, Squeak the Mouse, to outwit a cat who is chasing him. The comic satirizes cartoon series such as ''[[Tom and Jerry]]'', taking the content to extreme levels, which includes [[Graphic violence|gory]] [[horror fiction|horror]] violence and explicit sexual content.
'''''Squeak the Mouse''''' is an Italian [[Adult comics|adult]] [[black comedy]] [[comic strip]] and later [[comic book]] created by artist [[Massimo Mattioli]]. The comic depicts attempts by its title character, the [[anthropomorphic animal|anthropomorphic]] Squeak the Mouse, to outwit a cat who is chasing him. The comic satirizes cartoon series such as ''[[Tom and Jerry]]'', taking the content to extreme levels, which includes [[Graphic violence|gory]], [[horror fiction|horror]], violence, and explicit sexual content.<ref name="lambiek.net">{{Cite web|url=https://www.lambiek.net/artists/m/mattioli.htm|title = Massimo Mattioli}}</ref>


Two issues of a ''Squeak the Mouse'' comic book were produced in 1986 and 1992, the first written from the perspective of the cat, who murders the title character, and the second, written from the perspective of Squeak, who murders the cat. Each issue features a [[zombie]] plotline and a [[pornography|pornographic]] section depicting one of the main characters in an [[orgy]] with several funny animal women.
Two issues of a ''Squeak the Mouse'' comic book were produced in 1984 and 1992, the first written from the perspective of the cat, who murders the title character, and the second, written from the perspective of Squeak, who murders the cat. Each issue features a [[zombie]] plotline and a [[pornography|pornographic]] section depicting one of the main characters in an [[orgy]] with several funny animal women. On April 18, 2019, a third issue was published on a new collection titled ''Squeak the Mouse: The Trilogy''.<ref>{{cite web |url= https://www.fumettologica.it/2019/04/mattioli-squeak-mouse-coconino/ |title= L'integrale di "Squeak the Mouse" (con un capitolo inedito) |date=16 April 2019 |website=[[Fumettologica]]|language=Italian}}</ref>


== Overview ==
== Overview ==
''Squeak the Mouse'' is a parody of the cartoon series, ''[[Tom and Jerry]]''. Although the style of the drawing is typical of children comics, ''Squeak'' indulges in graphic violent, gore, splatter, and pornographic scenes.<ref name=jjj>Domenico Marinelli, "Biblioteca storica: Squeak the Mouse", ''Sbam! Comics'', Vol. 8, April–May 2013, p. 36.</ref>
''Squeak the Mouse'' is a parody of the cartoon series, ''[[Tom and Jerry]]''.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Rovin |first1=Jeff |title=The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Cartoon Animals |date=1991 |publisher=Prentice Hall Press |isbn=0-13-275561-0 |accessdate=8 April 2020 |url=https://archive.org/details/illustratedencyc00rovi/page/248/mode/2up/ |page=249}}</ref> Although the style of the drawing is typical of children comics, ''Squeak'' indulges in graphic violent, gore, splatter and pornographic scenes.<ref name=jjj>Domenico Marinelli, "Biblioteca storica: Squeak the Mouse", ''Sbam! Comics'', Vol. 8, April–May 2013, p. 36.</ref>


The first issue of the series is written from the perspective of the cat, who is aggravated by Squeak the Mouse, and ultimately murders the title character. As the cat goes to a party and unsuccessfully attempts to have sex with his girlfriend, and ultimately another girl he meets at the party, Squeak the Mouse returns from the dead as a [[zombie]] and murders every one of the guests at the party, until the cat stops the mouse by murdering it with a blender. When the cat returns home, each of the party guests, revived as zombies, attempt to kill him, leading him to kill each of the undead. The next day, the cat engages in an [[orgy]] with a number of beautiful women, but Squeak the Mouse returns once more and slaughters each of the women, leading the cat to kill Squeak once more before chasing after another mouse. The end of the issue assures readers that Squeak is really dead and will not return.
The first issue of the series is written from the perspective of the cat, who is aggravated by Squeak the Mouse, and ultimately murders the title character. The cat goes to a party and unsuccessfully attempts to have sex with his girlfriend, and instead sleeps with another girl he meets at the party, Squeak the Mouse returns from the dead as a [[zombie]] and murders every one of the guests at the party, until the cat stops the mouse by murdering it with a blender. When the cat returns home, each of the party guests, revived as zombies, attempt to kill him, leading him to kill each of the undead in self-defense. The next day, the cat engages in an [[orgy]] with a number of beautiful women, but Squeak the Mouse returns once more and slaughters each of the women, leading the cat to kill Squeak once more before chasing after another mouse. The end of the issue assures readers that Squeak is really dead and will not return.


