Summary

  • The "World's Finest" backups in Wonder Woman are a humorous nod to classic comic strips like Peanuts and Calvin and Hobbes.
  • These stories span years in the lives of second-generation heroes, giving a peek into their adventures and daily lives as kids.
  • Writer Tom King infuses light-hearted comedy into these Trinity backups to balance out the serious political thriller in the main plot.

The pages of the current Calvin and Hobbes.

So this is like, you know, my reach out to people like Watterson and Schulz and Breathed, the comic strips of my youth that really just made me laugh.

In the interview, when asked about what it's like working on the "World's Finest" backup stories he co-creates with artist Belén Ortega, King calls out three creators specifically who influenced him: Peanuts’ Charles M. Schulz, Calvin and Hobbes’ Bill Watterson, and Bloom County’s Berkeley Breathed. All of these comic strips focus on kids and animals causing trouble and asking big questions about life, giving their stories a cross-generational appeal.

Comic book s: toddler Lizzie Prince tells Damian Wayne and Jon Kent Darkseid is hiding in her closet while holding a large stuffed animal.

Similarly, King and Ortega's "World's Finest" stories have spanned years in the lives of these second-generation heroes, providing peeks into their lives, from Jon and Damian as teen babysitters for toddler Lizzie to all three heroes as adults taking on their parents’ mantles. These stories have clear roots in beloved comic strips. As King says himself in the interview:

I grew up a huge comic strip fan. I probably read comic strips before I read comics, just given the paper in the morning, because that's how old I am. So this is like, you know, my reach out to people like Watterson and Schulz and Breathed, the comic strips of my youth that really just made me laugh. It's a chance to flex that muscle.

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Check Out Peanuts, Calvin and Hobbes, and "World's Finest" Side-by-Side

The comic-strip humor appears everywhere in "World's Finest," and it's especially apparent after becoming aware of the influence. Charlie Brown’s mix of grown-up dialogue and youthful innocence is certainly there as Damian, explaining Batman’s purpose to Jon, simply says, “I am vengeance…I avenge.” As children, the three are supposed to keep each other safe, but keep getting into trouble with antics that would make Calvin and Hobbes proud. Finally, for all that they deal with big, global responsibilities, the three are just kids, echoing the blending of silliness and politics of Bloom County.

Trinity, whose name is Elizabeth Marston Prince, is Diana Prince's daughter. Created by Tom King and Daniel Sampere, she debuted in Wonder Woman #800. Her middle name, Marston, is a reference to Wonder Woman creator William Moulton Marston, and Elizabeth is likely referencing his wife, who inspired the character.

In Screen Rant’s interview with King, the writer expressed true joy about making these backups starring Lizzie, the first of which was nominated for an Eisner for "Best Short Story." He sees the stories as a way for his Wonder Woman series to offer readers everything that comics can be. The main plot is a serious political thriller with a secret American king and his own Amazonian weapon, but after each issue’s cliffhanger, readers get to break the narrative’s tension with the adventures of three super-kids. The stories are also a way for King to bond with his children, who like the backups more than the main story. He said:

I have a 10 year-old and a 14 year-old, my kids, and it's the one time they care about what I do for a living, because they love those stories. We talk about it at the table, and I pitch jokes to them, and they’re like, “No dad, that's not good,” or “Let's do this!” And if I'm making them laugh, I know it's good. Yeah, it's my favorite. It's literally my favorite writing week of the year. And [artist] Belén Ortega just kills it on that, everything I’m bringing her.

[...]

Because I write these sour, sad comics where everyone's crying and committing suicide all the time. So it's just fun to release that other side of what I love about this medium.

Newspaper Comics Aren't King's Only Comedy Inspiration for Wonder Woman

s from Wonder Woman #7 by King, Guillem March, Arif Prianto, and Clayton Cowles

Wonder Woman and Superman shop for a birthday gift for Batman, as another alien tries to quickly buy Kryptonite so he can defeat Supes. The struggle is a Love Actually reference, with a retail worker offering extras like a shopping bag and gift wrap.

