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Hero Complex

For your inner fanboy

Category: Marvel

Action Comics No. 1 sale pushes Superman to new heights

February 22, 2010 | 10:44 pm

Action8_ky99rinc Superman lifting a car? Not a big deal in today's comics, but when it's the Man of Steel lifting a car drawn on a "very fine"-rated 10-cent-issue of Action Comics No. 1, the deal is the biggest in comics history: $1 million.

Stephen Fishler, co-owner of the auction site ComicConnect.com, which mediated the deal, told the Associated Press: "It is still a little stunning to see 'a comic book' and '$1 million' in the same sentence."

The buyer remains anonymous, as often happens in these big money deals. The book doesn't reach the record heights of Pablo Picasso's Boy with a Pipe (The Young Apprentice), which sold for $104.1 million at auction in 2004, or a bronze sculpture by Alberto Giacometti that sold for $103.4 million (or $104.3 million,  depending on how you measure it), but comparatively, it's still a wonder.

How have other high-priced comic books fared at auction, you ask?  Well, that's what Hero Complex (and Comic Link, where we got some of the figures) is here for. Most of these books fetched high prices not only because of the issues, but the state that they're in as appraised by the Certified Guaranty Company, or its CGC grade.


Spiderman Amazing Fantasy #15
Sold for: $227,000
.

You-know-who swung into our lives courtesy of this issue, and this specific, near-mint book was part of the noted White Mountain pedigree collection.
 
Fantastic Four #1Fantasticfour1
Sold for: $52,000

The origin and first appearance of the first family of Marvel Comics takes place here, and Stan Lee and Jack Kirby launch the Silver Age. There are only five graded 8.5 by CGC.


Allstar All Star Comics #8
Sold for: $20,000

The introduction of Wonder Woman, the greatest female hero in comics (no debate! unless you want to leave a comment). This 1941 issue is one of only five examples of All Star Comics #8 assigned a grade as high as 7.5 by CGC.


Sensation Comics #1Sensationcomics
Sold for: $25,250

The Amazon with the golden lasso made her first cover appearance in Sensation Comics #1. This particular book, at least as far as anyone knows, is one of only six in the world that could be assigned a grade as high as 8.5 by CGC.


Showcase23 Showcase #23
Sold for: $15,928

The Blackest Night saga is currently taking the comics world by storm, and this comic has the second appearance of the Silver Age Green Lantern at the center of it all, Hal Jordan. Apparently, this 1959 issue is extremely hard to come by, and it's even tougher to find one that can match the 9.4 grading that was given.


-- Jevon Phillips


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Photos courtesy of Associated Press, Marvel Comics and DC Comics.


'Thor' star Anthony Hopkins explains the ruthless charm of Odin

February 16, 2010 |  7:32 am

Odin Anthony Hopkins is ready to cross the Rainbow Bridge to Asgard. "For 'Thor,'" he pointed out, "I don't just play a father, I play the god-father."

Work is underway on the fourth Marvel Studios film, and Hopkins said he is enthused about working with the cast that is led by Chris Hemsworth (who played the doomed father of James T. Kirk in "Star Trek") as the Thunder God and Natalie Portman as his mortal love, Jane Foster.

Anthony Hopkins 2007 Hopkins is taking on the role of Odin, ruler of Asgard and father of both the noble Thor and the nefarious Loki. The 72-year-old actor said it's a meaty role for him and, like his role in "The Wolfman," it allows him to test the tricky physics of paternal relationships.

"I'm very interested in that relationship between fathers and sons," Hopkins said. "My father's relationship with me was cold. He was a hot-blood character but to me, cold. When I was young, he expressed his disappointment because I was bad in school and all of that. He didn't mean any harm, but I felt I could never meet up to his expectations."

The morality tales and melodramas of Marvel Comics have a lot of fascinating fathers, and they have led to some memorable performances in Hollywood's adaptations -- Willem Dafoe as Norman Osborn, William Hurt as Gen. "Thunderbolt" Ross and Brian Cox as William Stryker spring to mind.

Hopkins, a native of Wales, has plenty of experience with sword scabbards and royal roles or antiquity. On that list of roles: He was Hrothgar in the Robert Zemeckis version of "Beowulf," Titus Andronicus in the 1999 film "Titus" and, way back in 1968, he made his feature-film debut as Richard the Lionhearted in Anthony Harvey's sublime "A Lion in Winter."

He said he has high hopes for "Thor" ( "Kenneth Branagh is such a terrific director and a wonderful guy to work with") especially because he finds a personal resonance in the Odin role.

"He's a stern man. He's a man with purpose. I play the god who banishes his son from the kingdom of Asgard because he screwed up. He's a hot-headed, temperamental young man --- probably a chip off of the old block -- but I decide he's not really ready to rule the future kingdom, so I banish him. I'm harsh and my wife complains and I say, 'That is why I'm king.' He's ruthless, take-it-or-leave-it. Women are much more forgiving; men are not so forgiving. I know in my life, my karma is, 'If you don't like it, tough, move on.' And I move on. I'm a little like Odin myself."

-- Geoff Boucher

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IMAGES: Top right, Odin and his thunder baby (Marvel Comics). Anthony Hopkins on the red carpet (Getty Images). Bottom, Hannibal Lecter behind bars. (MGM)


Captain America will be a USO performer in the movie, director says

February 6, 2010 |  4:30 pm

SPOILER ALERT: THIS POST REVEALS SEVERAL PLOT POINTS IN THE CAPTAIN AMERICA FILM

Captain America

It's one thing to take Batman off the comic-book page and make his costume still look good in a live-action feature, but Captain America presents a far bigger challenge — the hero is essentially a walking flag, which might leave many average moviegoers giggling instead of saluting.

But director Joe Johnston and the team at Marvel Studios have a plan for "The First Avenger: Captain America," which is due in Summer 2011: They've added a new wrinkle to the classic mythology to explain why a scientifically enhanced super-soldier would venture out in the WWII battlefields in a costume that leans a bit heavy on the old Betsy Ross imagery.

"The costume is a flag, but the way we're getting around that is we have Steve Rogers forced into the USO circuit. After he's made into this super-soldier, they decide they can't send him into combat and risk him getting killed. He's the only one and they can't make more. So they say, 'You're going to be in this USO show' and they give him a flag suit. He can't wait to get out of it."

Captain america 193 That's a whole new concept and it's one that sounds pretty promising. "It was never in the comics," Johnston said, "because they didn't really need it. In comics, he puts on the costume and the reader just justifies because of the nature of the medium."

Johnston told me all this when we sat down for lunch today at the Four Seasons Hotel. For an hour we chatted about his new film, "The Wolfman" (which you can read about next week right here at the Hero Complex) but I had to ask him a bit about the Captain America production.  Filming starts in London at the end of June. "There's a lot of work we have to do on it," the 59-year-old director said.

And who will wear the costume and carry the shield? "Well, we're testing five or six guys," Johnston said. "The youngest is 23, the oldest is 32. Most of the guys in the war are just kids, 18 or 19, but we want to go a little bit older. We have to have somebody locked in before I leave March 1 for London." 

