Jim
Starlin rose to prominence at Bronze-Age Marvel like the proverbial
comet. After he took over writing and drawing Marvel Comics’s moribund CAPTAIN MARVEL title, he spun
an inventive tale of the mad demigod Thanos, who worshiped a
feminine incarnation of Death and ascended to godhood with the help
of a Lee-Kirby artifact, the Cosmic Cube. Indeed, it could be argued
that this was the first multi-issue narrative that rivaled those of
Lee and Kirby. Captain Marvel defeated Thanos by playing on the villain's ego,
but though the hero later passed away, the demigod proved far
more durable. During Starlin’s tenure on the feature WARLOCK—one
portion of which I reviewed here—the artist-writer arguably pursued
his cosmic vistas to even greater effect. It was in the stories
devoted to Warlock—a reworked version of a Lee-Kirby character
known only as “Him”—that Starlin slightly pilfered motifs from
the work of Michael Moorcock, and evolved the idea of a “soul gem.”
Though Thanos was largely left alone by other Marvel raconteurs,
possibly in deference to Starlin, over time one soul gem multiplied into
several, all with different properties from the jewel used by Warlock.
By the early nineties, Starlin apparently decided to weave a tapestry
capable of dovetailing all of these continuity-additions into his own
cosmos of personal concerns.
Though
in the early nineties I was still keeping a weather-eye on Marvel
comics, I didn’t read INFINITY GAUNTLET or any of its subsequent
spin-offs. I was far from pleased by either Marvel’s exploitation of
the concept of the “multi-series crossover,” or with Starlin’s
dubious Metamorphosis Odyssey, one part of which I negatively
reviewed here. So I ignored this saga of the “soul gems,” which,
when placed upon Thanos’s glove, bestowed on him the power of “the
Infinity Gauntlet.” To the extent that I even was aware of the
series’ basic plotline, I probably would have thought it to be
little more than a reworking of that first “Cosmic Cube” story.
Now
that I’ve read GAUNTLET, I think this is an accurate judgment, but
in this case, Starlin improved upon the earlier story. The
CAPTAIN MARVEL narrative is a fun cosmic superhero tale, but it shows
little insight into the master villain and his perverse fascination
with a feminine version of Death. Further, GAUNTLET, despite being
prefaced by several issues of a Starlin-scribed SILVER SURFER
feature, and being tied in to various other Marvel features, shows a surer mythic discourse than the big-screen film it
inspired, AVENGERS: INFINITY WAR.
One
superior aspect of Starlin’s narrative is that the initiating
action of the story begins on a metaphysical plane too ambitious for
the live-action movie. It’s Death herself, not Thanos, who gets the
idea that the universe has become too prolific with living beings,
and needs to be culled. In the movie Thanos is given a more
“realistic” motive, that of wanting to prevent suffering by
thinning the universal herd, but this putative realism is one that
begs not to be examined too closely. In this case, a strong
metaphysical myth—“Death Gets Tired of Too Much Life”—proves
far more resonant than a weak sociological extrapolation. At any
rate, Death resuscitates Thanos from whatever grisly fate he last
met, and sends him out to gather the Infinity Gems. With these, he
crafts the Gauntlet, with which he can wipe out half of all living
beings with one snap of his fingers.
“The
snap” which received so much emphasis in INFINITY WAR appears for
just one panel in GAUNTLET. Still, like the movie-makers, Starlin
gets a lot of mileage out of the resultant drama, as various Marvel
characters lose friends and loved ones, though to be sure Starlin
devotes less attention than the movie does to rank-and-file
humankind. But then, Starlin takes far more time than the movie did
to explore the villain’s psychology, suggesting that Thanos's eroticization of the force of Death reveals his basic fear of failure
in life. Not that psychology is in the driver’s seat here. The
forces of life are championed by most of Marvel’s major heroes, as
well as almost all of Marvel’ quasi-omnipotent beings, from the
famed Galactus to the obscure Living Tribunal (who, in a
demonstration of cosmic legalism, chooses not to join the fight
against Thanos because it’s the nature of life to devour life).
In
contrast to, say, SECRET WARS, where all of the combined heroes share
roughly the same narrative emphasis, most of the champions in
GAUNTLET come “on stage” just to speak a few lines and toss a few
blasts, fists, or adamantine claws at the god-powered evildoer.
Thanos gets so much attention from Starlin that he’s almost the
star of the show. However, Starlin subtly allows the narrative to be
dominated by the hero who functioned most often as Thanos’s nemesis
following the demise of Captain Marvel: the aforementioned Warlock.
With this character, Starlin may have been subconsciously influenced
by another myth from the Lee-Kirby bag of tricks. Lee and Kirby gave
readers a dynamic opposition between the angelic Silver Surfer and
the planet-devouring Galactus, and Starlin uses similar motifs,
contrasting the arrogant, world-destroying “false deity” Thanos
to the calm, almost Christ-like mien of Warlock. Nevertheless,
Starlin’s variation on this metaphysical myth has its own organic
charms. When Thanos’s would-be mistress Death spurns him for the
act of assuming godhood, he tries to scorn her in return by creating
a female version of himself, but one who mirrors his own desires. You
certainly wouldn’t catch Galactus creating an erotic double of
himself in order to stroke his ego.
There
are flaws. Starlin devotes considerable space to a character he
didn’t invent, Nebula, the granddaughter of Thanos. But though she
manages to steal the Gauntlet from her ancestor, she remains a flat
character, both here and in most of her appearances. In this
particular case the Marvel Studios films improved on Nebula in terms
of her dramatic impact.
In
my review of AVENGERS: ENDGAME, I called attention to the way in
which the filmmakers used the event of “the Snap” to evoke the
tragic sense of “survivors’ guilt” following a great
catastrophe. Like most cosmic Marvel sagas, the events of GAUNTLET
have no more lasting impact than sweeping the pieces off a board in
order to initiate a new game. INFINITY WAR borrows the ending of
GAUNTLET—the scene of a contented Thanos, satisfied to live a
bucolic existence and give up being a super-villain. In both stories,
this conclusion is designed to be shattered at some future time.
Nevertheless, whatever Starlin chose to do with Thanos in his next
big cosmic extravaganza, the narrative within GAUNTLET is so
impressively coherent that one may choose to believe that within this one story-arc, Starlin really did bring his massively insecure malefactor a measure of
peace.
ADDENDUM 11-26-2020: The more I think about it, the more I believe that Thanos really IS the star of this particular show, not least because he passes on his burden to Warlock. That would explain why Warlock, despite being the master organizer, is to some extent outmaneuvered at the conclusion-- for all that Starlin had another epic on the horizon.
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