Tom King’s comedy isn’t just for Lizzie and her brothers: Wonder Woman #7 is a full-issue satiric romp starring Diana and Superman at an intergalactic mall, searching for a birthday gift for Batman. Within that story, an alien struggles to buy a bit of Kryptonite to take on the Man of Steel. However, the clerk, clearly inspired by Rowan Atkinson’s character in the classic romantic comedy Love Actually, holds him up by offering gift wrap and special packaging. It’s a delightfully unexpected reference, even for an issue that features Superman and Wonder Woman getting pedicures (it’s the only salon with the firepower to trim Clark’s nails).

King, Sampere, and the whole Wonder Woman team were nominated for an additional 2024 Eisner for Best Continuing Series.

King’s ability to balance serious dramatic action and light, family-friendly comedy is why he’s one of comics' superstars. Wonder Woman’s new villain, the Sovereign, is a nemesis on par with the Joker, and the physical and mental torture he’s inflicting on the Amazon will surely have repercussions in DC’s event, Absolute Power. With those kinds of stakes, it’s great to be able to switch gears and read about the funny adventures of Trinity as readers wait for the next world-changing issue of Wonder Woman.

Trinity's next "World's Finest" adventure is in Wonder Woman #9, available May 21st from DC Comics.

WONDER WOMAN #9 (2024)

Wonder Woman 9 Main Cover: Diana's profile fading into black and yellow stars.
  • Writer: Tom King
  • Artist: Daniel Sampere, Belén Ortega
  • Colorist: Tomeu Morey, Alejandro Sánchez
  • Letterer: Clayton Cowles
  • Cover Artist: Daniel Sampere, Tomeu Morey
Wonder Woman Flexing in Variant Comic Cover by Rahzzah
Created By
William Moulton Marston, H. G. Peter
Cast
Gal Gadot
First Appearance
All Star Comics
Alias
Diana Prince
Alliance
Justice League, Justice Society of America, Justice League Dark, Justice League International
Race
Amazon-Olympian

Wonder Woman is the superhero identity of Diana, Princess of the Amazons. Created on the island of Themyscira, Wonder Woman is a super-powered demi-goddess with extreme physical strength who utilizes magical gifts (like her famous Lasso of Truth) to defeat her foes. As mighty as her fellow heroes Superman and the Justice League, Wonder Woman is unmatched in her comion and virtue.

Video Games
MultiVersus
Franchise
D.C.
Birthday
March 22
Height
5'8"
Comic Books
Wonder Woman
Peanuts Franchise Poster
Created by
Charles M. Schulz
First Film
The Peanuts Movie
Cast
Christopher Shea, Kathy Steinberg, Bill Melendez, Sally Dryer, Peter Robbins, Noah Schnapp, Hadley Belle Miller, Mariel Sheets, Lisa DeFaria, Venus Omega Schultheis
TV Show(s)
The Snoopy Show, Peanuts by Schulz
Movie(s)
The Peanuts Movie, A Charlie Brown Christmas, A Boy Named Charlie Brown, Charlie Brown's All Stars!, A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving, It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown, It's the Easter Beagle, Charlie Brown
Character(s)
Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Lucy van Pelt, Linus van Pelt, Sally Brown, Pig-Pen, Marcie (Peanuts), Peppermint Patty, Woodstock

Created by Charles M. Schulz, Peanuts is a multimedia franchise that began as a comic strip in the 1950s and eventually expanded to include films and a television series. Peanuts follows the daily adventures of the Peanuts gang, with Charlie Brown and his dog Snoopy at the center of them. Aside from the film released in 2015, the franchise also has several Holiday specials that air regularly on U.S. Television during their appropriate seasons.

Calvin & Hobbes Poster

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Writer
Bill Watterson
Colorist
Bill Watterson
Publisher
Andrews McMeel Publishing

Calvin and Hobbes was a satirical comic strip series that ran from 1985-1995, written, drawn, and colored by Bill Watterson. The series follows six-year-old Hobbes and his stuffed Tiger, Calvin, that examines their lives through a whimsical lens that tackles everyday comedic issues and real-world issues that people deal with.