Miracleman (character): Difference between revisions
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{{short description|Comic book character}} |
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{{Use British English|date=January 2023}} |
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{{About||the [[DC Universe|DC]] and [[Image Universe]] characters originally depicted as the same character|Captain Marvel (DC Comics)|and|Man of Miracles (comics)}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2023}} |
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{{Infobox comics character<!--Wikipedia:WikiProject Comics--> |
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{{Infobox comics meta series <!--Wikipedia:WikiProject Comics--> |
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| image = [[File:Miracle3.png|200px]] |
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| character = y |
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| character_name = Miracleman |
| character_name = Miracleman |
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| image = MiraclemanBook3Olympus.jpg |
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| real_name = Michael Moran |
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| imagesize = <!-- default 250 --> |
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| publisher = [[L. Miller & Son, Ltd.]] (UK)<br />[[Quality Communications]] (UK)<br />[[Eclipse Comics]] (USA)<br />[[Marvel Comics]] (USA) |
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| caption = Miracleman on the cover of the ''Miracleman Book 3 - Olympus'' collected edition.<br>Art by [[John Totleben]]. |
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| debut = ''Marvelman'' #25 (Feb. 1954) |
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| publisher = {{ubl|[[L. Miller & Son, Ltd.]] {{small|(1954–1963)}}|[[Quality Communications]] {{small|(1982–1985)}}|[[Eclipse Comics]] {{small|(1985–1993)}}|[[Marvel Comics]] {{small|(2010–present)}}}} |
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| creators = [[Mick Anglo]] |
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| partners = [[Miraclewoman]]<br>[[Warpsmith]]s<br>[[Kid Marvelman]]<br>[[Young Marvelman]] |
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<!-- If "character" is set --> |
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| aliases = Micky<br>Marvelman |
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| debut = ''[[Marvelman]]'' #25 |
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| powers = Flight<br>Super-strength<br>Invulnerability<br>Greatly increased intelligence<br>Heightened senses<br>Telekinesis<br>Telepathy<br>Concussive energy blasts |
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| alter_ego = Michael John "Mike" Moran<ref name=KMA/> |
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| full_name = |
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| species = Human mutate |
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| homeworld = [[Earth]] |
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| alliances = [[Miracleman Family]] |
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| partners = {{ubl|Young Miracleman<ref group=Note name=N1/>|[[Kid Miracleman]]<ref group=Note name=N1/>|[[Miraclewoman]]|Qys|[[Warpsmith]]s|Huey Moon}} |
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| aliases = Micky<br>Marvelman |
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| powers = * Superhuman strength, speed, stamina, and senses |
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* Concussive energy blasts |
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* Invulnerability |
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* Force fields |
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* Telekinesis |
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* Telepathy |
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* Longevity |
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* Flight |
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* Genius-level intellect |
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| schedule = |
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| anthology = |
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| titles = <!-- include issue #s --> |
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| Superhero = y |
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| startmo = February |
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| startyr = 1954 |
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| main_char_team = |
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| writers = |
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| artists = |
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| letterers = |
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| colorists = |
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| creative_team_month = |
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| creative_team_year = |
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| creators = [[Mick Anglo]] |
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| nonUS = y |
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| reprint = |
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| altcat = |
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| sort = Miracleman |
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}} |
}} |
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'''Miracleman''' (originally known as '''Marvelman'''),<ref group=Note name=N1/> whose civilian name is '''Michael''' "'''Mike'''" '''Moran''', is a [[Great Britain|British]] [[Golden Age of Comic Books|Golden Age]] [[comic book]] [[superhero]] appearing in comic books first published by [[L. Miller & Son, Ltd.]] Created by [[Mick Anglo]], the character first appeared in ''[[Marvelman]]'' #25 (February 1954).<ref>{{Cite web |last=Rajput |first=Rohit |title=Who is Marvel's Miracleman? Comic origin and powers explored amid team up with X-Men |url=https://www.sportskeeda.com/comics/who-marvel-s-miracleman-comic-origin-powers-explored-amid-team-x-men |access-date=2023-03-30 |website=www.sportskeeda.com |date=15 June 2022 |language=en-us}}</ref> The character was subsequently revived in 1982 by [[Alan Moore]] and [[Garry Leach]] as the lead of ''Marvelman'' in the pages of ''[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]]''. After that publication was cancelled, the revival was continued as ''[[Miracleman]]'' by [[Eclipse Comics]] in 1985, with the character renamed accordingly, but went out of print following the company's demise in 1994. |
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<!--Powers and abilities section needs including--> |
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'''Miracleman''' ('''Michael "Micky" "Mike" Moran'''), originally known as '''Marvelman''', is a [[Character (arts)|fictional]] [[superhero]] appearing in comic books first published by [[L. Miller & Son, Ltd.]]. Created in 1954 by writer-artist [[Mick Anglo]] for publisher L. Miller & Son originally as a [[United Kingdom]] home-grown substitute for the American character [[Captain Marvel (DC Comics)|Captain Marvel]], the original series ran until 1963. It was revived in 1982 in a dark, post-modern [[Reboot (fiction)|reboot]] by writer [[Alan Moore]], with later contributions by [[Neil Gaiman]]. |
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{{toclimit|3}} |
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After a 15-year hiatus brought on by a confused legal situation, the character was successfully brought back into print by [[Marvel Comics]] in 2010, initially reverting to the Marvelman name. From 2014 onwards Marvel began reprinting the revival material, once again using the Miracleman name, and in 2022 began continuing the story. |
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==History== |
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===The Mick Anglo years=== |
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In 1953, the American company [[Fawcett Comics]], which was the US publisher of ''[[Captain Marvel (DC Comics)|Captain Marvel]]'', discontinued the title because of a [[National Comics Publications v. Fawcett Publications|lawsuit from DC Comics]].<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/Hills/6569/marvelman/ |first= Matthew H. |last= Gore| authorlink= Matthew H. Gore| publisher= Geocities |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20041209093349/http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/Hills/6569/marvelman/ |archive-date=2004-12-09 |title= The Origin of Marvelman| date= 2001-06-24 |access-date=2016-03-10}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| last= Ingersoll| first= Bob| url= http://www.worldfamouscomics.com/law/back20001024.shtml |title= 'The Law is a Ass' Installment # 66|website=World Famous Comics |access-date=16 January 2014|author-link=Ingersoll, Bob}} (Originally printed in ''[[Comics Buyer's Guide]]'')</ref> [[Len Miller]] and his company [[L. Miller & Son, Ltd.]] had been publishing black-and-white reprints of the series, along with other Fawcett titles, in the UK. Rather than stopping, he turned to comic [[Book packaging|packager]] [[Mick Anglo]] for help continuing or replacing the comic.<ref name="Back34">{{cite journal|last= Harvey|first= Allan|date= June 2009|title= Blood and Sapphires: The Rise and Demise of Marvelman|journal=[[Back Issue!]]|issue= 34|pages=69–76|publisher= [[TwoMorrows Publishing]]}}</ref> They transformed Captain Marvel into Marvelman while Miller continued his other Fawcett reprint titles and used logos and trademarks that looked significantly like Fawcett's.{{Citation needed|date=March 2014}} This added to the appearance that the Fawcett line was continuing, and that Marvelman was still Captain Marvel, in order to retain the audience.{{Original research inline|date=March 2014}} |
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==Concept and creation== |
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Marvelman was similar to Captain Marvel: a young reporter named Micky Moran encounters an astrophysicist, instead of a wizard, who gives him superpowers based on atomic energy instead of magic. To transform into Marvelman, he speaks the word "Kimota", which is phonetically "atomic" backwards, rather than "Shazam". Instead of Captain Marvel Jr. and Mary Marvel, Marvelman was joined by Dicky Dauntless, a teenage messenger boy who became [[Young Marvelman]], and young Johnny Bates, who became [[Kid Marvelman]]; both of their magic words were "Marvelman". |
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Following Fawcett Publications' cessation of their superhero titles in 1953, British publisher L. Miller & Son were left with the prospect of having to cancel their popular ''Captain Marvel'' and ''Captain Marvel Jr.'' weeklies due to a lack of material. Len Miller contacted [[Mick Anglo]], whose Gower Street Studio had provided cover artwork and other material for Miller's titles, to create a replacement.<ref name=KMA>{{cite book |last=Khoury |first=George |author-link= |date=2010 |title=Kimota! The Miracleman Companion |url= |location= |publisher=TwoMorrows Publishing |page= |isbn=9781605490274|chapter=The Man Behind Miracleman}}</ref> Anglo modified Captain Marvel, changing his human identity from newsboy Billy Batson to copyboy Micky Moran. The character's superhuman form was changed from Captain Marvel to Marvelman, after consideration was given to naming the new character Captain Miracle and Miracleman<ref name=MMClassic1TMS>{{Cite comic|writer=Wilson, Derek|title=Marvelman Classic|issue= Volume 1|date=19 January 2017| publisher=[[Marvel Comics]]|story=The Marvelman Story}}</ref>—both names that would later be used by Anglo for further derivatives of Captain Marvel.<ref name=sergi>{{cite book|last=Sergi |first=Joe |title=The Law for Comic Book Creators |publisher=McFarland, Incorporated, Publishers| date=2015 |isbn=9780786473601}}</ref> Anglo took the opportunity to simplify the character's costume, eliminating Captain Marvel's cape and switching his lightning bolt to a simpler "MM" chest logo. To provide greater contrast Marvelman was given close-cropped blond hair and a predominantly blue colour scheme. Anglo considered giving the character a gravity belt but eventually decided to retain flight as an inherent ability of the superhero.<ref name=KMA/> |
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While Marvelman and (less frequently, despite debuting concurrently) [[Young Miracleman|Young Marvelman]] are occasionally called the first British superheroes this is not the case as the short-lived [[DC Thomson]] ''[[The Dandy|Dandy]]'' character ''[[The Amazing Mr X (comics)|The Amazing Mr. X]]'' debuted some ten years previously.<ref name=Murray>{{cite book |last=Murray |first=Chris |author-link= |date=2017 |title=The British Superhero |url= |location= |publisher=University Press of Mississippi |page= |isbn=9781496807380}}</ref> |
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''Captain Marvel'' #19 and ''Captain Marvel, Jr.'' #19 announced the forthcoming replacement of these heroes, and with issue number 25 of each title (both cover-dated 3 February 1954), they were retitled as ''Marvelman'' and ''Young Marvelman''.<ref name= "Back34"/> ''Marvelman Family'' was added to the lineup two years later. Among the studio artists Anglo assembled to produce the comics were [[Denis Gifford]] and [[Don Lawrence]].<ref name="Back34"/> ''Marvelman'' and ''Young Marvelman'' each had 346 issues (#25–370), published weekly, except for the final 36 issues, which were monthly, reprinting old stories. ''Marvelman Family'' was a monthly that usually featured Marvelman, Young Marvelman and Kid Marvelman together, from October 1956 to November 1959. A variety of ''Marvelman'' and ''Young Marvelman'' albums were printed annually from 1954 to 1963. |
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==Publication history== |
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Mick Anglo's association with Len Miller ended in 1960. A disgruntled Anglo then recycled some of his Marvelman stories as ''Captain Miracle'', published under his Anglo Comics imprint, which folded in 1961. Anglo always claimed ownership of Marvelman, and although creator's rights were almost unheard of in the British comics industry of the 1950s and 1960s, at least some of Anglo's Marvelman stories do have a tiny "© Mick Anglo" in the margins, lending a measure of credibility to Anglo's claim.<ref>{{cite book| first= Matthew H. |last= Gore| title= The Origin of Marvelman| place= Ellendale, Tennessee| publisher= [[Boardman Books]]| year= 2006| page= 24}}</ref> |
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===1954–1963=== |
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{{main|Marvelman}} |
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Due to the backlog of Fawcett material Miller already had the company was able to prepare readers for the upcoming change. ''Captain Marvel'' #19, dated 19 December 1953, featured an in-character letter from 'Batson' to readers, telling them he planned to lead an ordinary life and would be handing over his duties to Marvelman; #24 featured the modified title ''Captain Marvel - the Marvelman'' and from #25 the title was renamed ''Marvelman'', with the new character taking over. A similar process would take place on sister title ''Captain Marvel Jr.'', which would become ''[[Young Marvelman (comic)|Young Marvelman]]''. The result was well-received by readers, and sales of ''Marvelman'' were actually larger than those of its predecessor. Anglo initially wrote and drew the strips himself; later other Gower Studio artists would work on the character, including [[James Bleach]], [[Norman Light]] and [[Don Lawrence]]. Marvelman would also occasionally appear in the pages of ''Young Marvelman'' and later starred the additional monthly title ''[[Marvelman Family]]'', which also featured [[Kid Miracleman|Kid Marvelman]]. However by 1961 sales were declining as imported American comics began to arrive on the British market, featuring full-colour strips rather than the black-and-white adventures of Marvelman. Miller switched ''Marvelman'' to a monthly reprint title, causing Anglo to unsuccessfully attempt to set up his own Anglo Features label after turning down an offer to work for Miller's son Arnold on his own venture. ''Marvelman'' finally ended in 1963, and the character went into obscurity.<ref name=MMClassic1TMS/> |
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===1982–1985=== |
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At the height of their success, the British "Marvels" saw a series of Italian reprints. Gordon and Gotch, one of Australia's largest comics publishers, also published reprint editions. In Brazil, British Marvelman stories were reprinted in the same titles as Fawcett's original Captain Marvel. However, in Brazil, Marvelman became Jack Marvel.<ref>{{cite web| first= Jotapê | last= Martins| url=http://omelete.uol.com.br/quadrinhos/miracleman-o-plagio-que-deu-certo/ |title=Miracleman, o plágio que deu certo | trans-title= Miracleman, the Plagiarism That Worked |work= Omelete.uol.com.br |date= August 14, 2000 | language= pt|access-date=2016-03-10 |url-status=dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20120307111604/http://omelete.uol.com.br/quadrinhos/miracleman-o-plagio-que-deu-certo/ |archive-date=March 7, 2012}}</ref> |
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{{main|Miracleman}} |
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In 1981 [[Dez Skinn]] opted to revive the character for anthology ''Warrior''. After his preferred choices turned him down, he became aware of Alan Moore's similar interest in reviving the character and requested a proposal. Impressed by the writer's ideas, Skinn commissioned Moore as writer for the strip, which debuted in the first issue of ''Warrior'' in March 1982.<ref name=KDS>{{cite book |last=Khoury |first=George |author-link= |date=2001 |title=Kimota! The Miracleman Companion |url= |location= |publisher=TwoMorrows Publishing |page= |isbn=9781605490274|chapter=Reign of the ''Warrior'' King}}</ref> Moore would later relate that he was drawn to the character's resemblance of the concept of the [[Übermensch]] from the writings of [[Friedrich Nietzsche]], a concept that would be frequently drawn on in this revival.<ref name=MMUS02>{{cite comic|title=[[Miracleman (Eclipse)|Miracleman]]|issue=#2|date=October 1985|publisher=[[Eclipse Comics]]|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|story=M*****man: Full Story and Pics}}</ref> After others had demurred, [[Garry Leach]] was assigned to draw the strip. He modelled the revised Marvelman on actor [[Paul Newman]] and redesigned the chest insignia into a more modern style. Leach and Moore opted for a graceful look for the character in contrast to the more common musclebound superhero archetype.<ref name=KGL>{{cite book |last=Khoury |first=George |author-link= |date=2001 |title=Kimota! The Miracleman Companion |url= |location= |publisher=TwoMorrows Publishing |page= |isbn=9781605490274|chapter=The Architect of Miracleman}}</ref> |
