The saga of Miracleman continues!
This TPB collects the second storyarc known as “The Red King Syndrome” featuring issues #5-10 of “Miracleman”, plus additional stories “Young Miracleman: 1957” & “The Guerneville Flood”, along with a “Behind-of-Scenes” section with sketches, pin-ups, cover variants, etc…
Warning: This TPB contains “Mature Content”
Creative Team:
Writer: Alan Moore (despicted as “The Original Writer”, based on characters created by Mick Anglo) & Cat Yronwode (for the short story “The Guerneville Flood”)
Illustrators: Alan Davis, John Ridgway, Chuck Austen, Rick Veitch
NO MORE GAMES
It imagines that it is invulnerable. -- …and it isnt.
Michael Moran had its “baptism of fire”, in the first volume, dealing with the wrath of Kid Miracleman. Family reunions always are messy!
Liz Moran (Michael Moran’s wife) is pregnant and her baby isn’t of Michael per se, but Miracleman’s (further explanation, bellow, in the second part of the review).
Miracleman found an ally in the most unlikely of situations and this helped him to discover the not so campy truth behind the reason of his powers.
Miracleman thought that he already knew all about his past and the worst has already happened…
…he thought wrong.
Liz is kidnapped and Miracleman doesn’t know the least of how grave is the menace fallen over the safety of their incoming baby!
The Miracleman Family got bigger and not in the way that Michael Moran imagined to be and he won’t be the same anymore!
And Johnny Bates aka Kid Miracleman isn’t as comatose as everybody else think…
THE MIRACLE OF BIRTH
M-Mike, I think it’s coming… AHH-HHHHHHH
In this second TPB, there is a famous moment in comic books’ history.
In its chapter eleven, Scenes from the Nativity, you are witness of the birth of Miracleman and Liz Moran’s daughter, Winter.
And I wrote intentionally “Miracleman” and not Michael Moran, since when they conceived the baby, it was in a moment where Miracleman was there, while they share a same existence, Mike Moran realized that they aren’t technically the same person. Besides the obvious physical differences (fitness, intelligence level, self-confidence, age, etc…), they even started to think as different individuals (Miracleman doesn’t trust in Moran during crisis moments, Moran is jealous about Miracleman having sex with his wife). Mike Moran and Liz were trying for years of having a baby, but just one night with Miracleman, was enough to have Liz pregnant.
In the classic cartoon, The Flintstones, they did history about presenting Wilma Flintstone pregnant, with a clearly visible swollen belly, and being like that for several episodes. Nowadays, in the new millenium and living in the age of internet, I supposed that there isn’t any kid believing in the old charming tales of storks, lettuces and Paris, but back in the campy 60s, it was quite daring and bold to show in a cartoon (not matter that it was aired in nocturnal prime time, just like The Simpsons nowadays) since the show was watched for all the family, including children, and then they are having an adult pregnant woman in the TV, so the “big secret” of the adults was revealed and kids then knew how babies came to the world.
Obviously in The Flinstones didn’t show the scene of Wilma giving birth to Pebbles in an operating room. There were certain understandable limits in their boldness.
However, Alan Moore has boldness in abundance, in fact you may say that he put the boldness in comic books. So, you may guess right that if Alan Moore would have a birth scene in one of his comics, well, he will be totally bold about how portrait it. Of course, he wasn’t the illustrator, but certainly as writer, he lead the artist of how he wanted the birth scene on the comic book.
And that leading was, well, showing the whole thing!
Yes, ladies and gentlemen, Miracleman’s run by Moore is famous for many things, and one those things was to show without any shyness in a total graphic way the miracle of birth, presenting Liz’s vagina dilating, the baby’s head coming out, etc… Becoming the first (and very likely the only time) that a comic book showed openly the birth of a baby.
Alan Moore, people. Only him.
And this is only one of many reasons why, in comic books, it’s Alan Moore first, and later the rest of the bunch of writers.