In Fantastic Four #48, we
are introduced to the Silver Surfer. In his very first panel, the text reads:
“But life goes on--” This is ironic given that the Surfer was the harbinger of
death. If he came to your planet, life did not go on! But when he was
turned around by the actions of a beautiful blind woman in Fantastic Four
#50, he became Marvel’s first extra-terrestrial super-hero. At DC, Superman was
their first, way back in 1938. The Surfer, however, was feared and shunned, something
no DC hero was in the 1960s.
There are many who feel that only Kirby should have drawn the Surfer. I agree. Kirby also should have been the only one to draw the Fantastic Four Thor, Captain America, Avengers, X-Men, Nick Fury, Sgt. Fury and The Hulk strips. In 1969, Kirby was drawing the F.F., Thor and Captain America. So if you say he should have drawn the Surfer, please mention which comic you wanted him to give up.
I had
wondered over the years, which back story of the Silver Surfer best suited the
character. It has to be Buscema’s, not Kirby’s mostly because Kirby’s Surfer had no real back
story.
In Fantastic Four #48, Kirby gave him form and Stan Lee gave him
substance. But no one gave him pants. For all we knew, the Surfer was life from
lifelessness, he had no gender. Stan used masculine pronouns for him, but he
really was an “it” He had no parts to be private with and did not need pants.
John Buscema did a beautiful job. In his first story he gave
us a very different Surfer. Kirby’s Surfer went from planet to planet, looking
for life and then signaled thumbs up or down to his master. Galactus would come
down and would, like Mobil-Exxon, suck all the energy out of the planet. The
Surfer was a murderer. If you say he wasn’t, that Galactus was, it was like
saying that all those Gestapo agents who loaded people on trains going to the
concentration camps were not culpable. The Kirby Surfer knew exactly what he
was doing, even if he was “only following orders.”
Norrin Radd, beginning in Silver Surfer #1, was a
great seeker of truth and human perfection. In fact, he was a snob. His planet
was a place of peace and contentment, but he could not be content because
everyone else was. He had a sense of danger, a “spidey sense” that told him
that something bad was going to happen. In fact, when Galactus’ ship travels to
his planet, Norrin knows that they will be linked.
Showing nobility, Norrin gives up the life he wasn’t happy
with and becomes the herald of Galactus, in order to save his planet. Buscema’s
Surfer changed the story. In one panel the Surfer bypasses a planet because it
was filled with primitive life. Yet, the very next panel reminds us that he
came to Earth to extinguish us all! Kirby’s Surfer came to Earth with no
humanity, but learned it from Alicia. He was programmed to kill, but once he
gained his humanity, he realized it was wrong and began to change his ways.
This works well because Kirby’s Surfer was a supporting character and did not
need the depth of a starring one. Buscema’s Surfer once had humanity and then
lost it. Then he worked to regain it.
There was a major problem with Galactus. Since Galactus
could take life, it would be seriously wrong if he could create life, too. This
would make him God. Not a god, like Thor, but God. Why couldn’t Galactus then
create life, create planets, like we create gardens and live off them? Galactus
should not be able to create life; that is too special as a part time
character.
As a full-time character The Surfer needed an origin, he
could not be life from lifelessness. Galactus therefore was needed to have
transformed Norrin Rand into the Silver Surfer, not create one from
nothingness.
Still no pants and still no gender. |
Galactus came
to Earth with a big G on his chest. Not only did he spoke our language, his
tailor did! He asks the F.F. in issue #49 and to Norrin, “Would you not
hesitate to step on an ant?” How does Galactus know about ants?
So while the Kirby Surfer was a perfect fit for a supporting
character, if you wanted a hero with his own bi-monthly comic, you needed the
Buscema version: a character, with nobility, with heroic motivation,
vulnerability, a sense of decency… and pants.
In an interview in Changes
Magazine in 1970 Lee says, When I discussed the character with John
Buscema before he started drawing the book, John said: “Well, how do you want
me to think of him? You know, what kind of guy?” And I said: “The closer you
come to Jesus Christ the better.”
Marvel’s mistake,
which probably led to cancellation, was to have one of their mightiest
characters Earthbound. He was called the Sentinel of the Spaceways, but he had no
Easy Pass to get to outer space, he was stuck on Earth. The stories of Thor improved when his tales were off Midgard (Earth) and placed inAsgard, the Underworld, or in different
realms.
The early Surfer stories were often about prejudice. This rarely
fully captured the character, or gave him a serious threat, but would have made
an interesting sub-plot every once in a while. He should have been able to roam
the Skyways, even go home and have great adventures off the Earth. In his best
story he went to Hell (in issue #3). Space travel might have also stopped his
incessant whining. There is a difference between prejudice and common sense. If
I saw a naked person, painted silver, walking down the street in the winter and
we were 1,000 miles from the ocean and he was carrying a surfboard, is it
prejudiced to think he is nuts?
Heck, they gave pants to Dragon Man!
Heck, they gave pants to Dragon Man!
Good Grief!!! |