Summary

  • From exhibiting the same hapless behaviors as human beings, to keeping them as pets, using aliens in The Far Side were one of creator Gary Larson's greatest techniques for making the familiar seem out of the ordinary, and at times, out of this world.
  • Larson expertly used aliens in The Far Side the same way he used animals: to highlight the absurdity of human activity, and spoof contemporary human life.
  • Aliens visiting Earth in Far Side were often portrayed as tourists, and frequently crashed their flying saucers, leading to one of Gary Larson's favorite recurring jokes – the impending first between aliens and humans, going in a way that is not ideal for either side.

The Far Side's humor often came from making the familiar seem alien – and many times throughout the strip's run, it used actual aliens to achieve this effect. Frequently, extraterrestrials were depicted in Far Side s as being engaged in the same hapless behaviors as everyday humans. Other times, they represented the vast, terrifying forces of the unknown universe, looming over the people of Earth.

Usually appearing in the familiar flying saucer, embedded in humanity's collective consciousness, The Far Side's aliens were prone to the same foibles as any of the strip's readers, as writer/artist Gary Larson used visitors from space the same way he used animals: to spoof, and to deconstruct, the blatant absurdity of contemporary human life. Aliens regularly populated The Far Side, making them an everyday part of newspaper readers' lives in a way no sci-fi property – with the exception of Star Trek, and perhaps Twilight Zone – had before. This makes Larson's alien Far Side s particularly worth taking a more in-depth look at.

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15 Best Far Side Comics That Make Jokes About Real World History

Far Side creator Gary Larson often mined history for the strip's material, in the process revealing how absurd human civilization has always been.

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15 At Least Wait Until The Ten O'Clock News Comes On

First Published: June 26, 1980

Far Side, aliens invade in the middle of Laverne and Shirley

In one of the most visually striking Far Side alien s, the extraterrestrials are not played for laughs here, but rather presented as an imminent threat. The invasion, it seems, has arrived – the humor comes from the woman in the house below the fleet of saucers, complaining over the phone to a friend that the TV signal has gone out "in the middle of Lavern and Shirley." As was often the case with Gary Larson's characters, doom appears to be approaching for this woman, but in this moment, she has no idea what's in store for her.

The Far Side debuted at the beginning of 1980. This was one of the strip's earliest alien s – immediately displaying Gary Larson's expert artistic approach to the iconic flying saucer design, though his equally memorable depictions of the creatures inside the UFO would take several years to develop over the strip's run.

14 Gary Larson Tweaks The Familiar To Induce The Strange

First Published: September 25, 1980

Far Side, aliens at a party, one asks the other, "give me six" instead of "five."

Even when [Far Side] jokes were corny, the accompanying image justified it, working not only to make the reader laugh, even in spite of themselves, but to make the joke uniquely Gary Larson's own.

In this , Gary Larson turns his attention to the simplest of human exchanges: the high five. Larson reinterprets this as the "high six," as his amorphous aliens in this Far Side installment engage in a similar greeting at an alien party. The joke here is simple, but it hits the way Far Side punchlines always did – that is, even when the joke was corny, the accompanying image justified it, working not only to make the reader laugh, even in spite of themselves, but to make the joke uniquely Gary Larson's own.

13 It's Obvious They're Not From Around Here

First Published: November 15, 1980

Far Side, alien visitors to Earth taking pictures with scarecrow

Gary Larson loved to portray alien visitors to Earth as assuming the familiar trappings of human tourists. In this case, a pair of aliens have landed on a farm, and one of them eagerly drapes a scarecrow over his shoulder, while the other takes a picture. Though this is an example of a Far Side using no words, the funniest interpretation of the joke is that the extraterrestrials are excited to go to Earth and experience the culture, as any traveler would be when going to a foreign land.

12 It's Not A Killing Jar, Gorok

First Published: October 26, 1981

Far Side, alien reminds another alien to poke holes in the jar for their captive humans

Though not Far Side featuring aliens, this comes close, as a pair of giant aliens are shown to have captured a pair of human boys, innocently riding their bikes along the road, in a jar. Ominously, one alien onishes the other: "Now, don't forget, Gorok!...This time punch some holes in the lid." Evidently, Gorok has inadvertently caused the deaths of several captive humans before. This also leaves readers with the uncertainty of what Gorok intends to do with his new humans, or whether they will ever be returned to their families.

