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The Adventures of Barry Ween, Boy Genius

The Adventures of Barry Ween, Boy Genius

List Price: $8.95
Your Price: $8.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fun!
Review: One of the funniest comic books you'll ever read! Go Barry Go!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fun!
Review: One of the funniest comic books you'll ever read! Go Barry Go!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: dexter's laboratory meets kevin smith!
Review: this book is hilarious. although many would shun it as a mindless comic book, i defy anyone to read it and not laugh out loud. its like dexter's laboratory meets kevin smith. judd winnick (the man who brought you frumpy the clown) spins hilarious tales of this an adolescent genius and his misadventures with his slightly less intelligent pal jerry. pick it up and give it a read even if you wouldn't normally read a comic book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Barry Ween Rocks
Review: This is perhaps the funniest comic book I've read in a long time. Not since Bisley's Lobo have I laughed so hard and loud at comic characters. Barry Ween has a dry wit, and he lives in such an absurd world with oblivious adults and ignorant children. Barry possesses an unparalleled genius mind, and he gets wrapped up in bizarre adventures to the merriment of his friend Jeremy. Judd Winick has just the right off kilter sense of humor to make me laugh for hours. There were a number of times I had to put the book down to laugh. Recommended.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Barry Ween Rocks
Review: This is perhaps the funniest comic book I've read in a long time. Not since Bisley's Lobo have I laughed so hard and loud at comic characters. Barry Ween has a dry wit, and he lives in such an absurd world with oblivious adults and ignorant children. Barry possesses an unparalleled genius mind, and he gets wrapped up in bizarre adventures to the merriment of his friend Jeremy. Judd Winick has just the right off kilter sense of humor to make me laugh for hours. There were a number of times I had to put the book down to laugh. Recommended.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Funny but not hilarious
Review: This is the first TPB of the Barry Ween comicseries, which reprints the first 3-part (black-and-white) miniseries.
Although I haven't really seen the greatness of this series in here, which I'm told IS existing in later volumes, it's still good entertainment. It's funny though, not hilarious.

Barry is a boy with an IQ that would be 350 points if it was to be measured. Over-aware of everything around him and sarcastic to the bone. His smarts enable him to get his way most of the time, often in bluntly humurous ways.
In this particular volume Barry first accidently opens an inter-dimensional portal which looks like and is referred to as ...uhm ... let's just say 'big-sized female genitalia'. The problems with this really start when his father is sucked in and comes back out heavily transformed.
Next issue, Barry learns to never let anyone alone in his room, when his best friend Jeremy decides to drink one of his experimental potions. With disastrous results.
In the final issue of the trade Barry decides it could be fun to go to school, like any normal boy his age would do. Off course it doesn't turn out to be a normal day and Barry and his classmates are taken hostage.
In all these issues Barry finds pretty ... let's say 'inventive ways' of dealing with the problems at hand. In the meanwhile cursing like a boatworker all the time.

All in all the book is good fun, entertaining. But like I said before: it isn't all that and a bag of potato chips (yet ?). If you're looking for some harmless uncomplicated fun, and you're not easily offended by faul language, this could be good for you. Matt Wagner (creator of Grendel and Sandman Mystery Theatre) describes it as "South Park meets Dexters Lab" and I can see the logic in that conclussion. Although I'll be quick to add it's nowhere as downright hilarious as South Park in this volume. But if you're into the foresaid kind off humor you won't be disappointed with it.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: No rest for the genius.
Review: This volume collects issues 1-3 of the Oni Press comics series The Adventures of Barry Ween, Boy Genius 2.0, and continues with the themes set forth by the first volume in the series. These themes are, of course, "Barry Ween is a genius. Jeremy is a fool. The first is a secret. The second is not."

Ok, ok. There's more to it than that. Barry Ween is not your average 10-year-old. He is, in fact, the smartest person on the planet. Understanding that, were the truth of his genius be revealed he would likely spend the rest of his life being researched and doing the bidding of the government, Barry has taken great pains to hide his true nature from his peers. In fact, the only person who knows about Barry's staggering intellect is Barry's best friend, Jeremy. Jeremy is... not a genius... and is responsible for complicating any number of the situations the boys find themselves in. But, you know, they do say that opposites attract.

In this collection, Barry and Jeremy work on doing 10 impossible things before breakfast. First, they must help an alien who has crash- landed in Barry's back yard before the feds or the alien's employers find them. Then, as if saving all of humanity weren't enough, an unfortunate accident with a matter transporter sends Jeremy (and thus, Barry) back in time to the un-romantic days of the Old West. Finally, Barry has to subdue the government when they take undue interest in him.

Really, all in a day's work when you're a boy genius.

Barry Ween, Boy Genius is not for the faint of heart. There's a great deal of violence, and even more in the way of colorful language. But, underneath the foul-mouthed, light-saber-weilding, world-dominating exterior, Barry Ween is a 10 year old boy who loves his best friend and wants to be accepted by his 'peers.' A fun read, all around.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Not your everyday neighborhood kid.
Review: This volume collects the first three issues of The Adventures of Barry Ween: Boy Genius.

Barry Ween is not the boy next door. At least, you'd better hope he's not. If he is, chances are you probably don't want to know, because you probably have radioactive waste stored under your house, have had your entire life history scoped out, have had your future pre-determined, and your cat is probably a clone.

Barry is not your typical 10 year old. As he says, if his IQ could be measured, it'd loom somewhere around 350. He remembers his time in the womb. He has, however, hidden his staggering intelligence from his family and from most of his 'peers.' The only one who seems to know the truth about Barry is his best friend Jeremy. The attraction there is certainly not because Barry recognizes a kindred spirit. While not dumb, Jeremy would rather spend his energy thinking about [breasts] and food than world domination.

If you're familiar with The Tick, you might remember Charles. Barry reminds me of Charles, except not as manic, more intelligent, and with a much more ... colorful ... vocabulary. But, despite the conniving, calculating, impatient, overbearing nature of our boy hero, he has a soft side (though he'd never admit it). Whether working to change Jeremy back into a human (long story), or saving his classmates from a group of Austrian art thieves, Barry generally finds a way to do 'the right thing' to get his friends and himself out of sticky situations, swearing up a blue streak all the while.

I thoroughly enjoyed this book, and am looking forward to reading more.


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