Despite never gaining the popularity of several of their contemporaries, the Eternals have been a consistent part of Marvel’s lore, courtesy of writers such as Roy Thomas, Mark Gruenwald, and Peter B. Over the decades, they were seamlessly drafted into a burgeoning Marvel Universe. Originally, the Eternals were meant to appear in our world, not the mainstream Earth-616. With this foundation in place, Kirby crafted a saga where superpowered, god-like beings mingled with humanity and fought their monstrous counterparts, the Deviants. Inspired by the book Chariots of the Gods?, which posited that aliens jump-started human development and civilization, Kirby constructed his Eternals series to answer the questions of where we came from and how we got to where we are. Jack Kirby, co-creator of characters such as Captain America, Black Panther, the Fantastic Four, and DC’s New Gods, invented the Eternals in 1976, trying to solve the same riddles posed by the film. The movie compiles thousands of years of human history as it tries finding the Eternals’ place in the universe… as well as humanity’s. Chloé Zhao’s The Eternals, 2021’s third Marvel Cinematic Universe entry, bears the distinction of being the lowest scoring film in the franchise’s history, currently sporting a 48% on Rotten Tomatoes.
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