A challenge, he said, is finding an actor that can play scenes as "98-pound-weakling" Steve Rogers and also pull off the brawny hero scenes, although some visual effects wizardry will come into play. Johnson has plenty of experience on that front as the director of "Jumanji,"  "Honey, I Shrunk the Kids" and "Jurassic Park III" He also had art director credits on major Lucasfilm projects, including "Raiders of the Lost Ark" and "The Empire Strikes Back."

Johnston also directed "The Rocketeer," an underrated 1991 film based on the retro-hero created by the late great Dave Stevens. I asked Johnston if he thought the vintage flair of that film might have caught the eye of the Marvel brain trust as they looked around for a filmmaker to handle a 1940s action movie.

"I think it's probably possible that it was an influence," he said. "I think they were looking for somebody that could handle the visual effects. I think that was a big part of it. And with visual effects, all you really need to know is what is possible. And these days, actually, that's almost anything. Not everything is affordable, but almost everything is approachable."

Captain America Reborn I wanted to come back to the idea of Steve Rogers as a reluctant performer with United Services Organizations, which famously brought Bob Hope and other entertainers to morale-boosting events for troops overseas.

"So he's up on stage doing songs and dances with chorus girls and he can't wait to get out and really fight. When he does go AWOL, he covers up the suit but then, after a few things happen, he realizes that this uniform allows him to lead. By then, he's become a star in the public mind and a symbol. The guys get behind him because he embodies something special."

There will be more than one costume in the film, too.

In the first USO sequences, the frustrated patriot will be wearing a version that is closer to the classic Jack Kirby-designed costume, but then later as the super-soldier hits the war zone he will be wearing a sturdier, more muted version that he makes himself that is more like battle togs. The stripes across his mid-section, for instance, will be straps, not colored fabric.

"He realizes the value of the uniform symbols but he modifies his suit and adds some armor, it will be closer to the Cpa costume in some of the comics in more recent years . . . this approach, it's the only way we could justify ever seeing him on a screen in tights, with the funny boots and everything. The government essentially puts him up there as a living comic-book character and he rips it off and then reclaims some of its imagery after he recognizes the value of it. We think it's the best way to keep the costume and explain it at the same time."

— Geoff Boucher

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ART: Marvel Comics


Marvel versus Jack Kirby, the battle heats up

January 8, 2010 |  3:57 pm

Steve Zeitchik has an article at our sister blog, Company Town, on the latest courtroom twist to the ramping dispute between Marvel's corporate captains and the estate of Jack Kirby, arguably the most important comic book creator in the history of the medium.

Marvel universe
The battle between Marvel Entertainment and the Jack Kirby estate is bringing out each side’s inner Hulk.

The comic book publisher and movie producer, which was recently acquired by the Walt Disney Co. in a $4-billion deal, has unleashed a lawsuit that seeks to invalidate the copyright termination claims made by the heirs to the iconic artist. It's the latest tactic in the fight over profits from some of the most lucrative superhero characters.

Jack Kirby The suit against the Kirby heirs, filed in federal court in Manhattan today, is essentially a preemptive strike to halt the Kirby family’s bid to reclaim the characters. It follows a series of letters from Kirby estate attorney Marc Toberoff in September in which his clients notified various copyright holders and licensors of their intent to terminate copyright to a slew of properties at various points in the coming decade (when they will, in the heirs' view, become available).

Those properties include The Hulk, Iron Man, Spider-Man, Thor, The Avengers and many others from which the movie blockbusters are adapted.

Jack Kirby was a renowned artist instrumental in the creation and shaping of these characters, his family argues, and is thus entitled to profits like any other copyright-holder. Disney has maintained that Kirby’s work was considered for-hire and that his heirs are thus not owed any further profits. 

Like other heirs to 20th century comic book artists, Kirby’s progeny have become more aggressive in seeking to recoup their share of the profits ...

THERE'S MORE, READ THE REST

-- Steven Zeitchik

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Image credit: Marvel

Upper photo: Jack Kirby at work in 1965. Credit: The Jack Kirby Museum

Lower photo: Stan Lee signs artwork at his Beverly Hills office in 2009. Credit: Barbara Davidson / Los Angeles Times.)


Disney now owns the Marvel universe

January 1, 2010 | 12:18 pm

From the AP out of New York:

Marvel universe

Walt Disney Co. completed its $4.24-billion acquisition of Marvel Entertainment Inc. on Thursday, bringing Spider-Man, Iron Man and 5,000 other characters under the same roof as Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck. Marvel shareholders approved the acquisition Thursday morning as expected.

Marvel Chief Executive Isaac "Ike" Perlmutter, who owned 37% of Marvel stock, supported it. He will oversee the Marvel business and report to Disney CEO Robert Iger. Iger said the deal can help Disney grow revenue and profit, saying in a statement, "The creative and business potential of this combination is substantial."

Mickey Mouse in 1930s Marvel shareholders received $30 per share in cash, plus 0.7452 of a Disney share for every Marvel share they owned. Disney shares closed Thursday at $32.25.

That valued Marvel shares at $54.03 each, and put the purchase price at $4.24 billion. The deal is Disney's largest since it bought Pixar Animation Studios Inc., the maker of "Up" and "Cars," for $7.4 billion in stock in 2006.

Separately, Pow Entertainment Inc., a company led by Spider-Man co-creator Stan Lee, said it expanded a three-year relationship with Disney by giving Disney greater rights to its creative output and exclusive consulting services.

Disney, based in Burbank, will take a 10% stake in Pow for $2.5 million, it said. Walt Disney Studios' president of worldwide distribution, Bob Chapek, said it made sense to extend the relationship with the company partly because of Lee's "knowledge and familiarity of the Marvel Universe."

-- Associated Press

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Images: The heroes and villains of Marvel (credit: Marvel Comics) and Mickey Mouse in the 1930s (Walt Disney Co.).


Happy holidays from Hembeck and the Hero Complex

December 21, 2009 | 12:16 pm

If you grew up as a comics fan in the 1980s, you probably also grew up a fan of parodist Fred Hembeck (I know I did) and his whimsical interpretations of classic Marvel and DC covers. We've been lucky enough to have Fred share his work with Hero Complex this year and here's the latest, a holiday blast-from-the-past that will bring a smile to your face. Check out more of his latest work at his website, and below you can find a directory of his Hero Complex contributions.

MarvelTreasuryEdition13big

It has been a great year for the blog and we're looking forward to an even more heroic 2010.

-- Geoff Boucher

Hembeck Captain America100

Fred Hembeck salutes Captain America, Part 1

Fred Hembeck salutes Captain America, Part 2

Fred Hembeck Hulks out, Part 1

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A Marvel-ous holiday tradition

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Matt Fraction will take over Thor in 2010 [UPDATED]

December 14, 2009 |  1:51 pm

FIRST LOOK

Iron Man Thor FCBD 

This beautiful John Romita Jr. cover will grace the front of the Thor and Iron Man team-up that will hit stands on Free Comic Book Day  on May 1. The issue is momentous -- it will be the start of a new era of Thor as writer Matt Faction takes over the thunder god's adventures. That's big news, so we got hold of star writer Fraction for more scoop on the his upcoming hammer time. -- Geoff Boucher


GB: Tell me a bit about Thor and how you viewed him as a fan - was he a key character for you growing up?

