Mister Miracle #6
May. 18th, 2025 08:28 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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Writer: Jack Kirby
Pencils: Jack Kirby
Inks: Mike Royer
Mr. Miracle encounters money grubbing conman Funky Flashman. Excelsior!
Here is an entirely necessary page of Barda bathing.
Funky gets the idea of filming Mister Miracle’s exploits.
Funky makes off with Scott’s Mother Box in the confusion.
As if it wasn’t already obvious, Funky Flashman is based on Stan Lee. If I don’t explain things, it’s because I prefer to give you all the benefit of the doubt and not talk you through everything as if you were babies. I felt that I had to point this out or somebody else would end up pointing out the obvious.
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Date: 2025-05-18 07:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-05-18 07:45 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-05-19 07:16 am (UTC)As for Barda… she’s always a delight. Her portrayal in the current. Birds of Prey series feels like a nice callback to this era.
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Date: 2025-05-19 11:31 am (UTC)While that bit was drawn from life, Flashman's Southern roots were, as far as I'm aware, almost pure invention. Kirby might argue Lee was an "inheritor" since his uncle got him his position at Timely/Marvel at first. But Lee was a born and bred New Yorker, and I don't think his Jewish family (the Leibers) had any Southern wealth in it. It wouldn't be the last time that Marvel was compared to a slave plantation: Todd McFarlane was also fond of that metaphor. He might've gotten it from this.
Neither Lee nor Thomas said anything about this story publicly to my knowledge, but there's no way it would have escaped their notice in the close-knit community that was 1970s comics production. Whatever Lee's short-term feelings about it, he did work with Kirby again later in the decade, and his public statements about Kirby don't seem to have changed in tone much before and after its release.
Thomas, on the other hand--and I say this as a guy who grew up loving Thomas's work--doesn't seem to have ever gotten over it.
I do think the line "like all his endless kind" in the last panel is interesting. When we hate someone or feel they've wronged us, we often tend to elevate them to superlatives: "He's the nastiest, pettiest cheat anyone could ever imagine!" It wouldn't be hard for Kirby to do a similar elevation here: "The Norse had the trickster god Loki--Eden had the snake--and the modern era is 'blessed'--or rather CURSED--with the ultimate expression of smiling, slithering slander and subterfuge: FUNKY FLASHMAN!" Instead, he implies that Funky is just one of thousands out there, breeding like flies.
(For a character who was closer to a "god of lies," flip to the next page of the Kirby alphabet and check out Glorious Godfrey.)
That could be a sign of Kirby's mature storytelling instincts triumphing over his grudges: by making Flashman a more everyman figure in the end, he gave the story more weight and meaning for those readers who DIDN'T know about his feud with Lee or care. "Sure, you haven't met Funky yourself, dear reader, but ask yourself: have you met ANOTHER of his endless kind?" Or it could be just one more jab at Lee, in its way: "In the end, this clown isn't even one of the BETTER KNOWN clowns."
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Date: 2025-05-19 11:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2025-05-19 06:44 pm (UTC)https://twomorrows.com/comicbookartist/articles/spevanier.html
(TLDR: Jack realized at the last minute that the story was a page short, so he asked his assistant Evanier to write an extra scene. And Mark, god bless him, came up with this.)