The second issue, ''Squeak the Mouse 2'', begins with a duck who revives Squeak from the pages of the first ''Squeak the Mouse'' comic book. Squeak proceeds to read his own comic, and is horrified by his own murder, and decides to track down the cat and murder him. However, when Squeak confronts the cat at a screening of ''[[The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2]]'', the cat tricks Squeak into feeling sympathy for the cat, which allows the cat to escape, until Squeak successfully murders the cat. As Squeak boards a plane heading to a tropical island, the cat returns as a zombie and crashes the plane, killing all of the passengers except Squeak, who escapes, and swims to the nearest island, where a pair of women awaken him by performing [[oral sex]] on Squeak, leading to another orgy sequence. The cat turns up on the island and slaughters the women, and Squeak destroys the cat, leaving only its separated bones, which are found by a [[horror film]]-loving child, who brings the remains home and reassembles them. The skeleton cat slaughters the child and his family, and once again goes after Squeak, who finally gets rid of the cat for good, but decides to antagonize another cat.
The second issue, ''Squeak the Mouse 2'', begins with a duck who revives Squeak from the pages of the first ''Squeak the Mouse'' comic book. Squeak proceeds to read his own comic, and is horrified by his own murder, and decides to track down the cat and murder him. However, when Squeak confronts the cat at a screening of ''[[The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2]]'', the cat tricks Squeak into feeling sympathy for him, which allows the cat to briefly escape before being murdered by the mouse. As Squeak boards a plane heading to a tropical island, the cat returns as a zombie and crashes the plane, killing all of the passengers except Squeak, who escapes, and swims to the nearest island, where a pair of women awaken him by performing [[oral sex]] on Squeak, leading to another orgy sequence. The cat turns up on the island and slaughters the women, and Squeak destroys the cat, leaving only its separated bones, which are found by a [[horror film]]-loving child, who brings the remains home and reassembles them. The skeleton cat slaughters the child and his family, and once again goes after Squeak, who finally gets rid of the cat for good, but decides to antagonize another cat.

In the third issue, ''Squeak the Mouse 3'', an alien watches the events at the ending of the second issue, and gathers the remains of the cat to revive for amusement. Meanwhile, Squeak has sex with a random woman he meets while out walking, but is abducted by the alien. The alien laughs until the cat manages to catch Squeak again and kills him before knocking out the alien. In return, the alien freezes the cat and Squeak's remains, and returns to its home planet. The alien gives the cat to another alien as a gift to cook, but the cat wakes up and murders the other alien. Squeak meanwhile revives and kills the alien who abducted them. The cat escapes the planet using the alien's craft, but is soon attacked by the zombie alien, and ends up having to decapitate it. Just then, Squeak attacks the cat, but is tricked into being shot out of an airlock before the spaceship crashes. The cat is attacked by worm-like monsters before fleeing to the ship, and being attacked by the zombie alien once more, ends up feeding it to the worm monsters. An alien explorer rescues the cat, but is killed by Squeak. After a long chase, the cat manages to evade Squeak and steals the explorer's ship to escape, while another alien explorer lands and is killed by Squeak. Squeak chases the cat in the other explorer's ship, and the cat crashes on another world, being revived and then having sex with his nurse. Soon, Squeak kills the hospital staff, and the cat once again steals a ship to head to Earth. However, Squeak sneaks on board, and the ship crashes on Earth. The cat and Squeak get away in escape pods, and after landing, the cat finally kills Squeak before chasing after another mouse.


== Publication history ==
== Publication history ==
The comic was first published in the underground comics magazine ''[[Frigidaire (magazine)|Frigidaire]]'' starting from 1982. The stories were later collected in an eponymous volume in 1984; initially intended to be an ended series, it had a sequel (''Squeak the Mouse 2'') published in 1992.<ref name=jjj/>
The comic was first published in the underground comics magazine ''[[Frigidaire (magazine)|Frigidaire]]'' starting from 1982. The stories were later collected in an eponymous volume in 1984 by [[Éditions Albin Michel]] and it was initially intended to be an ended series. It had a sequel (''Squeak the Mouse 2'') published in 1992 also by [[Éditions Albin Michel]] and Sefam, Paris.<ref name=jjj/><ref>{{Cite web|title=SELECTED BOOKS|url=http://www.massimomattioli.com/wp/books/|access-date=2021-08-13|website=MASSIMO MATTIOLI - Official Website|language=it-IT|archive-date=2021-08-13|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210813010100/http://www.massimomattioli.com/wp/books/|url-status=dead}}</ref> [[Fantagraphics]] released all of the stories in a collection on April 12, 2022.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.fantagraphics.com/products/squeak-the-mouse|title = Squeak the Mouse}}</ref>