MF: There was one run-- Walt Simonson's-- that I thought hung the moon but, weirdly enough, the character wasn't a favorite particularly beyond what Walt did. And then, as an adult, a few years ago, I was at a friend's house and saw a Kirby/Giacoia original Thor page on his wall and... and it was like an array of lock tumblers just clicked into place in my head. Like -- the art, the character, the myth, the potential -- the whole thing came to me in a weird revelation. I got obsessed with the character because for the first time I felt like I figured out, I sort of innately understood, just what you could do with Thor.  How big it was, what the potential was, what the book was really, or could really, be about.  For the first time I knew what Thor meant. Believe it or not, this is just one of several completely insane-sounding stories that have happened to me regarding Thor since I fell into the big guy's orbit. I've reconciled myself with just buying the ticket, taking the ride, and sounding like a mental patient until I'm done.

GB: Stan Lee always made Thor sound like a Shakespearean actor but I always wondered if he might sound more like the Swedish chef. Describe Thor's voice as you find it? What do you draw on?

MF: There's almost a Victorian tongue, to me, when I close my eyes and listen for it-- there this odd, mellifluous and  loping cadence in my head. If I was smart enough I'd write the whole thing in Iambic
pentameter but, well, I'm not. And besides, onamonapeas are murder on the metrical foot. Although now that I think about it, maybe they're really lifesavers.  Short a couple syllables? Slap a FLAPPABIPPITTYBLABOOM! in there...

GB: There are so many great supporting characters in Thor's mythology. Without giving away too much, can you mention some of the things you're excited about pursuing with those supporting characters?

MF: I'm most excited about getting off of Earth. There are nine worlds in the Norse cosmology, sort of, and lately the book has been spending a lot of time here in Midgard sweet Midgard.  I want to take these amazing people, these characters that are so known and loved (at least amongst the pages of THOR), and take 'em up and down the world tree. And beyond!  Hell, why stop at just our world tree? I've said too much.

GB: What do you love about Loki?

MF: That Thor loves him in spite of everything. That they were raised as brothers and before he went completely off the rails he was a sweet, cranky, mischievous, and most of all, funny kid. He was bawdy and witty and for all the brutality and ferociousness of the Norse myth cycles-- and, brother, believe me, that stuff can get brutal -- Loki was the trickster in the middle of it all, cracking jokes in spite of himself. I love what used to be; I love what's buried deep within him that Thor, for all of Loki's sins, can't quite let go.

GB: Does the "Thor" film tilt your approach in any way? It certainly won't plot-wise, but I'm curious if the casting decisions, approaches and general excitement of the Hollywood venture have any unexpected influences on your work.

Well, it's a lot of pressure being cast as "Thor" but really all I can do is hit the gym, learn the lines, and show up ready to work every morning. Why, what were you talking about?

-- Geoff Boucher

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FOR THE RECORD: An earlier version of this post said that John Romita Jr would be taking over the art on Thor. The announcement Marvel made about Romita was limited to the single-issue Thor and Iron Man comic book above.


Mickey Rourke's whiplash menace in 'Iron Man 2'

December 10, 2009 |  4:13 pm

What's the most anticipated fanboy film of 2010?

There's a deep list to consider. "Alice in Wonderland" springs to mind. And don't forget the new films in the "Harry Potter," "Twilight," "Toy Story" and "Narnia" franchises. I have high hopes, too, for the Hollywood adaptations of "Kick Ass," "Jonah Hex" and "Percy Jackson." And how about those revisitations to the three grand brand names of the 1980s: "Tron Legacy," "Predators" and "Clash of the Titans"?

Whew. It's going to be a busy year here at Hero Complex. We expect a lot of surprises but, as of right now, I'd have to say that the surest bet of 2010 is "Iron Man 2" in May. Why? Let me list the reasons: Jon Favreau, Robert Downey Jr., Scarlett Johansson, Don Cheadle, Samuel L. Jackson, Sam Rockewell and the guy in this just-released poster for the Marvel Studios release....

Whiplash

What about you readers? Which films should we circle as the priority films for 2010 here at the H.C.?

-- Geoff Boucher

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2009 Holiday Geek Gift Guide, Part 2: More great presents for Trekkies, Twi-Hards and fanboys

November 30, 2009 |  5:59 am

HOLIDAY GIFT GUIDE, PART TWO

(READ PART ONE RIGHT HERE and PART THREE RIGHT HERE)

Stressed about finding the perfect gift for that special Muggle, Trekkie, Twi-Hard, Jedi or Bat-fan in your life? Relax and read on: You've come to the perfect place at the perfect time, because this is the 2009 Hero Complex Holiday Gift Guide -- just think of us as a sort of retail Yoda guiding you through the complicated swamps of holiday shopping. "Buy or buy not. There is no browse..."

Lawn Jawa"Star Wars" Garden Jawa: Do you know someone that has a gopher problem and a fixation of the George Lucas universe? Well, of course you do -- who doesn't? Just last month, the Garden Jawa ($35) went on sale exclusively at Star Wars Shop. Not even a cranky Bantha could resist this little guy, who is close to a foot tall and comes ready for the garden -- he's got tools tucked into his bandoleer and a garden hose clutched in one gloved hand while the other flashes a thumbs-up symbol that seems to say, "Howdy-ho neighbor, may the Force be with you!" For a new product, he's sure covered a lot of famous ground already; he also seems built for the long haul since he is molded out of all-weather resin.

Tim Burton's Oyster Boy lightup journal Tim Burton's Oyster Boy light-up Journal: There's a towering pile of super-cool items from the gifted oddballs up at Dark Horse Deluxe in Oregon, and I had a tough time deciding which to include in the gift guide. In the end I went with one of the Tim Burton partner creations, the Oyster Boy light-up journal ($15), which is such a melancholy and unexpected gift that it will bring a brief flicker of a smile to the face of that pale friend of yours who loves rainy days, black clothes, the Cure and every Burton movie featuring a cemetery or castle scene. This 128-page hardcover journal just hit shelves in May but the character first appeared in Burton's 1997 book "The Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy & Other Stories" (yes, being old-school and relatively esoteric makes it even better). The cover shows Oyster Boy wearing his human mask and trick-or-treating beneath a starry sky -- and the stars light-up with sparkling lights embedded in the cover. You should check out the other Burton merch from Dark Horse, too.

StarTrek DVD

"Star Trek" DVD: What's the best movie of the year? Well, we could debate that all day but I can tell you that, without a doubt, my favorite movie of the year was "Star Trek,' which brought the long-under-performing film franchise to maximum warp, perhaps for the first time ever. The DVD and Blu-ray releases live up to the film, too, and dollar-for-dollar, they may be the season's best gift for sci-fi fans. The extras on the two-disc version are strong, too; J.J. Abrams is one of the best in Hollywood when it comes to an erudite but accessible director's commentary that is neither self-aggrandizing nor snore-inducing. The gag reel is actually funny. The nine deleted scenes on the Blu-ray, meanwhile, are actually pretty intriguing and show that the film could have gone into some substantially different sections of the story. The birth of Spock, trimmed from the start of the film, is worth wacthing for sure, as are the grim sequences with Klingons -- although they do kind of remind me of Spartans from some interstellar version of "300." And, oh yes, I love that critic's blurb on the box. It's available as a single DVD ($29.99), a two-disc DVD ($39.99) and a three-disc Blu-ray set ($39.99). Available just about everywhere.

