If you only ever buy one Fantastic Four omnibus, let this be the one. Why? Well, as the cover reveals, it includes the Galactus trilogy. That alone makes it worth the price of admission, but it’s not the only reason to invest in this weighty, 830-page tome. From the first issue in 1961, the Fantastic Four rewrote the rules of super-hero comics. Unlike DC’s bland goody-goodies, here was a group of reluctant heroes who squabbled, fought among themselves, had relationship problems, even had trouble paying the rent on their HQ. They didn’t even have costumes to begin with, and when they did they were just blue boiler suits.
That said, it wasn’t until 1965’s issue #35 (reprinted in this volume) that things really took off. In a story called ‘Calamity on the Campus!’ we’re introduced to Dragon Man, a scaly, super-strong, fire-breathing android, created in a laboratory in the university where teenage Johnny Storm, a.k.a. the Human Torch, is enrolling as a student. On the surface, this looks like your typical ‘monster-of-the-month’ yarn, and it would have been had not Kirby’s extraordinary story-telling sensibility led him to weave it into a much bigger picture.
That picture begins to emerge in the next issue with the introduction of the Frightful Four, a mismatched group of villains consisting of Paste-Pot Pete, an unpromising character who rapidly reinvents himself as the Trapster; a devious mechanical genius called the Wizard; some-time Spider-Man villain, the Sandman; and Madam Medusa, a mysterious woman with long, prehensile red hair. In many respects, she is typical of the sort of strong female characters Kirby created throughout his career, albeit one who harbours a secret not revealed until several issues down the line.
After a fill-in sci-fi issue, we get to the real meat in an extraordinary tale called ‘Defeated by the Frightful Four!’ The title does not lie. The FF really are fought to a standstill, stranded on a remote atoll and then blown up by their enemies. Another radical innovation in Marvel Comics. Elsewhere, heroes invariably won hands down by the end of every issue.
The next tale, ‘A Blind Man Shall Lead Them!’, has the FF stripped of their powers and their Baxter Building HQ invaded by their arch-enemy, a revenge-driven Doctor Doom. The blind man of the title is Daredevil who, in his day job, is the FF’s lawyer. The FF are represented as being genuinely in peril. Reading this issue at the time, I feared they were up against unbeatable odds this time and that one or all of them might die. It took 20 years to track down a copy of the follow-up, ‘Battle for the Baxter Building,’ which features seven pages devoted to an epic, gut-wrenching struggle between Ben Grimm, a.k.a. the Thing, and Doc Doom which shows Jack Kirby at his inventive best as a storyteller, ably supported by Stan Lee’s dialogue.
The next few issues build up to the gloriously over-the-top ‘Wedding of Sue and Reed,’ a.k.a. ‘Bedlam in the Baxter Building!’, that plays out in FF Annual #3, also reprinted here. This features almost the entire cast of all the Marvel Comics published at the time, from the X-Men through to Millie the Model. The plot, such as it is, has Doctor Doom unleashing a ray that makes practically every super-villain in the Marvel Universe converge on New York to spoil the wedding day by wiping out the FF. Of course, they haven’t allowed for the fact that the wedding guests include all of the Avengers, the X-Men, Nick Fury and assorted agents of SHIELD, Daredevil, Spider-Man, well, you get the picture. The result is an absolute riot in which Kirby has huge fun!
The next four issues introduce the super-human race, the Inhumans, revealing that Madam Medusa, who we met back in issue #36, is one of their number. We now meet her kin, from the Faun-like Gorgon to the awesome, unspeaking Black Bolt. But even this isn’t enough for Kirby.
The story arc in issues #48-51, published early in 1966, introduces Galactus, essentially the Old Testament God portrayed as the supreme villain simply because he considers humans too trivial to worry about wiping us out. It also introduces the Silver Surfer, a tragic, cosmic messiah who turns against God (Galactus), thus becoming a cross between Lucifer as fallen angel and Christ as Redeemer. Heady stuff. This arc is often cited as the best in the entire history of the Fantastic Four and even in the whole history of comics.
As if that wasn’t enough, this is followed by arguably the greatest single issue FF story ever, #51’s ‘This Man … This Monster.’ It’s certainly high on my list, demonstrating how magnificently moving a tale Kirby and Lee at their best were capable of producing.
Do things slow down after that? No. The next story arc introduces the Black Panther. Kirby already had a track record of introducing black characters in sympathetic roles. Here he creates the first full-on black super-hero in mainstream comics. Not only that but he locates him within a high-tech paradise in the heart of Africa, one whose scientific creativity outstrips anything the rest of the world has to offer. Wonderful!
After a run of twenty issues that pack in more creativity than most of us achieve in a lifetime, the pace does ease up a little in the remaining issues of this collection, but only a little. They’re still great stories.
Here, then, we have an unprecedented run that introduces an impressive cast of new characters, in the process creating the integrated Marvel Universe that now forms the basis of one of the most successful movie franchises of all time. Also, where other super-heroes were stagnant, Marvel characters changed, actually developing as human beings as time went by. Not only that but they interacted believably with a recognisably real world. Instead of Gotham City or Metropolis, they inhabited a recognisable New York, complete with its architecture, street furniture and cynical inhabitants. All this made it much easier for us to relate them as individuals. Not for nothing are Kirby and Lee often referred to as the Lennon and McCartney of comic books.
As an added bonus, Kirby’s dynamic pencil art is enhanced by some of the best inkers he ever worked with, including my all-time favourite, the great Chic Stone, who inks the first nine issues in this collection as well as several beautiful ‘Marvel Pin-Up’ pages of various heroes and villains. A few issues are inked by Vince Colletta, best known for inking much of Kirby’s run on ‘The Mighty Thor’ and the early issues of Kirby’s Fourth World saga at DC. His work on the FF is often criticised, but seeing it here, restored, increased in size and printed clearly, it looks much better than it did in the original comics. After Colletta, the brilliant Joe Sinnott, often voted Kirby’s best ever inker, takes over the gig.
The art restoration is done with more sensitivity than in the first FF omnibus. There’s still a problem with the colours. Marvel never allow for the fact that the original comics were printed on poor quality newsprint that muted the colours. The same colours on good quality, semi-glossy paper look garish if not toned down. Ah well, you can’t have everything, though I’ve never understood why… Usually, I’d knock off a star for the dodgy colouring, but in this case, the stories are so good that it’s impossible not to give the book the full five.
To sum up, this collection contains an amazing run of creativity that more than lived up to the Fantastic Four’s billing as ‘The World’s Greatest Comic Magazine!’