Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Miracleman ====== ===== Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary ===== * **Core Identity: **Miracleman is Michael Moran, a mortal man who can transform into a god-like superhuman being by speaking a key word, whose story evolved from a simple Silver Age pastiche into a dark, postmodern deconstruction of the superhero archetype itself.** * **Key Takeaways:** * **Role in the Universe:** Originally a standalone British hero, Miracleman now occupies his own distinct reality within the [[marvel_comics|Marvel Multiverse]]. He is not a native of Earth-616 but serves as a profound and often terrifying example of what happens when a superhero transcends humanity and remakes the world in his own image. * **Primary Impact:** Miracleman's most significant influence, particularly through the 1980s revisionist work of writer [[alan_moore]], was to pioneer the "dark and gritty" deconstruction of superheroes. This storyline is credited with maturing the comic book medium and directly influencing seminal works like //Watchmen// and //The Dark Knight Returns//. * **Key Incarnations:** The primary distinction is between the original, cheerful **Marvelman** of the 1950s (a direct replacement for Fawcett's Captain Marvel) and the psychologically complex, post-modern **Miracleman** reimagined by Alan Moore, which is the version currently published by Marvel Comics. He has no official incarnation in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. ===== Part 2: Origin and Evolution ===== ==== Publication History and Creation ==== Miracleman's real-world history is one of the most convoluted and fascinating in all of comics, marked by creative genius, corporate collapse, and decades of bitter legal disputes. His journey began in 1954 in the United Kingdom. When the American publisher Fawcett Comics ceased publication of //Captain Marvel// due to a lawsuit from DC Comics, the British publisher L. Miller & Son, which had been reprinting the popular hero's adventures, was left with a void. To fill it, writer-artist **Mick Anglo** was commissioned to create a near-identical substitute. He created **Marvelman**, a young reporter named Micky Moran who gained incredible powers from an astrophysicist, Guntag Barghelt, and transformed into the hero by shouting the atomic-powered magic word, "Kimota!" ("atomic" backwards, phonetically). Marvelman, along with his sidekicks Young Marvelman and Kid Marvelman, became a massive success in the UK, running for nearly a decade until 1963. For almost twenty years, the character lay dormant. He was resurrected in 1982 by writer **Alan Moore** for the new British anthology magazine, //Warrior//. Moore, along with artist Garry Leach, radically reimagined the character. Now an older, married man named Michael Moran, he had no memory of his heroic past, believing it to be a dream. Moore's story was a dark, psychological deconstruction of the superhero myth. He retconned the magic origin into a disturbing tale of military experimentation, alien technology, and psychological conditioning. This run was critically acclaimed and groundbreaking but was cut short when //Warrior// ceased publication in 1984. The rights were then picked up by the American publisher Eclipse Comics, which renamed the character **Miracleman** to avoid any potential legal conflict with Marvel Comics. Eclipse reprinted the //Warrior// material in color and continued the series with Moore and new artists like Chuck Beckum (now Chuck Austen), Rick Veitch, and John Totleben. Moore completed his planned epic, "Olympus," in //Miracleman// #16 (1989). He was succeeded by a new creative team, writer **Neil Gaiman** and artist **Mark Buckingham**, who began a new arc titled "The Golden Age." However, Eclipse Comics went bankrupt in 1994, leaving Gaiman and Buckingham's story unfinished after //Miracleman// #24. This led to a notoriously complex and prolonged legal battle over the character's ownership, primarily between Neil Gaiman and artist Todd McFarlane, who had purchased Eclipse's assets and believed he owned the character, even controversially including a version of Miracleman in his //Spawn// comic series. After years of litigation, the rights were eventually found to have reverted to the original creator, Mick Anglo. In 2009, **Marvel Comics** announced that they had acquired the full rights to Marvelman from Anglo. Marvel began a long, meticulous process of reprinting the classic Alan Moore material (with Moore, per his