== Controversy ==
== Controversy ==
On August 1, 1985, New York harbor officials confiscated the comic publication on the grounds that it was pornographic, but a court later overturned that decision.<ref>{{cite book|last=M. Keith Booker|title=Encyclopedia of Comic Books and Graphic Novels|publisher=ABC-CLIO, 2010|isbn=0313357471|page=240}}</ref><ref name="DAK35">{{cite news | last = Sweeney | first = Bruce | date = August 1986 | title = Bernd Metz | work = [[Comics Interview]] | issue = 35 | pages = 38–45 | publisher = [[Fictioneer Books]]}}</ref> According to Bernd Metz of [[Catalan Communications]], the book's USA publisher, ''Squeak the Mouse'' was ruled not obscene "because it failed the third test of the law... the [[Miller test]] as it's called... in that it did not exceed the community standards."<ref name="DAK35"/>
On August 1, 1985, New York harbor officials confiscated the comic publication on the grounds that it was pornographic, but a court later overturned that decision.<ref>{{cite book|last=M. Keith Booker|title=Encyclopedia of Comic Books and Graphic Novels|date=11 May 2010|publisher=ABC-CLIO, 2010|isbn=978-0313357473|page=240}}</ref><ref name="DAK35">{{cite news | last = Sweeney | first = Bruce | date = August 1986 | title = Bernd Metz | work = [[Comics Interview]] | issue = 35 | pages = 38–45 | publisher = [[Fictioneer Books]]}}</ref> According to Bernd Metz of [[Catalan Communications]], the book's USA publisher, ''Squeak the Mouse'' was ruled not obscene "because it failed the third test of the law... the [[Miller test]] as it's called... in that it did not exceed the community standards."<ref name="DAK35"/>


== Legacy ==
== Legacy ==
The comics are considered as an apparent inspiration for [[Matt Groening]]'s ''[[The Itchy & Scratchy Show]]''.<ref>{{cite book|last=Sergio Algozzino|title=Tutt'a un tratto. Una storia della linea nel fumetto|publisher=Tunué, 2005|isbn=8889613068|pages=112–113}}</ref><ref>''[[The Comics Journal]]'', Issues 280-283, Comics Journal Incorporated, 2007, p.27.</ref><ref>Giuseppe Pollicelli (28 August 2011), "Massimo Mattioli: il Disney del porno-horror", ''[[Libero (newspaper)|Libero]]''.</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Costanza Ognibeni|title=Incontro con Massimo Mattioli|url=http://www.cinemartmagazine.it/2010/10/08/incontro-con-massimo-mattioli/|accessdate=23 April 2013|newspaper=CinemArt Magazine|date=8 October 2010}}</ref>
The comics are considered to be an apparent inspiration for [[Matt Groening]]'s ''[[The Itchy & Scratchy Show]]''.<ref name="lambiek.net"/><ref>{{cite book|last=Sergio Algozzino|title=Tutt'a un tratto. Una storia della linea nel fumetto|year=2005|publisher=Tunué, 2005|isbn=8889613068|pages=112–113}}</ref><ref>''[[The Comics Journal]]'', Issues 280-283, Comics Journal Incorporated, 2007, p.27.</ref><ref>Giuseppe Pollicelli (28 August 2011), "Massimo Mattioli: il Disney del porno-horror", ''[[Libero (newspaper)|Libero]]''.</ref><ref>{{cite news|last=Costanza Ognibeni|title=Incontro con Massimo Mattioli|url=http://www.cinemartmagazine.it/2010/10/08/incontro-con-massimo-mattioli/|access-date=23 April 2013|newspaper=CinemArt Magazine|date=8 October 2010|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131220175352/http://www.cinemartmagazine.it/2010/10/08/incontro-con-massimo-mattioli/|archive-date=20 December 2013}}</ref>

== See also ==
== See also ==
* ''[[The Itchy & Scratchy Show]]''
* ''[[The Itchy & Scratchy Show]]''
* ''[[Happy Tree Friends]]''
* ''[[Happy Tree Friends]]''
* ''[[Tom and Jerry]]''
* ''[[Superjail!]]''
* [[Om Nom Stories]]
* [[Black Cat Detective]]
* [[List of Tales from the Crypt episodes|The Third Pig]]


