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Terra Obscura is a 2003 comic book miniseries spin-off from Alan Moore's Tom Strong series. The stories are written by Peter Hogan, and drawn by Yanick Paquette and Karl Story with additional flashback sequences drawn by Eric Theriault.
Titano the Super-Ape: Superman: A villain. Tytus de Zoo Chimpanzee Tytus, Romek i A'Tomek: Henryk Chmielewski (comics) An intelligent monkey created from an inkblot, seeks to become more human with the help of his friends. Ultra-Humanite: Gorilla Action Comics #13 A mad scientist who took many forms, most famously that of an evil albino ape.
However, these characters had lapsed into public domain before that. The Blue Tracer's origin story is told in the first appearance, in Military Comics #1. William "Wild Bill" Dunn is an American engineer working with the army in a secluded section of Ethiopia. While working, his team is attacked by a group of supernatural beings named the M ...
Flash Gordon was also an influence on early superhero comics characters. Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster based Superman 's uniform of tights and a cape on costumes worn by Flash Gordon. [ 33 ] [ 34 ] Bob Kane 's drawing of Batman on the cover of Detective Comics No. 27 (the first appearance of the character) was based on a 1937 Alex Raymond ...
All Quality Comics characters have lapsed into public domain. It should be noted that this pertains only to the characters as they were originally depicted when they appeared in titles published by Quality Comics. The versions of the characters that include retconned history are assumed to be separate characters that belong to DC Comics.
Man-Ape appears as a boss in the PS2, PSP, Nintendo DS, and Wii versions of Marvel: Ultimate Alliance 2, voiced by Emerson Franklin. [citation needed] Man-Ape appears as a boss in Marvel: Avengers Alliance. [citation needed] This version is the leader of the White Gorillas. Man-Ape appears as a boss in Marvel Heroes. [citation needed]
The Ape Man was released on March 19, 1943. [2] It was distributed by Monogram Pictures Corp. [3] In the United Kingdom, the film was released as Lock Your Doors. [7] In 1950, the film was screened under the title They Creep in the Dark. [8] [9] Monogram later released the film Return of the Ape Man in 1944 and marketed it as the "shock-sequel".
In 2025, the works unbound from copyright cap off the 1920s with literature, characters and more from 1929 entering the public domain.