standard practice, having his name removed and credited as "The Original Writer"). Finally, in 2014, Marvel began publishing new material, commissioning Gaiman and Buckingham to finally complete their story, starting with //Miracleman by Gaiman & Buckingham: The Silver Age// in 2022, nearly three decades after it was put on hold. ==== In-Universe Origin Story ==== The origin of Miracleman has two vastly different versions: the original Silver Age story and the modern, grim retcon that defines the character today. === Earth-238 / The Miracleman Universe (as published by Marvel Comics) === The modern origin story, as conceived by Alan Moore, is a complete and deliberate repudiation of the simple, magical Mick Anglo version. This narrative is considered the definitive one for the character's Marvel Comics incarnation, though it takes place in its own universe, separate from Earth-616. In 1954, a crashed alien spacecraft from the Qys race was discovered by the British government. Dr. Emil Gargunza, a brilliant and sociopathic scientist, was tasked with reverse-engineering its technology for a military project codenamed **"Project Zarathustra."** The goal was to create superhuman weapons for the Cold War. Gargunza used the alien tech to grow a superhuman body in a pocket dimension (hyperspace). He then lured young orphans—Michael Moran, Johnny Bates, and Dicky Dauntless—into his program. Instead of granting them powers directly, Gargunza's process was far more insidious. He used a combination of alien science and trauma-based conditioning to create a "trigger word." When Michael Moran speaks the word **"Kimota,"** his human consciousness is shunted into hyperspace, while the consciousness of the superhuman body is downloaded into his physical form, effectively swapping their places. The human Moran exists in a dreamlike state, believing his adventures as Miracleman are just fantasies, while the superhuman Miracleman operates in the real world. This process is instantaneous and accompanied by a flash of light and energy. Moran operated as Miracleman for years as part of the "Miracleman Family," fighting a fictional arch-nemesis, Dr. Gargunza (played by Gargunza himself to maintain the illusion). However, in 1963, the British government grew fearful of their creations. They lured the Miracleman Family into a trap using a decoy atomic device. The resulting explosion was designed to kill them all. Miracleman survived but the trauma reverted him to his human form, Michael Moran, with amnesia of his entire heroic life. The world was led to believe the heroes never existed. For nearly two decades, Moran lived a normal life as a freelance journalist, haunted by dreams of flying and a forgotten word. In 1982, while covering a protest at a nuclear power plant, he saw the word "atomic" reflected backwards in a window as "cimota." This jogged his memory, and he finally spoke the trigger word, "Kimota," becoming Miracleman for the first time in eighteen years and setting in motion the events of the modern storyline. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === **Miracleman has not yet appeared in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, nor have there been any official announcements regarding his inclusion.** His absence is largely due to two factors: the aforementioned decades-long rights issues that only resolved in the last decade, and the mature, often graphically violent and philosophical nature of his definitive storyline. Alan Moore's work on the character involves themes of existential dread, body horror, political dystopia, and a level of violence (particularly during the "Battle of London" storyline) that far exceeds the typical tone of the MCU. Should Marvel Studios choose to adapt the character, it would require significant creative decisions. They would either need to: * Create a dedicated, R-rated project under a banner like Marvel Spotlight to do the source material justice. * Fundamentally alter the character's story to fit a more mainstream, PG-13 narrative, which would risk alienating fans of the iconic comic run. * Introduce him as a multiversal figure, perhaps as an analog to characters like [[hyperion]] or the [[sentry_(robert_reynolds)]], who serves as a cautionary tale about absolute power. As of now, any discussion of Miracleman in the MCU remains purely speculative among fans. ===== Part 3: Abilities, Equipment & Personality ===== === Miracleman Universe (as published by Marvel Comics) === Miracleman's powers are derived from a combination