== References ==
== References ==
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{{Underground comix}}
{{Underground comix}}


[[Category:Italian comics titles]]
[[Category:1982 comics debuts]]
[[Category:1980 comics debuts]]
[[Category:1992 comics endings]]
[[Category:1992 comics endings]]
[[Category:Black comedy]]
[[Category:Italian comics titles]]
[[Category:Comics featuring anthropomorphic characters]]
[[Category:Italian comics characters]]
[[Category:Black comedy comics]]
[[Category:Horror comics]]
[[Category:Satirical comics]]
[[Category:Pantomime comics]]
[[Category:Parody comics]]
[[Category:Humor comics]]
[[Category:Erotic comics]]
[[Category:Erotic comics]]
[[Category:Fictional cats]]
[[Category:Obscenity controversies in comics]]
[[Category:Fictional mice and rats]]
[[Category:Parodies of films]]
[[Category:Parodies of television shows]]
[[Category:Anthropomorphic cats]]
[[Category:Anthropomorphic cats]]
[[Category:Anthropomorphic mice and rats]]
[[Category:Anthropomorphic mice and rats]]
[[Category:Horror comics]]
[[Category:Comics about anthropomorphic cats]]
[[Category:Humor comics]]
[[Category:Comics about anthropomorphic mice and rats]]
[[Category:Comics about animals]]
[[Category:Zombies in comics]]
[[Category:Italian comics characters]]
[[Category:Comics about death]]
[[Category:Obscenity controversies in literature]]
[[Category:Parody comics]]
[[Category:Satirical comics]]
[[Category:Underground comix]]
[[Category:Underground comix]]
[[Category:Zombies in comics]]
[[Category:Comics characters introduced in 1982]]
[[Category:Comics characters introduced in 1980]]
[[Category:Comics about talking animals]]
[[Category:Comics about cats]]

Latest revision as of 18:32, 26 December 2024

Squeak the Mouse
Squeak the Mouse #1, featuring the principal characters, Squeak the Mouse and the unnamed cat.
Author(s)Massimo Mattioli
Launch dateAugust 1982 [1]
Publisher(s)Éditions Albin Michel
Genre(s)Black comedy, humor, erotic, horror, pantomime comics,[1] adult comics

Squeak the Mouse is an Italian adult black comedy comic strip and later comic book created by artist Massimo Mattioli. The comic depicts attempts by its title character, the anthropomorphic Squeak the Mouse, to outwit a cat who is chasing him. The comic satirizes cartoon series such as Tom and Jerry, taking the content to extreme levels, which includes gory, horror, violence, and explicit sexual content.[1]

Two issues of a Squeak the Mouse comic book were produced in 1984 and 1992, the first written from the perspective of the cat, who murders the title character, and the second, written from the perspective of Squeak, who murders the cat. Each issue features a zombie plotline and a pornographic section depicting one of the main characters in an orgy with several funny animal women. On April 18, 2019, a third issue was published on a new collection titled Squeak the Mouse: The Trilogy.[2]

Overview

[edit]

Squeak the Mouse is a parody of the cartoon series, Tom and Jerry.[3] Although the style of the drawing is typical of children comics, Squeak indulges in graphic violent, gore, splatter and pornographic scenes.[4]

The first issue of the series is written from the perspective of the cat, who is aggravated by Squeak the Mouse, and ultimately murders the title character. The cat goes to a party and unsuccessfully attempts to have sex with his girlfriend, and instead sleeps with another girl he meets at the party, Squeak the Mouse returns from the dead as a zombie and murders every one of the guests at the party, until the cat stops the mouse by murdering it with a blender. When the cat returns home, each of the party guests, revived as zombies, attempt to kill him, leading him to kill each of the undead in self-defense. The next day, the cat engages in an orgy with a number of beautiful women, but Squeak the Mouse returns once more and slaughters each of the women, leading the cat to kill Squeak once more before chasing after another mouse. The end of the issue assures readers that Squeak is really dead and will not return.

The second issue, Squeak the Mouse 2, begins with a duck who revives Squeak from the pages of the first Squeak the Mouse comic book. Squeak proceeds to read his own comic, and is horrified by his own murder, and decides to track down the cat and murder him. However, when Squeak confronts the cat at a screening of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2, the cat tricks Squeak into feeling sympathy for him, which allows the cat to briefly escape before being murdered by the mouse. As Squeak boards a plane heading to a tropical island, the cat returns as a zombie and crashes the plane, killing all of the passengers except Squeak, who escapes, and swims to the nearest island, where a pair of women awaken him by performing oral sex on Squeak, leading to another orgy sequence. The cat turns up on the island and slaughters the women, and Squeak destroys the cat, leaving only its separated bones, which are found by a horror film-loving child, who brings the remains home and reassembles them. The skeleton cat slaughters the child and his family, and once again goes after Squeak, who finally gets rid of the cat for good, but decides to antagonize another cat.

