Showing posts with label New Gods. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Gods. Show all posts

Friday, November 28, 2025

Danger Street Signs - Return Of The New Gods!


In anticipation of a review of Danger Street by Tom King, Jorge Fornes and assorted cover artists I am representing my thirteen reviews of DC's 1970's Showcase-style comic 1st Issue Special. The books by King and company make use of ALL of the sundry heroes and heroines who appeared in these pages. So, let's finish with the Return of the New Gods

Jack Kirby was a big part of the early issues of 1st Issue Special as we've seen with three features in the first six issues of the run. Then his contract to DC fulfilled he left to return to Marvel, now minus Stan Lee who tended to his reputation and Marvel's doings in Hollywood and thereabouts. By this time Kirby was producing his wild Captain America stories for Marvel as the title rocketed to its two hundredth issue as well as some nifty covers for a bunch of different titles. DC decided that the New Gods characters who had seemingly demonstrated a lack of marketplace power only a few years before were ready to make another try, this time minus their absent creator. 



In this thirteenth and final 1st Issue Special we meet again the denizens of New Genesis such as Highfather, Scott Free (in costume on cover only), Big Barda and Lightray (cover only) and Metron. On the Darkseid of things there is of course the cruel dictator of Apokolips himself as well as Kalibak and Doctor Bedlam. In this issue Orion in new fighting togs (no helmet darn it which has always proven difficult for many artists to draw) taking the fight to Apokolips yet again but who finds that he cannot fulfill his long ballyhooed destiny to kill his father when Darkseid has taken steps to connect his beating heart to the Sun itself, making his sudden demise rough on humans all over. So it ends in a stalemate, but with the door open for more. 


And more is what we get as within months we have a new Mister Miracle comic and a new New Gods title both picking up the numbering of the abruptly halted original runs. The Fourth World will slowly but surely become an ever increasing part of the DCU with Darkseid in particular seen by the likes of Gerry Conway (who plotted this last 1st Issue Special as well as edited it in a deal with seemingly more latitude than even Kirby had). Denny O'Neil scripted it and an up and coming Mike Vosburg (hot off the previous issue's Starman) took the artistic helm.


And so it ends, a brief little series that packed some real punch with a gaggle of strong features some of which found a lasting time on the racks and others that withered away. One thing they almost all had in common was a grand sense of fun, something today's dour comics lack by the bushel loads. 

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Tuesday, August 29, 2023

The Fourth World Artist's Editons!


There will never be another creator in comics the equal of Jack "The King" Kirby. The influence of this small soft-spoken Brooklyn-born comic book artist resonates on almost any page of any modern comic you might care to peruse. Kirby is properly given kudos for his work with Joe Simon and Stan Lee, but for pure unadulterated Kirby the first stop is "The Fourth World". (As we've talked about all month.)

I can still remember seeing the debut issue of New Gods sitting in the top rung of a classic comic book spinner rack at the local drug store. The logo yelled across the old wooden floors, and the pronouncement that "Kirby is Here!" was all the coaxing I needed. I was a young "Marvelite", but I was just at the stage of expanding my horizons when I discovered "The Fourth World".


It blew my mind. I won't pretend I "grokked" it all at the time. I was confused by the sundry super-Hippies, the Forever People. I was unclear whether it was pronounced "Darkseed" or "Darkside", but both seemed highly suggestive. The social commentary inherent in characters like Glorious Godfrey eluded me originally. The Dickensian spirit of Granny Goodness (based on Phyllis Diller no less) was hidden. And to be totally honest, I never quite got exactly what the "Anti-Life Equation" was. I should've but I didn't...not really.


And maybe the fact that despite my limited understanding of Kirby's opus it still was fundamentally compelling is what makes it resonate in my imagination and memory all these decades since. Coming at the saga as an adult I can glean depth of meaning which eluded my naive boyish self. I can find themes and understanding where before I only sought adventure and excitement. That's the allure of real literature, that's the allure of Kirby's "Fourth World".


And now I've been given the chance (actually I paid rather dear for it to be honest) to read much of the core New Gods saga in the original manuscript, or at least as close to it as we're ever going to come. IDW Publishing has issue six of the first eight issues of New Gods (see below for the issues included) in their "Artist's Edition" format and we have these stories again.

Included with the stories are numerous pages filled with ad art, promos, commissions, and capped by fold-out color images of Metron and Lightray, the images Kirby produced in anticipation of this project. Utterly fabulous. Some of the artwork is inked by the unfairly maligned Vince Colletta and the rest by the great Mike Royer, who adds an afterword to the volume.

I keep getting older, but Kirby's elegant and awesome creation only gets sweeter and richer with time.







IDW has also come out with Artist's Editions for Mister Miracle and the Forever People. 









It is great to have both of the key stories "The Pact" from New Gods #7 and "Himon" from Mister Miracle #9. These were both mythic tales which revealed the secrets of the Fourth World. 









Amazing! Even after all these years it's just amazing! 

