The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers


The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers is an underground comic about a fictional trio of stoner characters, created by the American artist Gilbert Shelton. The Freak Brothers first appeared in The Rag, an underground newspaper published in Austin, Texas, beginning in May 1968, and were regularly reprinted in underground papers around the United States and in other parts of the world. Later their adventures were published in a series of comic books.
The lives of the Freak Brothers revolve around the procurement and enjoyment of recreational drugs, particularly marijuana. The comics present a critique of the establishment, while satirizing counterculture.
Fat Freddy's Cat appears in many of the stories, spinning off his own cartoon strip and later some full-length episodes.
An animated version, The Freak Brothers, was released in 2020.

Comic strips

The Freak Brothers first appeared in The Rag, an underground newspaper published in Austin, Texas, beginning in May 1968. Their debut was in an advertising flyer for a winter 1968 film short called The Texas Hippies March on the Capitol. Freak Brothers strips soon became popular and were regularly reprinted in underground papers around the United States and in other parts of the world.
The Freak Brothers' first comic book appearance was in Feds 'n' Heads, self-published by Shelton in the spring of 1968. They also appeared in the first two issues of Jay Lynch's Bijou Funnies. In 1969 Shelton and three friends from Texas founded Rip Off Press in San Francisco, which took over publication of all subsequent Freak Brothers comics. The first compilation of their adventures, The Collected Adventures of the Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers, had its first printing in 1971 and has been continually in print ever since. In addition to underground and college weekly newspapers, new adventures appeared in magazines such as Playboy, High Times, and Rip Off Comix; these too were collected in comic book form. Shelton continued to write and draw the series until 1992, in collaboration with Dave Sheridan and Paul Mavrides.
The majority of the comic books consist of one or more multi-page stories together with a number of one-page strips; many of the latter have a one-row skit featuring Fat Freddy's Cat at the bottom of the page. Issues #8-10 contained only the long-form story "The Idiots Abroad", which The Comics Journal listed as #44 of the "100 Greatest Comics of the Century." The UK newspaper The Guardian said of a 2003 reprint of the story that, "The graphic quality is, even in slightly muddy reproduction, astonishing. Depictions of various European cities recall Hergé in their accuracy and detail... As for the subject matter, considering the dates of composition, it has hardly dated."

Characters

The Freak Brothers are not siblings. They are a threesome of freaks from San Francisco.
Other recurring characters include:
Drug use is the predominant theme that runs throughout all volumes of this title. The protagonists "live in a state of blissful torpor relieved only by bursts of paranoia or stimulant-induced frenzy." Marijuana is the most frequently mentioned, but numerous other stimulants and hallucinogens are mentioned as well. Heroin is usually missing from the list. In one adventure, Franklin is shown to turn down an offer of "smack" when hitching a ride.
Food is a recurring subject. These stories most often involve Fat Freddy and his marijuana-induced "munchies". The squalor engendered by the Brothers' indolence is often highlighted; several strips feature the household's cockroach population, ruled over by a fascist monarchy. Several stories satirize governments, particularly the U.S. government. These stories invariably show politicians and their agents as corrupt, incompetent, or both. The theme of foreign travel is sometimes explored, most notably in the three-part Idiots Abroad series.
It is common for the story-lines to begin with an air of realism, but rapidly descend into comic pantomime.
Classic Freak Brothers stories include:
The Freak Brothers comics include several catchphrases:
Dope will get you through times of no money better than money will get you through times of no dope.
"Don't get burned!"

Smoking grass and drinking beer is like pissing into the wind.

While you're out there smashing the state, don't forget to keep a smile on your lips and a song in your heart!

Other appearances

In film

In 1973, without permission from Gilbert Shelton, The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers appeared in the full-length pornographic film Up in Flames. The story involved the brothers' attempts to raise cash to make their rent deadline. Fat Freddy gains employment at a local food store run by graphic artist Robert Crumb's character Mr. Natural.
Director Paul Thomas Anderson said the look of Joaquin Phoenix's lead character, Larry "Doc" Sportello, in Anderson's 2014 adaptation of the Thomas Pynchon novel Inherent Vice, was based in part on characters in the comics. "here's this documentary on Daniel Ellsberg, called The Most Dangerous Man in America. There's a great picture of a buddy of his who has this great set of glasses, a floppy hat and these mutton chops. I took a still frame from that and I sent it to , along with the omnibus collection of The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers comic, by Gilbert Shelton—and that's probably the most we really talked about ."
In 2006, the company Grass Roots Films began production on a feature-length clay-animation film based on the series, called Grass Roots, co-produced by German distribution company X Filme. In 2013, work on the film stopped.

Animated TV show

An animated series based on the characters, set in modern San Francisco, is being developed for release in 2020. It features four cannabis-loving, time-traveling “Freaks” from the late 1960s – Freewheelin’ Franklin, Phineas, Fat Freddy and Fat Freddy’s Cat. Known as The Freak Brothers, the show features Woody Harrelson, Tiffany Haddish, Pete Davidson, and John Goodman as voice actors for the 3 Freaks & the cat. Courtney Solomon and Mark Canton will serve as executive producers, alongside Adam Devine and Blake Anderson who will also provide voice acting. The first season will consist of eight 22-minute episodes and will debut in 2020. A mini-episode was released May 6, 2020, titled "Kentucky Fried Freaks".
According to the 2019 announcement it will be animated by Starburns Industries studio, which did Rick & Morty.

Places

Fat Freddy's Restaurant, in Galway, Ireland, has and other memorabilia relating to the Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers and Fat Freddy's Cat.

''The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers'' series

Almost all of the titles in the series have a title in words. Issues #0–7 and #12–13 are in black-and-white; issues #8–11 were produced in both color and black-and-white editions.
  • Freak Brothers No. 0: Underground Classics #1
  • Freak Brothers No. 1: The Collected Adventures Of...
  • Freak Brothers No. 2: Further Adventures of those...
  • Freak Brothers No. 3: A Year Passes Like Nothing
  • Freak Brothers No. 4: Brother, Can You Spare 75¢ for the...
  • Freak Brothers No. 5: Grass Roots
  • Freak Brothers No. 6: Six Snappy Sockeroos
  • Freak Brothers No. 7: Several Short Stories
  • Freak Brothers No. 8: The Idiots Abroad, Part I
  • Freak Brothers No. 9: The Idiots Abroad, Part II
  • Freak Brothers No. 10: The Idiots Abroad, Part III
  • Freak Brothers No. 11
  • Freak Brothers No. 12
  • Freak Brothers No. 13 —black-and-white reprints of stories from Thoroughly Ripped plus a new cover and one story never before printed in the U.S.: "The Plant"
  • Fifty Freakin' Years with the Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers —new strips by Shelton, as well as his written introduction

    Compilations and collections

Several compilation titles have been published that merge several of the original titles into one book.
  • Thoroughly Ripped with the Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers and Fat Freddy's Cat! —full-color collection of stories from High Times magazine published from Dec. 1976 to Sept. 1978. Book came in two editions, one of which included a board game called "It's a Raid".
  • The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers in Grass Roots —full-color reprints of material from comic book issues #5 and 7.
  • The Complete Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers, Volume One —reprints comic book issues #0–7 and 12
  • The Complete Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers, Volume Two —color reprints comic books issues #8-11 and 13.
  • The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers Omnibus —collection of the entire series, including some stories and covers done after publication of the "Complete" books. Includes everything from the two books above, except for the covers of Rip Off Comics 15 and 21, which do not show the Freak Brothers.