Kamandi: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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The main conflict was between the Tigers and the Apes. Kamandi tried to help the humans while avoiding the animal armies. He made friends with some of them, though, such as Doctor Canus, a science-minded hound. He also did find some humans who could speak, but they were actually androids.
The main conflict was between the Tigers and the Apes. Kamandi tried to help the humans while avoiding the animal armies. He made friends with some of them, though, such as Doctor Canus, a science-minded hound. He also did find some humans who could speak, but they were actually androids.


During the miniseries ''[[Countdown to Final Crisis]]'', a present-day version of Kamandi and his grandfather, after becoming involved with a sentient satellite he created and a trip to [[New Gods|Apokolips]] are trnsported to an [[Alternate Universe]] where a plague from the future has re-created the setting of the original series.
During the miniseries ''[[Countdown to Final Crisis]]'', a present-day version of Kamandi and his grandfather, after becoming involved with a sentient satellite he created and a trip to [[New Gods|Apokolips]] are transported to an [[Alternate Universe]] where a plague from the future has re-created the setting of the original series.


In the 1993, the character saw a [[Darker and Edgier]] reboot in an [[Elseworlds]] miniseries, ''Kamandi: At Earth's End'', which was in turn followed by the infamous ''[[Superman: At Earth's End]]''.
In the 1993, the character saw a [[Darker and Edgier]] reboot in an [[Elseworlds]] miniseries, ''Kamandi: At Earth's End'', which was in turn followed by the infamous ''[[Superman: At Earth's End]]''.
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* [[Alternate Reality]]: Kamandi's world was just one of many possible futures for the [[DC Universe]] (and is now a Parallel Earth).
* [[Alternate Reality]]: Kamandi's world was just one of many possible futures for the [[DC Universe]] (and is now a Parallel Earth).
** Some of the comics featuring Kamandi were explicitly [[Canon Discontinuity|out of continuity]].
** Some of the comics featuring Kamandi were explicitly [[Canon Discontinuity|out of continuity]].
* [[Apocalypse How]]: The Great Disaster was a mystery: The original series established that it had ''not'' been a [[World War III|nuclear war]], but not what it actually was. Later [[Retcon|Retcons]] did establish that it had indeed been a war, and most recently, a plague.
* [[Apocalypse How]]: The Great Disaster was a mystery: The original series established that it had ''not'' been a [[World War III|nuclear war]], but not what it actually was. Later [[Retcon]]s did establish that it had indeed been a war, and most recently, a plague.
* [[Applied Phlebotinum]]: Cortexium, the drug that mutated the animals.
* [[Applied Phlebotinum]]: Cortexium, the drug that mutated the animals.
* [[Fantasy Counterpart Culture]]: Possibly justified in that the animals may have been influenced by surviving records.
* [[Fantasy Counterpart Culture]]: Possibly justified in that the animals may have been influenced by surviving records.

Latest revision as of 15:03, 23 September 2019

Kamandi, The Last Boy on Earth was a science-fiction comic book series published by DC Comics. It was first published in the 1970s; its characters have appeared in various other comics since.

Shortly after the movie Planet of the Apes became a hit, a DC editor asked artist/writer Jack Kirby to create a series with a similar premise; Kamandi was the result (but note Kirby had not seen the movie, and in fact he used the chance to revisit some older ideas of his.) Unlike most other comics Kirby created for DC, the title lasted for many years, though Kirby left before its conclusion.

In the original series, a mysterious incident known only as "The Great Disaster" caused the collapse of human civilization. A human boy survived with his grandfather in a bunker called "Command-D". When he dies, the young man — named after the place — sets outs to find more people. What he discovers is that most humans are now primitive and unable to speak, while some animals became humanoid in form and gained human-level intelligence (apparently from the effects of an experiment being carried out shortly before the Disaster). All races were now in a conflict to survive while scavenging among the ruins. Humans were treated as animals, and the animals developed their own civilizations that were suspiciously similar to ancient human ones; e.g., the tigers had a culture like the Roman Empire.

The main conflict was between the Tigers and the Apes. Kamandi tried to help the humans while avoiding the animal armies. He made friends with some of them, though, such as Doctor Canus, a science-minded hound. He also did find some humans who could speak, but they were actually androids.

During the miniseries Countdown to Final Crisis, a present-day version of Kamandi and his grandfather, after becoming involved with a sentient satellite he created and a trip to Apokolips are transported to an Alternate Universe where a plague from the future has re-created the setting of the original series.

In the 1993, the character saw a Darker and Edgier reboot in an Elseworlds miniseries, Kamandi: At Earth's End, which was in turn followed by the infamous Superman: At Earth's End.

Kamandi was one of the series featured in Wednesday Comics.

Tropes used in Kamandi include: