Tales Of Suspense #19 [1961]

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Before Swamp Thing, before Man-Thing, there was “The Green Thing”. A 13-page Kirby/Ayers cover story in this issue of TALES OF SUSPENSE, featuring a scientist who goes to a remote island to test his serum, which he thinks will increase the intelligence of plants. Not finding the highly developed plant he hopes, he instead tries the serum on a weed, which grows to giant size, gains intelligence and plans to rule the world.

Tales Of Suspense #19 [1961]

Fortunately, with the remaining serum, the scientist is able to evolve a sample of his original choice, Ignatius Rex (and while checking to see if that was a real plant, all I found were links to websites about this story), which is a more benevolent walking plant. Lucky that worked out.

Hm, giant weed turning its own fibers into a lasso, these are some strange comics.

Published July 1961

Who’s Who – The Definitive Directory Of The DC Universe #17 [1986]

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Two Kirby pieces in this issue, drawing two of his 1970s characters, both inked by Greg Theakston. The Orion piece has a fairly bland main pose, but the background has some nice stuff like his savage face, a battle with Kalibak and his astro-glider.

omac

OMAC gets a page as well, with a very nice main pose, and a look at his alias Buddy Blank and partner Brother Eye.

Published 1986

Ka-Zar #2 [1970]

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This issue reprints DAREDEVIL #12 and #13, from 1966, two early appearances of Ka-Zar which establish his background and introduce his brother. Kirby did layouts for those issues, which John Romita, just recently returned to Marvel, finished. The most recent issue of THE JACK KIRBY COLLECTOR had some unused layout pages from #13, if you want to get an idea of what Kirby did. Interestingly, those pages are very different from the story as it was actually published, so I’m not sure if Kirby did two completely different sets of layouts or if what could be used from his for the original story were salvaged and adapted to the new story. There do seem to be varying amounts of Kirby in the finished product, for whatever reason, although I think we can safely credit much that’s on this page to Kirby:

Ka-Zar #2 [1970]

The story involved Matt Murdock taking a break from his law practice to go on a cruise, which is attacked by modern day pirates led by the Plunderer. As Daredevil, he allows himself to be taken by the pirates, and they go down to Ka-Zar’s Savage Land, where we eventually, after battles with man-apes and killer plants, find out that the Plunderer is really the Lord Plunder (clever secret identity  that), Ka-Zar is his long-lost brother Kevin, and they head off to England with Ka-Zar as a captive, ending on a cliff-hanger which leads into non-Kirby issues. It’s all very confusing, and I have to say that I’m more interested by the story in those unused layouts, which seems to involve Plunder attempting to civilize Ka-Zar, and Foggy and Karen, thinking Matt is dead, flying to England having been hired by Plunder.

The cover is a heavily modified version of the Kirby/Romita* cover to DD #12, with some of the characters flipped, re-arranged and partly redrawn (most notably Ka-Zar’s hair), and a big figure of Zabu added.

Published 1970

*see comments, apparently the cover is Kirby/Esposito, with maybe some work by Romita.**

**or maybe not.

Kirby inking

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Fred Hembeck, in his Dec 10th entry, has a note from Mark Evanier mentioning that the MavelMania catalog cover Fred had posted last week was, in fact, inked by Kirby himself, and posts a FANTASY MASTERPIECES cover that Kirby inked, as well as the Bullpen hype that specifically mentioned that fact. I’d agree with Fred that it does look a lot like Giacoia’s inks of the period (such as a few of the other issues of FM around that), which I guess just means Giacoia was pretty faithful to Kirby’s pencils.

That reminded me that it was in facted hyped even earlier than that, in this item from FF #45 in 1965, about 8 months before that FM cover:

bullpen

I think I recall Mark Evanier once posting somewhere that the last full story Kirby inked (as opposed to covers like this and poster/pin-up stuff for MarvelMania) was a western for Marvel in the early 1960s, but I’m not sure which one that would be. Anyone?

Ancient Cover Gallery

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A few pre-Silver Age gems.

ADVENTURE COMICS #92, 1944. Look out behind you Sandman, it’s a trap! Where’s Sandy when you need him…

HEADLINE COMICS #44, 1951. Nice to see them cracking down on some of those white-collar criminals for a change. Very eye-catching covers on these old crime books. I like that lackey off to the left.

WARFRONT #29, 1956. Man, those Harvey war comics could get violent.



