Because some mornings...
...you just need to see Neal Adams draw a talking, shooting gorilla.
You're welcome.
From Kamandi Challenge #2 (2017)
Showing posts with label Kamandi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kamandi. Show all posts
Thursday, March 30, 2017
Monday, January 30, 2017
Manic Monday--Crisis Of Infinite Kamandis!!
Thanks to the legendary DC Implosion, we were deprived of this:
The story would go on to reveal that Kamandi was somehow "the pivotal point of infinities uncountable":
The series would have gone on to show that Kamandi was a multiversal counterpart of Jed, the kid who was always hanging around with Kirby's Sandman. And heaven knows where Jack C. Harris was heading with this "pivotal point of the whole damned multiverse" business.
So, thanks for nothing, DC Implosion.
OK, this one is complicated. This story was planned for the never-published Kamandi #60 (would have been 1978). It was printed in the little-seen Cancelled Comics Cavalcade #2 (1978). As reprinted in Kamandi Challenge Special #1 (2017), where these scans were taken from. Phew!
And that was no exaggerations about "a thousand Kamandis on a thousand worlds," as an invisible omnipotent voice lectures The Last Boy On Earth about the nature of the pre-Crisis multiverse:
The story would go on to reveal that Kamandi was somehow "the pivotal point of infinities uncountable":
The series would have gone on to show that Kamandi was a multiversal counterpart of Jed, the kid who was always hanging around with Kirby's Sandman. And heaven knows where Jack C. Harris was heading with this "pivotal point of the whole damned multiverse" business.
So, thanks for nothing, DC Implosion.
OK, this one is complicated. This story was planned for the never-published Kamandi #60 (would have been 1978). It was printed in the little-seen Cancelled Comics Cavalcade #2 (1978). As reprinted in Kamandi Challenge Special #1 (2017), where these scans were taken from. Phew!
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Doctor Who Meets Kamandi!
Harvey's Alarming Tales #1 (1957) was an all Kirby issue--every story was drawn (and probably written...no official credits, don't you know) by the King.
And in this particular story, an unnamed scientist and his "time cube" arrive in the distant future:
And what does he find in 2154??
Woo hoo!! A full 25 years before Kamandi, Kirby was rocking the "future world where man was gone after a great disaster and the world is ruled by evolved animals" meme.
The first thing our hero finds is:
Really..."wearing clothes" is the noteworthy thing here?
And who took down the tigers?
The rat gives us the history the scientist missed on his jaunt:
Surprisingly, the rats turn out to be...well, rats. They hold the scientist prisoner, and try to force him to teach them how to build an atom bomb!!
Fortunately, there is a raid, and he is rescued...by?
I can't explain why he didn't wake up screaming his fool head off...
The leader of the non-rodent animals has a pleasant chat with our hero:

Yes, after all the anti-rodent propaganda, the scientist decides to give the good animals the plans for the bomb!
See, there's the real reason the Time Lords didn't want The Doctor running around unsupervised--blatant speciesism!! Genocide!!
So, anyway, Kirby obviously recycled large chunks of this idea when he created Kamandi--and there's absolutely nothing wrong with that. Why let a good idea that nobody saw lie fallow?
Oh, and speaking of early views of later Kirby concepts, we should note that the first story is this issue, also by Jack, was:
Wherein a goofy scientist creates a race of "clones" from plants!! DNAliens, indeed!
And in this particular story, an unnamed scientist and his "time cube" arrive in the distant future:
The first thing our hero finds is:
And who took down the tigers?
Fortunately, there is a raid, and he is rescued...by?
The leader of the non-rodent animals has a pleasant chat with our hero:
So, anyway, Kirby obviously recycled large chunks of this idea when he created Kamandi--and there's absolutely nothing wrong with that. Why let a good idea that nobody saw lie fallow?
Oh, and speaking of early views of later Kirby concepts, we should note that the first story is this issue, also by Jack, was:
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