By January 1971, Jack Kirby was writing and pencilling and editing all four, 4th World titles. Even for an artist as prolific as Kirby (his 1970 deal with National/DC required a minimum of 15 pages a week*) ,that is a big load and something had to give. That something was Jimmy Olsen.
Kirby was certainly working on the other three titles but the first two issues hit you between the eyes because he had time. By Jimmy Olsen # 136 the demands of creating an entire new universe of characters take their toll and Jimmy Olsen becomes the most traditional of the four titles as Giant Green Hulk Kryptonite-Coated Jimmy Clone goes a few rounds with the Big Red S/New Guardian and we learn about competing clone projects on Earth and Apokolips.
When Kirby met with National/DC they offered him Superman
and asked him to revamp it but he declined and instead said to Infantino et al,
‘what’s your lowest-selling title?’**. The reply was Jimmy Olsen. Anything to
do with Superman means you have to help bear the corporate burden of the
company’s founding character and I think Kirby felt restrained with what was
possible. He wasn’t at National/DC to do other people’s characters, he wanted
to do his own.
When I look at the four 4th World titles I think
they all have a different function and perhaps target slightly different age
groups. New Gods sits at the top of the Kirby universe, it literally tells the
story about the World. Forever People, regarded as the centrepiece title by
many commentators is about the People, the characters are the most closely tied
to the counter-culture youth Kirby saw all around him in California. Jimmy
Olsen is about the Kids. It’s about the fights, the camaraderie, the joie de
vivre Kirby remembers growing up in the Lower East Side of New York. Mister
Miracle is about the Individual, Scott Free on the Joseph Campbell hero’s
journey we all need to define for ourselves.
In this company, Jimmy Olsen is the least sophisticated of the four titles because it is targeted at the youngest audience. But Kirby being Kirby, he managed to say something which caught my eye and got me thinking about a situation closer to our own time. Darkeseid’s Project minions, Mokkari and Simyan regroup after a call to Darkseid and help Kirby with his exposition as they talk about how their mission is to replace the Earth Project with theirs and bring chaos in the place of order, “…from that chaos will arise the new masters of earth – with the great Darkseid as their exalted leader.” They talk about how they will destroy the Earth Project and “….It shall become again as it once was ---empty! Silent!’’
Darkseid brings chaos and that chaos simply destroys, it delivers nothing in the place of what once was, only emptiness and silence. Evil isn’t creative in the sense it cannot build anything. It can only tear things down. Darkseid is a being of no principles, no morals, no ethics. Behind his words, there are no thoughts, behind the rage, there is no strength, only empty darkness. Kirby who landed on Omaha beach only 10 days after D-Day fought against the evil of a great darkness, Hitler and his Nazis***, the unrestrained Will of a narcissistic colossus. According to multiple commentators, Kirby had Hitler (and even Nixon) in mind when he created Darkseid.
Yet like all despots, like all demagogues, Darkseid will
overreach himself. His empty words will ring hollow, his followers will melt
away, their bravado replaced by cowardice. The appeal to force will always be
attractive to many, to shut down free will with ‘the outside control of all
living thought’**** an all-encompassing
effort to get people to think and act in only one way, controlled by an outside
force. We, the people, cannot be silent when our dark side speaks.
** Comics
Journal # 134, February 1990, pg.94
*** Comics
Journal # 134, February 1990, pg. 68
**** New Gods # 1, pg. 9.
Research this article:
Comics:
-Comics
Journal # 134, February 1990 (Jack Kirby interview by Gary Groth)
-Mike’s Amazing World of Comics website
-The
Indispensable Kirby & Lee: Stuf’ Said! (Jack Kirby Collector # 75:
TwoMorrows).
Popular
culture:
-There’s
A Riot Going On (Peter Doggett, Canongate, 2007)
-Uncovering
the Sixties (Abe Peck, Pantheon, 1985)
Michael
Mead is a 54 year old New Zealand comic book collector, who likes to think he
can do "contextual" commentary reviews of old comics, asking:
"where does this story come from?", looking at the social, political,
cultural times it came from, the state of the comics industry, the personal and
creative journey of the writer or artist, the personal journey of the reader as
a child and as an adult.
As part of this, he is vain enough to think he can bring new
insights into Kirby's Fourth World comics and so, on the 50th anniversary of
publication of each issue of Superman's Pal Jimmy Olsen, Forever People, New
Gods and Mister Miracle, he will publish a contextual commentary. Check out his
earlier entries on this blog and tell him to stop talking so pretentiously in
the third person for God's sake!
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