Twilight wiiScene It? "Twilight" for the Nintendo Wii:

OK, here's the one gift on this list that I wouldn't want for myself but, hey, a gift guide is about giving, not getting, right? "The Twilight Saga" is in a full-force in American pop culture right now and if you have a Twi-Hard on your holiday shopping list, this might be the perfect fit. Scene It? is, for the uninitiated, a very successful brand of trivia games that incorporate video clips in the game play, but this is the very first edition in the Scene it? series to be available for the Wii game platform. The Konami release just hit stores on Nov. 24 and costs $50, although there are better prices to be found out there. It is rated T for teen due to mild blood, mild violence, some suggestive themes and a drug reference, but there's nothing here that's not in the first film.

Fantastic Four 49

Marvel ArtWorks: The classic artwork of Jack Kirby seemed too powerful, too kinetic and too, well, cosmic, to fit on the pages of Marvel Comics in the glory days of the 1960s and now, thanks to the folks at Every Picture Tells a Story, some of the late artist's iconic images are getting the massive, archival display they deserve. Every Picture Tells a Story is a gallery in Santa Monica and they have secured a license with Marvel to turn key covers into museum-quality pieces of art. The first 10 limited-edition prints were released this year and they look amazing. New releases each year will present signature covers from different eras of Marvel's history; this first batch of canvas prints included the Hulk by Dale Keown, Iron Man by Joe Quesada and the Silver Surfer by Gabriele Dell'Otto. The cream of the crop, though, are two cover by Kirby: "Captain America' No. 100 and "Fantastic Four" No. 49. Only 70 of each were made (which is fitting -- this is the 70th anniversary of Marvel) and they are going fast -- they were also signed by Stan Lee, adding another layer of collectibility. The Kirby glycee prints are $850 each, prices for the other covers vary, but you can find them at at the gallery's website

CHECK BACK THIS WEEK FOR PART THREE OF THE GIFT GUIDE

-- Geoff Boucher

READ PART ONE or READ 2008 GIFT GUIDE


The Onion: Wisconsin man knows more about Galactus than his own family

October 19, 2009 |  9:48 am

I celebrated my 16th wedding anniversary this month and it was such a treat for Tracy and me to reflect back on that autumn afternoon in Florida in 1993. The guest list was amazing -- Millie the Model was there, so was Tony Stark and Captain America -- but it was a pretty bumpy day, too; Doctor Doom used some gizmo to send an attacking army of super-villains with Kang, Electro, the Super Skrull, even some guy called the Melter. Oh wait, that's not right. That wasn't my wedding day, that was the nuptials for Reed Richards and Sue Storm in Fantastic Four annual No. 3 from 1965. Sometimes I get ... confused. But the new pills are helping. The Onion would understand. Here's an excerpt from one of their news stories ... -- Geoff Boucher

Onion geek LA CROSSE, WI—Returning to his hometown to attend a cousin's wedding Saturday, Josh Sundling, 29, reportedly demonstrated on numerous occasions a vast, far more intricate understanding of the fictional Marvel Comics Universe than of his own family's genealogy.

Sundling, who cannot identify his ancestral homeland or the meaning of his surname, possesses extensive knowledge of the creation of superhero teams, the history of imaginary alien races, and the special powers of countless characters.

"We're from Sweden or Norway or somewhere around there," said Sundling, who when prompted can accurately detail the origins of each cartoon member of the X-Men, the Avengers, the Defenders, and the Squadron Supreme. "I don't know for sure. I never really asked about it."

Though Sundling reportedly reread several issues of Moon Knight recently and found himself enjoying the subplot of the hero's romantic involvement with Tigra, it is believed he did not realize his cousin was dating anyone until he received an invitation to the wedding ...

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Neal Adams: The future is now for motion comics

October 19, 2009 |  7:01 am

GUEST ESSAY

Neal Adams

Who is the greatest living comic-book artist? Neal Adams gets my vote. His work for DC Comics in the 1960s and '70s still stands as a towering achievement, and he drew the perfect Bruce Wayne, the definitive Green Lantern and the most memorable Green Arrow. Adams remains a dynamic figure in the world of illustration (check out Adams' website if you haven't already), and his new passion is for motion comics, as he writes in this guest essay for Hero Complex.  -- Geoff Boucher


New York, Union Square, 14th street, October 28th. It's not every day that a new medium is invented or created and usually it happens by accident, against the tide and is roundly ignored and criticized by the majority of the population.

You want to put sound with movies? Talkies?! A flash-in-the-pan! Comic books?  That's not a medium, is it? They're written? And drawn? I thought they just sort of ... appeared.

And now the latest...motion comics? Isn't it enough that HALF of our movies are based on (heh) comic books, overnight, it seems?  No? There are going to be motion comics?  And what is that, a moving comic book?  Yep! But isn't that ... animation?

Actually NO. Animation, as it is defined today, is hundreds of thousands of animation cells drawn by a studio of animation artists who adapt ONE creator's work to a simplified version -- a version that has as few actual lines as possible. Done well, it can be brilliant -- BUT, it can never be the original artist's work. Until now. Which brings us to the aforementioned Oct. 28th.

On that day the first "true" motion comic, the first issue of Marvel's "Astonishing X-Men," will be presented in a world premiere at 14th Street-Union Square as part of MarvelFest NYC 2009. It will be outdoors and projected -- yes, I did just say "projected" -- on the side of the massively large, now closed, Virgin Megastore.

Ladieeze and Gentlemen, you will actually see the drawings of artist John Cassaday come to life and move. You will hear the words of the writer Joss Whedon (of "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" and "Dollhouse" fame) spoken by John Cassaday's drawings. (Well, OK, it's actors doing the actual voices coming from the drawings, but this is exciting stuff.) Also, to add to the excitement, there is a signing at the near-legendary Forbidden Planet comic book store as well as a Marvel-Disney costume contest.

It's a comic book come to life and fully drawn by your favorite artist and written by your favorite writer. "Impossible,"  you logically say. "No one artist could do all that work!"  And, you'd be absolutely RIGHT. But, this is the Age of Computers and, more importantly, the Age of Brilliant Computer Operators. The BEST of these are at my studio, Continuity, and they manipulated the work YOU will see (or miss) on the 28th. (If you do miss it, you can purchase the "Astonishing X-Men" series via iTunes beginning that same day.)

Properly cajoled and manipulated, computers can do nearly anything. For us at Continuity, computers have taken John's drawings and made them talk, run, jump, punch and take a massive cosmic ray blast right in the labonza! As a result? A never-seen-before medium.

Welllll, that's not true, of course. Continuity has been doing this sort of revolutionary animation for years,  Except yours truly is a dyed-in-the-wool comic book artist (and comic book writer, too).  Who better to debut this new form? All this comes together as Walt Disney Co. is completing its $4 billion purchase of Marvel Entertainment. Did Disney buy Marvel in time to tap into the most incredible boom time in the comic book business, and will motion comics contribute to the Disney bonanza? A prediction: "Motion comics" will be a household name a year from today.