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The strip was a critical success, winning Favourite Comic Character (UK) at the 1984 [[Eagle Awards]],<ref name=Eagles>{{cite web|url=http://www.eagleawards.co.uk/category/previous-winners/1984/ |title=1984 |website=[[Eagle Awards]]|url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120314223905/http://www.eagleawards.co.uk/category/previous-winners/1984 |archive-date=March 14, 2012 }}</ref> and continued to be a success when [[Alan Davis]] took over as artist. Vintage Gower Street material would also be reprinted in the one-off ''Marvelman Special'', with the conceit it presented imaginary adventures of the character. However, creative differences between Moore<ref name=KAM/> and Davis would lead to the strip stalling in 1985; while [[Grant Morrison]] was eager to take over ''Marvelman'' the dispute would prevent the strip from returning before ''Warrior'' was cancelled in 1985 after its losses became unsustainable for Skinn.<ref name=KDS/> |
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Though the Marvelman titles were successful for a considerable time, this changed abruptly in 1959 when changes in British law allowed comics to be imported from the US. The black-and-white Marvelman books were unable to compete with the full color imports, forcing Miller to cancel ''Marvelman Family'', downgrade the other two titles to monthly status, and use reprinted adventures for their content. The two series survived until 1963, when Miller filed for bankruptcy.<ref name="Back34"/> The company ceased publishing altogether in 1966.<ref>{{cite web| url= https://www.comics.org/publisher/1979/ |title= L. Miller & Son | work= Grand Comics Database| via= comics.org| access-date= January 7, 2021}}</ref> |
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===1985–1993=== |
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The story was eventually picked up by American publisher Eclipse Comics in 1985. To avoid legal attention from Marvel Comics the series and its leads were renamed Miracleman; Moore had previously suggested this as an alternate title in his original proposal as a substitute name should the editor decide against reviving Marvelman,<ref name=KOP>{{cite book |last=Khoury |first=George |author-link= |date=2001 |title=Kimota! The Miracleman Companion |url= |location= |publisher=TwoMorrows Publishing |page= |isbn=9781605490274|chapter=Alan Moore's Original Proposal}}</ref> and had also used it in print for the name of a proxy version of the character that had featured briefly in his parallel work on [[Marvel UK]]'s ''[[Captain Britain]]'' strip. Those involved do not appear to have been aware of the name being previously considered by Anglo, or its use as the name given to a series of British reprints of the artist's Spanish-market ''[[Superhombre]]''. Moore was initially resistant to the name change due to Marvelman having predated the establishment of Marvel Comics but eventually agreed, though he would air his dissatisfaction with the issue in an essay printed in the second issue of the title.<ref name=MMUS02/> Eclipse began by printing coloured, relettered versions of the ''Warrior'' material before ''Miracleman'' #7 (cover dated April 1986) saw the story continue with new material. The series continued its critical success, and was by Eclipse's standards a sizeable commercial success. Initially [[Chuck Austen]] (then using his birthname Chuck Beckum) drew the new adventures before [[Rick Veitch]] continued the work. From ''Miracleman'' #11, [[John Totleben]] became regular artist until #16, which was also the final issue of Moore's run.<ref name=KMI>{{cite book |last=Khoury |first=George |author-link= |date=2001 |title=Kimota! The Miracleman Companion |url= |location= |publisher=TwoMorrows Publishing |page= |isbn=9781605490274|chapter=Miracleman Index}}</ref> |
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====Marvelman (in ''Warrior'')==== |
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A new British monthly black-and-white anthology comic, ''[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]]'', was launched in March 1982. Editor/publisher [[Dez Skinn]] had decided from the beginning to revive Marvelman as one of its features, explaining: |
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{{quote|It was always going to be Marvelman. I knew the character's history: I'd had a few Annuals as a kid and those cheap and nasty little comics. Wasn't particularly thrilled with them, outside of occasional stunning art, but I'd always had a soft spot for Mick Anglo ... So, given the difference between a brand-new character who would sell no more copies, or a somewhat forgotten character who might sell about a dozen more, I opted to follow the similar relaunch I'd done with [[Captain Britain]]—tease at first, then, as a bonus, surprise those who actually cared. If it failed, it was only six pages out of 52—the beauty of the anthology approach.<ref name="Back34"/>}} |
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Moore then passed over the title to [[Neil Gaiman]], having completed the stories he had planned for the character. Gaiman and new artist [[Mark Buckingham (comic book artist)|Mark Buckingham]] planned three six-issue storylines for the character, and opted for an anthology approach for the initial arc. As such "The Golden Age" focused more on Miracleman's impact on Earth than the character himself, who was more felt than seen across ''Miracleman'' #17-22, largely featuring in cameos by various literary devices such as flashbacks, imaginary sequences and fictions-within-fictions. Meanwhile Gaiman found that numerous other creators were interested in working on the character; to harness this and expand their revenue, Eclipse produced the three-issue limited series ''[[Miracleman: Apocrypha]]'', featuring contributions by the likes of [[Alex Ross]], [[Kurt Busiek]], [[Matt Wagner]], [[James Robinson (writer)|James Robinson]] and [[Darick Robertson]]. Gaiman and Buckingham provided a framing story for the series which established it as a collection of imaginary stories. Miracleman returned to being more central in the creative team's second arc, "The Silver Age". However, after only two issues of the storyline had been published Eclipse went bankrupt; this also prevented the publication of another spin-off mini-series called ''Miracleman Triumphant'', written by Fred Burke and drawn by [[Mike Deodato]] and taking place between Gaiman's first two arcs.<ref name=KNG>{{cite book |last=Khoury |first=George |author-link= |date=2001 |title=Kimota! The Miracleman Companion |url= |location= |publisher=TwoMorrows Publishing |page= |isbn=9781605490274|chapter=Ages of Gold, Silver and the Darkness}}</ref> |
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Skinn's first two choices to write Marvelman were [[Steve Parkhouse]] and [[Steve Moore (comics)|Steve Moore]]. Both expressed a lack of interest, and when Moore told Skinn that his friend [[Alan Moore]] (no relation to Steve) would "give his [[eye teeth]]" to write Marvelman, Skinn agreed to let him submit a pitch for the series.<ref name="Back34"/> Skinn's first picks for artist were [[Dave Gibbons]] and [[Brian Bolland]], but again both declined, leaving Skinn to reluctantly give the assignment to [[Garry Leach]], the one artist he could find with interest in the project.<ref name="Back34"/> Leach used actor [[Paul Newman]] as the model for his rendition of Marvelman.<ref name="Back34"/> |
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===1995–2008=== |
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''Warrior'' featured a new, darker version of Marvelman, written by Alan Moore, illustrated by Garry Leach (soon replaced by [[Alan Davis]] when Leach's laborious and perfectionist approach threatened deadlines),<ref name="Back34"/> and [[letterer|lettered]] by [[Annie Parkhouse]]. In the first issue of ''Warrior'', Michael Moran is presented as married, plagued by [[migraine]]s, having dreams of flying, and unable to remember a word that had such significance in his dreams. In his initial run of Marvelman stories, Moore touches on many themes of his later work, including the superhero as a source of terror, the sympathetic villain and exploring the mythology of an established fictional character. |
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{{see also|Ownership of Miracleman}} |
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Gaiman mistakenly believed at the time he owned a one-third share of the rights to the Miracleman characters, with the other two-thirds residing with Eclipse. As such he reached an arrangement with [[Charlton Media Group (Canada)|Roger Broughton]] to continue the series once the Canadian publisher purchased Eclipse's rights. However at the 1996 liquidation auction Broughton was outbid by [[Todd McFarlane]], who had collaborated with Gaiman on various ''[[Spawn (character)|Spawn]]'' spinoffs.<ref name=KWH>{{cite book |last=Khoury |first=George |author-link= |date=2001 |title=Kimota! The Miracleman Companion |url= |location= |publisher=TwoMorrows Publishing |page= |isbn=9781605490274|chapter=Whatever Happened to Our Miracleman?}}</ref> Gaiman began legal action while McFarlane remained sure he owned the character,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=122 |title=The Devil You Know…: An interview with Todd McFarlane |website=Comic Book Resources |date=2001-06-15 |access-date=2013-10-15}}</ref> and produced Miracleman merchandise. A reimagined Mike Moran, now a principled journalist at the ''New York Daily Times'', was added to the supporting cast of ''[[Hellspawn (comics)|Hellspawn]]'', a dark spin-off title of ''Spawn'', in February 2001.<ref>{{cite comic|title=[[Hellspawn (comics)|Hellspawn]]|issue=#6|date=February 2001|publisher=[[Image Comics]]|writer=[[Steve Niles|Niles, Steve]]|artist=[[Ashley Wood|Wood, Ashley]]|story=The Big League}}</ref> Artist [[Ashley Wood]] released teaser images of Miracleman ahead of his planned debut in ''Hellspawn'' #12. However, Wood left the book after ''Hellspawn'' #11 and the storyline was abandoned<ref name=KMI>{{cite book |last=Khoury |first=George |author-link= |date=2001 |title=Kimota! The Miracleman Companion |url= |location= |publisher=TwoMorrows Publishing |page= |isbn=9781605490274|chapter=Miracleman Index}}</ref> when Gaiman sued McFarlane in 2002.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.icv2.com/articles/news/1057.html |title=Miracleman Heads to Court |publisher=ICv2 |date=2002-01-27 |access-date=2013-10-15}}</ref> In-universe, the appearances were subsequently ascribed to the character [[Man of Miracles (comics)|Man of Miracles]], whose aspect is shaped by the perceptions of others. |
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===2009–present=== |
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''Warrior'' published a ''Marvelman Special'' collecting Mick Anglo stories within a frame story by Moore. The former Atlas Comics, renamed [[Marvel Comics]] shortly before the original ''Marvelman'' was cancelled, objected to the use of the word Marvel in the series title. This was used as the publisher's official explanation for why Marvelman ended on a cliffhanger with ''Warrior'' #21 (August 1984) while the anthology itself went on for another five issues, but the actual reason was a series of bitter financial arguments between Skinn and Moore.<ref name="Back34"/> With the series discontinued, Skinn licensed the material to American publishers, first to [[Pacific Comics]], and after Pacific's collapse, to [[Eclipse Comics]]. |
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Since 2001, Marvel editor-in-chief [[Joe Quesada]] had been among the major industry figures to support Gaiman in the dispute.<ref name="press conference">{{cite web| last= Weiland| first= Jonah |date=2003-06-27 |url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/news/newsitem.cgi?id=2406|title= Marvel's '1602' Press Conference|publisher=[[Comic Book Resources]]| access-date= 2008-02-18}}</ref> Marvel eventually discovered in 2009 that the rights to the Marvelman characters had resided with Anglo all along, having never been officially purchased by Skinn (who believed the character was in the public domain, and reached a private agreement with Anglo) in 1981. Marvel licensed the characters from Anglo directly and in 2010 began a series of reprints of classic material under the Marvelman name.<ref name=Bleeding1>{{cite web|url=https://bleedingcool.com/comics/recent-updates/marvel-to-publish-mick-anglos-marvelman-and-they-own-it/|website=Bleeding Cool|title=Marvel To Publish Mick Anglo's Marvelman – And They Own It|author=[[Rich Johnston]]|date=24 July 2009 }}</ref> In 2014 after further legal rights were secured, Marvel began to reprint the revival material, now named ''Miracleman'' once again.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/nycc-marvel-reprint-classic-alan-648083 |title=NYCC: Marvel to Reprint Classic Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman 'Miracleman' |publisher=Hollywoodreporter.com |date=2011-11-17 |access-date=2013-10-15}}</ref> Marvel published new material with the character in 2015,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=55283 |title=Marvel Announces New "Miracleman" from Morrison, Quesada, Milligan & Allred |website=Comic Book Resources |date=2014-09-04 |access-date=2015-04-29}}</ref> and Miracleman's logo was featured in the one-shot ''Timeless'' in 2021, foreshadowing his introduction to the [[Marvel Universe]].<ref>{{cite web |last=Rabiroff |first=Zach |date=2021-12-29 |title=Marvel's Timeless teases a surprising new addition to the Marvel Universe |url=https://www.polygon.com/22857488/marvel-timeless-kang-miracleman-marvelman-alan-moore-neil-gaima |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211230154007/https://www.polygon.com/22857488/marvel-timeless-kang-miracleman-marvelman-alan-moore-neil-gaiman |archive-date=2021-12-30 |access-date=2021-12-30 |website=Polygon |language=en}}</ref> |
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In October 2022, Gaiman and Buckingham continued The Silver Age storyline after a hiatus of nearly 30 years.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Neil Gaiman and Mark Buckingham 'Miracleman' Series Returns |url=https://www.marvel.com/articles/comics/miracleman-series-returns-neil-gaiman-mark-buckingham |access-date=2023-04-29 |website=Marvel Entertainment}}</ref> |
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====Name change to Miracleman==== |
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In August 1985, Eclipse began reprinting the Marvelman stories from ''Warrior'', coloured, and re-sized. They were renamed and re-lettered throughout as ''Miracleman'' to avoid further problems with Marvel Comics.<ref name="Back34"/> Issues 1–6 reprinted all the ''Warrior'' content, after which Eclipse began publishing new Miracleman stories from Moore and new artist Chuck Beckum (now known as [[Chuck Austen]]), soon replaced by [[Rick Veitch]] and then [[John Totleben]]. Eclipse split the rights to the character, with 2/3 going to Eclipse and 1/3 split between the current writer and artist of the series.<ref name="writeragree">{{cite web|last=Best |first=Daniel |url=http://ohdannyboy.blogspot.com.au/2011/09/miracleman-neil-gaimans-writers.html |title=20th Century Danny Boy: Miracleman: Neil Gaiman's Writer's Agreement |publisher=Ohdannyboy.blogspot.com.au |date=2011-09-03 |access-date=2013-10-15}}</ref> Moore wrote the series until issue 16. |
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==Fictional character biography== |
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A glimpse of how Moore originally meant the story to continue is presented in ''Warrior'' issue 4 (also called the ''Warrior Summer Special''), which features Marvelman and Aza Chorn gathering energy for the final battle with Kid Marvelman. |
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===Original=== |
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Having discovered the keyword to the universe through his experiments, [[Mississippi]]-based astro-scientist Guntag Barghelt travels the world searching for a worthy recipient of this power. After young Micky Moran first attempts to return a [[Dime (United States coin)|dime]] Barghelt dropped and then defends the scientist from a trio of hoodlums, the scientist takes the youth to his laboratory. There further tests reveal Micky has absolute integrity and a well-defined discernment of good and evil, and treats him in his atomic machine. Micky is granted the power to turn into the superpowered Marvelman whenever he speaks the keyword "Kimota". After Marvelman thwarts an attempt by the villainous Herman Schwein to capture Barghelt's notes, the scientist withdraws to an [[asteroid]] in outer space, knowing Marvelman will protect good on Earth.<ref name=MM65>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#65|story=The Birth of Marvelman|date=13 November 1954|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref> Micky works for the ''Daily Bugle'' newspaper as a copyboy and keeps his superhero identity secret from the world while using his power to protect the innocent. To help him fight evil, Marvelman would later call on the scientist again when impressed by the courage of messenger boy Dicky Dauntless, and calls up Barghelt once again. The scientist gives Dicky an elixir that allows him to transform into Young Marvelman, who would become Marvelman's ally in the fight against evil.<ref name=YM64>{{cite comic|title=Young Marvelman|issue=#64|date=6 November 1954|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|story=How Dicky Dauntless Became Young Marvelman|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|}}</ref> Marvelman later selected another youth, Johnny Bates, who was granted the ability to become Kid Marvelman.<ref name=MM102>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#102|date=30 July 1955|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|story=Introducing Kid Marvelman|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Don Lawrence|Lawrence, Don]]}}</ref> |
