Showing posts with label Jack Schiff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jack Schiff. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 16, 2018

The Right Kirby Stuff!


I want this. In the Jack Kirby canon the Sky Masters of the Space Force have in many ways been the most elusive of his projects. The series has had a few collections over the decades, but I've managed to miss them all and only have a few installments which ran in Comics Revue. Now at last we have what appears to be a quality reprint of the Sunday color pages.


The dailies for this comic strip project were reprinted recently by Hermes Press. I didn't pop the cork on that for the simple reason it didn't contain the color sections and Hermes dailies can be a little suspect (too few per page for my tastes). But I'll likely add this to my list since I want to read the Sky Master of the Space Force saga in its brief entirety.

Rip Off

Friday, December 1, 2017

The World's Greatest Comic Book Artist!


Jack Kirby was without question the single most important comic book artist the field has known. To find other talents of such magnitude you have to go to Kirby's own influences -- Hal Foster and possibly Alex Raymond. Certainly Milt Caniff had his own school, but that one has largely disappeared over the decades. Kirby's only rival is Will Eisner of The Spirit fame. But these days it's the dynamics of Kirby's pages and his own approach to comics which tells the tale, even if most artists don't much realize it anymore.


So as I wind down a year here at the Dojo which has looked at the "King of Comics" I want to focus on his earliest and most influential work at Marvel, the early issues of "The World's Greatest Comic Magazine", better known as the Fantastic Four. Look for a focus on the first four years of the team as they developed by leaps and bounds from a ragtag concept to a rich and smoothly crafted comic book.


Also I want to look at Kirby's other famous foursome, the Challengers of the Unknown. As significant as I regard the Fourth World material at DC, it's arguable that Kirby's Challengers books are even more significant, insomuch as they helped shape the character of the later "Fab 4" at Marvel. But this is a book with its own distinctive character and one which featured some of the most beautiful artwork ever produced by Kirby thanks to the inks of Wally Wood.


In the "Favorite Covers" feature this month, it's my all-time favorite Kirby covers. I've spent quite a bit of time looking at Kirby covers this past year, but some of them are special. These are not necessarily the absolute best ones, but  these are my favorites representing the many genres Kirby worked in across the decades. These will be presented in something of a countdown as I move inexorably toward my absolute favorite Jack Kirby cover of all-time. Note that I said "my favorites" as your mileage may vary.


That and some of the usual nonsense which lolls around here this month as we make the trek toward the end of this season and the beginning of a new year.

Rip Off