Jack Kirby: Story Teller (Jack Kirby art) Full documentary

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  • @johnnybgoode1950
    @johnnybgoode1950 7 лет назад +897

    I had the honor of meeting Jack Kirby once. I told him how his visually exciting comics helped me learn how to read as a kid, and because of that I was able to go through college and attain graduate degrees, which is the truth. He told me that what I was saying made him feel wonderful. Well, his comics sure made me feel wonderful, and I'm glad I got to return the favor.

    • @kirbycontinuum5700
      @kirbycontinuum5700  7 лет назад +71

      I wish I had met him. Typical of Jack is he probably got as much good feeling out your meeting as you did

    • @johnnybgoode1950
      @johnnybgoode1950 7 лет назад +15

      I certainly hope so.

    • @howardweinstein1324
      @howardweinstein1324 7 лет назад +31

      met Kirby at a show at the old penta hotel across the street from the garden in nyc, ,he was sitting at a table by himself ,I pick up a Thor issue 139 for a dollar that he signed for me for free. I'm guessing they charge for autographs these days.he was a true mench.

    • @johnnybgoode1950
      @johnnybgoode1950 7 лет назад +9

      a mench and a genius.

    • @kirbycontinuum5700
      @kirbycontinuum5700  7 лет назад +25

      One of my biggest regrets in life is that I didn't try to meet him. I should have gone to his home in California, where the Kirbys always treated guests nicely.

  • @jessepires6936
    @jessepires6936 3 года назад +53

    I love Stan Lee, always will, but Jack Kirby should get just as much attention as he did. I wish Disney and Marvel Studios would recognize him with some type of memorial. He deserves it.

    • @tejanoburns5348
      @tejanoburns5348 Год назад +3

      The dumpster fire called, Eternals should have been the big cinematic Kirby honor. Did get a little in Ragnarok though.

    • @Matt_Wilson01
      @Matt_Wilson01 8 месяцев назад +6

      Actually Jack was leaps and bounds above Stan, Jack was a real creator and artist, Stan was marvels hype man that created a few character names, no disrespect to Stan but the actual creators should get all the glory not the “face” of the company

  • @johnnyroberts3761
    @johnnyroberts3761 5 лет назад +301

    It’s sad that most die-hard Marvel fans don’t acknowledge the work that Jack Kirby did. He did just as much as Stan Lee, if not more.

    • @mariod1547
      @mariod1547 5 лет назад +77

      Huh... I'm not sure how one can be called a die hard fan and not be aware of that. Maybe you mean fans of the mcu films only.

    • @johnnyroberts3761
      @johnnyroberts3761 5 лет назад +26

      I guess I’m referring more to those who go nuts in the theaters over every goddamn little thing in the movies, but it’s kinda the idea

    • @treeman8773
      @treeman8773 5 лет назад +22

      @@mariod1547 I'm sorry but I hate MCU fans.

    • @mariod1547
      @mariod1547 5 лет назад +6

      @@treeman8773 Lol. I'm a fan. Why you hate us?

    • @treeman8773
      @treeman8773 5 лет назад +35

      Mad Mario I meant people who are obsessed with the mcu but have never picked up a comic book and people who like to post those horrible tribute things on instagram that always show up in my feed.

  • @stevenhall992
    @stevenhall992 6 лет назад +130

    Jack Kirby was simply a man ahead of his time very creative too bad he's gone but it's creativity will live on forever through others

    • @mmitchellhouston
      @mmitchellhouston 5 лет назад +6

      I do not agree with Kirby being "ahead of his time." That phrase should be reserved for those who create incredible works that are ignored in their lifetimes and appreciated only later, usually after their deaths. Vincent Van Gogh comes to mind. Kirby was instrumental for defining the time he was in, and he was well recognized for his accomplishments during his lifetime. No, he didn't have quite the respect he does now, but he was groundbreaking and highly respected.

    • @garycarpenter6433
      @garycarpenter6433 Год назад +1

      His DC work was better than Marvel, I just love his New Gods, Superman and Jimmy Olsen work

  • @dougbrowne9890
    @dougbrowne9890 Год назад +11

    I got to meet Jack Kirby in person, in 1988, at a Detroit area convention put on by Greg Theikston. There was a bunch of his original art, just returned by Marvel, on display in the lobby of the hotel. I was look at a Thor pin up page, when someone came up behind me and asked, "Do you think that is any good?" I spun around that there was Jack Kirby. I told him I love it and we began a conversation. I had been hearing rumors that Jack's mind had gone, and he was being used by others to hurt Marvel. My conversation with him tore that all down. His mind was a sharp as a knife, and his imagination was equal to it. After our conversation ended (a crowd had grown, so I let others get in to talk with him), I noticed I forgot to ask for an autograph. I have since got a couple, but I didn't need one that day. The memory of that talk is ingrained in my mind. Better than an autograph. Love and miss you Jack.

  • @paulnorton567
    @paulnorton567 3 года назад +17

    Hello to all comic fans! I don't know English very well, I am from Russia. My childhood was in the 90s. After the collapse of the USSR, western culture became available to us. For me, a child of New Russia, Spider-Man has become a hero and an example. And there is a whole generation of people like me. I am very grateful to the creators of my favorite characters. I want to thank Jack Kirby for everything.

  • @davidv.3135
    @davidv.3135 6 лет назад +75

    Jack Kirby was a genius! I wish I could have met the man.

  • @godsbadkarma
    @godsbadkarma 4 года назад +60

    I hope Jack knew how important he was in the eyes of all of us kids, and how admired he is by us as adults. This man's art inspired a world of creators.

  • @TheDoctorofOdoIsland
    @TheDoctorofOdoIsland 2 года назад +88

    Seeing Neal Adams, Bruce Timm, Len Wein, Marv Wolfman, and Stan Lee all appear in the same documentary is mindboggling.