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Among his many victories, Marvelman prevented Boromanian spy Balco from using the experimental XB999 [[Nuclear weapons delivery|atomic bomber]] aircraft against [[Washington, D.C.|Washington]],<ref name=MM025a>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#25|story=Marvelman and the Atomic Bomber|date=3 February 1954|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref> prevented crooks from poisoning Oklabama's water supply with [[radium]],<ref name=MM025>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#25|story=Marvelman and the Stolen Radium|date=3 February 1954|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref> and foiled an attempt by Professor Gargunza to use memory-loss gas on the world.<ref name=MM026>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#26|story=Marvelman and the Lost-Memory Gas|date=10 February 1954|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref> Marvelman also crossed paths with [[mad scientist]] Dr. Gargunza, thwarting his plan to use animated skeletons to intimidate a judge.<ref name=MM027z>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#27|story=Marvelman and the Skeletons in the Cupboard|date=17 February 1954|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref> Gargunza would however return with numerous other amoral plans, which Marvelman again defeated.<ref name=MM033>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#33|story=Marvelman and the Super Heat Wave|date=31 March 1954|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref><ref name=MMGGM>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|story=Marvelman and the Great Gargunza Mystery|issue=#72-77|date=1 January to 5 February 1956|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref><ref name=MM159>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#159|story=Marvelman and the Stolen Kimota|date=1 September 1956|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|}}</ref><ref name=MMA56a>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman Annual|story=Gargunza's All Bad|date=1956|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref><ref name=MMA5b>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman Annual|story=Double Trouble|date=1956|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref><ref name=MM222>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#222|story=Marvelman and the Acid Vapour|date=16 November 1957|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|}}</ref><ref name=MMA57>{{cite comic|title=The Marvelman Annual|story=Marvelman and the Space Dustmen|date=1957|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref><ref name=MMA57a>{{cite comic|title=The Marvelman Annual|story=Gargunza's Voodoo Doll|date=1957|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref><ref name=MMA57d>{{cite comic|title=The Marvelman Annual|story=Gargunza's Atomic Suit|date=1957|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref><ref name=MM235>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#235|story=Magnetised Marvelman|date=15 February 1958|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|}}</ref><ref name=MM252>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#252|story=Coal in Space|date=13 June 1958|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|}}</ref><ref name=MMA58a>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman Annual|story=Gargunza Goes Straight|date=1958|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref><ref name=MMA59c>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman Annual|story=Pipe Dream|date=1959|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref><ref name=MMA60>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman Annual|story=Marvelman Becomes a Jinx|date=1960|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref> |
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===Miracleman: The Neil Gaiman years=== |
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Miracleman was a featured character in the mini-series ''[[Total Eclipse (comics)|Total Eclipse]]'' (1988–89). "Screaming", a short story by [[Neil Gaiman]] and [[Mark Buckingham (comic book artist)|Mark Buckingham]], appeared in ''Total Eclipse'' #4. This was Gaiman's first published Miracleman story. This story was reprinted in issue #21 and in "The Golden Age" trade paperback. |
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Other escapades Marvelman was involved in included preventing Boromanian attempts to sabotage Professor Jowik's new mega[[bathysphere]];<ref name=MM027>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#27|story=Marvelman Counters Sabotage|date=24 February 1954|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref> stopping the [[ice cream]]-crazed [[Yeti|Abominable Snowman]] and his [[Snowman]] minions;<ref name=MM030>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#30|story=Marvelman and the Abominable Snowman|date=10 March 1954|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref> defeating super-computer the Electronic Brain,;<ref name=MM029>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#29|story=Marvelman and the Electronic Brain|date=3 March 1954|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref> foiling a Boromanian plot to use scientist Doctor Ramado's miniaturised [[hydrogen bomb]] to blow up a [[table tennis]] tournament;<ref name=MM031>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#31|story=Marvelman and the Miniature Bomb Plot|date=17 March 1954|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref> saving oblivious astronaut Professor Swivelhead from his own oblivious behaviour;<ref name=MM031b>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#31|story=Marvelman and the Absent-Minded Spaceman|date=17 March 1954|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[James Bleach|Bleach, James]]}}</ref> clearing his name after [[circus]] [[strongman]] the Great Anvello framed him as a criminal;<ref name=MM032a>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#32|story=Marvelman and the Flase Marvelman|date=24 March 1954|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref> defeating scientist Cuprini's evil mirror image version of himself;<ref name=MM032>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#32|story=Marvelman and the Stolen Reflections|date=24 March 1954|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref> preventing destruction of a [[United States Navy]] squadron by a two-headed [[kraken]];<ref name=MM033b>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#33|story=Marvelman and the Kraken|date=31 March 1954|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[James Bleach|Bleach, James]]}}</ref> dealing with an epidemic of [[insomnia]] brought on by the King of the Land of Nod sulking;<ref name=MM034b>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#34|story=Marvelman and the Land of Nod|date=7 April 1954|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref> using a demonstration of his formidable powers to cause [[Martian]] War Lords to abort a planned invasion of Earth;<ref name=MM034>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#34|story=Marvelman and the Martian Menace|date=7 April 1954|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[James Bleach|Bleach, James]]}}</ref> stopping jealous electrical genius Austin Amps and his attempts to sabotage rival Oswald Ohms' all-electric town Wattingham;<ref name=MM096a>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#96|story=Marvelman Combats the Electric Terror|date=18 June 1955|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref> |
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Gaiman and Buckingham picked up the series at #17, which was published in June 1990. Three volumes were planned, consisting of six issues each: "The Golden Age," "The Silver Age" and "The Dark Age." "The Golden Age" showed the world some years later: a [[utopia]] gradually being transformed by alien technologies, and benignly ruled by Miracleman and other parahumans, though he has nagging doubts about whether he has done the right thing by taking power. Gaiman's focus in "The Golden Age" is less the heroes themselves than the people who live in this new world, including a lonely man who becomes one of Miraclewoman's lovers, a former spy (whose tale recalls [[J.G. Ballard]]'s short story "War Fever"), and several duplicates of [[Andy Warhol]]. |
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travelling back to [[1588]] and helping [[Royal Navy]] Captain Farnaby warn [[England]] about the [[Spanish Armada]];<ref name=MM096>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#96|story=Marvelman and the Spanish Armada|date=18 June 1955|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref> ending the crime spree of Professor Coisson's Marvelman II, a robot double of the hero;<ref name=MM168>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#168|story=Marvelman and the Robot Double|date=3 November 1956|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref> foiling the attempt of unlicensed [[dentist]] Mr. Nook to use misery gas in revenge for being exposed as a quack by Moran;<ref name=MMA56>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman Annual|story=Marvelman and the Misery Gas|date=1956|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref> putting an end to [[Nazi]] Otto Gruber's attempt to create a [[Fourth Reich]];<ref name=MM228>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#228|story=Marvelman and the Shadow of the Swastika|date=28 December 1957|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Norman Light|Light, Norman]]}}</ref> beating wizard Wizzo the Wizard and his mirror-henchman namlevraM;<ref name=MMA57c>{{cite comic|title=The Marvelman Annual|story=Marvelman Fights Marvelman|date=1957|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref> capturing embezzler Charles Crank despite his attempts to hide out on the [[Moon]]<ref name=MM268-269>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#268-269|story=Marvelman and the Moon Venturer|date=27 September - 4 October 1958|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref>}; thwarting the attempts of Menzari [[Motorsport|driver]] Heinz Vifter to beat rival Nevady driver Micky Desmond to the Golden Wheel via sabotage;<ref name=MM268a>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#268|story=Marvelman and the Ace Drivers|date=4 October 1958|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref> |
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exposing [[pickpocketing]] [[clown]]s from a travelling circus;<ref name=MM268>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#268|story=The Circus Comes to Town|date=4 October 1958|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref> forestalling an invasion from underground hat-wearing giant [[ant]]s;<ref name=MMA58>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman Annual|story=Giant Ant Plots to Rule Earth|date=1958|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]}}</ref> undoing disgruntled [[prop]] manager Eddie Gay's attempts to sabotage a [[Documentary film|documentary]] made by Peakpoint Films;<ref name=MMA59b>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman Annual|story=Marvelman - Stuntman|date=1959|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref> |
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uncovering [[cargo cult]]-leading machine Klashna;<ref name=MMA59q>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman Annual|story=Evil Monster of a Machine|date=1959|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref> |
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and halting elderly bad-luck projecting nuisance Irwin M. Trouble<ref name=MMA60c>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman Annual|story=Troublesome Mr. I.M. Trouble|date=1960|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref> |
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He would also team up with Young Marvelman and Kid Marvelman as the Marvelman Family to face threats such as Garrer and his army of time-travelling renegades;<ref name=MF01>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Don Lawrence|Lawrence, Don]]|story=Marvelman Family and the Invaders from the Future|title=Marvelman Family|issue=#1|date=October 1956| publisher=[[L. Miller & Son, Ltd.]]}}</ref> a combined alliance of Marvelman's arch-enemy Doctor Gargunza and his nephew, Young Marvelman rogue Young Gargunza;<ref name=MF02>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Don Lawrence|Lawrence, Don]]|title=Marvelman Family|issue=#2|date=November 1956| publisher=[[L. Miller & Son, Ltd.]]|story=Marvelman Family and the Shadow Stealers}}</ref> the King of Vegetableland;<ref name=MF03>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Don Lawrence|Lawrence, Don]]|title=Marvelman Family|issue=#4|date=February 1957| publisher=[[L. Miller & Son, Ltd.]]|story=Marvelman Family and the Giant Marrow}}</ref> invaders from the planet Vardica;<ref name=MF04>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Don Lawrence|Lawrence, Don]]|title=Marvelman Family|issue=#4|date=March 1957| publisher=[[L. Miller & Son, Ltd.]]|story=Marvelman Family and the Hollow Planet}}</ref> would-be dictator Professor Batts and his speech-scramber;<ref name=MF08>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Don Lawrence|Lawrence, Don]]|title=Marvelman Family|issue=#8|date=July 1957| publisher=[[L. Miller & Son, Ltd.]]|story=Marvelman Family and the Speech Scrambler}}</ref> a crime boss intent on sinking Pacific City below the ocean;<ref name=MF09>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Don Lawrence|Lawrence, Don]]|title=Marvelman Family|issue=#9|date=August 1957| publisher=[[L. Miller & Son, Ltd.]]|story=Marvelman Family and the City Under the Sea}}</ref> the cruel, slave-driving King Snop of [[Atlantis]] (which the story revealed would eventually become [[Australia]]);<ref name=MF10>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Don Lawrence|Lawrence, Don]]|title=Marvelman Family|issue=#10|date=September 1957| publisher=[[L. Miller & Son, Ltd.]]|story=Marvelman Family and the Atlantis Fable}}</ref> an attempt by Gargunza to declare himself King of the Universe;<ref name=MF14>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Don Lawrence|Lawrence, Don]]|title=Marvelman Family|issue=#14|date=March 1958| publisher=[[L. Miller & Son, Ltd.]]|story=Marvelman Family and King Gargunza}}</ref> cruel 14th century knight Simon de Carton (clearing the name of [[Amadís de Gaula|Amadis of Gaul]] in the process);<ref name=MF18>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Don Lawrence|Lawrence, Don]]|title=Marvelman Family|issue=#18|date=July 1958| publisher=[[L. Miller & Son, Ltd.]]|story=Amadis of Gaul}}</ref> a monster accidentally collected from the planet Droon;<ref name=MF29>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Norman Light|Light, Norman]]|title=Marvelman Family|issue=#29|date=August 1959| publisher=[[L. Miller & Son, Ltd.]]|story=The Mighty Marvelman Family and the Dragons of Great Droon}}</ref> and Professor Wosmine's shrinking ray<ref name=MF30>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Don Lawrence|Lawrence, Don]]|title=Marvelman Family|issue=#30|date=August 1957| publisher=[[L. Miller & Son, Ltd.]]|story=The Mighty Marvelman Family and 'Jungle Fury'}}</ref> |
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Eclipse followed up "The Golden Age" by publishing the standalone, three-issue mini-series ''Miracleman: Apocrypha'', written and illustrated by a variety of other creators, with framing pages by Gaiman and Buckingham. These stories did not form part of the main narrative, but instead further fleshed out the world of "The Golden Age". Two issues of "The Silver Age" appeared, but Eclipse went bankrupt in 1994, ceasing publication of Miracleman with issue #24. Issue #25 was completed but never published.<ref name="kimota">{{cite book|last1=Khoury|first1=George|title=Kimota!: The Miracleman Companion |date= 2001 |publisher= [[TwoMorrows Publishing]]|location=Raleigh, North Carolina| isbn= 9781893905115 |page= 49 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=FDVJZGoHcboC&q=Kimota!|access-date=28 January 2017}}</ref> |
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===Revival=== |
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Gaiman had approved a spin-off series, ''Miracleman: Triumphant'', written by Fred Burke, penciled by [[Mike Deodato|Mike Deodato Jr]] and inked by [[Jason Temujin Minor (artist)|Jason Temujin Minor]]. Most of the first issue of ''Miracleman: Triumphant'' was complete and ready for printing, and the second was scripted, but like ''Miracleman'' #25, the two issues remained in publishing limbo after Eclipse collapsed.{{citation needed|date=February 2014}} Issues #23 and #24 saw the resurrection of Young Miracleman and described the beginnings of trouble in Miracleman's idyllic world. A few pages of issue #25 were leaked to various websites, and appear in George Khoury's book ''Kimota! The Miracleman Companion''. "The Dark Age" would have seen the full return of Kid Miracleman and completed the story. |
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==== Book One: 'A Dream Of Flying' - written by Alan Moore ==== |
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===Ownership battle=== |
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Two decades later, Mike Moran is a middle-aged man working as a freelance journalist and happily married to Liz, but he is suffering from mid-life crisis and is plagued by headaches. He remembers nothing of his adventures as Miracleman, but has recurring dreams of flying and of the terrible fate that apparently befell the Miracleman family when they were caught in a nuclear explosion. |
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In 1996, [[Todd McFarlane]] purchased Eclipse's creative assets, including the purported Miracleman rights, for a total of $25,000.<ref name="writeragree"/> |
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When a peaceful protest at an atomic power station is overtaken by terrorists, Moran is present and is taken hostage. In the throes of a migraine - he sees the ‘magic word’ (that has eluded him for decades but haunts his dreams) written on a glass door: ‘Kimota’. When he speaks this aloud he transforms into Miracleman, incapacitates the terrorists and flies away. |
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In 2001, McFarlane said that he owned all rights related to Miracleman, dismissing Neil Gaiman's claims of co-ownership, and announced that the character would appear in ''[[Hellspawn (comics)|Hellspawn]]''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=122 |title=The Devil You Know…: An interview with Todd McFarlane |website=Comic Book Resources |date=2001-06-15 |access-date=2013-10-15}}</ref> McFarlane introduced Mike Moran (Miracleman's alter ego) in ''Hellspawn'' #6, with the alleged intention of returning Miracleman himself in ''Hellspawn'' #13. McFarlane included Miracleman in his section of what was then the long-delayed Image 10th Anniversary Book. He released a Miracleman cold-cast statue as well as a {{convert|4|in|cm|adj=on}} scale action figure that was partnered with Spawn in a San Diego Comicon exclusive two-pack. It had been McFarlane's intention to use the character in his core title.{{Citation needed|date=March 2014}} Since the Hardcover story became a direct tie-in to the events of ''Spawn'' #150 and beyond, Miracleman was changed into a mysterious new character known as the [[Man of Miracles (comics)|Man of Miracles]]. His appearance as Miracleman is explained by Man of Miracles' ability to shape-shift and the fact that people see him as they wish. |