11 The Greatest Defense Against Alien Invasion Isn't Germ Warfare – It's Bee Warfare

First Published: August 11, 1981

Far Side, bee causes aliens to crash their space ship

Gary Larson frequently depicted UFO crashes in The Far Side, almost always as a result of mundane, Earth-bound reasons. In this instance, the perennial fear held by most drivers – of a bee getting into their car and causing them to crash – takes down an alien spacecraft, leaving its two occupants shaken and stranded on an unfamiliar planet. As was often the case with Larson's Far Side alien s, a group of humans appear on a hill in the distance, drawn to the crash site, and certainly about to be expected by what they find.

10 Gary Larson Reminds Humanity They Brought This Upon Themselves

First Published: November 25, 1981

Alien angrily sending flying saucers after US astronauts

This is another example of a straightforward, but nevertheless effective, Far Side alien joke. Here, a U.S. space probe, the Explorer II – launched in 1958 – has found life out in the galaxy, and directed its ire back toward Earth. "Find them!" an alien cries out, pointing a fleet of flying saucers in the direction the probe came from. In this , Larson blends a unique, if not ostentatious, design for the alien being with his regular use of the classic saucer ship design, which he excelled at drawing.

9 The Grub Is Greasy, But It's Good

First Published: February 27, 1982

Far Side, Earth is an intergalactic diner

The Far Side was usually at its best when its jokes were kept deliberately simple, as is the case in this , which features aliens driving by Earth in their spaceship, when they notice the giant sign reading "EAT" sticking up from the planet. "Say...I could go for something," the alien enger says to the driver. The illustration itself is amusing, but what makes this particularly funny is the small detail of the alien's jagged teeth – slyly suggesting that their take out menu might include human beings.

8 Gary Larson Excelled At Making The Ordinary Feel Out Of This World

First Published: July 16, 1982

Far Side, aliens locked the keys in their flying saucer, human farmers approach in distance

Gary Larson loved to subvert expectations for humanity's first encounter with aliens in his Far Side installments featuring beings from another world. He often also used aliens in the way he used all of his characters – to twist common human experiences into something just unfamiliar enough that the tension between trope and innovation contributed to the reader's reaction. This is the perfect example, as a pair of aliens land their flying saucer on Earth, and lock their keys inside it. A woeful occurrence that any car owner can attest to, Larson uses aliens to remind readers how inherently ridiculous such a circumstance is.

Gary Larson used aliens frequently in 1982, as that year contributes seven of the most outstanding extraterrestrial Far Side installments, as cataloged by this list. This included the first appearance of the purple aliens who would become his most frequent visitors from the starts, featured in this .

7 A Visit To The Far Side Of The Galaxy

First Published: August 4, 1982

Far Side, giant farmer alien feeds earthlings

Gary Larson tended to use The Far Side to illustrate the absurdity of humanity in the face of an unrelenting universe, and few s zero in on that theme quiete as aptly as this one.

This is almost wholesome – in a topsy-turvy, characteristically Far Side type of way. Presumably set on some distant planet, a giant alien farmer gleefully throws handfuls of food from a bag labeled "human feed" to a pack of hungry, excited humans, as though they were chickens. The caption is pure nonsense, as the alien banters "yakity yak!" at his flock of homo-sapiens. Gary Larson tended to use The Far Side to illustrate the absurdity of humanity in the face of an unrelenting universe, and few s zero in on that theme quiete as aptly as this one.

6 Gary Larson's Aliens Were Some Of His Best Artistic Work

First Published: September 16, 1982

Far Side, aliens joyriding through Earth city as humans flee in terror

This is one of the most gloriously rendered alien illustrations from The Far Side, elevating what is a very simple joke at its core...The caption for this simply reads, "yeeeehaaaaaa," evoking cattle rustlers, as well, with the hapless human beings on the street beneath the UFO as the terrified, stampeding herd.

This is one of the most gloriously rendered alien illustrations from The Far Side, elevating what is a very simple joke at its core. Two carefree aliens "buzz" a city street full of terrified humans, taking a joyride in their flying saucer through an Earth metropolis, turning an otherwise ordinary, cloudy-looking day into the day the earth stood still. The caption for this simply reads, "yeeeehaaaaaa," evoking cattle rustlers, as well, with the hapless human beings on the street beneath the UFO as the terrified, stampeding herd.