–Link– Upcoming Ayers autobio comic

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In 2005, Mecca Comics Group has scheduled two autobiographical graphic novels by Dick Ayers in February and May. Presumably his time as one of Kirby’s main inkers in the early 1960s will figure into the middle of the second volume, which covers 1951 to 1986.

Ayers Autobio
They’re also publishing a new Ayers western comic, CHIPS WILDE – THE WILD ONE in March.

Quite a few preview pages from all those books at the link.

http://www.meccacomics.com/mecca-gallery.cfm

Marvel Tales #193 [1986] – The Fabulous FF Meet Spider-Man

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This six page Kirby/Ditko story is reprinted from FANTASTIC FOUR ANNUAL #1 (1963) (not AMAZING SPIDER-MAN ANNUAL #1, as it’s mistakenly cited on the first page of this reprint). A bit of an oddity, as it retells a scene done in two pages in the first issue of AMAZING SPIDER-MAN earlier that year, with full Ditko art, where Spidey breaks into the Baxter Building, thinking he could get a job with them. He was a bit unclear on the concept early on, I guess. The Avengers might have been a better bet if they’d formed by then.

mt193

It does feel a bit stretched, with the attack from each FF member (taken straight from the original) being followed by another attack newly revealed for this telling. It’s still interesting, especially the way Kirby draws the Spider-Man / Mr. Fantastic battle.

Published 1986

Giant-Size Defenders #1 [1974] – Surfer / Hulk reprints

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For about a year in the mid-1970s, Marvel added a bunch of “Giant Size” specials to their schedule, with a mix of new and reprint contents. As the editorial in this one explains, the plans for the line were often in flux in terms of price and page counts, which is how this early one wound up with four reprints, three of them tied together with a new framing story.

Two Kirby stories made it in here. The first is “Banished to Outer Space”, the first half of INCREDIBLE HULK #3 from 1962, inked by Dick Ayers. It’s a fun story if you don’t think about it too much, since that early Marvel stuff is clearly very seat-of-the-pants type plotting, and especially with the Hulk, where they didn’t seem to know where they wanted to go during that short original run. I kind of like how charmingly stupid Rick Jones is as he’s tricked into luring the Hulk into a rocket, and the blank look on the Hulk’s face when he inexplicably falls under the mental control of Rick.

Later in the book, outside the framing story, is “The Peerless Power of the Silver Surfer”, from FF ANNUAL #5 (1967), inked by Frank Giacoia.

defgs

In this one, during his wandering days on Earth between major FF stories he comes across the Mad Thinker’s leftover construct from an earlier FF story, Quasimodo (Quasi-Motivational Destruct Organ). The Surfer uses his powers to give Quasimodo a body, not realizing that whole Destruct Organ thing, and eventually has to turn the rampaging Quasimodo into a statue.

A bit of an iffy story, I guess, but great art, with the Surfer looking as elegant as always, and Quasimodo being a great Kirby monster type, with his body or without.

Published 1974

–Link– Joe Sinnott website

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Joe Sinnott, Kirby inker extraordinaire, has some fun stuff on his website, including a new sketchbook offered for sale, and this 1972 photo of Sinnott with Kirby:

Kirby with Sinnott
Thanks to Fred Hembeck for pointing it out, and check out his site for an account of a signing for the sketchbook.

http://www.joesinnott.com/pages/1/index.htm

Wanted – The World’s Most Dangerous Villains #9 [1973]

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WANTED. THE WORLD’S MOST DANGEROUS VILLAINS was a short-lived reprint anthology from DC with a focus on super-villains. This was the final issue, and featured a reprint of the S&K Sandman story from WORLD’S FINEST #6 (1942).

The villain in this case is the Nightshade, a demonic looking green criminal who has used a variety of technological and biological terrors to take control of his “magic forest” where, for a price, he’ll offer other criminals a place to hide until the heat dies down. Sandman and Sandy get involved when the parents of a boy whose party Sandy is attending go missing in the forest, and battle Nightshade’s deadly plants.

wanted

Fun story, but the bit that cracks me up is the last page, when Sandy and Wes Dodds return to the party, where birthday boy Toby says “Hi’ya Sandy! Did ya hear what happened? The Sandman and Sandy saved my mom and dad!”. Yeah, you know Sandy, right Sandy? That crimefighter sidekick, about your height, curly blonde hair, kind of like yours…

Published 1973