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Sunday, August 27, 2023

Fourth World Absolute Edition Volume Two!


The great tragedy of Jack Kirby's Fourth World is that it never became what he imagined it to be and that it was brought to a screeching halt before he could complete even what was likely the first phase. Kirby imagined, perhaps naively, that he would be the centerpiece of a gang of talented artists like Don Heck and John Romita (both of whom he asked to join him) and launch not only a gaggle of new concepts, but oversee new formats as well. Kirby imagined collected editions of comics and larger sizes done in a higher quality fit for regular bookstores. He recognized that the comic book was a limited option for graphic storytelling, weighed down by decades of low expectations. Audiences didn't expect to find literature in comic books, they expected to find fun trash. But Kirby had proven at Marvel in conjunction with Stan Lee that comics could be more than that. With his shift to DC and his elevation to editor, he wanted to have another go at it and get proper payment and proper recognition for the work. 


The Lee-Kirby debate for me hinges on one evident fact. Measure what Stan Lee created after Jack Kirby left Marvel with what Kirby himself created on his own. There's no comparison. Within a year Stan did what he'd planned to do before in tandem with Kirby, Ditko and others he'd fashioned a new kind of comic book experience, he left comic book writing for the most part. Stan Lee was doubtless a more accomplished and skilled writer than either Jack or Steve, but when it comes to actual creativity he withers in the shadow of his old partner despite the modern mythology to the contrary.  Kirby helped create a vivid alternate universe at Marvel that has produced countless graphic stories in an array of formats and has been the spur for television shows and movies of great success. Apart from Stan and Marvel he created a whole new world, several in fact. And eventually the Fourth World was completely integrated into the DC Universe. 


At the time the sales of the Fourth World books was likely hampered by the switch of all DC books from fifteen cents to twenty-five cents with added reprints and extra pages for the additional dime. At first Marvel did a similar thing, but then whipped back to twenty cents and ripped the rug out form under DC which had for decades been the number one comics sales leader. And add to that, the fact that Marvel was actually publishing more Kirby work than DC with their avalanche of reprint comics. Kirby was battling against the economy, his old company, and himself. The actual sales numbers of the Fourth World books have long been debated and we'll never know the truth. For my part, I found the quarter books to be great values and I generally love this era of DC with lots of different formats. But I was clearly in the minority. 


In this second Absolute Edition of the Fourth World we will see his work on Jimmy Olsen sputter to a halt. And we will see both the Forever People and the New Gods stop abruptly, the stories left hanging in no small way. Mister Miracle will soldier on, but only in a limited way, suddenly ripped away from its companions. Instead of large concepts we get a series of small stories before an obligatory finale. Kirby would finish out his DC contract with new things like Kamandi, the Last Boy on Earth, The Demon, The Losers and OMAC One Man Army Corp, among others such short stints on Justice Inc., Richard Dragon Kung-Fu Fighter, Atlas, Dingbats of Danger Street, Manhunter and The Sandman where he got to work briefly with old partner Joe Simon. 


Then he shifted back to Marvel where Stan had been gone for some years as a daily presence and produced The Eternals, Machine Man, Devil Dinosaur, as well as sizeable stints on both Captain Ameria and The Black Panther. Stan and Jack did work together on a Silver Surfer graphic novel. By the end of that contract, he turned his attention to animation where he found greater remuneration. Later he'd help jump start the Independent market with books like Destroyer Duck (more on him at a later date) Silver Star, and Captain Victory and Galactic Rangers. 


His ability to draw was beginning to be hampered by his weakening eyesight, but when DC contacted him over a decade after his leaving it behind to revisit his Fourth World vison, he saddled up once again. Kirby had already been cobbling together a vague ending to the Fourth World in Captain Victory, but here was a chance to work once again with original characters. But time had moved. He fashioned an ending of sorts for the saga, far less than originally conceived (if an ending had been imagined at all) but an ending nonetheless. It was better than nothing. But those of us who adore the Fourth World have now lived decades imagining what it might have been, what it could have become if only...

Here are the covers of the work in this mammoth volume. 


























Kirby was able to give a tiny finale of sorts in his final issue of Mister Miracle which saw many of the Fourth World characters for the last time in that decade under his hand. They would be revived by Gerry Conway and company almost as soon as Kirby left DC for Marvel. Years later a new DC regime welcomed Kirby back to create a more fitting ending to the saga, but from the beginning there were problems. 







The Hunger Dogs is Jack Kirby's official finish to the Fourth World saga, but due to technical communications about format and Kirby's diminished eyesight, it's a bit of a muddle. At least there was some vindication to see other formats actually being used on the story as he'd wanted to do many years before.


The Fourth World ideas have become core to the DC Universe, in particular the master villain Darkseid. Darkseid is Kirby's best villain, most real and most fantastic at the same time. He might be Kirby's best character, but I won't get into that fight. So I've read the Fourth World once again and hopefully I'll get the chance to read it several more times before I shuffle off this mortal coil. It still works, Kirby's interrupted masterpiece. 

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