-- Neal Adams

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Bryan Singer on 'X-Men' return: 'I've been talking to Fox about it'

October 13, 2009 |  8:50 am

Bryan Singer at Valkyrie premiere Over the weekend, the AP had a short story from Busan, South Korea, where filmmaker Bryan Singer made it sound it like his return to the "X-Men" franchise may be more than just a rumor. Here's an exceprt, links added by me: 

"I'm still looking to possibly returning to the 'X-Men' franchise. I've been talking to Fox about it," Singer said at a talk at South Korea's Pusan International Film Festival.

"I love Hugh Jackman. I love the cast," he said, referring to the Australian actor who plays Wolverine.

Singer said he enjoyed making science fiction and fantasy movies because they allowed him to discuss serious issues through entertainment. He said the "X-Men" series, which follows a group of mutants with superpowers who struggle to fit in with humans, is about tolerance and social structures.

He said he likes to "trick audiences into thinking they're seeing fireworks, but they're learning about themselves and listening to what I have to say."

Singer directed the first two X-films with deft success but then left the franchise for a somewhat disappointing trip to Metropolis. Would the Marvel mutants fare better with his return? Check out our in-depth look at the future of the franchise, which answers that very question. 

-- Geoff Boucher

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'X-Men' film franchise must mutate to be heroic again

October 8, 2009 | 10:56 pm

FOUR FRANCHISES AT A CROSSROADS: PART THREE

This week we're taking a look at four major trilogies from this decade that are looking to add a fourth film despite substantial challenges -- not least among those challenges the skepticism of moviegoers who may wonder whether some of these Hollywood vehicles are running on empty. You can find the other three installments of the series right here.

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"X-Men"

The story so far: With the triumph of comic-book properties in Hollywood today, it's easy to forget how startling Bryan Singer's "X-Men" was when it arrived in 2000. Sleek, sophisticated and respectful of its studied source material, the Fox film ran counter to the then-standard Hollywood approach of turning comic-book adaptations into smirking cartoons that insulted loyal fans of the properties. The $75-million film made $296 million in worldwide box office (it finished as the eighth-highest-grossing film in America that year) and later won over a vast audience that saw it on home video, cable or pay-per-view. The sequel "X2: X-Men United" arrived as one of the most anticipated releases of 2003 and finished with $408 million worldwide and better reviews than the first one. Singer left the franchise to take on the oddly airless "Superman Returns," so Brett Ratner ("Rush Hour") was brought in for the third movie, "X-Men: The Last Stand," which rolled up $459 million at the box office but suffered some withering reviews.

The challenge: When the credits rolled on "The Last Stand," most observers assumed the franchise (like a good number of the main characters) was dead and waiting to be buried. The fact that the franchise's central hero, Wolverine (Hugh Jackman), was spun off into a lone-wolf film this year suggested that the Marvel mutant team might be akin to aging band that just watched its lead singer launch a solo tour. But last month, producer Lauren Shuler Donner, a key figure in the franchise from Day 1, said that a fourth X-Men film remains viable and, more than that, there are efforts moving toward that goal, although they are in very early stages. That may be true, but there have been plenty of mixed signals when it comes to Fox and potential mutant movies; more than a half-dozen different projects have been trumpeted at one time or another, among them a Magneto film, a Deadpool movie, a Gambit project, a New Mutants spin-off and a Wolverine sequel. It's maddening to try keep track of what is (and isn't) happening.

Cyclops3_hdcufmkf

The status: Amid all the noise, the most interesting tidbit in recent months was the August report in Variety that Singer was flirting with the idea of directing "X-Men: First Class," which would be a prequel based on the popular comic book series and the draft script by “The O.C.” creator Josh Schwartz. Later, Donner publicly stated that "First Class" is not the likely next film, but the linkage of Singer to any Marvel mutant is big news -- and may signal an effort to have him back in X-business. Donner has made a point of saying in interviews that having Singer back would be a welcome idea, and why not? The director's departure from the X-franchise didn't burn any bridges. Plus, Donner's husband, "Superman" director Richard Donner, was an engaged mentor for Singer as the younger filmmaker toiled on a version of the Man of Steel that was a valentine to the Donner interpretation. Singer's slate of upcoming projects looks dense, but Fox wants to keep the "X-Men" properties front and center, clearly. The studio's rights will revert back to Marvel in 2012 if there is no project in active development. I know Donner is looking at the wide mythology of the entire "X-Men" universe and there is plenty there, of course, but if they go with a "First Class" prequel, they may have a tough time shoehorning Jackman and his signature character into the film continuity. A reunion sequel may be the safer way to go, but that would require reuniting the scattered big-name cast (which would be difficult) and coming up with a deft way to bring back the dead characters (less challenging, if the old comics are any indication).  

The prediction: Back in 2000, I remember telling one of the top film-coverage editors at the Los Angeles Times that there was huge potential audience for "X-Men," and he scoffed. "Well, 'Mystery Men' tanked," he said. "Why should this be different?" "X-Men" was a pivot point in superhero cinema and, with the intensity of its opening concentration-camp scene, it gave a ready generation of filmgoers the heroes they wanted, not the bloated old-school farce of "Batman & Robin," which was a mere three years earlier. With all that context, watching "The Last Stand" was torture. "X-Men Origins: Wolverine" was better but still not on the level of the Singer films. Despite the upbeat chatter on both sides, I'm skeptical that Singer will actually return to the franchise -- when decision time comes, there will have to be a truly marvelous script to get the "Usual Suspects" director to circle back to ground he's covered before, especially considering that the landscape is charred and pitted after Ratner's noisy residence. No, I predict we instead see more spinoffs of Singer's outsider tale. And (judging by recent history) the directors entrusted with those mutant ventures might deliver video-game plots, flimsy characters and some killer explosions.

-- Geoff Boucher

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'Spider-Man' franchise is tangled up in its own web

October 7, 2009 |  6:59 pm

FOUR FRANCHISES AT A CROSSROADS: PART TWO

This week we're taking a look at four major trilogies from this decade that are looking to add a fourth film despite substantial challenges -- not least among those challenges the skepticism of moviegoers who may wonder if some of these Hollywood vehicles are running on empty. You can find the other three installments of the series right here.

Spider-Man in battle 

"SPIDER-MAN"

The story so far: Not that long ago, the standard assumption in Hollywood was that there were only two superheroes with enough general-audience appeal to carry a film franchise -- Superman and Batman. That changed in May 2002 when "Spider-Man" swung into theaters and grabbed $115 million domestically in its opening weekend, setting a new record at the time. Unlike the wholesome and invulnerable Man of Steel of Metropolis or the handsome billionaire prowling Gotham City alleys, this spindly masked man was a high-school nerd bitten by a bug. Not only did he fight villains, he had to contend with homework, money problems, public derision and a losing streak with girls. The franchise, directed by Sam Raimi and starring Tobey Maguire and Kirsten Dunst, has continued to soar commercially -- "Spider-Man 3" in May 2007 again set the mark for the biggest U.S. opening weekend with $151 million (although last year's "The Dark Knight" edged it with $158 million). Worldwide, the "Spider-Man" films have brought in close to $3.5 billion at theaters and keyed billions and billions more in the sales of toys, video games, DVDs, clothing, etc.