    • @Matt_Wilson01
      @Matt_Wilson01 8 месяцев назад +1

      Why 🤷🏻‍♂️ they all worked in the same small industry

    • @TheDoctorofOdoIsland
      @TheDoctorofOdoIsland 8 месяцев назад +3

      @@Matt_Wilson01 Because they all worked in very different eras defined by very different stories, when the industry was hardly recognizable, it's surreal to think that were all alive at the same time.

  • @chwenhoou
    @chwenhoou 5 лет назад +55

    I've always had this belief that, unless you were the sole artist/writer/inker/etc, creating a comic book is a collaborative process. I cannot imagine a Marvel Universe without Jack Kirby or Stan Lee. Without Steve Ditko, Spider-Man would not have his iconic costume. But Stan Lee made Spider-Man a character we could relate to. And I haven't even mentioned the more unsung heroes of the Marvel Bullpen, from Larry Lieber to Don Heck, the inkers, the letterers, colorist, and so on.
    Many people working behind the scenes of Marvel deserve much more credit than what they got. And that goes double for Jack Kirby. We owe him a debt to his contribution to comics that may never be repaid.

  • @Redmenace96
    @Redmenace96 4 года назад +36

    Jack Kirby is absolutely a genius of art. When you contemplate that he didn't go to school or get any training other than experience and observation, it is astounding. Everybody needs guidance and support. For a poor kid to jump into graphics and 'just do it' is very impressive.

    • @rockon8174
      @rockon8174 Год назад

      He had mentors along the way. 🙂 Even worked in animation.

  • @techtard3000
    @techtard3000 8 лет назад +194

    Hail to the King baby!

    • @MGSBigBoss77
      @MGSBigBoss77 7 лет назад

      Both of them, Kirby and Frazetta, both were artistic gods!
      *-- edit* RUclips glitched and screwed up my original comments.

    • @CelestialWoodway
      @CelestialWoodway 6 лет назад +1

      Frazetta was great but he didn't work on or create any classic characters that people still live today like Fantastic Four, The Hulk, etc.

    • @crystallizationofthesoul7095
      @crystallizationofthesoul7095 4 года назад

      You mean Hail to the King Kirby!

  • @randalwung8715
    @randalwung8715 6 лет назад +33

    Y'know, as I learn more about Jack over the years the thing that stands out the most for me isn't necessarily his art, but his overall life. This was a guy who really lived a FULL life: drawing his way out the tenement, actively serving in the war and having some crazy tales to tell from it, getting married to a damn good woman and raising an equally good family, struggling and triumphing and struggling through the most prolific career in the history of American comics. And through it all to remain this humble, down-to-earth dude who, along with his gracious wife, would literally invite you into their house and serve you sandwiches and let you watch him draw-I mean, it's kinda nuts when you stop and think about it. If there was ANYBODY in the industry entitled to be an arrogant, egotistical prick, it was Jack Kirby. And he WASN'T. Far from it. And one of the key things to understanding his development as an artist and creator was that his incredibly full life, his incredible fullness and realness as a person, all got pumped and filtered from his brain into his hand and onto the drawing page-which is why I think there will never be another like him, at least not in comic books. That amazing confluence of experience and personality was, I believe, one of a kind. Or perhaps I should say, one of a KING.

    • @kirbycontinuum5700
      @kirbycontinuum5700  6 лет назад +6

      Great comment, Randal. Had he not been the man he was, he might have decided during any low point in his comics career to go into advertising or some other medium to express his art, for higher pay and better hours. We are fortunate.

    • @randalwung8715
      @randalwung8715 6 лет назад +4

      Totally agree, and that's another remarkable thing about a remarkably talented man: He absolutely LOVED comics, and he couldn't have done what he did in ANY other medium. I mean, it's awesome to have all these movies coming out with his name right there beside The Man's (it fucking took long enough), but we all know that no matter how much money they pump into these things and how many thousands of hours worth of FX you see up there on the screen, they will NEVER equal what The King put down on one page or even one panel. His unique vision only exists on the printed page--and non-glossy, please. I'm old school.

    • @kirbycontinuum5700
      @kirbycontinuum5700  6 лет назад +2

      100 percent correct, Randal.

  • @fistofdoom8429
    @fistofdoom8429 5 лет назад +14

    The Kirby crackle and his way of drawing machinery will always be two of the things I’ll remember him for the most. Such an exceptional talent and we are all luck to have his work available to us

  • @milhouse777
    @milhouse777 7 лет назад +460

    It's really sad see nowadays Stan Lee receiving all the credits to the Marvel Heroes, none of this would had the same impact without Kirby, the real Marvel's King

    • @XxSilverTheHedgehog1
      @XxSilverTheHedgehog1 6 лет назад +133

      ELVISFX Stan always makes sure to acknowledge Jack’s contributions, he never lets Jack go uncredited...Unlike Bob Kane with Bill Finger.

    • @ImYourHuckleberry_29
      @ImYourHuckleberry_29 6 лет назад +9

      I just read stan is broke. Wtf??

    • @rodneywilson871
      @rodneywilson871 6 лет назад +49

      stans the man but jack is the king baby

    • @robertt9342
      @robertt9342 6 лет назад +26

      ELVISFX he's not even taking exclusive credit, he's just the only one available for people to fawn over.

    • @JasonConlan75
      @JasonConlan75 6 лет назад +47

      Stan ALWAYS says that Jack was the man at Marvel but I have a feeling that they both had equal measures of brilliance....

