20 August 2017

Launching the X-51 (King Kirby 076)


One of Jack Kirby's Odder creations (which is saying something given some of the competition) is X-51 aka Aaron Stack aka Mister Machine aka Machine Man.


Over the years since The King unleashed our living robot hero, he's been all over the Marvel universe, even became a Watcher at one point. I suppose that's almost appropriate given X-51's origins...

Jack only did nine issues of Machine Man...


...but in that short time he was both creating wildly and asking questions, exploring potential issues. Not just within the stories, but in the letters-free letters column, as well. A decade before Star Trek: The Next Generation was lauded for exploring potential social ramifications for self-aware machine intelligence, Kirby was already asking questions. For example, here's his essay from the first issue:


Here's the introductions to the next few essays:





This one seems particularly relevant as we advance machine systems capable of dealing death & destruction autonomously. Heck, we even have robotic suicide bombers now!

But we still haven't gotten to the odd bits. The parts they can't talk about when they retell Machine Man's origins. The true why of the blurb


X-51, you see, evolved beyond his mere machine nature. He did so back before Machine Man #1, in the same manner our species was induced to evolve.
Trapped, bound, facing dismantlement... it happened...


...he encountered The Monolith!


Next issue, after pulling a Nick Cage...


...he makes his escape, and while hunted has a second encounter with The Monolith:


Beyond his evolutionary advancements, this encounter with the boy leads him to thinking more like a 'superhero' and he soon changes his alias from Mr. Machine to Machine Man. (This might also have been to avoid licensing issues with MGM & Kubrick)
So, they can't usually mention any of that stuff, since the first three issues of "Machine Man" were actually the last three issues of 2001: A Space Odyssey:


Jack turned a basically impossible assignment - adapt 2001: A Space Odyssey into an ongoing series - into both a wild, semi-psychedelic, evolutionary ride and a fairly serious probe at issues of the coming 30 years. (The King always liked to think 3 decades into the future) And he created another enduring Superhero in the process.

King Kirby - Always Amazing.

X-51 covers & panels by Jack Kirby & Mike Royer for 2001: A Space Odyssey #s 8-10 (1977) and Machine Man #s 1-9 (1978)

Kirby Komics (King Kirby 075)


Welcome once again to Sunday Morning Funnies. For our first selection this morning, let's jump all the way back to 1947, to Punch & Judy Comics, v.3 #1. Jack Kirby is drawing Earl, The Rich Rabbit, a precursor to Disney's Uncle Scrooge, who debuted the following year-


I have to say, this makes me want to see more Jack Kirby cartoon work. He would have kicked ass in this market, too.
How about some parody work? In Crazy, Man, Crazy magazine, he illustrated an adaptation of the 1955 John Wayne film, Blood Alley, in a piece entitled

BLOODSHOT ALLEY


The piece included text that stood separate from the illustrated adaptation, so we'll ignore it. Jack's illustrations are covered with the captions:


Okay, some of our readers >*cough cough*< might be less than thrilled reading a parody of something they've never seen; probably never heard of. So how about we wrap up today's funnies with a Jack Kirby drawn parody of one of his popular Marvel creations?



Now go thou forth and smile this day!

all page art by Jack Kirby from Punch & Judy v3#1(1947), Crazy, Man, Crazy v2#2 (1956), and Not Brand Echh #2 (with Frank Giacoia) (1967)