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The Dark Legion introduced in Archie Comics' Knuckles the Echidna comic series and featured in Sonic the Hedgehog and Sonic Universe, and its Dark Egg Legion expansion. Omega Red from X-Men series (1992) Overtkill from Spawn series (1993) Alita from the Gunnm/Gunnm:Last Order series (1990–present) Toadborg from Bucky O'Hare and the Toad Wars ...
Titular hero in the 39-episode series. Dr. Slick and the Street Frogs: The Comic Strip (TV series) A group of hip hop frogs who are trying to make it big in the rap industry. They are led by Dr. Slick and star in a segment in the series. Croaker (Frog) Maya the Bee
The Videssos cycle (sometimes also referred to as the Lost Legion series) [1] is a fantasy novel series by Harry Turtledove and set in the Videssos fictional universe. Turtledove uses his knowledge of Byzantine Empire history and military experience extensively within the story.
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The series was filmed in Morocco, Algiers, [4] England and Spain. [3] Eventually it became too dangerous and filming was completed at Beaconsfield Studios in London. [citation needed] CBS Television Film Sales Inc. distributed the series. [3] Assignment Foreign Legion was broadcast on Tuesdays from 10:30 to 11 p.m. Eastern Time. [7]
Legion is an American cable television series created for FX by Noah Hawley, based on the Marvel Comics character David Haller / Legion. It is connected to the X-Men film series, the first television series to do so. The first season, consisting of eight episodes, aired from February to March 2017.
Nick Harley of Den of Geek gave the episode a 4 star rating out of 5 wrote, "The final episode of Legion isn't flawless, but flawless isn't how Legion lived. Still, the series was breathtaking in its visuals, thrillingly off-kilter in its risks (like devoting so much of its runtime to musical interludes), and oddly poignant in its quiet moments.
David Wiegand for the San Francisco Chronicle called Legion the best series of the new year, and praised the "resolutely novelistic" approach from Hawley. He found it "facile" to call Legion "a comic book show for people who don't like comic book shows. [It has] a far more complex thematic and psychological structure than most comic book shows."