  • @garypecoraro9293
    @garypecoraro9293 5 лет назад +19

    It was Jack Kirby!! Not Stan Lee! The greatest of all time, his drawings and Frank Frazzeta that I want to draw like!
    Thank for all these Doc's ! Great memories...👍👍❤

    • @TetsuDeinonychus
      @TetsuDeinonychus 5 лет назад +5

      It was Kirby and Lee together. Ideas came from both of them, then were given form in Kirby's brilliant visual storytelling and Lee's dynamic dialogue. That's what made the Marvel magic.

    • @allenlovell1604
      @allenlovell1604 Год назад

      There are many artists that I admired growing up and most of them are sadly passed away ! When I was younger, I wanted more than anything to be a comicbook artist ; I quickly found that while I had the desire, I didn't have the knack to do it well enough. Even if one of the Grand Masters of Art were alive today ; they'd be struggling to even get someone to look at their portfolios ! Oh well, I can dream I guess !

  • @GenreChowderStudios
    @GenreChowderStudios 7 лет назад +155

    Not even two minutes into this doc, and I already feel the intense, comic artist nerd wafting off these guys, and I love it. These are my people.

    •  4 года назад +4

      Agreed. these are the people that inspired me to enjoy the hobbie of collecting good comic book stories...the memories of when I was young..and the great artwork and stories of Kirby, Starling, Ditko, Romita, Sr. , the older Buscema, Kane, Adams, Moore. this is why I can't be love with the supehero movies. The actors, the producers, Disney, and the studio execs...they don't care about us like these writers and artists are. Roy Thomas...what a great writer. Kirby was the greatest. REMEMBER THE ETERNALS series???

  • @werewolfbymoonknight7613
    @werewolfbymoonknight7613 8 лет назад +104

    best moment is when len & marv turn into little boys again remembering kirby

  • @larrylarry1
    @larrylarry1 5 лет назад +11

    Jack Kirby’s Fantastic Four got me at first look. He got me into comics forever! Thanks Jack!

  • @KTK44
    @KTK44 7 лет назад +86

    This was cool! I especially liked that the documentary didn't only focus on Kirby but also on his beloved wife. Terrific stuff that makes you wanna go and find the old comics from the boxes and read them.

  • @robertt9342
    @robertt9342 6 лет назад +15

    Kirby cared more about getting the feeling of a story across than being technically accurate.

    • @RubbinRobbin
      @RubbinRobbin 5 лет назад +1

      Hard to say it wasn’t a style without seeing any other type of artistic work.

  • @joshhanson
    @joshhanson 8 лет назад +47

    I love that Marv and Len are together.

  • @cha5
    @cha5 7 лет назад +94

    Happy 100 years of King Kirby. 1917-2017.

  • @sku11bropat45
    @sku11bropat45 6 лет назад +5

    Jack kirby deserves his own marvel movie

    • @Gamer-lq4wl
      @Gamer-lq4wl 5 лет назад +1

      Agreed !
      With a Stan Lee cameo as a villain stealing all the credit of Jack and Steve :D

  • @markletts2000
    @markletts2000 5 лет назад +44

    RIP STAN & JACK,.Respect to you both M England

  • @Mr67Stanger
    @Mr67Stanger 7 лет назад +7

    My dad used to bring me comics once or twice every week and I read them and gave them away. One day he brought me a comic of "Maxisol: El Hombre Milagro" (Mister Miracle, translated in spanish for Latin America), and I was immediately possessed by the story and the art work. I asked my dad to bring me more Mister Miracle comics. I could not believe that someone could draw like that, with that imagination, the science fiction, the complex mechanical environments, the gadgets, the abstract lines everywhere that went straight then merged into three or four spheres or zig-zags, the pudgy, very expressive faces... I kept those comics for many years, until I joined the Army and someone did away with them and all my old toys. But the huge impression the Artwork of Jack Kirby had on me still persists to this moment.

  • @PrismMime47
    @PrismMime47 5 лет назад +75

    Why did I learn about Picasso and not Jack Kirby?

    • @bashsibda6289
      @bashsibda6289 4 года назад +8

      PrismMime
      Because comic art is looked down upon as being inferior. When the truth is the Comic Masters are true artists. Its time we tell the art crowd to wake up. Massimo Berdinelli, Carlos Ezequerra, Kevin O Niel, Ian Gibson, Brian Talbot, Ron Smith etc etc were my heroes and still are.

    • @KTF0
      @KTF0 4 года назад +4

      Picasso's work looks better in person than on book and computer screen.

  • @GB-gf3dm
    @GB-gf3dm 5 лет назад +25

    It's amazing how Stan Lee's writing was so complimentary to Kirby's fantastic imagery. He not only 'kept up' with Kirby's power but made it all so enduring. For a while I was with that 'Lee's Stealing Kirby's Thunder' crowd but there's nothing further from the truth. Lee helped or created the idea of turning the talent into stars. Before him (for the most part I think), publishers wouldn't even print the names of who drew some of their books. Lee's humility / visionary aspects help make comic books what they are today -motion picture rivals and foundations. Imagine a movie studio putting out a movie but not mentioning who the stars are! Old comics used to do that stupid sh*t.

    • @AliFareedMC
      @AliFareedMC 2 года назад +4

      1. Early Joe Simon and Jack Kirby comics had their names on them
      2.Jack Kirby was already a star before teaming up with Stan lee, he has 20 years experience ahead and he made stan lee famous
      3. Lee stole not only Kirby's thunder but money since Kirby did come up with the stories and ideas and he only got paid for the arts, also from Wally Wood and Ditko, The Credit only severed stan lee and his ego
      4. Lee's vision couldn't even help marvel from Bankruptcy
      5. Post 1960s Stan lee, what did he do? He slowly abandoned "writing" while Kirby worked till the day he died creating stories and art, stan lee turned himself into a brand selling perfume and other people's TV shows and ideas slapping his name on them

    • @geaux6034
      @geaux6034 Год назад

      Stan Lee’s work without Kirby is not good. Kirby did great work before Lee (Cap) and after Lee (New Gods & Mr Miracle). Stan Lee begrudgingly gave Kirby credit after the fact. Lee was a great comic salesman and a key part of Marvel. But a much smaller part than Kirby or even Ditko.