of advanced alien Qys technology and terrestrial physics, making him one of the most powerful beings in his reality. The transformation from Michael Moran to Miracleman is total, replacing a frail human body with a perfected superhuman form. * **Powers and Abilities:** * **Superhuman Strength:** Miracleman possesses near-limitless physical strength. He can move mountains, shatter entire city blocks with a single blow, and physically overpower virtually any opponent. His strength is portrayed as being on a cosmic scale, far exceeding that of typical "powerhouse" characters. * **Invulnerability:** His body is incredibly dense and resistant to almost all forms of physical and energy-based harm. He can survive the vacuum of space, deep-sea pressures, and nuclear explosions without injury. * **Flight:** Miracleman can fly at supersonic and even faster-than-light speeds. His control over his flight is precise, allowing him to hover, maneuver with perfect grace, or cross interstellar distances. * **Superhuman Speed and Reflexes:** He can move and react at speeds far beyond human perception, appearing as a blur or seeming to teleport over short distances. * **Superhuman Intellect / Genius-Level Strategist:** The Miracleman body possesses a vastly expanded consciousness and intellect. He can process information at an incredible rate, devise complex strategies in moments, and comprehend concepts far beyond human understanding. This intellect grows as he spends more time in the form, leading to a gradual detachment from human concerns. * **Energy Manipulation:** He has the ability to project powerful beams of energy from his hands and eyes, capable of incinerating targets or creating concussive blasts. * **Force Field Generation:** Miracleman can generate fields of psionic or gravimetric energy to protect himself and others. These fields are strong enough to withstand immense destructive force. * **Telekinesis:** In later stages of his development, he demonstrates powerful telekinetic abilities, allowing him to move and manipulate objects with his mind on a massive scale. * **Weaknesses:** * **The Trigger Word:** His greatest vulnerability is the reliance on the word "Kimota." If forced or tricked into saying it, he will revert to his mortal, vulnerable form of Michael Moran. * **Psychological Trauma:** Moran's human mind is the vessel for Miracleman, and the horrors he witnesses and perpetrates take a severe psychological toll. This connection to a fragile human psyche can be exploited. * **God-like Detachment:** As his power and understanding grow, Miracleman becomes increasingly detached from humanity. This emotional distance, while not a physical weakness, makes him colder, more calculating, and capable of making decisions that are terrifying from a human perspective. * **Personality:** Michael Moran is an ordinary, somewhat timid man. Miracleman, by contrast, is initially confident, noble, and heroic, albeit with a lingering sense of disorientation after his long absence. However, as he uncovers the truth of his origin and confronts the horrors of his existence, his personality darkens. He becomes more pragmatic, ruthless, and ultimately, messianic. After defeating Kid Miracleman, he fully embraces his godhood, casting aside human morality to establish a global "utopia" under his absolute rule. He is a benevolent dictator, a god who loves his creation but is no longer truly part of it. === Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) === As Miracleman does not exist in the MCU, his abilities and personality in that context are non-existent. An adaptation would likely maintain his core powerset (strength, flight, invulnerability) as it is central to his identity. However, the true challenge for any MCU adaptation would be capturing the evolution of his personality—from a rediscovered hero to a morally ambiguous god-king—which is the entire thematic point of his story. ===== Part 4: Key Relationships & Network ===== ==== Core Allies ==== * **Liz Moran:** Michael's wife. Liz is one of the most important characters in the series, serving as the story's human anchor. She is the first person to witness Miracleman's return and grounds the narrative in a real, emotional context. Her journey is as transformative as Michael's; she must grapple with her husband becoming a literal god, their marriage evolving into something unrecognizable, and eventually giving birth to their superhuman child, Winter. * **Miraclewoman (Evelyn Cream):** The last survivor of a separate, all-female