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Miracleman returns home to a startled Liz and attempts to explain his newly-remembered backstory. Liz is initially skeptical but eventually convinced, and they spend the night together. |
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In 2001, Gaiman formed Marvels and Miracles LLC, a company whose goal was to clear up the ownership of Miracleman long-term.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/news/newsitem.cgi?id=567 |title=Neil Gaiman returns to comics with Marvel project |website=Comic Book Resources |date=2001-10-24 |access-date=2013-10-15}}</ref> In 2002 Gaiman sued McFarlane over his unauthorised use of Miracleman and the characters he had created for Spawn.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.icv2.com/articles/news/1057.html |title=Miracleman Heads to Court |publisher=ICv2 |date=2002-01-27 |access-date=2013-10-15}}</ref> According to Gaiman, the evidence presented in the course of the lawsuit revealed that the rights for Miracleman were not included in McFarlane's purchase of Eclipse Comics assets.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://journal.neilgaiman.com/2004/02/last-legal-post-for-long-time.asp |title=Neil Gaiman's Journal: Last Legal Post for a long time |publisher=Journal.neilgaiman.com |date=2004-02-25 |access-date=2013-10-15}}</ref> Also in 2002, Gaiman wrote the ''[[Marvel 1602|1602]]'' series for Marvel. Gaiman's profits from this series went to Marvels and Miracles LLC to aid his legal fight over Miracleman.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sequart.com/marvel1602.htm |title=Sequart Research & Literacy Organization | advancing comics as art |publisher=Sequart.com |access-date=2013-10-15}}</ref> Gaiman's dedication in the collected editions of ''1602'' reads, in part, "To Todd, for making it necessary". |
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Miracleman’s appearance is noticed by Johnny Bates, who has become a very successful international businessman in the intervening decades. Bates invites Mike and Liz to his offices, and though they are initially convinced by his story Mike confronts Bates with his suspicions that he has become corrupted by his powers. These suspicions are confirmed when Kid Miracleman attacks. Transforming into Miracleman, Moran attempts to fight Kid Miracleman but is overpowered and only spared by Bates mistakenly speaking his ‘magic word’ and transforming back into a young boy. Miracleman and Liz escape, leaving the young Johnny Bates in the hands of the authorities. |
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It emerged in 2009 that original creator Mick Anglo had retained the rights to Marvelman from the beginning, meaning that the purchase of those rights by [[Quality Communications]], Eclipse and McFarlane was illegitimate.<ref name="Back34"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=22429 |title=McFarlane Responds to Marvelman News |website=Comic Book Resources |date=2009-08-06 |access-date=2013-10-15}}</ref> |
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As a result of their single night together, Liz becomes pregnant with Miracleman’s child, an event that fuels Mike Moran’s feelings of inadequacy in comparison to his superhuman alter-ego. |
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[[File:Miracleman01Quesada.jpg|thumb|left|Marvel Comics' ''Miracleman'' #1, art by [[Joe Quesada]]]] |
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At the [[San Diego Comic Con]] in 2009, Marvel Comics announced they had purchased the rights to Marvelman, "one of the most important comic book characters in decades", from Mick Anglo.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=22203 |title=CCI: Cup O Joe – Marvelman at Marvel |website=Comic Book Resources |date=2009-07-24 |access-date=2013-10-15}}</ref> In June 2010, a "Marvelman Classic Primer" one-shot was published, featuring new art and interviews with Mick Anglo and others involved in Marvelman's history. In July 2010, a new ongoing series called ''Marvelman Family’s Finest'' launched reprinting "Marvelman’s greatest adventures." A hardcover reprint edition, ''Marvelman Classic Vol. 1'', was released in August 2010.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=25363 |title=Marvelman Returns In June |website=Comic Book Resources |access-date=2013-10-15}}</ref> These reprints contain only early material. Alan Moore has stated that he would donate some of his royalties from any Marvel reprints of his Marvelman stories to Mick Anglo.<ref>{{cite web|last=Ó Méalóid |first=Pádraig |url=http://forbiddenplanet.co.uk/blog/2009/05/the-mighty-moore-marathon-part-three-of-padraigs-talk-with-alan-moore/ |title=The Mighty Moore Marathon – part three of Pádraig's talk with Alan Moore – Forbidden Planet Blog |publisher=Forbiddenplanet.co.uk |date=2009-05-08 |access-date=2013-10-15}}</ref> |
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The ‘Spookshow’, a government agency, recruits Evelyn Cream to kill Moran. Cream instead kidnaps Moran and they agree to work together to discover Miracleman’s real origins. This leads them to a hidden bunker in the countryside where Miracleman encounters various ineffectual traps and a deranged superhuman called Big Ben, who he subdues effortlessly. |
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===Marvel Comics=== |
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At New York Comic Con 2013, Marvel announced that they had solidified their rights to Miracleman and that Neil Gaiman would finish the story he had started 25 years earlier.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/nycc-marvel-reprint-classic-alan-648083 |title=NYCC: Marvel to Reprint Classic Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman 'Miracleman' |publisher=Hollywoodreporter.com |date=2011-11-17 |access-date=2013-10-15}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=48465 |title=NYCC: Cup O' Joe Announces Miracleman's Return |website=Comic Book Resources |access-date=2013-10-15}}</ref> The series adopted a giant-sized format, with each issue containing a reprint of the corresponding issue of the Eclipse Comics series, reprints of select Mick Anglo Marvelman stories, and non-fiction material such as essays, photos and Marvelman design sketches.{{Citation needed|date=March 2014}} The first issue, reprinting the recolored and relettered stories from ''Warrior'' #1 & 2/''Miracleman'' #1, was released on January 15, 2014. |
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Once inside the bunker, Miracleman is confronted with the true nature of his past: he is the result of an experimental program by the British government to create superhumans as an escalation of the Cold War arms race. The program is derived from alien technology discovered in the 1950s and adapted and overseen by Dr Emil Gargunza, an ex-Nazi scientist given shelter by the British government. It is revealed that his entire past has been a virtual reality fiction created to subdue him and the rest of the Miracleman Family and make them pliable as super-weapons. Enraged by this, Miracleman destroys much of the bunker and, once calmed by Cream, returns home. |
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The reprints continued, collecting remastered and recolored work of the original run, with hardcover collections following. In September 2014 the first new Miracleman material under the Marvel Comics banner was announced. Featuring a 'lost' story by [[Grant Morrison]] that they wrote in the 1980s, and drawn by [[Joe Quesada]], it was joined by a brand new story by [[Peter Milligan]] and [[Mike Allred]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=55283 |title=Marvel Announces New "Miracleman" from Morrison, Quesada, Milligan & Allred |website=Comic Book Resources |date=2014-09-04 |access-date=2015-04-29}}</ref> |
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==== Book Two: 'The Red King Syndrome' - Written By Alan Moore ==== |
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The reprints proceeded through #16 when the series was retitled ''Miracleman: The Golden Age'' which reprinted issues 17–22.{{Citation needed|date=March 2017}} ''Miracleman by Gaiman & Buckingham: The Silver Age'' issues 1 to 3 were announced for release in 2017<ref>{{cite web|last=|first=|date=2017-01-10|title=Miracleman by Gaiman & Buckingham: The Silver Age (2017) #1 | Comics|url=http://marvel.com/comics/issue/58527/miracleman_by_gaiman_buckingham_the_silver_age_2017_1|url-status=dead|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=2017-03-11|website=|publisher=Marvel.com}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=|first=|date=2017-02-07|title=Miracleman by Gaiman & Buckingham: The Silver Age (2017) #2 | Comics|url=http://marvel.com/comics/issue/58530/miracleman_by_gaiman_buckingham_the_silver_age_2017_2|url-status=dead|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=2017-03-11|website=|publisher=Marvel.com}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=|first=|date=|title=Miracleman by Gaiman & Buckingham: The Silver Age (2017) #3 | Comics|url=http://marvel.com/comics/issue/58533/miracleman_by_gaiman_buckingham_the_silver_age_2017_3|url-status=dead|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=2017-03-11|website=|publisher=Marvel.com}}</ref> but those solicitations were cancelled shortly thereafter. At the 2018 San Diego Comic Con at a retailer only event Marvel announced legal hurdles causing the cancellation had been resolved and the new series was supposed to begin publication in 2019 with the previously announced creative team of Gaiman and Buckingham on board.<ref name="Newsarama.com">{{cite web|url=https://www.newsarama.com/40951-neil-gaiman-resumes-work-on-new-miracleman-stories-for-marvel.html |title=Work on NEIL GAIMAN's MIRACLEMAN Resumed For 2019 Release |publisher=Newsarama.com |date=2018-07-20| access-date=2018-07-29}}</ref> As of November 2021, despite reports from Marvel and Gaiman that the series is being worked on, the new series had not yet appeared nor have any issues of it been solicited. |
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As the birth of her and Miracleman’s child grows near Liz is kidnapped by Gargunza, now living in Paraguay, where Liz is taken. Whilst she is held captive Gargunza relates to her his life story, telling of how he worked on the Zarathustra Project, adapting the technology of a crashed spaceship and creating the Miracleman Family. He hopes to transfer his consciousness into the body of Miracleman’s child, thus achieving immortality. |
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Miracleman and Cream travel to Paraguay and confront Gargunza. However, Gargunza has implanted another ‘magic word’ which changes Miracleman back into a defenceless Mike Moran for an hour. He then sets his ‘Miracledog’ - a monstrous, genetically altered super-animal - on Moran and Cream. Cream is killed and Moran is maimed but he remembers the ‘magic word’ Gargunza used on the dog and it reverts back to its harmless original form, whereupon Moran kills it and evades Gargunza’s mercenaries until such time as he can change back to Miracleman. When he does, he slaughters Gargunza’s guards, kills Gargunza and rescues Liz who then gives birth to a daughter, Winter - who can already speak. |
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==Fictional character biography== |
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===Alan Moore version=== |
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Michael Moran is working as a freelance reporter when he gets caught up in a terrorist raid on a new atomic power plant. Seeing the word "atomic" backwards ("cimota") while he was carried past a door with the word written on glass, he remembers the word "Kimota"; Marvelman is reborn and saves the day.<ref>Moore, Alan with Garry Leach. "A Dream of Flying," ''Warrior'' #1 (Quality Communications, Mar. 1982).</ref> As Marvelman, Moran remembers his early life as a superhero, and explains to his wife Liz that he lost his memories when all of the Marvelman family were caught in an atomic explosion.<ref>Moore, Alan with Garry Leach. Untitled story, ''Warrior'' #2 (Quality Communications, Apr. 1982).</ref> Marvelman's reappearance catches the attention of Johnny Bates ([[Kid Marvelman]]), who not only survived, but lived on with his memories and superpowers intact. Bates, however, was corrupted by his power and became a bitter [[Psychopathy|sociopath]].<ref>Moore, Alan with Garry Leach. "When Johnny Comes Marching Home...", ''Warrior'' #3 (Quality Communications, July 1982).</ref> After a brutal confrontation, Kid Marvelman says his magic word ("Marvelman") by mistake and reverts to his alter-ego, the 13-year-old Johnny Bates. The boy, innocent but aware of the evil he committed as Kid Marvelman, mentally recoils in shock and falls into a [[Catatonia|catatonic state]]. |
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Back in England, domestic tensions between Mike and Liz are exacerbated by Liz’s mood swings - which she suspects are caused by Winter, who is developing at an unusually accelerated rate. Meanwhile two alien agents are tracking Moran, but are themselves being followed by a mystery woman. |
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With the aid of renegade British Secret Service agent Evelyn Cream, and after a short fight with a new British superhero called [[Big Ben (comics)|Big Ben]], Marvelman makes his way to a top-secret military bunker. There, he discovers the remains of an alien spacecraft and two non-human skeletons fused together. Marvelman views a file that reveals his entire experience as a superhero was a simulation as part of a military research project, codename "Project [[Thus Spoke Zarathustra|Zarathustra]]", attempting to enhance the human body using the alien technology. Moran and the other subjects had been kept unconscious, their minds fed with stories and villains plucked from comic books (which comprised the original stories) by the researchers, for fear of what they could do if they awoke. As a result, it was decided that the project was to be terminated, and so were Marvelman and his two companions: in a final, real adventure they were sent into a trap where a nuclear device was meant to annihilate them. Moran survived, his memory erased, and [[Young Marvelman|Young Miracleman]] died. In the meantime, it's revealed that Liz had conceived a child with Marvelman, which has the potential of being the first naturally-born superhuman on Earth. |
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==== Book Three: 'Olympus' - Written By Alan Moore ==== |
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In issue #21 of ''Warrior'', Moran meets his dream-world nemesis Dr. Gargunza (loosely based on [[Doctor Sivana]]). In "reality", Gargunza was the scientific genius behind the experiment that created Marvelman. Gargunza, after working as a [[geneticist]] for the [[Nazism|Nazis]], had been recruited by the British after World War II. Unable to keep pace with the U.S. and Soviet [[nuclear arms race]], the British had backed Gargunza to use genetics to develop a new superweapon. By coincidence, an alien spacecraft crashed in the UK around 1947 and Gargunza was able to [[Reverse engineering|reverse-engineer]] enough technology to create the Marveldog. The alien technology, and thus the Zarathustra project, consisted of growing an advanced second body, which was stored in an extradimensional pocket of space when not in use. When a special word was spoken, the two bodies switched place in space and the consciousness was transferred. After the project's cancellation, Gargunza escaped to South America. It's revealed that Gargunza has a deeper purpose: after the death of his mother, he has a mortality complex and intends that the child of Marvelman will host his own consciousness. |
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The aliens - of the race The Qys - attack Moran, who becomes Miracleman and attempts to fight them off, but the aliens are able to change bodies in a manner similar to Moran / Miracleman himself and easily defeat him. Upon learning of Winter’s existence, they turn their attention to Liz but are thwarted by the mystery woman, who reveals herself to be Avril Lear - Miraclewoman - and tells the story of her past as another of Gargunza’s experiments. |
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The Qys take Miracleman and Miraclewoman to their homeworld where the future of the Miracleman Family - and Earth itself - is discussed by the ambassadors of the Qys and their mortal enemies the Warpsmiths. Miraclewoman convinces the assembly that Earth should be a neutral world wherein the two cultures can work together and hopefully achieve some form of understanding. |
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Moran's daughter is born in ''Miracleman'' #9 (which became controversial due to a highly graphic [[childbirth|birth]] scene, based on medical illustrations of the process);{{citation needed|date=February 2014}} two races of aliens, one called Warpsmiths, the other called ''Qys'' (who were behind the original body-swapping technology) come to Earth; [[Miraclewoman]] emerges; and certain native super-humans are revealed to already be living on Earth, such as Firedrake. |
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After returning to Earth Miracleman finds himself growing apart from his human ties as Liz leaves him and Winter [who is physically a small child but already beyond even Miracleman himself in terms of mental development] leaves Earth to find and learn from The Qys. |
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Now out of his catatonia, the small and spindly Johnny Bates is repeatedly beaten by older bullies at his group home. When one of them goes so far as to try to rape him, Johnny transforms into Kid Miracleman and unleashes a murderous holocaust on [[London]]. When the Miracles discover what is happening, they and their alien allies collectively challenge Bates. One of the Warpsmiths, Aza Chorn, realizes that they cannot go through Bates' personal force field, and instead teleports some wreckage into his body, forcing him to transform into his mortal form to escape the horrific pain. His rampage is stopped, but Bates kills Aza Chorn as his last act. Unwilling to risk another chance for repeating this horror and out of mercy for his former charge, Miracleman quietly kills Johnny Bates, knowing that it is the only way to be certain it will never happen again. The heart of London, however, has been destroyed, 40,000 people are dead, Aza Chorn lies dead, and the world now knows that gods walk among them. |
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Mike Moran, his life turned upside down, commits a form of suicide by trekking into the wilderness and leaving a small memorial for himself to find when he transforms for a last time into Miracleman. Miracleman understands this gesture and never returns to his human form again. |