    • @pike100
      @pike100 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@geaux6034Kirby and Ditko could not have achieved the same level of success without Stan Lee. His writing and marketing skills were very important.

  • @raymondbennett489
    @raymondbennett489 7 лет назад +35

    As i look back over my history with Jack The King Kirby I began to see the true influence He has had on the entire Comic book Genre. I watch all of these animated series mainly the Justice League and i see all of Kirby's machines and some of the great episodes involved Kirby Characters. Superman the animated series was full with episodes like Darksied abusing him and causing Him to attack Earth. The Death of Dan Turpin (KIRBY) episode, Jumping swiftly to Batman as he teams up with The Demon Etrigan, a Kirby Creation, The Justice League as I said was replete with Kirby Laced episodes. The climax of season 1 Darksied and Superman when Batman calls superman an "Idiot".The Mr. Miracle Episode, the Classic episode where Lex Luther delivered the Anti Life Equation to Darksied. The Young Justice Look, I can go on and on. So, Thanks to Artist like Bruce Timm, Steve Rude,John Byrne, Kieth Giffen, Rick Buckler, Barry Winsdor Smith, Salt Simonson oh i can go on but this is my point...none of these programs make success without the use of the creativeness, if that is a word of the great Jacob Kurtzburg, His lovely Wife Roz, His Daugther Lisa who carries on admirably and I can't forget Dr. Neal Adams who i came to like just by interview along with John Romita Sr, and Jr. John and Steve Buscema, Stan the man lee to who i give as much honor to the Marvel creations for without his corny saying...Marvel doesn't sell. I close by saying this....Kirby really showed his creative majesty when He went to DC and created the 4th world and going back to Marvel creating The Eternals, Machine Man Devil Dinosaur and if that is not enough...On to Pacific with Capt. Victory, The Silver Star, anyhow I have been preparing to write this piece for some 20 years now I said it like i wanted to hope this opens the heart of all the Comic book writers and artist world over...As you can tell...I Lvoe me some Jack King Kirby....

    • @kirbycontinuum5700
      @kirbycontinuum5700  7 лет назад +3

      As one Jack Kirby fan to another, I thank you for your comment, Raymond.

    • @raymondbennett489
      @raymondbennett489 7 лет назад +2

      I forgot to mention Neal Kirby I often wondered if he too was an artist but, i guess not. I t would have been wonderful if he like The Romitas had a son to follow in his steps...

  • @brianoneil3891
    @brianoneil3891 6 лет назад +18

    often imitated never duplicated Jack King Kirby R.I.P

  • @MrTerryt2
    @MrTerryt2 8 лет назад +47

    Thank you for helping me learn to read. RIP

  • @henryjaremek2644
    @henryjaremek2644 Месяц назад +1

    There will NEVER be another Jack Kirby .

  • @stevenserial4080
    @stevenserial4080 5 лет назад +8

    Kirby was born to inspire the world with his imagination and talent.

  • @menghao737
    @menghao737 5 лет назад +34

    It's a crime that Jack died poor. He should have died a millionaire. He made Marvel a billion dollar company with the help of a few other creators. Stan Lee will forever hold that shame with him. How dare he claim to be the main creator of FF, Hulk, Thor, the X-Men, ect. How dare he deny a genius like Kirby his due. Stan Lee was a glorified editor. He was nothing without the talents of Kirby, Ditko, and many others. Yeah, Stan Lee was eventually forced to give Kirby credit, far far too late in my opinion, after Kirby had filed a suit and Marvel kept it in litigation till well after his death.

    • @dilungmoveityafool777
      @dilungmoveityafool777 4 года назад +4

      Kirby didn't die poor. He wasn't rich as he should've been, but not many original creators were. Even now, writers still aren't rich.

    • @EmiTheLoomistar
      @EmiTheLoomistar 4 года назад +9

      @@dilungmoveityafool777 Still a crime considering stan died filthy rich and with all the credit due to the marvel movies

    • @DarksaberForce
      @DarksaberForce 3 года назад +7

      Same with Bill Finger who practically created Batman.

  • @born_again_torinos
    @born_again_torinos 6 лет назад +9

    I got to talk to Jack Kirby twice in my life. When he had come back to marvel I was about 13 years old. I knew he lived in Thousand Oaks California so I called directory and asked the operator for Jack Kirby's phone number in Thousand Oaks. To my surprise she gave me the number. I called and sure enough he answered the phone. I was a stumbling fan boy kid and he took the time to talk to me with my stupid kid questions that he had probably answered a million times. So gracious and kind.
    Then in 1980 I called him again to pick his brain about the pros and cons of working for a comic book company to count the cost to see if I wanted to do that for a career. Again, like before, he took the time to answer me. I can truly say he was one of the most kind genuine guy I ever met.
    I met Stan Lee in the early 70s at a "stan lee lecture" at UNLV. He signed my copy of X-Men #1. Stan seemed like a robot who had a canned response to everything and tried too hard to be funny. He also seemed to need to be famous. Jack on the other hand was a real guy.

  • @archer1949
    @archer1949 6 лет назад +68

    Everybody’s praising Kirby’s Marvel work, and that’s fine. But I think his Magnum Opus was the Fourth World.

    • @menghao737
      @menghao737 5 лет назад +15

      NEW GODS!