Sam Raimi web The challenge: If you are Sony Pictures and you look at the ledger, a fourth "Spider-Man" film is a no-brainer -- the web-slinger movies rank as the three highest-grossing films in the studio's history (further down that list are considerable hits such as "Men in Black," "Terminator 2" and "Ghostbusters"). But while the first two films were widely praised for their verve and heart, the third edition of Peter Parker's saga struck many viewers as noisy, hollow and disjointed. The Rotten Tomatos rating for "Spider-Man 3," for instance, was 62%, well below the glowing 90% and 94% for the first two films, respectively. One fan of the first two films, Los Angeles Times critic Kenneth Turan, wrote that the success of the first two films sapped the heart out of the third: "This is a film that commerce mandated, a marketing puzzle that insisted on a solution ... it's as if its plot elements were the product of competing contractors who never saw the need to cooperate on a coherent final product." The fourth movie has other challenges: How many other ways can the relationship between Peter Parker and Mary Jane Watson be bent without totally losing its shape? What villain left on the list can connect with a wide audience?

The status: In May, Raimi told the Hero Complex that filming will start next February. In that same interview, with our Gina McIntyre, he said he has regrets not just about the third film, but all of them. "What would I have done differently? I would have done everything differently, every single shot. I think in every picture that I’ve ever made. Everything that I’ve done torments me." He also said of the character Peter Parker: "I’d like to really make a great picture with him and bring the character to life at a level of detail that I’ve never realized before. It’s almost like I have a desire to do something I’ve been trying to do right and haven’t yet been able to. Not exactly." Raimi is on board for the fourth film, but will he stay past its May 2011 release? Sony is certainly interested in taking Spidey well into the next decade; screenwriter James Vanderbilt ("Zodiac") is already at work on the story for the fifth and sixth films, which is reportedly a single story arc spread over two movies.

The prediction: No one was more disappointed with "Spider-Man 3" than me -- well, perhaps Raimi was, although I doubt he would ever admit that publicly. The first two films were nimble, smart and fun, the perfect summer films; Raimi made so many good decisions that it was easy to forgive his one glaring clunker (the casting of the wan Dunst as Mary Jane). My defining memory of Raimi: I interviewed him on the set of the first "Spider-Man" movie and he told me that as a child his birthday gift one year was a Spider-Man mural his mom painted above his bed. He fell asleep at night staring up at the hero. Raimi's deep affection for the vintage 1960s and 1970s comics of Stan Lee, Steve Ditko and John Romita infused the first two movies. The third one, though, was driven by its set pieces and visual effects, not by story or character -- it was all badly stacked brick and no mortar. It's telling that the most heartfelt presence in the movie was the 1960s character Sandman, while the 1980s creation Venom (whom Raimi initially resisted) added to the clutter. Listening to Raimi now, my guess is we get an old-school villain like the Rhino, Vulture, the Lizard, Mysterio or perhaps Morbius (or some combination from that group) and Raimi's return to form. I suspect it will also be his last Spidey film before a new director and cast come in or the subsequent two-parter.

-- Geoff Boucher

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Four major franchises look to make a fourth film -- but should they? [Updated]

October 5, 2009 |  7:04 am

Franchises

They are four of the biggest franchises in Hollywood history and each is at a major crossroads. This week the Hero Complex will look at "The Lord of the Rings," "Spider-Man," "X-Men" and "Pirates of the Caribbean" and size up their future as they attempt to move past their original trilogies and into a new decade.

Tuesday "Lord of the Rings/The Hobbit": How can Guillermo del Toro possibly match up to Peter Jackson's magical conquests ($2.92 billion in global box office and 17 Oscars including best picture, best director and best adapted screenplay)? At least he has Jackson on his side ...

Wednesday "Spider-Man": Director Sam Raimi and stars Tobey Maguire and Kirsten Dunst are back for more and that's no surprise considering "Spider-Man 3" had the highest-grossing opening weekend of the wall-crawling films -- and went on to make $891 million worldwide. Still, the last film got decidedly mixed reviews, and some fans are wondering if the magic is gone.

Thursday: "X-Men": The summer 2000 release of Bryan Singer's "X-Men" truly signaled the beginning of the modern era of superhero cinema and its new ambitions. While the 2006 release of "X-Men: The Last Stand" led to commercial success ($459 million), the hero-snuffing plot, the finality of the title and those cruel reviews all suggested the run was over. Now, though, producers are looking for a return to the mutant chronicles...

Friday "Pirates of the Caribbean" : The fourth film, "Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides," hits theaters in 2011, but after a shake-up at the top of Walt Disney Studios, star Johnny Depp said he is feeling glum about the project. If he's not excited, should you be?

Check back to read them all, but in the meantime, give us your opinion: Which franchise would be making the biggest mistake by continuing past the original trilogy? Vote below ...

-- Geoff Boucher

Photos from left, Ian McKellen in "Lord of the Rings," Tobey Maguire in "Spider-Man," Halle Berry in "X-Men: The Last Stand" and Johnny Depp in "Pirates of the Caribbean."  Credits from left: New Line Cinema, Sony Pictures, 20th Century Fox, Walt Disney Studios.

UPDATED: Previous version of this post had an incorrect year of release on one of the X-films.


Jack Kirby, the abandoned hero of Marvel's grand Hollywood adventure, and his family's quest [updated]

September 25, 2009 |  8:00 am

This is a longer version of my story that will run Sunday in the Los Angeles Times Calendar section...

Jack Kirby, 1965

You’d be hard-pressed to find a recent comic book that didn’t have the stylish scrawl of the artists somewhere on the cover, but that was not the case when Jack Kirby was making pop culture history back in the 1960s with his wildly kinetic drawings of the X-Men, Hulk and the Fantastic Four. “I think I have a highly unique and unusual style, and that’s the reason I never sign my drawings,” the proud Kirby told an interviewer in 1987, seven years before his death. “Everybody could tell any of my covers a mile away on the newsstand, and that satisfied me.”

The satisfaction was fleeting. The artist may be reverently referred to as “King” Kirby by the pop scholars and younger artists who celebrate his genre-defining work but Kirby is, in some ways, an overlooked figure in the broader view of American culture. He didn’t live to see his creations fly across the movie screen over the last decade and his four children made nothing from those lucrative films, although they are now pursuing legal action to claim some of the future Hollywood wealth. “There is,” daughter Lisa Kirby says, “a bittersweet legacy to my father’s work.”

On a recent afternoon, in Beverly Hills, a different man was autographing a giant lithograph reproducing one of Kirby’s classic Fantastic Four covers. It was Stan Lee, the writer who was Kirby’s most famous collaborator until they became estranged over creative credit, artwork custody and money. An art dealer had brought stacks of limited-edition lithos, some to be priced at $850, to Lee’s Santa Monica Boulevard office along with a check in his pocket to pay the 86-year-old Lee for his autographs.

Lee had written the stories for the classic comics, of course, but considering all the history, it was still odd to see his name etched on the cosmic Kirby tableau from 1966.

Stan Lee in his office 2009

“Yes, there was a time when there was some hard feeling on his part ... but he got over that and we were friends,” Lee said. “It really is sad that he didn’t get to see all the big movies. None of us could predict that we would get to this point with the films. I don’t dwell on it too much because I’m always so busy doing what I am doing today. Unfortunately the guys back in the day did not make as much as they do today. Years ago also you had artists doing these comics who, well, there was nothing else they could have done. Their style wasn’t right for advertising or magazines like Saturday Evening Post or Collier’s. And as for us writers, well, we weren’t qualified to write for the New Yorker. Comic book writers were considered hacks, and artists weren’t really thought of as much beyond that.”

