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Friday, September 09, 2016 

Marvel's celebration of Kirby's work obscures the legal battles he fought

The Atlantic wrote a history article about Jack Kirby's work with Marvel and DC, and the bitter legal battles he had to fight for getting the rights to his artwork drafts back, which he never fully succeeded in doing. And about how Marvel's allegedly celebrating his work on Fantastic Four, while simultaneously obscuring the mistreatment of freelancers by the main publishers:
Marvel’s “Kirby Week” covers all of this in glowing fashion. But the articles all gloss neatly over the other side of the story: namely, the fact that Marvel fought a decades-long battle to keep Kirby from claiming creative and financial control over his creations, culminating in a legal dustup with his heirs that very nearly landed in front of the Supreme Court. The story of Kirby’s struggle with Marvel is also one of the most public examples of the lengths to which even the greatest of creators had to go in order to get credit—and compensation—for his work.

The origin of Kirby’s battles with Marvel go all the way back to his collaborations with Stan Lee, who, as part of the “Marvel Method,” assigned plot summaries to artists, left while they plotted and penciled the comic, and then wrote dialogue over their work. This was a method born partially of necessity: The overworked Lee wasn’t just Marvel’s primary writer, he was also the main editor with a stable of books to get out. As a result, though, Kirby was often the driving influence behind many of the stories they worked on. (In one oft cited example, Lee told Kirby simply: “Have the Fantastic Four fight God.” Kirby came back with a fully plotted saga of Galactus the World Eater and the Silver Surfer, characters who went on to become major figures in the Marvel Universe.)

As their comics grew incredibly popular, Kirby began to push for recognition for his role in plotting stories and creating characters. He made little headway. Frustrated with his lack of both credit and creative control, and angry at Marvel’s continual refusal to offer him a share of the money his creations were raking in, he eventually left for DC Comics in 1970. As recorded in Sean Howe’s Marvel Comics: The Untold Story, Kirby gave an interview shortly after his departure: “I was never given credit for the writing I did,” he said. “It was my idea to do [The Fantastic Four] the way it was...I had to come up with new ideas to help the strip sell. I was faced with the frustration of having to come up with new ideas and then having them taken from me.”
If so, that's bad enough. But it got worse in the late 1970s:
In the mid-1970s, Congress revised the laws around copyright, offering longer periods of ownership for copyright holders—if the proper paperwork could be provided. Marvel realized that many of its previous contracts were legally questionable, remnants of the comics industry’s fly-by-night origins with regards to creative work. In 1978, the company began handing out freelancer contracts that guaranteed the company “forever all rights of any kind and nature in and to the work.” As Michael Dean wrote in a 2002 issue of The Comics Journal, these “work for hire” contracts were partly a result of the superhero boom Kirby himself had a hand in creating. “It wasn’t just monthly comic books that were at stake any more,” Dean wrote. “It was the vast ancillary potential of licensing and merchandising the content of those comics.” The contracts legally formalized what had previously been loosely assumed to be corporate policy, but having it in writing gave many comics freelancers pause for thought. When Kirby got the contract, he refused to sign it and left Marvel for good.
Yes, Marvel's management was that unfair, and to be sure, not just to Kirby. This demonstrates all that went - and is - wrong with corporate run companies. They're so greedy for all the money to be made from merchandise that I personally think hurt comics in the long run, and no doubt, this is still a major problem today, also at DC. It could even explain why some writers may never have had their work reprinted in trades. Tony Isabella once spoke about how DC mistreated him so much they wouldn't even reprint the original 12 Black Lightning stories for many years, and only recently was this finally done. Even Chuck Dixon's had this problem, mostly notably with the bulk of the Robin stories he wrote, and some of his Punisher stories may not have been reprinted either.

And this is why I'd personally recommend somebody with rationale buy ownership of the DC/Marvel publishing arms, and IMO, let the corporations who own them now keep ownership of all the movies and toy merchandise. Seriously. It's the storytelling that matters to me, not all those spinoff products.

Recognizing Kirby and other people's work is important, but so long as the Big Two's managements don't apologize for both their past and present misconduct, it won't have the great impact it could've had.

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It's really disgusting how the original Lee/Kirby creations have been crated as of late. I mean next week's X-Men comic has the young X-Men taking the newly homosexual Iceman to a gay nightclub in Miami.

http://www.bleedingcool.com/2016/09/09/next-week-the-x-men-go-to-a-gay-club-in-miami/

↑ Of course. Once someone does that to a character, it's all they are anymore.

I just saw that X-Men issue even worse in full. Just positively crap. Deserves to be demolished by FCMM.

I'm working on a post about it now.

A club huh...guess the writer doesn't like sports or something.

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  • From Jerusalem, Israel
  • I was born in Pennsylvania in 1974, and moved to Israel in 1983. I also enjoyed reading a lot of comics when I was young, the first being Fantastic Four. I maintain a strong belief in the public's right to knowledge and accuracy in facts. I like to think of myself as a conservative-style version of Clark Kent. I don't expect to be perfect at the job, but I do my best.
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