Full description not available
J**L
Five Stars
Pretty awesome!
R**O
An interesting, kid-friendly caper.
When Princess Bubblegum realizes that she needs a hammer that she had lent to Finn and Jake. She dispatches Peppermint Butler and almost randomly Cinnamon Bun to go fetch the hammer for her, but they are unable to locate the pair of adventurers anywhere in the kingdom. The Candy Kingdom quickly falls into disarray given their heroes aren't around, Princess Bubblegum places Peppermint Butler in charge of the Banana Guards in order to restore order. And even with the unusual help of Cinnamon Bun and the Banana Guards, Peppermint Butler quickly realizes that he needs more help.Thus he decides to enact an old Candy Kingdom edict - the Royal Hero Draft. Thus each issue in the series features a new pair of Adventure Time characters being tested out as possible heroes to replace Finn and Jake. And while each new pair does their best to solve one case or another, Peppermint Butler is also busy with the bigger case of finding out what happened to Finn and Jake.First, I really liked the initial effort to tell this story as a noir-style mystery. Peppermint Butler is a pretty rational guy and his efforts at locating new heroes while also trying to find Finn and Jake are pretty fun to follow. He's hardly perfect at this job - it just goes to show why he's primarily a supporting character. But he does the best that any supporting character can in terms of seeing the adventure through.The series as a whole runs in little vignettes - I suppose you could look at them as "cases" or something. Thus the core issues after the first feature some clever pairings of various Adventure Time characters trying to work together. Issue 2 features Marceline and Tree Trunks. Issue 3 features Lumpy Space Princess and the Earl of Lemongrab. Issue 4 features Ice King and Susan Strong. But as you can already tell, putting together such diverse characters can't result in anything productive and the rest of the series focuses on the search for Finn and Jake.I kind of expected Peppermint Butler to be a bit more, well, eldritch in his investigation methods right from the start, but of course that wouldn't make this a truly family-friend comic. At the same time, I think it nicely brought into question just how much of a master of the dark arts Peppermint Butler might actually be. More and more it seems that he may be just a dabbler in such magics and thus no one can ever come close to being more evil than Gunther the penguin.It's of no surprise to anyone of course that Finn and Jake weren't actually kidnapped or anything crazy like that. But thankfully this is knowledge that is limited to the reader and the in-story characters remain in the dark for most of the story. As much as Peppermint Butler seems to have all the trappings of a good detective, we see that his investigation doesn't immediately yield results.I really enjoyed Candy Capers - it's mostly a gateway comic that features a wide number of Adventure Time characters other than our protagonists Finn and Jake. I think we could have pushed this exploration of characters a bit more, but you can only go so far with a 6-issue TV tie-in comic.
N**N
Love it!
This is such an adorable book! It's a delightful story that both adult fans, and kids can enjoy. My six year old loves reading this, and I love reading it with her. It's all about Peppermint Butler's search for Finn & Jake, who went missing. They couldn't find Finn's demon blood sword, so they went after it. Then Princess Bubblegum realized, after several straight days of research in her lab, that she hadn't seen them in a while. She made Peppermint Butler "Banana Boss", and sent him after them. He brought Cinnamon Bun with him, who is always funny. Then, Marceline and Tree Trunks continue the hunt and find the sword, but no Finn or Jake! Where are they? So cute. Seriously.
F**A
ok
Ok
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 month ago