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Moon Girl appears only in the story "I Was a Heart Pirate" in issue #9 (Sept-Oct 1949) and no subsequent issue. The series continued as Weird Fantasy beginning with issue #13. [8] The Moon Girl story is one of two credited with starting the trend in horror comics at EC. [9]
Alter Ego #1 (1961). Cover art by Roy Thomas. Alter-Ego supported the superhero revivals of the era that Jerry Bails dubbed "The Second Heroic Age of Comics", popularly known as the Silver Age of Comic Books. DC Comics editor Julius Schwartz encouraged Bails and collaborator Roy Thomas, who would eventually become Marvel Comics editor-in-chief.
The Incredible Hulk comic book series further complicates this theme, as Bruce Banner loses control to the Hyde-like Hulk whenever he becomes angry, yet also depends upon the Hulk's superpowers to combat villains. In the film and novel Fight Club, the narrator has an alter ego he loses control of, Tyler Durden.
The Incredible Hulk is an ongoing comic book series featuring the Marvel Comics superhero the Hulk and his alter ego Dr. Bruce Banner. First published in May 1962, the series ran for six issues before it was canceled in March 1963, and the Hulk character began appearing in Tales to Astonish.
TekWar is a series of science fiction novels created by Canadian actor William Shatner, ghost-written by American writer Ron Goulart, [1] and published by Putnam beginning in October 1989. The novels gave rise to a comic book series , video game , and later TV movies and a series , both of the latter featuring Shatner.
Duane Dibbley is the dorky alter-ego of the Cat, played by Danny John-Jules with a bowl haircut and a large overbite. He first appears in the Series V episode "Back To Reality (S5,E6)," as part of a hallucinogenic experience, designed to cause despair in the Dwarfers.
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