In the third issue, Squeak the Mouse 3, an alien watches the events at the ending of the second issue, and gathers the remains of the cat to revive for amusement. Meanwhile, Squeak has sex with a random woman he meets while out walking, but is abducted by the alien. The alien laughs until the cat manages to catch Squeak again and kills him before knocking out the alien. In return, the alien freezes the cat and Squeak's remains, and returns to its home planet. The alien gives the cat to another alien as a gift to cook, but the cat wakes up and murders the other alien. Squeak meanwhile revives and kills the alien who abducted them. The cat escapes the planet using the alien's craft, but is soon attacked by the zombie alien, and ends up having to decapitate it. Just then, Squeak attacks the cat, but is tricked into being shot out of an airlock before the spaceship crashes. The cat is attacked by worm-like monsters before fleeing to the ship, and being attacked by the zombie alien once more, ends up feeding it to the worm monsters. An alien explorer rescues the cat, but is killed by Squeak. After a long chase, the cat manages to evade Squeak and steals the explorer's ship to escape, while another alien explorer lands and is killed by Squeak. Squeak chases the cat in the other explorer's ship, and the cat crashes on another world, being revived and then having sex with his nurse. Soon, Squeak kills the hospital staff, and the cat once again steals a ship to head to Earth. However, Squeak sneaks on board, and the ship crashes on Earth. The cat and Squeak get away in escape pods, and after landing, the cat finally kills Squeak before chasing after another mouse.

Publication history

[edit]

The comic was first published in the underground comics magazine Frigidaire starting from 1982. The stories were later collected in an eponymous volume in 1984 by Éditions Albin Michel and it was initially intended to be an ended series. It had a sequel (Squeak the Mouse 2) published in 1992 also by Éditions Albin Michel and Sefam, Paris.[4][5] Fantagraphics released all of the stories in a collection on April 12, 2022.[6]

Controversy

[edit]

On August 1, 1985, New York harbor officials confiscated the comic publication on the grounds that it was pornographic, but a court later overturned that decision.[7][8] According to Bernd Metz of Catalan Communications, the book's USA publisher, Squeak the Mouse was ruled not obscene "because it failed the third test of the law... the Miller test as it's called... in that it did not exceed the community standards."[8]

Legacy

[edit]

The comics are considered to be an apparent inspiration for Matt Groening's The Itchy & Scratchy Show.[1][9][10][11][12]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d "Massimo Mattioli".
  2. ^ "L'integrale di "Squeak the Mouse" (con un capitolo inedito)". Fumettologica (in Italian). 16 April 2019.
  3. ^ Rovin, Jeff (1991). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Cartoon Animals. Prentice Hall Press. p. 249. ISBN 0-13-275561-0. Retrieved 8 April 2020.
  4. ^ a b Domenico Marinelli, "Biblioteca storica: Squeak the Mouse", Sbam! Comics, Vol. 8, April–May 2013, p. 36.
  5. ^ "SELECTED BOOKS". MASSIMO MATTIOLI - Official Website (in Italian). Archived from the original on 2021-08-13. Retrieved 2021-08-13.
  6. ^ "Squeak the Mouse".
  7. ^ M. Keith Booker (11 May 2010). Encyclopedia of Comic Books and Graphic Novels. ABC-CLIO, 2010. p. 240. ISBN 978-0313357473.
  8. ^ a b Sweeney, Bruce (August 1986). "Bernd Metz". Comics Interview. No. 35. Fictioneer Books. pp. 38–45.
  9. ^ Sergio Algozzino (2005). Tutt'a un tratto. Una storia della linea nel fumetto. Tunué, 2005. pp. 112–113. ISBN 8889613068.
  10. ^ The Comics Journal, Issues 280-283, Comics Journal Incorporated, 2007, p.27.
  11. ^ Giuseppe Pollicelli (28 August 2011), "Massimo Mattioli: il Disney del porno-horror", Libero.
  12. ^ Costanza Ognibeni (8 October 2010). "Incontro con Massimo Mattioli". CinemArt Magazine. Archived from the original on 20 December 2013. Retrieved 23 April 2013.