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Moore's last issue, number 16 ("Olympus") ends with a depiction of Miracleman's [[apotheosis]], as he and his superhuman allies bring the entire planet under their [[Totalitarianism|totalitarian]] control. Miracleman and his companions, explicitly compared to gods, now rule the planet as they see fit, though they are ineffectively opposed by groups such as an alliance of [[Christianity|Christian]] and [[Islam|Islamic]] [[Fundamentalism|fundamentalists]]. The "age of miracles" is ostensibly benevolent, but in scenes such as the final conversation between Miracleman and Liz, Moore suggests that Miracleman has lost his humanity and that his utopia will ultimately be harmful to mankind.{{Or|date=January 2017}} The issue ends with Miracleman sitting in Aza Chorn Memorial Park, thinking about everything that has happened in his life up to this point and wondering if he has done the right thing. |
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With the help of Qys and Warpsmith agents including Aza Chorn, the initial alien/superhuman project is to gather together all the remaining superhumans on Earth and work in secret to begin to nudge Earth towards a more enlightened path. This is cut short, however, by the sudden re-emergence of Kid Miracleman. |
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Neil Gaiman's run begins with issue #17. |
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Johnny Bates, who has been kept at a children’s home in England, has been attempting to keep his alter-ego at bay; but the brutal abuse he suffers at the hands of fellow inmates forces him to transform into a vengeful Kid Miracleman, who then destroys half of London in Miracleman’s temporary absence and kills forty thousand people. When he is discovered, a battle ensues where Miracleman and his cohorts - with apparently little regard for human life - attempt to subdue him. |
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==Alternative versions== |
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An alternative version of Marvelman is seen in the British comic ''[[The Daredevils]]'' #7 (1983) (owned by [[Marvel UK]]) in the [[Captain Britain]] story. Actually called Miracleman (the first time the name was attached to the character), he is killed by [[Fury (Marvel Comics)|the Fury]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix/miracl.htm |title=Miracleman (Earth-238) |publisher=Marvunapp.com |access-date=2013-10-15}}</ref> His junior partner, named 'Rick' and never explicitly identified as Young Miracleman, is married to that world's Captain Britain. Rick is seen to be killed by the Fury, but is rescued by Roma. |
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Kid Miracleman is only eventually defeated by a dying Aza Chorn and, mortally wounded, transforms back to Johnny Bates. Miracleman then kills Bates to prevent him ever becoming Kid Miracleman again. In the ruins of London, surrounded by thousands of dead and dying, Miracleman now realises the world can never be the same. |
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The ''[[A1 (comics)|A1 Sketchbook]]'', released in late 2004 by [[Atomeka Press]], included four Miracleman-related pin-ups (although the pin-ups were not labelled as Miracleman, likely to avoid further legal entanglements) by original Miracleman artist [[Garry Leach]]. A variant of the sketchbook was also produced, with a "Miracleman" front cover and "Kid Miracleman" back cover by Leach. |
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He and Miraclewoman reshape the world into a utopia. All the practical ills of human society are cured, and the offer of superhuman powers and children is gradually taken up by a humanity who regard the Miracleman Family as gods. The pantheon of new gods build Olympus, a huge temple in the ruins of Central London where they are worshipped by human acolytes. Despite having created a utopia, Miracleman is haunted by Liz’s accusation that he has lost touch with his humanity. |
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==Collected editions== |
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<!-- Deleted image removed: [[File:Miraclemanbook3.JPG|thumb|Cover to the collected ''Miracleman'' Book 3. Art by [[John Totleben]].]] --> |
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As of August 2010, Marvel has started reprinting the original Mick Anglo Marvelman stories, beginning with the character's first appearance in issue #25. |
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* ''Marvelman Classic Hardcover Vol. 1'', by Mick Anglo. Collects Marvelman (Vol. 1, 1954) issues 25, 27–34. |
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**Hardcover: Marvel Comics, 2010. {{ISBN|0-7851-4376-9}}. |
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==== Books Four and Five: 'The Golden Age' & 'The Silver Age' - Written By Neil Gaiman with Mark Buckingham ==== |
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The Miracleman comics published by Eclipse were collected into a number of individual [[trade paperback (comics)|volumes]] in the 1990s. All of these books are currently [[out of print]]. |
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After a series of short stories detailing the effects of this new society on ordinary humans and supporting characters from the series ['The Golden Age'], the main story picks up again in the year 2001 ['The Silver Age'], where Young Miracleman - Dickie Dauntless - is revived but has a great deal of trouble adjusting to the new world he finds himself in. |
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* ''Miracleman Book One: A Dream of Flying'', by Alan Moore, Garry Leach, Alan Davis. Collects ''Miracleman'' issues 1–3, (which in turn reprinted stories from ''Warrior'' issues 1–11). |
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**Paperback: Eclipse Books, 1990. {{ISBN|0-913035-61-0}}. |
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**Hardcover: Eclipse Books, 1990. {{ISBN|0-913035-62-9}}. |
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* ''Miracleman Book Two: The Red King Syndrome'', by Alan Moore, Alan Davis, John Ridgeway, Chuck Beckum, Rick Veitch. Collects ''Miracleman'' issues 4–6, (which in turn reprinted stories from ''Warrior'' issues 12–21) and ''Miracleman'' issues 7, 9, and 10. [Issue 8, containing 1950s reprint material, was omitted]. |
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**Paperback: Eclipse Books, 1990. {{ISBN|1-56060-036-5}}. |
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**Hardcover: Eclipse Books, 1991. {{ISBN|1-56060-035-7}}. |
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* ''Miracleman Book Three: Olympus'', by Alan Moore and John Totleben. Collects issues 11–16. |
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**Paperback: Eclipse Books, 1991. {{ISBN|1-56060-080-2}}. |
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**Hardcover: Eclipse Books, 1991. {{ISBN|1-56060-079-9}}. |
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* ''Miracleman Book Four: The Golden Age'', by Neil Gaiman and Mark Buckingham. Collects issues 17–22, but does not contain the "Retrieval" storyline published in those issues. |
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**Paperback: Eclipse Books, 1992. {{ISBN|1-56060-168-X}}. |
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**Paperback: HarperCollins, 1993. {{ISBN|0-06-105005-9}}. |
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* ''Miracleman: Apocrypha'', by various. |
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**Paperback: Eclipse Books, 1992. {{ISBN|1-56060-189-2}}. |
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Miraclewoman convinces Miracleman that Dauntless is infatuated with him, and Miracleman attempts to kiss him to assuage his frustrations. This shocks and enrages Dauntless, whose attitudes towards sexuality and the world in general are still very much those of the 1950s. He leaves Olympus to discover himself in the changed world of 2001. Landing in the Himalaya mountains, a bewildered Dauntless ends up meeting Bill Caxton (Mister Master), the first superhuman created by Miracleman and also the only to ever give up his powers. Inspired by this experience, and accompanied by the somewhat directionless but enhanced Meta-Maid, Dauntless finds the orphanage where he grew up prior to being abducted by Gargunza. In an extended flashback, Dauntless remembers the physical and mental abuse he experienced before changing back to his Young Miracleman form and vowing to confront Miracleman. |
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Marvel has begun collecting their recolored reprints of the Miracleman comics originally published by Eclipse. The first hardcover edition, ''A Dream of Flying'', was released in May, 2014 with the second volume, ''The Red King Syndrome'', published later that same year, and volume three, ''Olympus'' published in 2015.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://marvel.com/comics/collection/50518/miracleman_book_1_a_dream_of_flying_hardcover |title=Miracleman Book 1: A Dream of Flying (Hardcover) | Comic Books | Comics |publisher=Marvel.com |access-date=2014-08-01}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=Miracleman Book 3: Olympus (9780785154662): Alan Moore, John Totleben: Books |date= 2015-04-21|isbn = 978-0785154662}}</ref> |
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* ''Miracleman Book One: A Dream of Flying'', by [[Alan Moore]] (credited as "The Original Writer"),<ref name="Bleedingcool.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.bleedingcool.com/2013/10/17/the-original-writer-formerly-known-as-alan-moore/ |title=The Original Writer Formerly Known As Alan Moore – Bleeding Cool Comic Book, Movie, TV News |publisher=Bleedingcool.com |date=2013-10-17 |access-date=2014-08-01}}</ref> Mick Anglo, Garry Leach, Alan Davis, Steve Dillon. Collects ''Miracleman'' issues 1–4. |
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** Hardcover: Marvel Comics, 2014. {{ISBN|0-78515-462-0}}. |
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* ''Miracleman Book Two: The Red King Syndrome'', by Alan Moore ("The Original Writer"),<ref name="Bleedingcool.com"/> [[Chuck Austen]], Rick Veitch, John Totleben. Collects ''Miracleman'' issues 5–10. |
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** Hardcover: Marvel Comics, 2014. {{ISBN|0-78515-464-7}}. |
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* ''Miracleman Book Three: Olympus'', by Alan Moore ("The Original Writer"),<ref name="Bleedingcool.com"/> [[Grant Morrison]], [[Peter Milligan]], John Totleben, [[Joe Quesada]], [[Mike Allred]]. Collects ''Miracleman'' issues 11–16, ''Miracleman Annual'' #1. |
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** Hardcover: Marvel Comics, 2015. {{ISBN|0-78515-466-3}}. |
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In the finale of this series, Miracleman meets Young Miracleman who after rebuking his options and criticising this present world states "I'm going to be your adversary. Not now. But One Day. I'm going to be the opposition. If this is Eden, I'm going to be the Serpent.". Ultimately agreeing to these terms, Miracleman lets Young Miracleman leave where he starts meditating for prolonged periods and begins a social movement. Under Miraclewoman's encouragement, Miracleman unofficially cedes Australia for Young Miracleman. In the final panels of the series, Young Miracleman hears the voice from Kid Miracleman from infra-space asking to be let out. |
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==References== |
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{{Reflist}} |
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The series is to be concluded in Book 6, The Dark Age. |
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==Further reading== |
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*''The Origin of Marvelman'', by [[Matthew H. Gore]], ''Comic Book Marketplace'' #22 |
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*''Boardman Comics Monographs #1: The Origin of Marvelman'', by [[Matthew H. Gore]], 48 pages, [[Boardman Books]], 2006 |
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==Powers and abilities== |
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==External links== |
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Miracleman can fly, has super-strength and is invulnerable. The source of his strength and durability is a forcefield,<ref name=B1C6/> derived from Qys technology.<ref name=B2C6/> He is able to tear open a bunker door without apparent effort,<ref name=B1C9/> push his finger through a human chest without any sort of run-up,<ref name=B2C10/> and clapping his hands together causes a concussive blast that deafens those within range.<ref name=B1C1/> Miracleman survives being in the range of the Operation Dragonslayer nuclear bomb unscathed, only being forced into dormancy by the physical and mental damage done to Mike Moran, and is impervious to bullets,<ref name=B1C1/> blades, rocket launchers and conventional explosives.<ref name=B1C8/> He can survive without oxygen,<ref name=B1YG/> and is able to singlehandedly carve Silence from subsea rock.<ref name=B3C4/> Liz finds his speed cannot be measured by a stopwatch, estimating it as well over Mach 2.<ref name=B1C6/> In the original, the character could fly around Earth fast enough to move backwards<ref name=MM078>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#78|date=12 February 1954|story=Marvelman and the Court of King Arthur|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|}}</ref><ref name=MMA57b>{{cite comic|title=The Marvelman Annual|story=Marvelman and the Man in the Iron Mask|date=1957|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref><ref name=MM136>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#136|story=Marvelman and Hannibal|date=26 March 1956|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|}}</ref><ref name=MM148>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#148|date=16 June 1956|story=Marvelman and Hippocrates|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|}}</ref><ref name=MM175>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman|issue=#175|date=22 December 1956|story=Marvelman and Icarus|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|}}</ref><ref name=MMA56c>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman Annual|story=Marvelman and Charles II|date=1956|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref><ref name=MMA59>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman Annual|story=Marvelman and the Jester|date=1959|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref><ref name=MMA60q>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman Annual|story=Marvelman and Scheherazade|date=1960|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref><ref name=MMA60b>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman Annual|story=Marvelman and Dick Whittington|date=1960|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref> or forwards<ref name=MMA58c>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman Annual|story=Marvelman and the Case of the Missing Space Ace|date=1958|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref><ref name=MMA59d>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman Annual|story=The Empty City|date=1959|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref><ref name=MMA60a>{{cite comic|title=Marvelman Annual|story=Marvelman and the Venasaur|date=1960|publisher=[[L. Miller & Son]]}}</ref> in time, an ability that has yet to be featured in the revival. |
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{{Wikisource|Gaiman v. McFarlane}} |
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* [http://www.sequart.org/magazine/6473/why-miracleman-matters/ Why ''Miracleman'' Matters] by [[Sequart Organization|Julian Darius]] |
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== Reception == |
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* [http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/1527758/Marvelman/ Reference article on Marvelman] by ''Encyclopædia Britannica'' |
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* [http://www.captainmarvelculture.com Captain Marvel Culture] A history of the many Captain Marvels and their social and historical significance |
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=== Critical reception === |
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*{{comicbookdb|type=character|id=5411|title=Miracleman}} |
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Timothy Adams of ''[[ComicBook.com]]'' called Miracleman a "classic superhero."<ref>{{Cite web |last=Adams |first=Timothy |title=Marvel Teases the Long-Awaited Return of Miracleman |url=https://comicbook.com/marvel/news/marvel-teases-long-awaited-return-of-miracleman/ |access-date=2023-03-30 |website=[[ComicBook.com]] |language=en}}</ref> Michael Doran of ''[[Newsarama]]'' included Miracleman in their "Best Marvel characters left to adapt to the MCU" list.<ref>{{Cite web |author1=Michael DoranContributions from George Marston |date=2022-11-01 |title=The best Marvel characters left to adapt to the MCU |url=https://www.gamesradar.com/remaining-marvel-characters-to-adapt-to-the-mcu/ |access-date=2023-02-07 |website=gamesradar |language=en}}</ref> Danilo Raul of ''[[MovieWeb]]'' ranked Miracleman 7th in their "Obscure Marvel Characters That Deserve Their Own Films" list.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Raul |first=Danilo |date=2023-03-22 |title=Obscure Marvel Characters That Deserve Their Own Films, Ranked |url=https://movieweb.com/marvel-characters-that-deserve-their-own-film/ |access-date=2023-03-30 |website=MovieWeb |language=en}}</ref> |
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* [http://www.internationalhero.co.uk/m/marvmanw.htm Marvelman (Warrior)] at the International Catalogue of Superheroes |
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* {{cite web |url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=25363 |title=MARVELMAN RETURNS IN JUNE |date=March 23, 2010 |access-date=2013-10-14}} |
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==Other versions== |
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* {{cite web |first=George |last=Khoury |author-link=George Khoury (author) |url=http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=18492 |title=Land of Lost Tales: The Lost Miracleman Story |work=Pop! |publisher=[[Comic Book Resources]] |date=October 19, 2008 |access-date=2008-12-04 }} |
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An alternate version of Miracleman is one of the heroes of Earth-238 that appears in the ''[[Captain Britain]]'' stories written by Moore and [[Alan Davis]] around the time of their work together on ''Marvelman'' for ''Warrior''. A grave bearing the name is seen by Captain Britain shortly before he is killed by [[Fury (Marvel Comics)|the Fury]] on the alternate world;<ref name=MSH388>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Alan Davis|Davis, Alan]]|story=Graveyard Shift|title=[[The Mighty World of Marvel|Marvel Superheroes]]|issue=#388|date=August 1982|publisher=[[Marvel UK]]}}</ref> the character's death at the hands of the symbiote was then shown in flashback during a nightmare experienced by |
