The New York Times wrote a nice tribute to the late Jack “King” Kirby, the world’s greatest comic book writer/artist.
There are elements of the “Star Wars” mythology in “Matrix.” But the idea of a hero turning out to be the offspring of the most inconceivable evil, an immensely grim force that dominates out of pride, did not begin with George Lucas. In 1971 Kirby left Marvel after disagreements over rights to characters he had helped bring to life. After going to DC Comics, the home of Superman and Batman, Kirby hammered together a new vision: an expanse of planets and the gods that controlled them called the New Universe, which unfolded in the “New Gods,” “Forever People” and “Mister Miracle” comics.
With the malevolent overlord, Darkseid — who turns out to be the father of Orion, a damaged warrior-hero who has to battle a barely sublimated streak of cruelty — Mr. Lucas’s “Star Wars” archvillain, Darth Vader, can clearly be glimpsed.