Journey into Mystery 83

Lee studied one of the other art pieces, a dazzling revisiting of a Kirby cover for Captain America. "Wow, look at this one." The pieces are being sold by the Santa Monica gallery called Every Picture Tells a Story as part of a new licensing deal with Marvel to create high-end wall art from illustrations that were, in their day, the most gaudy and disposable entertainment imaginable. “As far as I’m concerned,” Lee said with his endless zeal, “it is fine art."

The story of two “hacks,” as Lee would frame it, will be scrutinized much more considering recent events. Last month, the Walt Disney Co. paid $4 billion to scoop up Marvel Entertainment and its vault of florid characters who over the last decade have become Hollywood box-office heroes. Many of the most valuable properties in that vault were created by the wildly prolific tandem of Lee and Kirby in the 1960s; there are two big-budget movies now in the pipeline for Marvel Studios that are based on Lee-Kirby creations (“The Mighty Thor" and “The Avengers”) and a third (“First Avenger: Captain America”) based on the work of Kirby and writer Joe Simon. The Kirby brood watched the Disney deal happen and within days were conferring with attorneys and accelerating their bid to reclaim copyright.

A day after Lee sat signing that artwork, attorneys representing the four children of Kirby sent out 45 notices of termination to Hollywood studios and players with an interest in assorted Marvel films; it was the opening salvo in a legal battle to gain copyright control of certain characters and the name on the legal letterhead was Toberoff & Associates, the same firm that last year won a intriguing victory by reclaiming a share of the copyright for the first Superman story for heirs of that character's co-creator, Jerry Siegel.

Fantastic Four 1

Under copyright law, creators or their heirs can seek to regain copyrights they previously assigned to a company 56 years after first publication, so the Kirby family is starting that process now with hopes of gaining an interest or, perhaps, a settlement. Lee, meanwhile, struck assorted deals through the years with Marvel and has been an executive producer on every Marvel film made to date, movies with worldwide box office now in the billions of dollars, and has had prominent cameos in many of them.

Lee is by far the most famous creator in comics history thanks to his longevity, success and a Barnum-like flair for self-promotion. He became a media figure in the 1960s when journalists jotted down his dizzying hyperbole about Marvel’s brightly hued, counterculture ethos. Kirby, laboring at home with far less credit, looked on and chafed about his status as a freelancer, essentially working for Lee, whose family connections by then had taken him to the top of the small and scruffy publishing venture. By 1970, Kirby had had enough and defected to rival DC Comics. Lee would go on to accumulate considerable wealth and fame, sometimes selling comics, sometimes selling his own persona with a long list of splashy but short-lived ventures. Kirby’s fortunes were not as grand; when he talked about his old creations he had the weary tone of a man who long ago watched the family coin collection scatter on a crowded street.

Lee knows that fans like to set up the partners as rivals. Kirby is portrayed as the irascible purist with staggering imagination and Lee reduced to the tireless huckster -- the pop-culture prophet versus the corporate profiteer. From Lee's present vantage point, though, he prefers to look back on their shared tale as the unexpected odyssey of two kids who grew up in a business of cruel deadlines and lowbrow aspirations and found in each other a go-to guy.

Avengers 4

“My favorite thing about Kirby’s artwork was his storytelling,” Lee said. “He was really a film director doing comics.”

In that, Kirby was certainly ahead of his time. Comics are a huge part of Hollywood now, thanks to the modern era of computer-generated special effects that, finally, can match the galactic visions and super-powered mayhem that Kirby put to paper in the 1960s. Kirby’s influence is nothing less than massive on several generations of artists and filmmakers.

“There was power in the work of Jack Kirby that changed the way I looked at things,” said Guillermo del Toro, writer-director of “Pan’s Labyrinth.” "There was no one else like him and there never will be."

Nevertheless, Kirby remains a distant second to Lee in name recognition, which Lisa Kirby said rankles. “A lot more people know the name Stan Lee than the name Jack Kirby,” she said. “I’m not putting down Stan Lee’s talents but it’s difficult for us to see that he does dominate the credit. That doesn’t reflect the work or the reality. To see Jack Kirby in small letters and Stan Lee in big letters, that’s hard for us.”

Mike Richardson grew up under the thrall of Kirby's drawings and was inspired to found his own comic-book company, Dark Horse, which has grown into a Hollywood player after seeing titles such as "The Mask,"  "Hellboy" and "300" jump to the screen. Through the years, he reached out to the Kirby family to help them find some sort of compensation.

Jack Kirby self-portrait 2

"There was a lot of anger in the Kirby family with the way that Jack was treated, more than they will express in public," Richardson said. "There's no way you can say enough about the impact of those Marvel comics in the 1960s. They changed the rules. Lee and Kirby were the Lennon and McCartney of comics and Stan Lee became a well-known figure in popular culture and Jack did not. Neither were as great on their own, it's true, but Jack had decades of work that was really special. To me, there's no doubt that Jack Kirby was the truly brilliant creative genius behind the success of Marvel."   

If there’s a battle to come, it’s one Kirby never took on in life.

“Jack didn’t have the resources or the stomach lining to fight Marvel over copyrights, character ownership or past contractual sleights that he believed he suffered,” says Mark Evanier, who was Kirby’s assistant in the early 1970s and later his biographer. “He fought to get back his pages of original art. That was the fight he believed he could win.”

Evanier, now a comics historian and creator, testified in the Siegel suit and it seems certain that he would be in the deposition seat for any Kirby legal case. A longtime friend to Kirby and respectful acquaintance of Lee, he spoke glowingly of the partnership as lightning in a bottle, the zenith of each man’s career.

Stan Lee 2006 photo by Robyn Beck AFP Getty Images

Kirby contributed mightily to the plots and character creation; the workload at Marvel was so intense in the 1960s that there were no “scripts” handed to Kirby, he would just draw the story and Lee would go back and craft dialogue that fit the action. Still, Evanier said, while it’s now fashionable to view Lee as the lesser figure, he also had the separate success of Spider-Man (with artist Steve Ditko) and set the singular tone and culture of Marvel.

The pair had met in the Roosevelt years. In late 1940, Jacob Kurtzberg, 23, drawing under the name Kirby, had his first taste of real success in the young comics industry, which soared after the debut of Superman in 1938. Kirby and writer Simon’s Captain America was a hit for Timely Comics, which would later morph into Marvel. There was an eager assistant in the office named Stanley Lieber, just 18, who had gotten the job through a family connection (and would later shorten his name).

“In those days they dipped the pen in ink, I had to make sure the inkwells were filled,” said Lee. “I went down and got them their lunch, I did proofreading, I erased the pencils from the finished pages for them.

Jack Kirby's Hulk in action

Whatever had to be done. I remember Jack would always be sitting at a table puffing on his cigar, kind of talking to himself as he was doing those pages.”

Lee’s first credited work was a 1941 Captain America story where the hero threw his shield for the first time. That would become a trademark for decades, suggesting an instant flair for the medium. Kirby left Timely not long after. Years later, with comics in the doldrums, Lee and Kirby would reunite and create a new sort of comic book, with frenetic energy, mutant outsiders and misunderstood monsters. Superman and DC Comics instantly seemed like boring old Pat Boone; Marvel felt like the Beatles and the British Invasion. It was Kirby’s artwork with its tension and psychedelia that made it perfect for the times — or was it Lee’s bravado and melodrama, which was somehow insecure and brash at the same time?