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* {{cite web |first=Kurt |last=Amacker |url=http://www.mania.com/alan-moore-reflects-marvelman_article_117413.html |title=Alan Moore Reflects on Marvelman |work=The No-Fly Zone |publisher=[[Mania.com]] |date=September 3, 2009 |access-date=2009-09-05 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090905013308/http://www.mania.com/alan-moore-reflects-marvelman_article_117413.html |archive-date=September 5, 2009 }} |
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Linda McQuillan (the superhero [[Captain UK]]).<ref name=TDD7>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Alan Davis|Davis, Alan]]|story=Rough Justice|title=[[The Daredevils]]|issue=#7|date=July 1983| publisher=[[Marvel UK]]}}</ref> Moore would later recall that they came up for the name for the Marvel appearances<ref name=KAM/> but it features in his original proposal for the ''Warrior'' strip as an alternate title,<ref name=KOP/> but it was the first use of the name in print.<ref name=KMI/> When asked, Moore could not recall if he remembered using it when settling on renaming Marvelman for Eclipse Comics.<ref name=KAM/> |
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{{Marvel Multiverse}} |
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{{Shazam}} |
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== Collected editions == |
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{{Alan Moore|type=comic}} |
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{{further|Marvelman#Collected editions|Miracleman#Collected editions}} |
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{{Neil Gaiman|type=comic}} |
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{{GoldenAge}} |
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==Notes== |
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{{reflist|group=Note|refs= |
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<ref name=N1>Since licensing the characters from Mick Anglo in 2009, [[Marvel Comics]] have used the Marvelman name for original 1954-1963 appearances and the Miracleman name for revival material.</ref>}} |
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==References== |
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{{reflist|refs= |
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<ref name=KDS>{{cite book |last=Khoury |first=George |author-link= |date=2001 |title=Kimota! The Miracleman Companion |url= |location= |publisher=TwoMorrows Publishing |page= |isbn=9781605490274|chapter=Reign of the ''Warrior'' King}}</ref> |
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<ref name=KAM>{{cite book |last=Khoury |first=George |author-link= |date=2001 |title=Kimota! The Miracleman Companion |url= |location= |publisher=TwoMorrows Publishing |page= |isbn=9781605490274|chapter=Revival and Relevation}}</ref> |
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<ref name=KGL>{{cite book |last=Khoury |first=George |author-link= |date=2001 |title=Kimota! The Miracleman Companion |url= |location= |publisher=TwoMorrows Publishing |page= |isbn=9781605490274|chapter=The Architect of Miracleman}}</ref> |
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<ref name=KMI>{{cite book |last=Khoury |first=George |author-link= |date=2001 |title=Kimota! The Miracleman Companion |url= |location= |publisher=TwoMorrows Publishing |page= |isbn=9781605490274|chapter=Miracleman Index}}</ref> |
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<ref name=KOP>{{cite book |last=Khoury |first=George |author-link= |date=2001 |title=Kimota! The Miracleman Companion |url= |location= |publisher=TwoMorrows Publishing |page= |isbn=9781605490274|chapter=Alan Moore's Original Proposal}}</ref> |
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<!--ref name=B1C0>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]; [[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Don Lawrence|Lawrence, Don]]|story=Prologue - 1956|title=[[Miracleman]]|issue=#1|date= August 1985| publisher=[[Eclipse Comics]]}}</ref--> |
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<ref name=B1C1>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Garry Leach|Leach, Garry]]|story=...a Dream of Flying|title=[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]] |issue=#1|date=March 1982| publisher=[[Quality Communications]]}}</ref> |
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<!--ref name=B1C2>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Garry Leach|Leach, Garry]]|story=(Untitled)|title=[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]] |issue=#2|date=April 1982| publisher=[[Quality Communications]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B1C3>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Garry Leach|Leach, Garry]]|story=When Johnny Comes Marching Home...|title=[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]] |issue=#3|date=July 1982| publisher=[[Quality Communications]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B1C4>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Garry Leach|Leach, Garry]]|story=Dragons|title=[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]] |issue=#5|date=September 1982| publisher=[[Quality Communications]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B1C5>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Alan Davis|Davis, Alan]]; [[Garry Leach|Leach, Garry]]|story=Fallen Angels, Forgotten Thunder|title=[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]] |issue=#6|date=October 1982| publisher=[[Quality Communications]]}}</ref--> |
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<ref name=B1C6>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Alan Davis|Davis, Alan]]; [[Garry Leach|Leach, Garry]]|story=Secret Identity|title=[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]] |issue=#7|date=November 1982| publisher=[[Quality Communications]]}}</ref> |
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<!--ref name=B1C7>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Alan Davis|Davis, Alan]]|story=Blue Murder|title=[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]] |issue=#8|date=December 1982| publisher=[[Quality Communications]]}}</ref--> |
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<ref name=B1C8>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Alan Davis|Davis, Alan]]|story=Out of the Dark|title=[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]] |issue=#9|date=January 1983| publisher=[[Quality Communications]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B1C9>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Alan Davis|Davis, Alan]]|story=Inside Story|title=[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]] |issue=#10|date=April/May 1983| publisher=[[Quality Communications]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B1YG>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Alan Davis|Davis, Alan]]|story=The Yesterday Gambit|title=[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]] |issue=#4|date=August 1982| publisher=[[Quality Communications]]}}</ref> |
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<!--ref name=B1C10>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Alan Davis|Davis, Alan]]|story=Zarathustra|title=[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]] |issue=#11|date=July 1983| publisher=[[Quality Communications]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B2C1>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Alan Davis|Davis, Alan]]|story=Catgames|title=[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]]|issue=#13|date=September 1983| publisher=[[Quality Communications]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B2C2>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Alan Davis|Davis, Alan]]|story=One of Those Quiet Moments|title=[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]]|issue=#14|date=October 1983| publisher=[[Quality Communications]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B2C3>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Alan Davis|Davis, Alan]]|story=Nightmares|title=[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]]|issue=#15|date=November 1983| publisher=[[Quality Communications]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B2C4>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Alan Davis|Davis, Alan]]|story=The Approaching Light|title=[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]]|issue=#16|date=December 1983| publisher=[[Quality Communications]]}}</ref--> |
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<ref name=B2C6>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Alan Davis|Davis, Alan]]|story=A Little Piece of Heaven|title=[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]]|issue=#20|date=July 1984| publisher=[[Quality Communications]]}}</ref> |
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<!--ref name=B2C7>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Alan Davis|Davis, Alan]]|story=...and Every Dog Its Day|title=[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]]|issue=#21|date=August 1984| publisher=[[Quality Communications]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B2C8>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Chuck Austen|Beckum, Chuck]]|story=All Heads Turn as the Hunt Goes By|title=[[Miracleman]]|issue=#6|date=February 1986| publisher=[[Eclipse Comics]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B2C9>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Chuck Austen|Beckum, Chuck]]|story=Bodies|title=[[Miracleman]]|issue=#7|date=April 1986| publisher=[[Eclipse Comics]]}}</ref--> |
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<ref name=B2C10>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Chuck Austen|Beckum, Chuck]]|story=The Wish I Wish Tonight|title=[[Miracleman]]|issue=#7|date=April 1986| publisher=[[Eclipse Comics]]}}</ref> |
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<!--ref name=B2C11>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Rick Veitch|Veitch, Rick]]|story=Scenes from the Nativity|title=[[Miracleman]]|issue=#9|date=July 1986| publisher=[[Eclipse Comics]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B2C12>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[Rick Veitch|Veitch, Rick]]|story=Mindgames|title=[[Miracleman]]|issue=#10|date=December 1986| publisher=[[Eclipse Comics]]}}</ref--> |
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<ref name=B3C4>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[John Totleben|Totleben, John]]|story=Pantheon|title=[[Miracleman]]|issue=#14|date=April 1988| publisher=[[Eclipse Comics]]}}</ref> |
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<!--ref name=B2MF>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[John Ridgway (comics)|Ridgway, John]]|story=The Red King Syndrome|title=[[Warrior (comics)|Warrior]]|issue=#17|date=January 1984| publisher=[[Quality Communications]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B3C1>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[John Totleben|Totleben, John]]|story=Chronos|title=[[Miracleman]]|issue=#11|date= May 1987| publisher=[[Eclipse Comics]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B3C2>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[John Totleben|Totleben, John]]|story=Aphrodite|title=[[Miracleman]]|issue=#12|date=September 1987| publisher=[[Eclipse Comics]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B3C3>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[John Totleben|Totleben, John]]|story=Hermes|title=[[Miracleman]]|issue=#13|date=November 1987| publisher=[[Eclipse Comics]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B3C5>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[John Totleben|Totleben, John]]|story=Nemesis|title=[[Miracleman]]|issue=#15|date=November 1988| publisher=[[Eclipse Comics]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B3C6>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Alan Moore|Moore, Alan]]|artist=[[John Totleben|Totleben, John]]|story=Olympus|title=[[Miracleman]]|issue=#16|date=December 1989| publisher=[[Eclipse Comics]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B4C1>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Neil Gaiman|Gaiman, Neil]]|artist=[[Mark Buckingham (comic book artist)|Buckingham, Mark]]|story=Prologue|title=[[Miracleman]]|issue=#17|date=June 1990| publisher=[[Eclipse Comics]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B4C2>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Neil Gaiman|Gaiman, Neil]]|artist=[[Mark Buckingham (comic book artist)|Buckingham, Mark]]|story=A Prayer and a Hope...|title=[[Miracleman]]|issue=#17|date=June 1990| publisher=[[Eclipse Comics]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B4C4>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Neil Gaiman|Gaiman, Neil]]|artist=[[Mark Buckingham (comic book artist)|Buckingham, Mark]]|story=Trends|title=[[Miracleman]]|issue=#18|date=August 1990| publisher=[[Eclipse Comics]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B4C9>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Neil Gaiman|Gaiman, Neil]]|artist=[[Mark Buckingham (comic book artist)|Buckingham, Mark]]|story=Carnival|title=[[Miracleman]]|issue=#22|date=August 1991| publisher=[[Eclipse Comics]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B4C10>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Neil Gaiman|Gaiman, Neil]]|artist=[[Mark Buckingham (comic book artist)|Buckingham, Mark]]|story=Retrieval|title=[[Miracleman]]|issue=#17-22|date=June 1990-August 1991| publisher=[[Eclipse Comics]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B5C1>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Neil Gaiman|Gaiman, Neil]]|artist=[[Mark Buckingham (comic book artist)|Buckingham, Mark]]|story=The Secret Origin of Young Miracleman|title=Miracleman by Gaiman & Buckingham: The Silver Age|issue=#1|date=December 2022| publisher=[[Marvel Comics]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B5C2>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Neil Gaiman|Gaiman, Neil]]|artist=[[Mark Buckingham (comic book artist)|Buckingham, Mark]]|story=When Titans Clash!|title=Miracleman by Gaiman & Buckingham: The Silver Age|issue=#2|date=January 2023| publisher=[[Marvel Comics]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B5C3>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Neil Gaiman|Gaiman, Neil]]|artist=[[Mark Buckingham (comic book artist)|Buckingham, Mark]]|story=Trapped... in a World He Never Made!|title=Miracleman by Gaiman & Buckingham: The Silver Age|issue=#3|date=February 2023| publisher=[[Marvel Comics]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B5C4>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Neil Gaiman|Gaiman, Neil]]|artist=[[Mark Buckingham (comic book artist)|Buckingham, Mark]]|story=An Alien Walks Among Us|title=Miracleman by Gaiman & Buckingham: The Silver Age|issue=#4|date=March 2023| publisher=[[Marvel Comics]]}}</ref> |
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<ref name=B5C4b>{{Cite comic|writer=[[Neil Gaiman|Gaiman, Neil]]; [[Mark Buckingham (comic book artist)|Buckingham, Mark]]; [[Mick Anglo|Anglo, Mick]]|artist=[[Mark Buckingham (comic book artist)|Buckingham, Mark]]; [[George Partlett|Partlett, George]]|story=Why? Part One|title=Miracleman by Gaiman & Buckingham: The Silver Age|issue=#4|date=March 2023| publisher=[[Marvel Comics]]}}</ref-->}} |
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{{Marvelmiracleman}} |
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[[Category:1954 comics debuts]] |
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[[Category:1963 comics endings]] |
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[[Category:1982 comics debuts]] |
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[[Category:British comics characters]] |
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[[Category:Comics by Neil Gaiman]] |
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[[Category:Comics characters introduced in 1954]] |
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[[Category:Comics characters with superhuman strength]] |
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[[Category:Eclipse Comics superheroes]] |
[[Category:Eclipse Comics superheroes]] |
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[[Category:Marvel Comics characters who can move at superhuman speeds]] |
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[[Category:Marvel Comics characters with superhuman senses]] |
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[[Category:Marvel Comics characters with superhuman strength]] |
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[[Category:Marvel Comics superheroes]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Miracleman]] |
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[[Category:Fictional British people]] |
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[[Category:Fictional characters who can move at superhuman speeds]] |
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[[Category:Horror comics]] |
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[[Category:Warrior characters]] |
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[[Category:Warrior titles]] |
Latest revision as of 09:59, 7 December 2024
Miracleman | |
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Character information | |
First appearance | Marvelman #25 (1954) |
Created by | Mick Anglo |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Michael John "Mike" Moran[1] |
Species | Human mutate |
Place of origin | Earth |
Team affiliations | Miracleman Family |
Partnerships |
|
Notable aliases | Micky Marvelman |
Abilities |
|
Publication information | |
Publisher |
|
Genre | |
Publication date | February 1954 |
Miracleman (originally known as Marvelman),[Note 1] whose civilian name is Michael "Mike" Moran, is a British Golden Age comic book superhero appearing in comic books first published by L. Miller & Son, Ltd. Created by Mick Anglo, the character first appeared in Marvelman #25 (February 1954).[2] The character was subsequently revived in 1982 by Alan Moore and Garry Leach as the lead of Marvelman in the pages of Warrior. After that publication was cancelled, the revival was continued as Miracleman by Eclipse Comics in 1985, with the character renamed accordingly, but went out of print following the company's demise in 1994.
After a 15-year hiatus brought on by a confused legal situation, the character was successfully brought back into print by Marvel Comics in 2010, initially reverting to the Marvelman name. From 2014 onwards Marvel began reprinting the revival material, once again using the Miracleman name, and in 2022 began continuing the story.
