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Fantastic Four #1

Nov 1961
Stan Lee, Jack Kirby

Fantastic Four #1 cover

Story Name:

The Fantastic Four!


Synopsis

Fantastic Four #1 synopsis by Julio Molina-Muscara
Rating: 4 stars
Image from Fantastic Four #1

Dr Reed Richards shots a flare in the sky that forms the phrase “The Fantastic Four”. While people wonder what that means, three individuals rush to where Richards made the call. They are his fiancee, Susan Storm, who becomes invisible. Ben Grimm, a powerful monster with a rocky hide. And Johnny Storm, who can turn into a human torch. As Richards prepares to inform them about the purpose of their gathering, we learn how they got their super powers.

Richards spent years building a rocket ship to beat the Soviets in the space race. But Grimm, his pilot, fears the side effects that comic rays could induce. Susan confuses Grimm’s caution with cowardice, which hurts his pride, and pilots the ship that very night. Susan’s brother, Johnny, comes along. They launch secretly.

As the ship penetrates the stratosphere, the vessel’s weak shield let cosmic rays bathe it, affecting all four at the atomic level. Back on the ground, each discloses their powers: invisibility for Susan, stretching for Richards, flaming for Johnny, and Grimm turns into a monster that Susan refers to as a thing.

Richards, calling himself Mr Fantastic, invites all to use their formidable and unique capabilities to aid humanity. Everyone agrees, forming the Fantastic Four.

--



Story #2

The Fantastic Four Meet the Mole Man!

Writer: Stan Lee. Penciler: Jack Kirby. Inker: George Klein

Synopsis

Reed Richards tells his companions about cave-ins affecting atomic plants in different parts of the world. He located the potential cause on an area called Monster Isle. Though considered part of folklore, they reach that island in a private jet. As they climb a peak, a three-headed flying monster attacks them. Richards, or better said, Mr Fantastic, grabs it with a lasso he formed using his elongated arm, and throws it into the ocean. Suddenly, the earth beneath Richards and Johnny subdues.

They fall to their doom, but Mr Fantastic changes his body into a parachute and Johnny grabs firmly onto him. When they reach the bottom, a blinding light knocks them out. As they recover, they find themselves wearing strange suits in front of a vast field of enormous diamonds. A short man with glasses presents himself: it is the Moleman.

--


Story #3

The Moleman's Secret!

Writer: Stan Lee. Penciler: Jack Kirby. Inker: George Klein

Synopsis

A menacing rocky monster comes from behind Susan Storm. But the Thing confronts it and beats it. They rush to find their teammates.

Meanwhile, deep inside the planet, in the Moleman’s quarters, he tells Mr Fantastic and Johnny Storm, the Human Torch, how after escaping from a world that despised him, he became ruler of the underground world. After losing his sight in a fall, he developed senses like those of moles and bats. He can move in the dark and dodge dangers with ease.

Revengefully, the Moleman intends to conquer the world by sending his army of monsters after destroying all power plants. When the Thing and Sue Storm arrive, the foe releases a monumental beast. But the Human Torch keeps it at bay, flying around it.

Upon hearing their master’s call, all the other monsters quickly move in. So the Fantastic Four escape through a tunnel to the surface, while the Human Torch produces a rockslide that locks the beasts and the Moleman underground. As the team leaves on their plane, a tremendous explosion destroys Monster Isle. The Fantastic Four wonders if they will ever see the Moleman again.

--



 

Review / Commentaries


Fantastic Four #1 Review by (October 31, 2024)

This is the comic book that changed the world; the comics world that is. And the lives of the creators involved with it.

Stan Lee, the scripter, had been writing comics for twenty years, but he was tired. He wasn’t a successful writer, and he wanted to be one. Comics were not the venue to become one in those days. So he hid his true name, Stanley Lieber, with a pseudonym, in hopes they would not link his comic book work (he was not entirely proud of), with the novel he planned writing one day. Stan Lee was seriously thinking about leaving comics for good.

His wife advised him to write a comic book story, not like his boss expected it, but as he would like to write it. And he wrote The Fantastic Four.

This was an out of the ordinary tale. A smart man, his girlfriend, her brother, and a friend get super capabilities via cosmic rays (in vogue in those days because of the USA/URSS space career). Out of altruism, they become a superhero group, like DC’s Justice of America. But they don’t hide their identities using masks. They neither use uniforms nor wear capes. More than a group, they form a family. And they have problems like a regular Joe.

A few months after the release of this unique comic book, fan letters flooded the offices of Marvel Comics (recently renamed from Atlas Comics) with very positive feedback. 

Superhero comics were then back in the game (customers had lost interest in them after WWII ended). The publishing company would see a steady, important increase in revenue. And Stan Lee was on the right path to fulfill his dream of becoming a successful writer. Not like he planned, but doing what he did best, and not needing to display his real name. He actually became a worldwide sensation. The father of Marvel Comics.

Special note about Jack Kirby, the penciller of the issue, and the cocreator of the FF. Jack was a veteran in the world of comics. His vast imagination and drawing speed were second to none. FF #1 perhaps felt like another comic book task for him; he accomplished it as usual. But it opened the gates for his pencils to design and create the fenomenal characters base of the Marvel Comics universe (during the 60s). Read that again. Nobody has accomplished such a magnitude of world-reaching creativity ever again. Oh, his life changed too. He is considered a true master, and nothing more and nothing less than the king of comics.



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Jack Kirby
George Klein
?
Jack Kirby (Cover Penciler)
George Klein (Cover Inker)
Stan Goldberg (Cover Colorist)
Additional Credits
Letterer: Art Simek.
Editor: Stan Lee.

Characters

Listed in alphabetical order. All stories.

Human Torch
Human Torch

(Jonathan Storm)
Invisible Woman
Invisible Woman

(Sue Storm)
Mr. Fantastic
Mr. Fantastic

(Reed Richards)
Thing
Thing

(Ben Grimm)


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