“Jack was the best partner you could ask for, dependable and imaginative,” Lee said, sitting in an office cluttered with all those old heroes and villains. “And it was never dull. Nothing with us was ever dull.”

-- Geoff Boucher

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Photos: Jack Kirby at work in 1965; Credit: The Jack Kirby Museum. Stan Lee in his office in 2009; Barbara Davidson/Los Angeles Times. Stan Lee in 2006 with Marvel characters; Robin Beck\Getty Images. All artwork: Marvel

UPDATE: An earlier version of this post had the word "narrow" in the description of the Siegel copyright victory but in delving further into that victory I decided to delete the misleading adjective. It also will not appear in the abridged print version of this story.  


Jack Kirby's family wants a piece of the pie in Marvel's Hollywood success

September 21, 2009 |  8:19 am

Ben Fritz has a story in today's Los Angeles Times business section on the heirs of the late, great Jack Kirby looking for a legal avenue to profit from the many characters that he created, which have become lucrative Hollywood properties.

Jack Kirby self-portrait

Walt Disney Co. may not get full ownership of many of Marvel Entertainment's most famous superheroes if new copyright claims by the family of the late artist Jack Kirby have merit.

Four children of Kirby, who co-created a number of Marvel's best-known superheroes in the 1960s including the X-Men, Fantastic Four, Thor and the Hulk, have served 45 "notices of termination" to Marvel, Disney, Sony Pictures, 20th Century Fox, Paramount Pictures and Universal Pictures. The notices seek to regain copyright control of certain characters.

Disney this month agreed to buy Marvel for $4 billion. Sony owns the movie rights to Spider-Man, Fox to the Fantastic Four and X-Men; Paramount and Universal have distribution rights for certain Marvel-produced films.

The notices were sent Wednesday.

The children of Kirby, who died in 1994, are being represented by Los Angeles law firm Toberoff & Associates, which has represented the heirs of Superman co-creator Jerry Siegel in a similar claim against Warner Bros.

Kirby served as artist and co-plotter with writer Stan Lee on most of the characters in question.

Whereas Lee has been a public face of the company for decades, Kirby is less known. That's in part because Kirby left to work for competitor DC Comics in 1970...

THERE'S MORE, READ THE REST

-- Ben Fritz

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CREDIT: Jack Kirby self-portrait, Marvel.


Disney has no fear of masked-man overkill: 'You can never have too many heroes'

September 16, 2009 | 11:07 am

After contributing mightily to the Hero Complex coverage of Disney D23 Expo, Los Angeles Times business writer Dawn C. Chmielewski has more tidbits about the strange marriage between the Mouse House and the House of Ideas...

Spider-Man logo With Walt Disney Co. buying Marvel Entertainment, inquiring minds at the Goldman Sachs Communacopia XVIII Conference in New York wanted to know if there will be a glut of superhero films.

Mickey Mouse "You can never have too many heroes," Tom Staggs, Disney's chief financial officer, deadpanned.

Asked, and answered, puny mortals.

Staggs said once the $4-billion cash and stock deal closes, there would be an immediate impact on Disney's consumer products division. That's probably code for Marvel's 5,000 characters appearing on backpacks, bedding and action figures.

Over time, the Marvel characters will present new video game opportunities -- both for those games published by Disney's group, as well as by third parties...

There's more. Read the rest of the report on Disney and Marvel here. 

-- Dawn Chmielewski

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Matt Fraction: A comic book writer's secret identity revealed

September 7, 2009 | 10:07 am

In the L.A. Times' business section, there is a handy feature run called 'How I Made It.'  This week, reporter Alex Pham talked to comics writer extraordinare Matt Fraction.

Fraction

The gig: Professional comic book writer.

Matt Fraction, the 33-year-old author of "Invincible Iron Man" and "Uncanny X-Men" comics for Marvel Entertainment, has a job that's coveted by thousands of boys, not to mention grown men who daydream at their desks.

Lately, Fraction's ratcheted his career up a notch by landing a gig to write the script for the upcoming Iron Man 2 video game. It will be published next year by Sega Corp. alongside the debut of the movie sequel. That means his dialogue is very likely to be read by Robert Downey Jr., who plays the title character in the upcoming movie and who also provided the voice talent for Sega's first Iron Man game, released in May 2008.

Now that Marvel will be purchased by Walt Disney Co. in Burbank, Fraction is about to go from college dropout to one of the star writers for the House of Mouse.

We asked Fraction about his unorthodox career path at July's Comic-Con convention in San Diego, where he has earned his minor cult status among comic fans for his graphic novel, "Last of the Independents." His work with Marvel artist Salvador Larocca for "Invincible Iron Man" won the 2009 Eisner Award for best new series...

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-- Alex Pham

Photo: Alex Pham / Los Angeles Times

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Hannah Montana on the Avengers? Reactions to the Disney/Marvel deal

September 1, 2009 |  4:01 pm

The mouse has eaten the spider, and there's been strong industry and fan speculation as to what the Disney-Marvel deal could mean (Demi Lovato as She Hulk was not one of the ideas), but most seem to be giving the move a "wait-and-see" reaction.

Analysts are saying that Marvel didn't have to do it, but obviously it will have more money to make the new reboot of "The Fantastic Four" everyone's talking about, "Ant-Man," "Thor,"Ang Lee's "Shang Chi" (yep!) and other long-languishing projects -- though Marvel does have lots of characters already tied up.  But, as David Pollard says in the video below from G4, it also means that the mouse may decide, "Hey, 'Thor's' too expensive to make with Kenneth Branagh. Nix it." Fans would probably be mad ("I say thee nay!"), but even they have to admit that the Magic Kingdom does know how to make money.

Comic Book Resources asked many of comicbookdom's voices what they thought of the deal and its possible effects on the publishing arm.  A few of the comments included:

Kurt Busiek, writer of "Astro City," "JLA/Avengers," "Marvels"

I see the fan community already salivating over Pixar X-Men (has Pixar done any adaptations, guys?) or dreading Hannah Montana joining the Avengers.

Rick Remender, writer of Marvel's "Punisher"

I just got off the phone with my editor at Marvel and was told this deal guarantees everyone currently at Marvel will get [a] helium-filled rocket balloon car covered in gold leaf and powered by the dreams of children.

Dan Vado of SLG Publishing, home of Disney properties “Haunted Mansion,” “Tron,” and “Gargoyles,” among others

It could be, again strictly conjecture here, that Marvel will end up being reduced to a licensing company and that its publishing will be scaled back dramatically as emphasis is put on content like movies and video games and less emphasis on things like publishing.

Marv Wolfman, former Marvel Comics Editor in Chief and former "Disney Adventures" editor

As far as the comics go, hopefully, they will leave Joe Quesada and company where they are and not interfere; they've creatively improved the Marvel Comics. Based on most of their Marvel Studios movies, they seem to have good people there, too. I'm not completely sure it was a wise purchase, but Disney is in the branding/franchise business and the Marvel brand is one of the largest in the world.

-- Jevon Phillips

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