Concept and creation
[edit]Following Fawcett Publications' cessation of their superhero titles in 1953, British publisher L. Miller & Son were left with the prospect of having to cancel their popular Captain Marvel and Captain Marvel Jr. weeklies due to a lack of material. Len Miller contacted Mick Anglo, whose Gower Street Studio had provided cover artwork and other material for Miller's titles, to create a replacement.[1] Anglo modified Captain Marvel, changing his human identity from newsboy Billy Batson to copyboy Micky Moran. The character's superhuman form was changed from Captain Marvel to Marvelman, after consideration was given to naming the new character Captain Miracle and Miracleman[3]—both names that would later be used by Anglo for further derivatives of Captain Marvel.[4] Anglo took the opportunity to simplify the character's costume, eliminating Captain Marvel's cape and switching his lightning bolt to a simpler "MM" chest logo. To provide greater contrast Marvelman was given close-cropped blond hair and a predominantly blue colour scheme. Anglo considered giving the character a gravity belt but eventually decided to retain flight as an inherent ability of the superhero.[1]
While Marvelman and (less frequently, despite debuting concurrently) Young Marvelman are occasionally called the first British superheroes this is not the case as the short-lived DC Thomson Dandy character The Amazing Mr. X debuted some ten years previously.[5]
Publication history
[edit]1954–1963
[edit]Due to the backlog of Fawcett material Miller already had the company was able to prepare readers for the upcoming change. Captain Marvel #19, dated 19 December 1953, featured an in-character letter from 'Batson' to readers, telling them he planned to lead an ordinary life and would be handing over his duties to Marvelman; #24 featured the modified title Captain Marvel - the Marvelman and from #25 the title was renamed Marvelman, with the new character taking over. A similar process would take place on sister title Captain Marvel Jr., which would become Young Marvelman. The result was well-received by readers, and sales of Marvelman were actually larger than those of its predecessor. Anglo initially wrote and drew the strips himself; later other Gower Studio artists would work on the character, including James Bleach, Norman Light and Don Lawrence. Marvelman would also occasionally appear in the pages of Young Marvelman and later starred the additional monthly title Marvelman Family, which also featured Kid Marvelman. However by 1961 sales were declining as imported American comics began to arrive on the British market, featuring full-colour strips rather than the black-and-white adventures of Marvelman. Miller switched Marvelman to a monthly reprint title, causing Anglo to unsuccessfully attempt to set up his own Anglo Features label after turning down an offer to work for Miller's son Arnold on his own venture. Marvelman finally ended in 1963, and the character went into obscurity.[3]
1982–1985
[edit]In 1981 Dez Skinn opted to revive the character for anthology Warrior. After his preferred choices turned him down, he became aware of Alan Moore's similar interest in reviving the character and requested a proposal. Impressed by the writer's ideas, Skinn commissioned Moore as writer for the strip, which debuted in the first issue of Warrior in March 1982.[6] Moore would later relate that he was drawn to the character's resemblance of the concept of the Übermensch from the writings of Friedrich Nietzsche, a concept that would be frequently drawn on in this revival.[7] After others had demurred, Garry Leach was assigned to draw the strip. He modelled the revised Marvelman on actor Paul Newman and redesigned the chest insignia into a more modern style. Leach and Moore opted for a graceful look for the character in contrast to the more common musclebound superhero archetype.[8]
The strip was a critical success, winning Favourite Comic Character (UK) at the 1984 Eagle Awards,[9] and continued to be a success when Alan Davis took over as artist. Vintage Gower Street material would also be reprinted in the one-off Marvelman Special, with the conceit it presented imaginary adventures of the character. However, creative differences between Moore[10] and Davis would lead to the strip stalling in 1985; while Grant Morrison was eager to take over Marvelman the dispute would prevent the strip from returning before Warrior was cancelled in 1985 after its losses became unsustainable for Skinn.[6]
1985–1993
[edit]The story was eventually picked up by American publisher Eclipse Comics in 1985. To avoid legal attention from Marvel Comics the series and its leads were renamed Miracleman; Moore had previously suggested this as an alternate title in his original proposal as a substitute name should the editor decide against reviving Marvelman,[11] and had also used it in print for the name of a proxy version of the character that had featured briefly in his parallel work on Marvel UK's Captain Britain strip. Those involved do not appear to have been aware of the name being previously considered by Anglo, or its use as the name given to a series of British reprints of the artist's Spanish-market Superhombre. Moore was initially resistant to the name change due to Marvelman having predated the establishment of Marvel Comics but eventually agreed, though he would air his dissatisfaction with the issue in an essay printed in the second issue of the title.[7] Eclipse began by printing coloured, relettered versions of the Warrior material before Miracleman #7 (cover dated April 1986) saw the story continue with new material. The series continued its critical success, and was by Eclipse's standards a sizeable commercial success. Initially Chuck Austen (then using his birthname Chuck Beckum) drew the new adventures before Rick Veitch continued the work. From Miracleman #11, John Totleben became regular artist until #16, which was also the final issue of Moore's run.[12]
Moore then passed over the title to Neil Gaiman, having completed the stories he had planned for the character. Gaiman and new artist Mark Buckingham planned three six-issue storylines for the character, and opted for an anthology approach for the initial arc. As such "The Golden Age" focused more on Miracleman's impact on Earth than the character himself, who was more felt than seen across Miracleman #17-22, largely featuring in cameos by various literary devices such as flashbacks, imaginary sequences and fictions-within-fictions. Meanwhile Gaiman found that numerous other creators were interested in working on the character; to harness this and expand their revenue, Eclipse produced the three-issue limited series Miracleman: Apocrypha, featuring contributions by the likes of Alex Ross, Kurt Busiek, Matt Wagner, James Robinson and Darick Robertson. Gaiman and Buckingham provided a framing story for the series which established it as a collection of imaginary stories. Miracleman returned to being more central in the creative team's second arc, "The Silver Age". However, after only two issues of the storyline had been published Eclipse went bankrupt; this also prevented the publication of another spin-off mini-series called Miracleman Triumphant, written by Fred Burke and drawn by Mike Deodato and taking place between Gaiman's first two arcs.[13]
1995–2008
[edit]Gaiman mistakenly believed at the time he owned a one-third share of the rights to the Miracleman characters, with the other two-thirds residing with Eclipse. As such he reached an arrangement with Roger Broughton to continue the series once the Canadian publisher purchased Eclipse's rights. However at the 1996 liquidation auction Broughton was outbid by Todd McFarlane, who had collaborated with Gaiman on various Spawn spinoffs.[14] Gaiman began legal action while McFarlane remained sure he owned the character,[15] and produced Miracleman merchandise. A reimagined Mike Moran, now a principled journalist at the New York Daily Times, was added to the supporting cast of Hellspawn, a dark spin-off title of Spawn, in February 2001.[16] Artist Ashley Wood released teaser images of Miracleman ahead of his planned debut in Hellspawn #12. However, Wood left the book after Hellspawn #11 and the storyline was abandoned[12] when Gaiman sued McFarlane in 2002.[17] In-universe, the appearances were subsequently ascribed to the character Man of Miracles, whose aspect is shaped by the perceptions of others.
2009–present
[edit]Since 2001, Marvel editor-in-chief Joe Quesada had been among the major industry figures to support Gaiman in the dispute.[18] Marvel eventually discovered in 2009 that the rights to the Marvelman characters had resided with Anglo all along, having never been officially purchased by Skinn (who believed the character was in the public domain, and reached a private agreement with Anglo) in 1981. Marvel licensed the characters from Anglo directly and in 2010 began a series of reprints of classic material under the Marvelman name.[19] In 2014 after further legal rights were secured, Marvel began to reprint the revival material, now named Miracleman once again.[20] Marvel published new material with the character in 2015,[21] and Miracleman's logo was featured in the one-shot Timeless in 2021, foreshadowing his introduction to the Marvel Universe.[22]
In October 2022, Gaiman and Buckingham continued The Silver Age storyline after a hiatus of nearly 30 years.[23]
Fictional character biography
[edit]Original
[edit]Having discovered the keyword to the universe through his experiments, Mississippi-based astro-scientist Guntag Barghelt travels the world searching for a worthy recipient of this power. After young Micky Moran first attempts to return a dime Barghelt dropped and then defends the scientist from a trio of hoodlums, the scientist takes the youth to his laboratory. There further tests reveal Micky has absolute integrity and a well-defined discernment of good and evil, and treats him in his atomic machine. Micky is granted the power to turn into the superpowered Marvelman whenever he speaks the keyword "Kimota". After Marvelman thwarts an attempt by the villainous Herman Schwein to capture Barghelt's notes, the scientist withdraws to an asteroid in outer space, knowing Marvelman will protect good on Earth.[24] Micky works for the Daily Bugle newspaper as a copyboy and keeps his superhero identity secret from the world while using his power to protect the innocent. To help him fight evil, Marvelman would later call on the scientist again when impressed by the courage of messenger boy Dicky Dauntless, and calls up Barghelt once again. The scientist gives Dicky an elixir that allows him to transform into Young Marvelman, who would become Marvelman's ally in the fight against evil.[25] Marvelman later selected another youth, Johnny Bates, who was granted the ability to become Kid Marvelman.[26]
Among his many victories, Marvelman prevented Boromanian spy Balco from using the experimental XB999 atomic bomber aircraft against Washington,[27] prevented crooks from poisoning Oklabama's water supply with radium,[28] and foiled an attempt by Professor Gargunza to use memory-loss gas on the world.[29] Marvelman also crossed paths with mad scientist Dr. Gargunza, thwarting his plan to use animated skeletons to intimidate a judge.[30] Gargunza would however return with numerous other amoral plans, which Marvelman again defeated.[31][32][33][34][35][36][37][38][39][40][41][42][43][44]
Other escapades Marvelman was involved in included preventing Boromanian attempts to sabotage Professor Jowik's new megabathysphere;[45] stopping the ice cream-crazed Abominable Snowman and his Snowman minions;[46] defeating super-computer the Electronic Brain,;[47] foiling a Boromanian plot to use scientist Doctor Ramado's miniaturised hydrogen bomb to blow up a table tennis tournament;[48] saving oblivious astronaut Professor Swivelhead from his own oblivious behaviour;[49] clearing his name after circus strongman the Great Anvello framed him as a criminal;[50] defeating scientist Cuprini's evil mirror image version of himself;[51] preventing destruction of a United States Navy squadron by a two-headed kraken;[52] dealing with an epidemic of insomnia brought on by the King of the Land of Nod sulking;[53] using a demonstration of his formidable powers to cause Martian War Lords to abort a planned invasion of Earth;[54] stopping jealous electrical genius Austin Amps and his attempts to sabotage rival Oswald Ohms' all-electric town Wattingham;[55] travelling back to 1588 and helping Royal Navy Captain Farnaby warn England about the Spanish Armada;[56] ending the crime spree of Professor Coisson's Marvelman II, a robot double of the hero;[57] foiling the attempt of unlicensed dentist Mr. Nook to use misery gas in revenge for being exposed as a quack by Moran;[58] putting an end to Nazi Otto Gruber's attempt to create a Fourth Reich;[59] beating wizard Wizzo the Wizard and his mirror-henchman namlevraM;[60] capturing embezzler Charles Crank despite his attempts to hide out on the Moon[61]}; thwarting the attempts of Menzari driver Heinz Vifter to beat rival Nevady driver Micky Desmond to the Golden Wheel via sabotage;[62] exposing pickpocketing clowns from a travelling circus;[63] forestalling an invasion from underground hat-wearing giant ants;[64] undoing disgruntled prop manager Eddie Gay's attempts to sabotage a documentary made by Peakpoint Films;[65] uncovering cargo cult-leading machine Klashna;[66] and halting elderly bad-luck projecting nuisance Irwin M. Trouble[67]
He would also team up with Young Marvelman and Kid Marvelman as the Marvelman Family to face threats such as Garrer and his army of time-travelling renegades;[68] a combined alliance of Marvelman's arch-enemy Doctor Gargunza and his nephew, Young Marvelman rogue Young Gargunza;[69] the King of Vegetableland;[70] invaders from the planet Vardica;[71] would-be dictator Professor Batts and his speech-scramber;[72] a crime boss intent on sinking Pacific City below the ocean;[73] the cruel, slave-driving King Snop of Atlantis (which the story revealed would eventually become Australia);[74] an attempt by Gargunza to declare himself King of the Universe;[75] cruel 14th century knight Simon de Carton (clearing the name of Amadis of Gaul in the process);[76] a monster accidentally collected from the planet Droon;[77] and Professor Wosmine's shrinking ray[78]
Revival
[edit]Book One: 'A Dream Of Flying' - written by Alan Moore
[edit]Two decades later, Mike Moran is a middle-aged man working as a freelance journalist and happily married to Liz, but he is suffering from mid-life crisis and is plagued by headaches. He remembers nothing of his adventures as Miracleman, but has recurring dreams of flying and of the terrible fate that apparently befell the Miracleman family when they were caught in a nuclear explosion.
When a peaceful protest at an atomic power station is overtaken by terrorists, Moran is present and is taken hostage. In the throes of a migraine - he sees the ‘magic word’ (that has eluded him for decades but haunts his dreams) written on a glass door: ‘Kimota’. When he speaks this aloud he transforms into Miracleman, incapacitates the terrorists and flies away.
Miracleman returns home to a startled Liz and attempts to explain his newly-remembered backstory. Liz is initially skeptical but eventually convinced, and they spend the night together.
Miracleman’s appearance is noticed by Johnny Bates, who has become a very successful international businessman in the intervening decades. Bates invites Mike and Liz to his offices, and though they are initially convinced by his story Mike confronts Bates with his suspicions that he has become corrupted by his powers. These suspicions are confirmed when Kid Miracleman attacks. Transforming into Miracleman, Moran attempts to fight Kid Miracleman but is overpowered and only spared by Bates mistakenly speaking his ‘magic word’ and transforming back into a young boy. Miracleman and Liz escape, leaving the young Johnny Bates in the hands of the authorities.
As a result of their single night together, Liz becomes pregnant with Miracleman’s child, an event that fuels Mike Moran’s feelings of inadequacy in comparison to his superhuman alter-ego.
The ‘Spookshow’, a government agency, recruits Evelyn Cream to kill Moran. Cream instead kidnaps Moran and they agree to work together to discover Miracleman’s real origins. This leads them to a hidden bunker in the countryside where Miracleman encounters various ineffectual traps and a deranged superhuman called Big Ben, who he subdues effortlessly.
Once inside the bunker, Miracleman is confronted with the true nature of his past: he is the result of an experimental program by the British government to create superhumans as an escalation of the Cold War arms race. The program is derived from alien technology discovered in the 1950s and adapted and overseen by Dr Emil Gargunza, an ex-Nazi scientist given shelter by the British government. It is revealed that his entire past has been a virtual reality fiction created to subdue him and the rest of the Miracleman Family and make them pliable as super-weapons. Enraged by this, Miracleman destroys much of the bunker and, once calmed by Cream, returns home.
Book Two: 'The Red King Syndrome' - Written By Alan Moore
[edit]As the birth of her and Miracleman’s child grows near Liz is kidnapped by Gargunza, now living in Paraguay, where Liz is taken. Whilst she is held captive Gargunza relates to her his life story, telling of how he worked on the Zarathustra Project, adapting the technology of a crashed spaceship and creating the Miracleman Family. He hopes to transfer his consciousness into the body of Miracleman’s child, thus achieving immortality.
Miracleman and Cream travel to Paraguay and confront Gargunza. However, Gargunza has implanted another ‘magic word’ which changes Miracleman back into a defenceless Mike Moran for an hour. He then sets his ‘Miracledog’ - a monstrous, genetically altered super-animal - on Moran and Cream. Cream is killed and Moran is maimed but he remembers the ‘magic word’ Gargunza used on the dog and it reverts back to its harmless original form, whereupon Moran kills it and evades Gargunza’s mercenaries until such time as he can change back to Miracleman. When he does, he slaughters Gargunza’s guards, kills Gargunza and rescues Liz who then gives birth to a daughter, Winter - who can already speak.
Back in England, domestic tensions between Mike and Liz are exacerbated by Liz’s mood swings - which she suspects are caused by Winter, who is developing at an unusually accelerated rate. Meanwhile two alien agents are tracking Moran, but are themselves being followed by a mystery woman.
Book Three: 'Olympus' - Written By Alan Moore
[edit]The aliens - of the race The Qys - attack Moran, who becomes Miracleman and attempts to fight them off, but the aliens are able to change bodies in a manner similar to Moran / Miracleman himself and easily defeat him. Upon learning of Winter’s existence, they turn their attention to Liz but are thwarted by the mystery woman, who reveals herself to be Avril Lear - Miraclewoman - and tells the story of her past as another of Gargunza’s experiments.
The Qys take Miracleman and Miraclewoman to their homeworld where the future of the Miracleman Family - and Earth itself - is discussed by the ambassadors of the Qys and their mortal enemies the Warpsmiths. Miraclewoman convinces the assembly that Earth should be a neutral world wherein the two cultures can work together and hopefully achieve some form of understanding.
After returning to Earth Miracleman finds himself growing apart from his human ties as Liz leaves him and Winter [who is physically a small child but already beyond even Miracleman himself in terms of mental development] leaves Earth to find and learn from The Qys.
Mike Moran, his life turned upside down, commits a form of suicide by trekking into the wilderness and leaving a small memorial for himself to find when he transforms for a last time into Miracleman. Miracleman understands this gesture and never returns to his human form again.
With the help of Qys and Warpsmith agents including Aza Chorn, the initial alien/superhuman project is to gather together all the remaining superhumans on Earth and work in secret to begin to nudge Earth towards a more enlightened path. This is cut short, however, by the sudden re-emergence of Kid Miracleman.
Johnny Bates, who has been kept at a children’s home in England, has been attempting to keep his alter-ego at bay; but the brutal abuse he suffers at the hands of fellow inmates forces him to transform into a vengeful Kid Miracleman, who then destroys half of London in Miracleman’s temporary absence and kills forty thousand people. When he is discovered, a battle ensues where Miracleman and his cohorts - with apparently little regard for human life - attempt to subdue him.
Kid Miracleman is only eventually defeated by a dying Aza Chorn and, mortally wounded, transforms back to Johnny Bates. Miracleman then kills Bates to prevent him ever becoming Kid Miracleman again. In the ruins of London, surrounded by thousands of dead and dying, Miracleman now realises the world can never be the same.
He and Miraclewoman reshape the world into a utopia. All the practical ills of human society are cured, and the offer of superhuman powers and children is gradually taken up by a humanity who regard the Miracleman Family as gods. The pantheon of new gods build Olympus, a huge temple in the ruins of Central London where they are worshipped by human acolytes. Despite having created a utopia, Miracleman is haunted by Liz’s accusation that he has lost touch with his humanity.
Books Four and Five: 'The Golden Age' & 'The Silver Age' - Written By Neil Gaiman with Mark Buckingham
[edit]After a series of short stories detailing the effects of this new society on ordinary humans and supporting characters from the series ['The Golden Age'], the main story picks up again in the year 2001 ['The Silver Age'], where Young Miracleman - Dickie Dauntless - is revived but has a great deal of trouble adjusting to the new world he finds himself in.