    • @AshrafAnam
      @AshrafAnam 5 лет назад +4

      true

    • @mmitchellhouston
      @mmitchellhouston 5 лет назад +11

      Yes, that Fourth World stuff was mind-blowing. I would have really liked to see where he would have gone if he had been allowed to continue his run on 2001: A Space Odyssey. That was some amazing stuff, too.

    • @cosuinofdeath
      @cosuinofdeath 3 года назад

      It was

    • @simonedwards5564
      @simonedwards5564 2 года назад

      YES THE KINGS ABSOLUTE INCREDIBLE PINNACLE WAS THE NEW GODS!!!!!!!!!

  • @bobbydee30g
    @bobbydee30g 5 лет назад +13

    ONE I feel Jack and Stan need their own bio pic. TWO it would also be really cool to see some of the interactions with some of the other publications cus lets face it there was a lot of tea behind the scenes we know about imagine the shit we don't.

  • @Lone432345
    @Lone432345 7 лет назад +13

    Frankly this Documentary makes me appreciate Jack Kirby even more. I mean not only was he an Amazing Artist. But a Amazing Human Being as well.

  • @am234523
    @am234523 5 лет назад +18

    Jack THE KING Kirby: The Godfather of the MCU

    • @menghao737
      @menghao737 5 лет назад +7

      He also created the New Gods and Darkseid, so he's technically the Godfather of the DCEU as well.

    • @followthewhiterabbit2549
      @followthewhiterabbit2549 5 лет назад +1

      @@menghao737 I love Kamandi

    • @menghao737
      @menghao737 5 лет назад +2

      @@followthewhiterabbit2549 New Gods is probably my favorite, haven't read much Kamandi, but want to pick up the omnibus. Everything he did was brilliant.

    • @AshrafAnam
      @AshrafAnam 5 лет назад +5

      Please don't insult the great Kirby by associating him with Feige's cheap kiddie entertainment that is MCU

  • @josephel5856
    @josephel5856 6 лет назад +7

    Rest in peace Jack Kirby. Thank you for sharing your gift with all of us

  • @davidthomas7340
    @davidthomas7340 7 лет назад +57

    Ditko Simon Kirby lee the mount Rushmore of marvel comics

    • @MGSBigBoss77
      @MGSBigBoss77 7 лет назад +8

      Where's; Mark Gruenwald, Roy Thomas, Len Wein, Chris Claremont and several others on that Rushmore of yours?

    • @TryptychUK
      @TryptychUK 6 лет назад +10

      And John Romita Sr.

    • @J-money201
      @J-money201 5 лет назад +7

      @@MGSBigBoss77 shut up, they all came way after smdh

    • @MGSBigBoss77
      @MGSBigBoss77 5 лет назад

      J money be quiet dickhead, i asked cos they're missing alright. way after? i don't think so he left for DC in the 70's while Roy Thomas, Len Wein, Chris Claremont all at Marvel starting out. So recheck your comic history cos your knowledge is way off jack!

    • @YannickTMessiah
      @YannickTMessiah 5 лет назад +5

      ​@@MGSBigBoss77 But he's right, he's not pointing all the important guys, but the essential early ones who created it all, and that would be, of course, Kirby, Simon, Ditko and Lee. The ones you've cited are from a second generation of fans of the first one.
      Don't shut up though, that was rude and stupid.

  • @dougg1075
    @dougg1075 5 лет назад +3

    That poor man NEVER got the respect he deserved. He should have got a presidential award:) I didn’t like his work as a kid but now I’m grown. Genius

  • @s.n.a.k.e.o.i.l.e.r
    @s.n.a.k.e.o.i.l.e.r 4 года назад +4

    To the God of Marvel and DC, Jack Kirby, may you live forever.

  • @papaeli5930
    @papaeli5930 3 года назад +2

    His comics still live on..even in 2089 they will still be around

  • @AmericanHinoki
    @AmericanHinoki 2 года назад +2

    Kirby really is the king of comics.

  • @jonathanmitchell9886
    @jonathanmitchell9886 5 лет назад +6

    Kirby was one of the very few artists who just got better and better; he never peaked and became one of those people whose work you start to avoid because it's gotten repetitive and boring. Look at "Captain Victory" and even that first issue of "Satan's Six": he was doing brilliant stuff right up to the end.

    • @GreatBowlsAfire
      @GreatBowlsAfire 2 года назад +1

      yeah man! that Satan's Six #1 is a thing of beauty

    • @cha5
      @cha5 2 года назад +1

      I always loved that exploding cigar given to the devil and it going off in his face, That for me just somehow screams 'KIRBY' to me. 😁

    • @jonathanmitchell9886
      @jonathanmitchell9886 2 года назад +1

      @@cha5 Absolutely :) Kirby was distinctly and unmistakably himself right up to the end.

  • @timmarshall2062
    @timmarshall2062 4 года назад +2

    jack kirby is the marvel in marvel comics and he will always be known for what he did if you can do something in life and people remember 100 years from now then you have done something and he did it and will be remembered for ever

  • @general5886
    @general5886 4 года назад +3

    nobody & I mean NOBODY could've ever came close to creating the vast world of characters that JK did

  • @Darrylizer1
    @Darrylizer1 5 лет назад +2

    In the olden days, the long long ago, it wasn't the stories that attracted me to the comics. It was Kirby's art. He was hugely influential to me. The Thelonius Monk of comics.

    • @Gamer-lq4wl
      @Gamer-lq4wl 4 года назад

      Funny comment, because the stories were created by Jack Kirby too.
      Stan Lee just edited the dialogs in the comics and abusing of his position in Marvel he always put his name first before the true creators.
      Example:
      Stan Lee & Jack Kirby.
      Stan Lee & Steve Ditko.
      Stan Lee & John Romita.
      Stan Lee & Bill Everett.

