There you have it! I hope you enjoyed. After this Kirby did an original sci-fi series called 2001, I haven't read it but I can only assume it's good. See you next storytime!
Great storytime OP. God, Frank Giacoia is such a wonderful Kirby inker. Really underrated.
Yes the series is really out there. Most notably Machine Man first appeared in issue 8 but the better story can be found in issue 5 and 6. It's a two part story about Harvey Norton as the White Zero in a superhero virtual realty game and he turns into Captain Cosmic.
Cooper Clark
Kirby knew absolutely _nothing_ about orbital mechanics. Poole, the space pod, and Discovery are all in approximately the same gravitational field. No "tremendous force" is pulling Poole away. Furthermore, unless the ship was already on an impact course with Jupiter, everything would swing past with a change of direction but no loss of their hyperbolic velocity relative to the planet.
Jack couldn't even draw a dead-black monolith without covering it in Kirby Krackle.
Ryan Phillips
thank god then he wasn't a rocket engineer he was the greatest fucking cartoonist ever
Easton Jackson
>Jack couldn't even draw a dead-black monolith without covering it in Kirby Krackle Look at this tourist trying to throw shade at Kirby's favorite method of illustrating stars in space.
Daniel Gutierrez
neat
Jayden Nguyen
Nothing wrong with drawing stars that way. It was almost his trademark. But the utter blackness of the monolith was repeatedly stressed by Clarke and Kubrick.
If he didn't like "adapting" someone else's work, he should have done something original. Which he did, as noted. That was a hodge-podge of crazy concepts whirled through a blender. His artwork is a matter of taste. But it seems like Stan was the "stable and restrained" one of the pair; rather ironic given his flamboyance and self-hype.
Evan Hall
>1976 Why so late?
Jonathan Foster
this and the ongoing might be my favorite kirby work
Hunter Lopez
>But the utter blackness of the monolith was repeatedly stressed by Clarke and Kubrick. Almost like we're dealing with a different sort of medium where a plain black monolith wouldn't look as remarkable without a framing of sorts that makes it stand out against the background, huh. Such is the nature of comics! Makes you think.
Justin Rivera
Ah yeah, the famous scene.
Levi Gonzalez
Fantastic story time. Thanks OP. I need to check out more of Kirby’s work and Marvel Treasury Editions in general so this is great
James Hall
In Clarke's novel these two chapters have the same ending, which is very, very fitting.
After monkey kills another monkey with a bone, effectively creating tools: >For a few seconds Moon-Watcher stood uncertainly above his new victim, trying to grasp the strange and wonderful fact that the dead leopard could kill again. Now he was master of the world, and he was not quite sure what to do next. But he would think of something.
After Dave is "reborn" in space and uses his powers to destroy nuclear warheads and prevent armageddon: >A thousand miles below, he became aware that a slumbering cargo of death had awoken, and was stirring sluggishly in its orbit. The feeble energies it contained were no possible menace to him; but he preferred a cleaner sky. He put forth his will, and the circling megatons flowered in a silent detonation that brought a brief, false dawn to half the sleeping globe. Then he waited, marshaling his thoughts and brooding over his still untested powers. For though he was master of the world, he was not quite sure what to do next. But he would think of something.
Blake Torres
Huh, learn something new everyday.
Jack Clark
A perfect sequence that has nothing to envy to what the movie showed us. This really needs a reprint in hardcover.