Friday, 16 January 2026

Fantastic Four #12 - Marvel Comics

FANTASTIC FOUR (FACSIMILE EDITION) No. 12, February 2026
“Arguably one of the first Marvel Crossovers between titles”, Stan Lee’s script for Issue Twelve of “Fantastic Four” clearly contains a number of mesmerising moments – not least of which is the eventual battle between the titular characters and Bruce Banner’s gamma green alter-ego. However, the twenty-three page long narrative does seem to take an eternity to reach so cataclysmic a confrontation, and also features a fair few eye-raising scenes which make it very much of its time; “Miss Storm, a pretty young lady can always be of help -- just by keeping the men’s morale up!”

Foremost of these early Sixties setbacks has to be the treatment of Invisible Girl and her inability to even stay visible whilst watching recorded footage of the Incredible Hulk. Sue’s entire development arc throughout the comic is simply to stand on the side-lines and only step in when either a befuddled armed soldier gets close to shooting at anything which moves, or an utterly oblivious Russian spy is about to blow away Aunt Petunia's ever-loving blue eyed nephew with a handy "atomic-powered weapon". Indeed, Mister Fantastic’s eventual wife doesn’t even fight the founding Avenger, preferring instead to impotently run away from the behemoth whenever she gets within arm's reach.

Similarly as disconcerting has to be the American author’s depiction of the Thing and Human Torch – both of which debatably come across as being disagreeable and dislikeable. Admittedly, Ben Grimm's hot-headed attitude to show-off his great strength does result in him rather enjoyably duking it out with “a company of infantrymen” directly outside the City Symphony Auditorium. But this clash is soon resolved courtesy of a lungful of sleeping gas, and quickly gets swallowed up amidst a series of increasingly dialogue-driven scenes featuring General “Thunderbolt” Ross.

Luckily Jack Kirby appears to be desperate to imbue as much of this “book-length epic” with his legendary, pulse-pounding pencils as his panels can take. The aforementioned punch-ups between the super-group and Hulk, as well as the Thing’s bout against the American military are packed full of adrenalin-fuelled action. Furthermore, the prolific artist does a first-rate job in depicting the mental aspirations of Reed Richards’ team-mates once they meet their formidably-strong adversary, and even manages to make the re-designed Fantasti-Car appear as “impressive-looking” as Captain Nelson’s superior officer suggests.

Script: Stan Lee, Art: Jack Kirby, Inking Dick Ayers, and Lettering: Art Simek

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