counterpart to Project Zarathustra called "Project Venus." Initially introduced as a freelance intelligence agent, she reveals her superhuman form and becomes Miracleman's partner and consort in his new world order. She shares his power and his divine detachment, becoming a co-ruler of their new pantheon. * **The Warpsmiths (Aza Chorn, Phon Mooda, etc.):** A race of stoic, teleporting aliens from the planet Qys. They are the creators of the technology that gave Miracleman his powers. They seek out Miracleman to form an alliance, viewing his existence as a potentially stabilizing force in the cosmos. They are powerful but dispassionate, providing Miracleman with alien perspectives and technology that further distance him from his human origins. ==== Arch-Enemies ==== * **Kid Miracleman (Johnny Bates):** Miracleman's ultimate nemesis and one of the most terrifying villains in comic book history. Unlike Michael Moran, Johnny Bates was not reverted to his human form and forced into amnesia in the 1963 explosion. Instead, he remained in his super-powered body for years. Without the balancing influence of the Miracleman Family, his immense power and childish mind twisted into a vessel of pure sadism and megalomania. He lived for two decades as a "normal" man, never speaking his trigger word ("Miracleman") for fear of losing his power. When Miracleman returns, Bates is goaded into transforming back into Kid Miracleman. His subsequent rampage, known as the "Battle of London," is a horrific massacre that levels the city and forces Miracleman to make his world-altering decisions. Bates represents the ultimate corruption of the superhero ideal: absolute power without a shred of maturity or morality. * **Dr. Emil Gargunza:** The human scientist behind Miracleman's creation. Gargunza is the true "evil genius" of the story, a cold, amoral manipulator who saw the children in his care as mere lab rats. His motivations were not world domination in a traditional sense, but a twisted desire for immortality and a god-complex of his own. He orchestrated the entire "superhero" narrative of Miracleman's youth as a way to study him, and later attempts to transfer his own consciousness into the superhuman body of Miracleman's unborn child. ==== Affiliations ==== * **The Miracleman Family:** The original superhero team created by Project Zarathustra, consisting of Miracleman, Kid Miracleman, and Young Miracleman (Dicky Dauntless). It was designed to be a propaganda tool and a controlled experiment. The "family" was a complete fabrication, shattered by the government's betrayal in 1963. * **The Pantheon:** After establishing his new world order, Miracleman creates a new "family" of god-like beings to rule Earth. This pantheon includes himself, Miraclewoman, their daughter Winter, and the allied Warpsmiths. They reside in a massive citadel, Olympus, built atop the ruins of London. * **The Marvel Multiverse:** Since Marvel Comics' acquisition, Miracleman has had tangential connections to the wider multiverse. His alternate reality was designated Earth-238 in Alan Moore's earlier work on //Captain Britain//. More recently, in the comic series //Timeless//, he has been depicted in visions of the future, suggesting a larger, yet-to-be-defined role in the cosmic architecture of the Marvel Universe. ===== Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines ===== ==== The //Warrior// Magazine Revival (1982-1984) ==== This is the genesis of the modern Miracleman. The storyline, subtitled "A Dream of Flying," begins with Michael Moran as a middle-aged man plagued by migraines and a single, recurring dream of being able to fly. Alan Moore masterfully builds a sense of mystery and psychological dread as Moran slowly rediscovers his lost identity. This arc introduces the core concepts of the revisionist take: the forgotten trigger word, the confrontation with a now-villainous Johnny Bates, and the slow, horrifying reveal that his entire heroic past was a government-induced lie. It set the standard for superhero deconstruction. ==== Olympus (Miracleman #15-16) ==== The climax of Alan Moore's and John Totleben's run is one of the most celebrated and shocking storylines ever published. After being freed, Kid Miracleman unleashes his full power on London in an act of pure, psychopathic fury. The resulting battle is depicted with unflinching, graphic detail, showing the horrific collateral damage that a real-world superhuman fight would entail. It is an apocalypse. Miracleman is forced to go to extreme