FACT #44
In 1966, nearly five years after launching Marvel Comics' flagship
superhero title, Fantastic Four, creators Stan Lee and Jack Kirby collaborated
on an antagonist designed to break the supervillain mold of the tyrant with
god-like stature and power. As Lee recalled in 1993,
Galactus was simply another in a long line of
super-villains whom we loved creating. ...[W]e felt the only way to top
ourselves was to come up with an evil-doer who had almost godlike powers.
Therefore, the natural choice was sort of a demi-god, but now what would we do
with him? We didn't want to use the tired old cliche about him wanting to
conquer the world. There were enough would-be world conquerors in the Marvel
Universe and in all the other comic book galaxies. That was when inspiration
struck. Why not have him not be a really evil person? After all, a demi-god
should be beyond mere good and evil. He'd just be (don't laugh!) hungry. And
the nourishment he'd require is the life force and energy from living
planets!
Kirby described his biblical inspirations for Galactus and
an accompanying character, an angelic herald Lee called the Silver Surfer:
My inspirations were the fact that I had to make sales and
come up with characters that were no longer stereotypes. In other words, I
couldn't depend on gangsters. I had to get something new. For some reason, I
went to the Bible and I came up with Galactus. And there I was in front of this
tremendous figure, who I knew very well because I've always felt him. I
certainly couldn't treat him in the same way I could any ordinary mortal. And I
remember in my first story, I had to back away from him to resolve that story.
The Silver Surfer is, of course, the fallen angel. When Galactus relegated him
to Earth, he stayed on Earth, and that was the beginning of his adventures.
They were figures that had never been used before in comics. They were above
mythic figures. And of course they were the first gods.
Kirby elaborated, "Galactus in actuality is a sort of
god. He is beyond reproach, beyond anyone's opinion. In a way he is kind of a
Zeus, who fathered Hercules. He is his own legend, and of course, he and the
Silver Surfer are sort of modern legends, and they are designed that way."
FACT #44
Reviewed by Admin
on
October 04, 2019
Rating: