An attempt to capitalize on the popularity of The Planet of the Apes franchise (1968, 1970, 1971, 1972), it is set an a post-Apocalyptic world where sentient animals rule (everything from apes to rats), and humans are extinct.
Except for Kamandi, the last of the human survivors bunkered in Command-D (thus his name), who is raised by his elderly grandfather and emerges into chaos, hunted for sport, imprisoned in a zoo, experimented on by scientists who want to know how a human could be sentient.
Though described as "a boy" and "a tyke," Kamadi is drawn as an extremely muscular teenage with long blond hippie-hair, naked except for tight cut-off jeans.
He is captured a lot, muscles taught and struggling. Or he fights with high kicks that display his bulging pecs and 8-pack abs almost as well.
For the next 30 issues, Ben and Kamandi fight together, rescue each other, search the ruined cities for each other. Kamandi occasionally meets girls, momentary dalliances that mean nothing. And there is no question for Ben: he has eyes only for the blond muscle god.
See also: Jim Steranko; and DC Comics Muscle.
Kamandi was DC. Yes, it was by Jack Kirby. He'd had a falling out with Stan Lee. During this time he also created the New Gods; Funky Flashman, the self-proclaimed world's greatest scam artist, was basically all of Stan Lee's negative qualities, and had a coffee mug shaped like Jack Kirby's head where he got his ideas. (Yikes! I thought Marville was mean-spirited.)
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Jack Kirby even cowrote The History of the DC Universe, which tried to make sense of what fellow Marvel alum Marv Wolfman had just done to the multiverse. (You know, destroying it.) How this new universe which was just created had its own history. And it still didn't adequately solve everything. (Marv Wolfman himself had to rewrite Donna Troy. Again. And poor Hawkman and Hawkgirl.)
There is a 90s version. Kamandi: At Earth's End. Terrible, and two words: Virtual girlfriend.
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