    • @Darrylizer1
      @Darrylizer1 4 года назад

      @@Gamer-lq4wl Oh I know but I just loved the artwork. It's what initially caught me.

  • @brianchidester3334
    @brianchidester3334 8 лет назад +18

    God, that was so good and so important. I mean, it could have gone on two, three more hours and I would not have gotten tired of watching. He's just so inexplicable, yet so very approachable.

  • @anthk.4846
    @anthk.4846 Год назад +2

    More people need to see this documentary.

  • @garwinredman5636
    @garwinredman5636 5 лет назад +3

    Jack Kirby's 'raw dynamism' lifted comics from mere entertainment to a visceral experience we all delighted in. We "felt" these moments in time as portrayed by a man who knew instinctually "How" it should be presented. Hail to Jack KING Kirby!!!

  • @kirbymarchbarcena
    @kirbymarchbarcena 5 лет назад +8

    The King was way ahead of his time.

  • @kevingonzales1639
    @kevingonzales1639 4 года назад +10

    The MCU box office is at 22 billion right now. People exploiting this man's creations.

    • @simonedwards5564
      @simonedwards5564 2 года назад

      And already they have FUCKED UP his ETERNALS and it hasn't even been released yet!!!!!!! Same as the inhumans!!!!!!SHIT!!!!!

    • @pike100
      @pike100 5 месяцев назад

      Exploiting? I believe that it could be described as skillfully running a very successful business in a capitalist economic system. Making a profit is a good thing; we're not communists. Heck, these days, even the communists are actually capitalists.

    • @FringeSpectre
      @FringeSpectre 5 месяцев назад

      Bold of you to call Disney "people".

  • @Fevertorium
    @Fevertorium 6 лет назад +4

    I hope that all of these great artists, writers etc., of the golden age of comics, knew/know how much of a positive influence they actually were (and continue to be) on a lot of us. They accelerated my love of reading and art at the same time. Especially illustrations from the late 30's to about the mid-fifties. Thanks!

  • @neroresurrected
    @neroresurrected 7 лет назад +66

    Stan lee and marvel practically owe their entire comic book line to jack kirby's absolute creative genius and yet all we here today is how "great" Stan lee is and how he created marvel... what a joke. Stan was a great editor and a good writer but jack kirby was a great artist and great story teller. He added soo much to what we know as comic book superhero genre that the man deserves his due. When I think of marvel I think of jack Kirby's art and storytelling ability.

    • @kirbycontinuum5700
      @kirbycontinuum5700  7 лет назад +34

      Kirby invented a new graphic language for comics. That language is still being spoken by every artist in comics today (whether they know it or not). As for the "who did what" debate, Marvel Comics needed both men, just as the Beatles needed Lennon and McCartney. I don't try to separate them; I just enjoy what they gave us.

    • @robertt9342
      @robertt9342 6 лет назад +7

      Xwing Class it's because Stan is still currently alive, it makes a big difference when you can actually talk to a creator. In a two decades or so after Stan passes he and Kirby will likely be remembered with similar reverence, mostly forgotten.

    • @menghao737
      @menghao737 5 лет назад +7

      Gotta give Steve Ditko his dues too. They both built Marvel together.

    • @metalheadprime2
      @metalheadprime2 5 лет назад +1

      @@kirbycontinuum5700 Well said...:)

    • @TetsuDeinonychus
      @TetsuDeinonychus 5 лет назад

      @@kirbycontinuum5700 Yeah, classic Marvel was "Stan and Jack" not "Stan OR Jack".

  • @richardnorton1248
    @richardnorton1248 5 лет назад +4

    I was changed by Kirby's conception of the Negative Zone. When I turned the comic-book page I was transported and instantly became a big fan.

  • @christopherdavis8248
    @christopherdavis8248 4 года назад +3

    amazing. I was born in 1972 so by the time I discovered Jack Kirby he was doing Captain America, Black Panther and Machine Man (late 1970s)

  • @jflack6
    @jflack6 5 лет назад +3

    And Marvel did Jack totally wrong. They gave him 2,000 of the 88k+ pieces of art back to him in a settlement. That part is never mentioned.

  • @johnsketcher2222
    @johnsketcher2222 5 лет назад +5

    His splash pages and double page spreads were always amazing. I didn't like the way he drew people, but his drawings of monsters (including the the Thing) were his specialty. I also loved the way he created believable environments; Reed Richards' lab, Doctor Doom's lair, Galactus' ship. This was where he really stood apart from other artists. True genius!

  • @cdheidt
    @cdheidt 5 лет назад +4

    Jack and Roz remind me of my grandparents. He was a WWII Naval Officer, then an engineer for GE. She was a nurse, but as they aged, she did the driving. He was a deep thinker, but she ran the house and managed all the money. He had no idea how much money they had in the bank! The greatest generation, and they had all the great ideas that we enjoy residually today.

  • @monstersandmadonnas3103
    @monstersandmadonnas3103 3 года назад +1

    Jack Kirby - It Is Good to Be The King

  • @pretorious700
    @pretorious700 5 лет назад +4

    Jack Kirby and Wally Wood are my favorite comic artists, and when Wally inked Jack, it was sublime.

  • @eiderglast
    @eiderglast 2 года назад +3

    I love re-watching this documentary, his artworks are timeless! And he was blessed with a wonderful wife...

  • @johnwright1447
    @johnwright1447 4 года назад +4

    Love to see a documentary about Jack give time and credit to his wife and her role.

