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Jack Kirby's Fourth World

Jack Kirby's Fourth World

List Price: $12.95
Your Price: $9.71
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One fourth of Kirby's Fourth World ...
Review: I am waiting for Mark Evanier and the folk's at DC to realize Jack Kirby's Fourth World isn't complete without the DNA Project, Intergang, Dabney Donovan, the Evil Factory and ... well, the list goes on. Give us Superman's Pal, Jimmy Olsen! Granted, the 1st half of Kirby's run on the title wasn't the flagship for Kirby's Fourth World. The series really took off with the second half during the '25-cent, Bigger&Better' phase. So, come on DC, complete the reprinting of Kirby's Fourth World and introduce readers to some dynamite storytelling, Kirby style!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: These are DC's Best Charecters.. Thanks to Jack.
Review: In the words of Stan Lee. "Jack Kirby was a genius". And read both his Marvel work and all THE NEW GODS stories, and you can see. These are stories about characters that are both mythological and human. These would make great movies also.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: These are DC's Best Charecters.. Thanks to Jack.
Review: In the words of Stan Lee. "Jack Kirby was a genius". And read both his Marvel work and all THE NEW GODS stories, and you can see. These are stories about characters that are both mythological and human. These would make great movies also.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: These are DC's Best Charecters.. Thanks to Jack.
Review: In the words of Stan Lee. "Jack Kirby was a genius". And read both his Marvel work and all THE NEW GODS stories, and you can see. These are stories about characters that are both mythological and human. These would make great movies also.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Not Quite The Fourth World
Review: This book is somehwat mistitled. This is actually the second half of the run of Mister Miracle published after the Forever People and New Gods were cancelled by DC in the 70s. The result is a scaled down series concentrating more on the core characters Scott, Barda, Oberon, and Shilo Norman and less on the Darkseid/Anti-Life War, which seems almost ignored until the last story. The cancellations of the other two books adversely affected this title as it seems that much of the momentum generated by the Anti-Life story was lost. Who knows what would have happened if Jack Kirby was allowed to continue his story to its completion? Not even Jack might have known, but it probably would have been powerful and thrilling.

Hopefully, DC will get around to re-releasing two more New Gods stories: the final comics chapter written in the 80s baxter format book and the Hunger Dogs graphic novel. These may not have been the conclusion that Jack originally intended but are powerful stories in their own right. The Fourth World characters have proven to be compelling and enduring, thirty years after they were first introduced. Pick up the New Gods, Forever People and the other Mr Miracle trade papaerbacks to see some of the finest storytelling by comics' greatest legend.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: FOUR PART SERIES ENDS ON A HIGH NOTE
Review: This is the final part of a four-part series of black and white trades collecting Jack Kirby's New Gods, Forever People and Mister Miracle. The three titles, which Kirby was writing, drawing and editing himself, where meant to be a grand space opera concluding with a great showdown between Orion and and his father Darkseid. But after the first two series were cancelled by DC, only Mister Miracle was left and the story was simplified so that it focused more on Mister Miracle's life on earth. This trade collects the second half of the Mister Miracle title which Kirby did. Dispite a simpler story, I think its better that the Mister Miracle trade but not as good as the Forever People and New Gods, which is clearly the best.

Some new villains are introduceed and Darkseid and his gang make an appearance, but clearly the most important part is the blossoming of the relationship between Big Barda and Mister Miracle. It seems that Kirby was planning to develop this relationship slowly but wasn't given enough time. Still, it wasn't a bad issue at all.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Mister Miracle from Fourth World To Super Hero
Review: This is the second volume from DC that reprints Kirby's Mister Miracle (in black and white with gray tones). Mister Miracle is Jack Kirby's super-escape artist character.

The first volume was tied more tightly with his "Fourth World Series" (New Gods, Mister Miracle, Forever People and to a much lesser degree his run on Jimmy Olsen).

By the time most of the stories for this second volume came out the other Fourth World titles were cancelled or on the verge of being so. The Demon and Kamandi were in the works.

Mister Miracle was being aimed at more conventional super hero fare (or at least as conventional as Kirby could make it). This is not to say the stories are bad, just different from the earlier part of the run.

Of note is the introduction of Shiloh Norman who would become Mister Miracle's apprentice and latter in the comics assume the role of Mister Miracle (as he may do again this year, 2005, in a Grant Morrison Maxi Series).

Mike Royer provides the inking for the stories in this volume and his stong line compliments Kirby's pencils rather well.

Why only four stars, its the black and white. These books were meant for color, but then again the price can't be beat.

But don't worry too much, the last story in the volume is the wedding of Scott (Mister Miracle) Free and Barda and the entire cast of the New Gods shows up to make it a wedding slug fest in the grand tradition of Kirby's Fantastic Four Wedding. The very last panels are like something out of Shakesphere and are well worth reading and rereading.


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