lengths to stop him, and the victory is utterly hollow. Surveying the carnage of a destroyed city and millions dead, Miracleman concludes that humanity cannot be trusted to govern itself. He declares himself the planet's ruler, abolishes all governments and religions, and uses his powers and alien technology to create a forced utopia, ending war, hunger, and strife at the cost of free will. He becomes a god, and the age of man ends. ==== The Golden Age & The Silver Age (1990-1993, 2022-Present) ==== Written by Neil Gaiman with art by Mark Buckingham, these arcs explore the world //after// the god has arrived. "The Golden Age" is an anthology-style series examining life in Miracleman's new paradise from various human perspectives: a grieving man who lost his family in the London attack, a group of resurrected dead (including Andy Warhol), and spies from the remnants of the old human order. It poses the question: Is a perfect, safe world worth the price of our humanity? The series was famously cut short by Eclipse Comics' bankruptcy. Its continuation, "The Silver Age," finally resumed publication at Marvel in 2022, picking up the story threads and reintroducing Miracleman's long-lost sidekick, Young Miracleman, into this strange new world. ===== Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions ===== * **Marvelman (Mick Anglo's Original):** The original 1950s character. This version is a direct, uncomplicated hero in the vein of the original Captain Marvel. Micky Moran is a plucky copy boy, and his adventures are bright, optimistic, and whimsical. This version lacks all of the psychological depth and darkness of the modern incarnation and represents the innocent archetype that Alan Moore sought to deconstruct. * **The Miracleman of Earth-238:** In Alan Moore's acclaimed run on Marvel UK's //Captain Britain//, he introduced the concept of the "Jaspers' Warp," a reality-destroying wave. Earth-238 was a world that had a version of Miracleman. This world was destroyed, and its Miracleman was killed and later resurrected as a zombified corpse by a hero-killing cyborg called The Fury. This was a dark foreshadowing of Moore's later work and an early link between the Miracleman mythos and the broader Marvel Multiverse. * **Young Miracleman (Dicky Dauntless):** The "Robin" to Miracleman's "Batman" in the original Miracleman Family. Like Moran, he was a young orphan roped into Project Zarathustra. He was believed to have been killed in the 1963 explosion that erased Moran's memory. The Gaiman/Buckingham "Silver Age" storyline reveals that he survived and is reintroduced into a world now ruled by his former mentor, forcing both to confront a past they thought was long dead. ===== See Also ===== * [[alan_moore]] * [[neil_gaiman]] * [[sentry_(robert_reynolds)]] * [[hyperion]] * [[captain_britain]] * [[marvel_multiverse]] ===== Notes and Trivia ===== ((Miracleman was originally named Marvelman. The name was changed to Miracleman for the American reprints by Eclipse Comics in the 1980s to avoid legal conflicts with Marvel Comics, which ironically now owns the character and has the right to use either name.)) ((The trigger word "Kimota" is "Atomic" spelled backwards, phonetically. This was a direct homage to the original Captain Marvel's trigger word, "Shazam.")) ((Alan Moore famously has a policy of refusing to have his name credited on modern reprints or adaptations of his older work-for-hire comics. For Marvel's reprints of his Miracleman run, he is credited simply as "The Original Writer.")) ((The legal battles over the character's rights are legendary in the comics industry, involving creators Mick Anglo, Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman, and Todd McFarlane, and publishers L. Miller & Son, Eclipse Comics, and Image Comics before the rights were finally secured by Marvel.)) ((The "Battle of London" in //Miracleman// #15 is widely considered a landmark in comic book storytelling for its unflinching and realistic portrayal of superhuman violence and its devastating consequences on a civilian population.)) ((The character of the Sentry (Robert Reynolds) in the main Marvel Universe (Earth-616) shares several thematic similarities with Miracleman, including being a forgotten, impossibly powerful hero with a dark, destructive side.)) ((Before acquiring the rights to Miracleman, Marvel introduced the character Hyperion of the Squadron Supreme, who often serves a similar narrative role as a "Superman analogue" taken to a darker or more extreme conclusion.))