  • @ClanHellbone
    @ClanHellbone 4 года назад +3

    I like how the some of the interviewees didn't get Kirby when they were young but they grew to appreciate and understand him, it remind me when I watched Frasier when I was a kid, i didn't get it but as grew up I say it is one of the Greatest sitcoms out there, our mind is in consistent growth it can influence our perception of things, things we dont like when we were kids we come to apperciate when we are older, and the marketers doesn't understand that they just want to appeal to certain Demographic ignoring what is Art supposed to be, it is an expression

  • @OptimusPrime298
    @OptimusPrime298 Месяц назад

    Jack Kirby’s Fantastic Four, Captain America, Thor, Hulk and such other characters he created were he’s such a wonderful person he is

  • @FAYMprod
    @FAYMprod 3 года назад +3

    jack kirby is marvel. stan lee less so. good doc with great access but it's weird not to mention he's a ww2 vet and consider how that affected him

  • @tazzahmed511
    @tazzahmed511 Год назад +2

    Wow.... All those legend's talking about......The Legendary King ♔ Jack Kirby!! Even now at these bleak times, J.K. inspires me and gives me HOPE....🙏

  • @jfilesgraphics
    @jfilesgraphics Год назад +2

    Jack was a force to be reckoned with. Most of us were influenced by him in one way or another.

  • @stevenbrown1225
    @stevenbrown1225 5 лет назад +1

    Jack and Roz. What a story of love and support.

  • @tomdecuca3627
    @tomdecuca3627 Год назад

    Everything Jack drew was very masculine. His layouts were beautiful. Every comic cover was a work of art.

  • @Bu11yMagu1re
    @Bu11yMagu1re Год назад +1

    Jack Kirby has created or co created half of my favorite comic book characters including my favorite superhero and supervillain.

  • @sundown6715
    @sundown6715 5 лет назад +2

    The drawings attracted me to actually read the stories. In a sense it encourage me to read more and enjoy it.

  • @txmoney
    @txmoney 6 лет назад +16

    While I worked at Marvel I met my childhood gods...Chris Claremont, John Byrne, Michael Golden, etc.
    But my biggest regret was not ever having met Jack King Kirby whom I considered on par with Stan Lee.
    I alway knew Stan was the face and voice of Marvel but Jack was the silent talent.

    • @kirbycontinuum5700
      @kirbycontinuum5700  6 лет назад +1

      What was it like working for Marvel and what did you do there?

    • @txmoney
      @txmoney 6 лет назад +6

      Kirby Continuum
      Nothing too exciting since I was working in the business side. I was the circulation manager and also worked with licensing.
      Despite working there during a low point at Marvel (chapter 11 bankruptcy) the people working there were a joy. I had to hide my fanboyism in order to maintain my professionalism however after being there for a couple weeks, I realized we were all fan boys (and fan girls). My favorite job. I wish I'd have stayed.

  •  5 лет назад +3

    Wow this really made me realize why I started collecting comics as a kid.

  • @rickclick8359
    @rickclick8359 4 года назад +17

    I imagined what I would ask Jack Kirby if I had the chance to meet him all those years ago. I would of asked him " Do you imagine a time when your comic book hero's will be on the big screen, in the movies?" and he would probably say "All of the time". Then it struck me that was the way he drew, unlike the static panels of early comics, his had movement, perspective, even camera angles. It's just a theory an observation.

    • @danpetitpas
      @danpetitpas Год назад +1

      Kirby (and a lot of other artists) was heavily influenced by the movie Citizen Kane in 1940. You can see it in his style, especially his over-the-shoulder shots.

  • @trevorregay9283
    @trevorregay9283 6 лет назад +3

    Wow....great documentary......I do often wonder how under compensated this guy was.....I hope his family is well off after all those years of his hard work .....he definitely left an impact on many, many, many lives.......RIP Jack!

  • @LKaramazov
    @LKaramazov 5 лет назад +1

    The bizarre thing to me as a 53 year old, is that I wasn’t there at the beginning beginning, but those comics were only 10 years old when I was a 4th grader entering the hobby.When I look at 10 years ago now, that would be like the comics of 2009, which seems like a drop in the bucket. We had the original reprints, we knew all of the original stories. I could be wrong but it was all lee and Kirby, then it was all Thomas and buscema, and it just went on and on, and now it looks like it’s all over...

  • @Artemisia6Crowfoot
    @Artemisia6Crowfoot 9 дней назад

    Drawing and listening to this at the same time and I swear that my drawing is turning out so well! Thank you Mr.Kirby for the inspiration!

  • @donaldfrierson743
    @donaldfrierson743 5 лет назад +1

    Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, One could not exist without the other. Jack Kirby was the reason I loved Marvel. Also Steve Ditko.

    • @AliFareedMC
      @AliFareedMC 5 лет назад +4

      You are wrong
      Stan Lee would not exist Without Jack Kirby
      Jack Kirby Existed before Stan Lee
      Stan Lee first story was Captain America
      Who created Captain America
      Joe Simon and jack Kirby

  • @tejanoburns5348
    @tejanoburns5348 Год назад

    I love the story Todd McFarlane tells. He had to ink a Kirby page for a collaboration. He really didn't want to because it meant erasing Kirby's pencils. He had to anyway for the project, but kept the eraser shavings in a sandwich bag. Later on after the project, Jack heard how upset Todd was having to ink over his pencils and then to erase them. He had redrawn the page they were working on and had sent it to Todd. Good, kind, sweet man. As much as I love Jim Lee and Todd McFarlane of being a kid in the extreme era that got me in comics, eventually find Kirby and he most definitely is the King and no one can even compare. Then, now, or ever!

  • @Auriflamme
    @Auriflamme 6 лет назад +5

    I met Jack Kirby once and he gave me some of the best advice I've ever gotten. He said: "Calm down, put the gun down, put your clothes back on, and get the hell out of my house!"
    Those words will live with me forever.

