Jack Kirby's greatest non-Marvel contribution to pop culture was providing the influence that formed the spine of George Lucas' Star Wars. DC Comics certainly knew that, because when Jedis became all the rage, they did their level best to foist the Fourth World Saga onto a largely disinterested public. As a member of Generation X, I'm well aware of The Force's pervasive presence, and my entry into The Source was Kenner's Super Powers Collection of action figures, whose Kirby-infused lore also absorbed the final seasons of the Super Friends Saturday Morning cartoon that I watched. It's main accomplishment was to set up Darkseid as one of DC's biggest super-villains, and if I didn't know him before, he's been inescapable ever since. I had figures of Darkseid and a Parademon, while my half-brother had Steppenwolf, DeSaad, and maybe Kalibak. I can't recall if either of us bothered with Orion or Mr. Miracle.
Even when I was generally disinterested in DC, John Byrne on Legends couldn't be missed, and Darkseid was there. He popped up in lots of stuff, so that even when I was only occasionally buying DC, the Lord of Apokolips found his way into my collection. By the mid '90s, I was hot and heavy with DC, so I felt obligated to at least try some Fourth World material, and that's exactly how it felt to read that stuff. Finally, I picked up an early proto-Essential/Showcase Presents black & white collection of New Gods, and finally found a way into Kirby's lore. I "got" Orion, at least, but I wasn't convinced that anyone else did. In most of his appearances, he was a hothead jerk with neither the charisma nor menace of, say, Namor the Sub-Mariner. Even favored creators like Jim Starlin came up short.
Of all the attempts to continue the Fourth World without Kirby, I figure mine and the consensus opinion of who came the closest was Walt Simonson's Orion. He'd arguably bettered Kirby on The Mighty Thor, though he admittedly had the whole of Norse mythology to fall back on, and was at the peak of his powers in the '80s. Like John Byrne, some of that luster had faded in the '90s, though Byrne still tapped Simonson to provide the covers to his year-plus attempt at reviving Jack Kirby's Fourth World. When Byrne moved on, Simonson was tapped for the next bid, and I was intrigued enough to give it a try for half a year. The story was about the will-enslaving Anti-Life Equation taking over people's minds in the American heartland. This built to what was presented as a climactic battle between father and son, with Darkseid seeming to perish under the blast of his own Omega Effect beams. Simonson was successful at drawing the characters with a divine Kirby bigness, and create a visual language for the New Gods' cosmic power through ornate and arcane displays. But it also embraced the decompressed storytelling trend that persists to this day, and I simply ran out of interest.
After I left, Orion was forced to take up his father's mantle as leader of a wasteland autocracy, and was manipulated down a dark path. He killed DeSaad, gained control of the Anti-Life Equation, and used it to conquer several worlds. As heel turns went, it was pretty benevolent, actually. Less so was Simonson's clear intent to keep his story New Gods-centric despite middling sales and the imposition of gimmicks. There were hot guest artists like Rob Liefeld and Jim Lee doing back-ups, and a particularly grating and incompetent two month tie-in with the Jokers Last Laugh crossover stunt. By 2001, JLA wasn't the juggernaut that it once was, but their prominence on the right cover was still enough to get my dollars.
Simonson had drawn a couple issues of John Byrne's run, and Byrne returned the favor on the two additional issues that I bought for the Justice League guest spot. I bought #14 assuming that things would pick up from their barely-there cameo in #13, but I was too generous and/or gullible. Orion had used the Anti-Life Equation on Captain (Shazam!) Marvel, who was sort of his herald to the JLA Watchtower base. The Big Red Cheese talked the League into listening to Orion's global broadcast of the Equation, the League's will ceased to be their own, but they still flew around performing good deeds, as usual. Orion just took the fighting aspect out of the... equation... for a hot minute. In his sole line, Martian Manhunter stated his intent to build a dam in China. Like he wouldn't have been up for that any other day?
Predictably, Darkseid turned up alive and the mastermind behind much of this, but also plotted Orion's demise to halt his threat. Orion lost the Anti-Life Equation, but otherwise got better. The book really meandered after that, seemingly marking time until cancellation. Two new villainesses introduced and mostly contained in this volume continued to plague Orion, helping to gouge his eyes out, but he got better across a narratively listless but illustratively compelling five-parter. A final oversized issue set all the pieces back to default. As you can probably tell, I'm glad I kept that money in my wallet.
"The Ordering of Earth!" was by Walter Simonson, John Byrne, and Terry Austin. It was nice to see the classic X-Men art team reunited, and the embellishment was a welcome change from Byrne's solo efforts, but say it with me-- Austin wasn't what he once was by that point.
Monday, March 24, 2025
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