Another run that proves that Kirby really did need to work with a writer.
In this series, which I got for free through Amazon Prime Reading, Kirby has some interesting ideas about the “true” origins of Earth’s 3 species (humans, Eternals, and Deviants). The problem is that his world-building is the story, and it doesn’t work. It’s not a world revealed through its characters, and without consistent characters or a plot from issue to issue, it makes it hard for a reader to care about the fictional setting alone.
He continues exploring his cosmic themes from New Gods, but here a more or less blatant rip-off of Chariots of the Gods?, which was a lousy book of pseudo-archaeology that I read once but was very popular in Kirby’s day. I am not sure what this says about his originality or the marketing of this series to tie in to that book.
Kirby constantly uses a high-falutin, quasi-religious style of diction that is supposed to convey something important, and he also keeps telling us that it will change Earth forever, but it never really develops story wise. Sure, there are “space gods,”
but Kirby never really sees the redundancy of that term and the whole notion get silly after awhile. Kirby was even the editor, and it shows in the numerous misspellings that made it to print.
A few of these Celestial giants are already in Peru, and another is set to activate in 50 years, but it’s not clear where all of this was going. Why was 50 years important in the life span of a being that has lived for eons, and how did Kirby plan to get to year 50 in his lifetime? Any human characters he introduces could already be dead by then.
Kirby seems to be trying to explore how humanity would react in a world filled with super-beings. Some comics have explored these issues of the relationship between supers and society (X-men) or characters who reconcile humanity and superpowers within themselves (Clark Kent). The difference is that other creators understand how to explore these anxieties and tensions within a story. With Kirby, it feels like I’m sitting through a sermon.
Both of his cosmic gods series are reminders that even Jack Kirby got cancelled after short, back-to-back runs, at both DC and Marvel no less; quite an achievement. And yet, Marvel had no problem making his cancelled comic book into a movie years later and long after he was dead; comics is such a classy business that way.