  • @lenjennings3096
    @lenjennings3096 5 лет назад +1

    It was 2 weeks after Jack Kirby had passed. I was at Marvel Comics in NYC interviewing with Stan Lee's successor, Tom DeFalco. I foolishly brought in only drawings of my own characters so I didn't get the job. But I did get an hour and forty-five minutes of Tom DeFalco's time. That was the single most incredible interview of my life. When the interview ended, Tom was kind enough to give me a tour. He showed me the famous Marvel bullpen which was amazing. As we headed to the exit, I gave my condolences for the loss of Jack Kirby. He came to a dead stop. He turned around and faced me. It looked like he was about to cry. He said, "This world will probably never know the genius we lost when Jack Kirby died." Tom was kind enough to give me faxes of pencil drawings sent in by various artists for different books. I still have those faxes today. I will always remember that day as one of the greatest days in my now 25+ year career. I never went into comics but the dream is still alive. I will self-publish a comic before I leave this earth. All hail to Jack "KING" Kirby! You are sorely missed!!!

    • @peace8381
      @peace8381 4 года назад +1

      Believe me, millions of people around the world know the Genius of the King of Comics.

  • @thaxtonwaters8561
    @thaxtonwaters8561 4 года назад +1

    @30:30 High levels of creativity usually lead to a life of private rewards and public frustration.

  • @gbuddy
    @gbuddy 5 лет назад +1

    Jack "King" Kirby. There'll NEVER be anyone like him again. He was my biggest hero growing up, and I patterned my artwork after his incredible drawings.

  • @jerocaldon429
    @jerocaldon429 4 года назад +5

    Notice Stan Lee didn't even want to speak on his legacy... I heard they had bad blood cause Stan was the big mouth salesman and Jack the cool guy. They both needed each other sure I just know Jack did most of the work while Stan would sell the it big.

    • @Moodboard39
      @Moodboard39 2 года назад

      Stan is the owner lol

    • @cha5
      @cha5 2 года назад +1

      @@Moodboard39 Stan was the barker and the hustler of Marvel, There was a recent book on Stan called 'The Rise and Fall of Stan Lee' which is a fascinating read,
      It doesn't go out of it's way to tear the man down but it does give a warts and all presentation of the man and his life and impact.

    • @AliFareedMC
      @AliFareedMC 2 года назад

      You kidding me right?
      Jack Kirby didn't need Stan Lee, Stan Lee needed Kirby, Stan Lee couldn't even sell Marvel out of bankruptcy

    • @jerocaldon429
      @jerocaldon429 2 года назад

      @@AliFareedMCKirby was not a foreman at marvel so in other words he could not get ppl interested unless a showman like stan lee to sell his work. Stan lee represents the marketing kirby the product both need another for world wide success. Millions vs a handful is why everyone wants as much expose possible.

  • @jamesschulziii9098
    @jamesschulziii9098 Год назад +1

    I've probably seen this a half dozen times. Hope to see it another half dozen or so. 💯😎

  • @l.a.gothro3999
    @l.a.gothro3999 Год назад

    I was born in 1964 & my only sib, my brother, was born in 1957. It was from him that I learned about comic books, which he bought and read to me. He was a Marvel fan, mostly, so I was exposed to Jack Kirby's art as a toddler. His influence on our lives was strong, especially influencing my brother's art style; he learned to draw intricate mechanical backgrounds from Kirby's examples. Thanks for sharing this doc with the world!

  • @RepublicanJesusthe2nd
    @RepublicanJesusthe2nd 2 года назад +1

    Jack Kirby is the KING!

  • @angelmanfredy
    @angelmanfredy 2 года назад +1

    This gentle, wonderful, and sincere documentary is so soothing I’ve used it to fall to sleep dozens and dozens of times.
    Safe to say I’m a Kirby fan, too. :)

  • @Bobbybillybillbob
    @Bobbybillybillbob 7 месяцев назад +1

    Comics wouldnt be what-where theybsre today without the talent if Kirby. What he contributed to the comic book medium os incredible, Kirby is King of the comic book industry

  • @Zzz-iz6jk
    @Zzz-iz6jk 4 года назад +1

    Never understood how good Kirby was until I saw the IDW Artist Editions and I finally understood why he was the king.

  • @marcustmachado
    @marcustmachado 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks for sharing this suberb documentary. So sensitive and really paying homage to that great artist.

  • @idjamzul
    @idjamzul 7 лет назад +27

    Roz Kirby is a wonderful woman :)

  • @zandorvorkov9305
    @zandorvorkov9305 7 лет назад +6

    At 31:26 he says "he did a very weird comic called 'Devil Dinosaur. . . ". That was one of my favorites! So was Machine Man! Thank you Jack Kirby!

    • @simonedwards5564
      @simonedwards5564 2 года назад

      IT SHOULD HAVE READ,,,DEVIL DINOSAUR AND MOON BOY,!!!!!!!!!!

  • @theswan1852
    @theswan1852 7 лет назад +2

    I'm 20 minutes in and this doc is so awesome. I could never find who did what with Simon & Kirby. Now I finally know. Those are Kirby drawings. I've been admiring them for years.
    I've read that the 40s team was such a famous comic book name that they asked them to stockpile stories before going overseas to war. When the stockplile ran low, they would use other artists to mimic Kirby's style, one of these artist's was Gil Kane.
    Also there's a fascinating story about Curt Swan drawing over Kirby's Superman faces, softening them up. This movie was too short.

  • @iOnRX9
    @iOnRX9 Год назад +1

    “on my page with my pencil, i have an unlimited budget”- Jack “the King” Kirby

  • @superginrai8036
    @superginrai8036 5 лет назад +3

    Jack Kirby: He was and always will be “The King”.

    • @peace8381
      @peace8381 4 года назад

      That's a kind comment coming from "Superman"

  • @dougg1075
    @dougg1075 4 года назад +1

    These guys deserve Kennedy Center Honors
    As much as anyone.