- The Sleuth (Disney)
The Sleuth is a
fictional character featured inDisney comics . He first appeared in "Walt Disney Showcase" n°38 in the story "Mickey and the Sleuth: The Case of the Wax Dummy" (1977). The character was created byCarl Fallberg (plot) andPaul Murry (art) and was featured in Disney comics stories produced in theUnited States for the foreign and domestic markets.The Sleuth is an
anthropomorphic canine. He is an English private eye operating in 19th centuryLondon and employingMickey Mouse as an assistant. Given their historical setting, the "Mickey and the Sleuth" stories stand apart from other Mickey Mouse continuities. It is never explained if the "Mickey Mouse" working with the Sleuth is an ancestor of the present-day Mickey or if those stories are to be included in a totally different continuity. Apart from Mickey, no other prominent Disney characters are featured in the stories.The Sleuth is a good-natured gentleman; wearing a
deerstalker hat , smoking a pipe, and using amagnifying glass , he is an obvious parody ofSherlock Holmes , Mickey basically playing the part ofDr. Watson . Like his literary counterpart, he also plays theviolin (albeit horribly). Unlike Sherlock Holmes, however, he is totally hopeless as a detective, being sometimes unable to figure out crimes that happen right in front of his eyes. Nevertheless, he always manages to solve his cases - hence ensuring a reputation as a great detective - either by sheer luck, or thanks to his foes' own incompetence, or simply because Mickey Mouse does all the actual detective work for him.The Sleuth's constant foes are "Professor Nefarious" (a parody of
Professor Moriarty ), a London-based "teacher of crime", and his three henchmen-pupils "Fliplip", "Sidney" and "Armadillo". While Nefarious is reasonably smart (although his own megalomania sometimes hinders his plans), his three accomplices are thoroughly inept comical villains. Mickey and the Sleuth imprison the gang at the end of each story, although Nefarious himself generally manages to escape.Apart from Mickey - and of course, the reader - no one seems to be aware of the Sleuth's utter incompetence. Nefarious considers the Sleuth - not Mickey - as his greatest enemy. Why Mickey would keep being the assistant of such an inept detective is never explained.
"Mickey and the Sleuth" stories were produced up until the late 1980s.
Names in other countries
*
France : "Sir Lock"
*Italy : "Ser Lock" or "Hulme"
*Colombia : "Chirlo Bobo"
*Brazil : "Sir Lock Holmes"
*Germany : "Sir Dionys"
*Spain : "Ser Lock"
*Netherlands : "Oliver Flops" or "Olivier Flops"
*Norway : "Hårlock"Links
* [http://coa.inducks.org/character.php?c=Sleuth The Sleuth at INDUCKS]
* [http://users.cwnet.com/xephyr/rich/dzone/hoozoo/images/sleuth2.gifCharacter image]
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