Miraclewoman convinces Miracleman that Dauntless is infatuated with him, and Miracleman attempts to kiss him to assuage his frustrations. This shocks and enrages Dauntless, whose attitudes towards sexuality and the world in general are still very much those of the 1950s. He leaves Olympus to discover himself in the changed world of 2001. Landing in the Himalaya mountains, a bewildered Dauntless ends up meeting Bill Caxton (Mister Master), the first superhuman created by Miracleman and also the only to ever give up his powers. Inspired by this experience, and accompanied by the somewhat directionless but enhanced Meta-Maid, Dauntless finds the orphanage where he grew up prior to being abducted by Gargunza. In an extended flashback, Dauntless remembers the physical and mental abuse he experienced before changing back to his Young Miracleman form and vowing to confront Miracleman.
In the finale of this series, Miracleman meets Young Miracleman who after rebuking his options and criticising this present world states "I'm going to be your adversary. Not now. But One Day. I'm going to be the opposition. If this is Eden, I'm going to be the Serpent.". Ultimately agreeing to these terms, Miracleman lets Young Miracleman leave where he starts meditating for prolonged periods and begins a social movement. Under Miraclewoman's encouragement, Miracleman unofficially cedes Australia for Young Miracleman. In the final panels of the series, Young Miracleman hears the voice from Kid Miracleman from infra-space asking to be let out.
The series is to be concluded in Book 6, The Dark Age.
Powers and abilities
[edit]Miracleman can fly, has super-strength and is invulnerable. The source of his strength and durability is a forcefield,[79] derived from Qys technology.[80] He is able to tear open a bunker door without apparent effort,[81] push his finger through a human chest without any sort of run-up,[82] and clapping his hands together causes a concussive blast that deafens those within range.[83] Miracleman survives being in the range of the Operation Dragonslayer nuclear bomb unscathed, only being forced into dormancy by the physical and mental damage done to Mike Moran, and is impervious to bullets,[83] blades, rocket launchers and conventional explosives.[84] He can survive without oxygen,[85] and is able to singlehandedly carve Silence from subsea rock.[86] Liz finds his speed cannot be measured by a stopwatch, estimating it as well over Mach 2.[79] In the original, the character could fly around Earth fast enough to move backwards[87][88][89][90][91][92][93][94][95] or forwards[96][97][98] in time, an ability that has yet to be featured in the revival.
Reception
[edit]Critical reception
[edit]Timothy Adams of ComicBook.com called Miracleman a "classic superhero."[99] Michael Doran of Newsarama included Miracleman in their "Best Marvel characters left to adapt to the MCU" list.[100] Danilo Raul of MovieWeb ranked Miracleman 7th in their "Obscure Marvel Characters That Deserve Their Own Films" list.[101]
Other versions
[edit]An alternate version of Miracleman is one of the heroes of Earth-238 that appears in the Captain Britain stories written by Moore and Alan Davis around the time of their work together on Marvelman for Warrior. A grave bearing the name is seen by Captain Britain shortly before he is killed by the Fury on the alternate world;[102] the character's death at the hands of the symbiote was then shown in flashback during a nightmare experienced by Linda McQuillan (the superhero Captain UK).[103] Moore would later recall that they came up for the name for the Marvel appearances[10] but it features in his original proposal for the Warrior strip as an alternate title,[11] but it was the first use of the name in print.[12] When asked, Moore could not recall if he remembered using it when settling on renaming Marvelman for Eclipse Comics.[10]
Collected editions
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ a b c Since licensing the characters from Mick Anglo in 2009, Marvel Comics have used the Marvelman name for original 1954-1963 appearances and the Miracleman name for revival material.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Khoury, George (2010). "The Man Behind Miracleman". Kimota! The Miracleman Companion. TwoMorrows Publishing. ISBN 9781605490274.
- ^ Rajput, Rohit (15 June 2022). "Who is Marvel's Miracleman? Comic origin and powers explored amid team up with X-Men". www.sportskeeda.com. Retrieved 30 March 2023.
- ^ a b Wilson, Derek (w). "The Marvelman Story" Marvelman Classic, no. Volume 1 (19 January 2017). Marvel Comics.
- ^ Sergi, Joe (2015). The Law for Comic Book Creators. McFarland, Incorporated, Publishers. ISBN 9780786473601.
- ^ Murray, Chris (2017). The British Superhero. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 9781496807380.
- ^ a b Khoury, George (2001). "Reign of the Warrior King". Kimota! The Miracleman Companion. TwoMorrows Publishing. ISBN 9781605490274.
- ^ a b Moore, Alan (w). "M*****man: Full Story and Pics" Miracleman, no. 2 (October 1985). Eclipse Comics.
- ^ Khoury, George (2001). "The Architect of Miracleman". Kimota! The Miracleman Companion. TwoMorrows Publishing. ISBN 9781605490274.
- ^ "1984". Eagle Awards. Archived from the original on 14 March 2012.
- ^ a b c Khoury, George (2001). "Revival and Relevation". Kimota! The Miracleman Companion. TwoMorrows Publishing. ISBN 9781605490274.
- ^ a b Khoury, George (2001). "Alan Moore's Original Proposal". Kimota! The Miracleman Companion. TwoMorrows Publishing. ISBN 9781605490274.
- ^ a b c Khoury, George (2001). "Miracleman Index". Kimota! The Miracleman Companion. TwoMorrows Publishing. ISBN 9781605490274.
- ^ Khoury, George (2001). "Ages of Gold, Silver and the Darkness". Kimota! The Miracleman Companion. TwoMorrows Publishing. ISBN 9781605490274.
- ^ Khoury, George (2001). "Whatever Happened to Our Miracleman?". Kimota! The Miracleman Companion. TwoMorrows Publishing. ISBN 9781605490274.
- ^ "The Devil You Know…: An interview with Todd McFarlane". Comic Book Resources. 15 June 2001. Retrieved 15 October 2013.
- ^ Niles, Steve (w), Wood, Ashley (a). "The Big League" Hellspawn, no. 6 (February 2001). Image Comics.
- ^ "Miracleman Heads to Court". ICv2. 27 January 2002. Retrieved 15 October 2013.
- ^ Weiland, Jonah (27 June 2003). "Marvel's '1602' Press Conference". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved 18 February 2008.
- ^ Rich Johnston (24 July 2009). "Marvel To Publish Mick Anglo's Marvelman – And They Own It". Bleeding Cool.
- ^ "NYCC: Marvel to Reprint Classic Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman 'Miracleman'". Hollywoodreporter.com. 17 November 2011. Retrieved 15 October 2013.
- ^ "Marvel Announces New "Miracleman" from Morrison, Quesada, Milligan & Allred". Comic Book Resources. 4 September 2014. Retrieved 29 April 2015.
- ^ Rabiroff, Zach (29 December 2021). "Marvel's Timeless teases a surprising new addition to the Marvel Universe". Polygon. Archived from the original on 30 December 2021. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
- ^ "Neil Gaiman and Mark Buckingham 'Miracleman' Series Returns". Marvel Entertainment. Retrieved 29 April 2023.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Anglo, Mick (a). "The Birth of Marvelman" Marvelman, no. 65 (13 November 1954). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w). "How Dicky Dauntless Became Young Marvelman" Young Marvelman, no. 64 (6 November 1954). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Lawrence, Don (a). "Introducing Kid Marvelman" Marvelman, no. 102 (30 July 1955). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Anglo, Mick (a). "Marvelman and the Atomic Bomber" Marvelman, no. 25 (3 February 1954). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Anglo, Mick (a). "Marvelman and the Stolen Radium" Marvelman, no. 25 (3 February 1954). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Anglo, Mick (a). "Marvelman and the Lost-Memory Gas" Marvelman, no. 26 (10 February 1954). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Anglo, Mick (a). "Marvelman and the Skeletons in the Cupboard" Marvelman, no. 27 (17 February 1954). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Anglo, Mick (a). "Marvelman and the Super Heat Wave" Marvelman, no. 33 (31 March 1954). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Anglo, Mick (a). "Marvelman and the Great Gargunza Mystery" Marvelman, no. 72-77 (1 January to 5 February 1956). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w). "Marvelman and the Stolen Kimota" Marvelman, no. 159 (1 September 1956). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Gargunza's All Bad" Marvelman Annual (1956). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Double Trouble" Marvelman Annual (1956). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w). "Marvelman and the Acid Vapour" Marvelman, no. 222 (16 November 1957). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Marvelman and the Space Dustmen" The Marvelman Annual (1957). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Gargunza's Voodoo Doll" The Marvelman Annual (1957). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Gargunza's Atomic Suit" The Marvelman Annual (1957). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w). "Magnetised Marvelman" Marvelman, no. 235 (15 February 1958). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w). "Coal in Space" Marvelman, no. 252 (13 June 1958). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Gargunza Goes Straight" Marvelman Annual (1958). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Pipe Dream" Marvelman Annual (1959). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Marvelman Becomes a Jinx" Marvelman Annual (1960). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Anglo, Mick (a). "Marvelman Counters Sabotage" Marvelman, no. 27 (24 February 1954). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Marvelman and the Abominable Snowman" Marvelman, no. 30 (10 March 1954). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Anglo, Mick (a). "Marvelman and the Electronic Brain" Marvelman, no. 29 (3 March 1954). L. Miller & Son}.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Anglo, Mick (a). "Marvelman and the Miniature Bomb Plot" Marvelman, no. 31 (17 March 1954). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Bleach, James (a). "Marvelman and the Absent-Minded Spaceman" Marvelman, no. 31 (17 March 1954). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Anglo, Mick (a). "Marvelman and the Flase Marvelman" Marvelman, no. 32 (24 March 1954). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Anglo, Mick (a). "Marvelman and the Stolen Reflections" Marvelman, no. 32 (24 March 1954). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Bleach, James (a). "Marvelman and the Kraken" Marvelman, no. 33 (31 March 1954). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Anglo, Mick (a). "Marvelman and the Land of Nod" Marvelman, no. 34 (7 April 1954). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Bleach, James (a). "Marvelman and the Martian Menace" Marvelman, no. 34 (7 April 1954). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w). "Marvelman Combats the Electric Terror" Marvelman, no. 96 (18 June 1955). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w). "Marvelman and the Spanish Armada" Marvelman, no. 96 (18 June 1955). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w). "Marvelman and the Robot Double" Marvelman, no. 168 (3 November 1956). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Marvelman and the Misery Gas" Marvelman Annual (1956). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Light, Norman (a). "Marvelman and the Shadow of the Swastika" Marvelman, no. 228 (28 December 1957). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Marvelman Fights Marvelman" The Marvelman Annual (1957). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w). "Marvelman and the Moon Venturer" Marvelman, no. 268-269 (27 September - 4 October 1958). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w). "Marvelman and the Ace Drivers" Marvelman, no. 268 (4 October 1958). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "The Circus Comes to Town" Marvelman, no. 268 (4 October 1958). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w). "Giant Ant Plots to Rule Earth" Marvelman Annual (1958). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Marvelman - Stuntman" Marvelman Annual (1959). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Evil Monster of a Machine" Marvelman Annual (1959). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Troublesome Mr. I.M. Trouble" Marvelman Annual (1960). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Lawrence, Don (a). "Marvelman Family and the Invaders from the Future" Marvelman Family, no. 1 (October 1956). L. Miller & Son, Ltd..
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Lawrence, Don (a). "Marvelman Family and the Shadow Stealers" Marvelman Family, no. 2 (November 1956). L. Miller & Son, Ltd..
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Lawrence, Don (a). "Marvelman Family and the Giant Marrow" Marvelman Family, no. 4 (February 1957). L. Miller & Son, Ltd..
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Lawrence, Don (a). "Marvelman Family and the Hollow Planet" Marvelman Family, no. 4 (March 1957). L. Miller & Son, Ltd..
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Lawrence, Don (a). "Marvelman Family and the Speech Scrambler" Marvelman Family, no. 8 (July 1957). L. Miller & Son, Ltd..
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Lawrence, Don (a). "Marvelman Family and the City Under the Sea" Marvelman Family, no. 9 (August 1957). L. Miller & Son, Ltd..
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Lawrence, Don (a). "Marvelman Family and the Atlantis Fable" Marvelman Family, no. 10 (September 1957). L. Miller & Son, Ltd..
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Lawrence, Don (a). "Marvelman Family and King Gargunza" Marvelman Family, no. 14 (March 1958). L. Miller & Son, Ltd..
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Lawrence, Don (a). "Amadis of Gaul" Marvelman Family, no. 18 (July 1958). L. Miller & Son, Ltd..
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Light, Norman (a). "The Mighty Marvelman Family and the Dragons of Great Droon" Marvelman Family, no. 29 (August 1959). L. Miller & Son, Ltd..
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w), Lawrence, Don (a). "The Mighty Marvelman Family and 'Jungle Fury'" Marvelman Family, no. 30 (August 1957). L. Miller & Son, Ltd..
- ^ a b Moore, Alan (w), Davis, Alan; Leach, Garry (a). "Secret Identity" Warrior, no. 7 (November 1982). Quality Communications.
- ^ Moore, Alan (w), Davis, Alan (a). "A Little Piece of Heaven" Warrior, no. 20 (July 1984). Quality Communications.
- ^ Moore, Alan (w), Davis, Alan (a). "Inside Story" Warrior, no. 10 (April/May 1983). Quality Communications.
- ^ Moore, Alan (w), Beckum, Chuck (a). "The Wish I Wish Tonight" Miracleman, no. 7 (April 1986). Eclipse Comics.
- ^ a b Moore, Alan (w), Leach, Garry (a). "...a Dream of Flying" Warrior, no. 1 (March 1982). Quality Communications.
- ^ Moore, Alan (w), Davis, Alan (a). "Out of the Dark" Warrior, no. 9 (January 1983). Quality Communications.
- ^ Moore, Alan (w), Davis, Alan (a). "The Yesterday Gambit" Warrior, no. 4 (August 1982). Quality Communications.
- ^ Moore, Alan (w), Totleben, John (a). "Pantheon" Miracleman, no. 14 (April 1988). Eclipse Comics.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w). "Marvelman and the Court of King Arthur" Marvelman, no. 78 (12 February 1954). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Marvelman and the Man in the Iron Mask" The Marvelman Annual (1957). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w). "Marvelman and Hannibal" Marvelman, no. 136 (26 March 1956). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w). "Marvelman and Hippocrates" Marvelman, no. 148 (16 June 1956). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Anglo, Mick (w). "Marvelman and Icarus" Marvelman, no. 175 (22 December 1956). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Marvelman and Charles II" Marvelman Annual (1956). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Marvelman and the Jester" Marvelman Annual (1959). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Marvelman and Scheherazade" Marvelman Annual (1960). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Marvelman and Dick Whittington" Marvelman Annual (1960). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Marvelman and the Case of the Missing Space Ace" Marvelman Annual (1958). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "The Empty City" Marvelman Annual (1959). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ "Marvelman and the Venasaur" Marvelman Annual (1960). L. Miller & Son.
- ^ Adams, Timothy. "Marvel Teases the Long-Awaited Return of Miracleman". ComicBook.com. Retrieved 30 March 2023.
- ^ Michael DoranContributions from George Marston (1 November 2022). "The best Marvel characters left to adapt to the MCU". gamesradar. Retrieved 7 February 2023.
- ^ Raul, Danilo (22 March 2023). "Obscure Marvel Characters That Deserve Their Own Films, Ranked". MovieWeb. Retrieved 30 March 2023.
- ^ Moore, Alan (w), Davis, Alan (a). "Graveyard Shift" Marvel Superheroes, no. 388 (August 1982). Marvel UK.
- ^ Moore, Alan (w), Davis, Alan (a). "Rough Justice" The Daredevils, no. 7 (July 1983). Marvel UK.
- Comics characters
- Comics characters introduced in 1954
- 1954 comics debuts
- Superhero comics
- Eclipse Comics superheroes
- Marvel Comics characters who can move at superhuman speeds
- Marvel Comics characters with superhuman senses
- Marvel Comics characters with superhuman strength
- Marvel Comics superheroes
- Miracleman