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* BlueAndOrangeMorality: Miracleman warmly agrees to help a woman with her capacity to draw the images in her head, stating everyone has a right to art but coldly turns down a father's plea to help his daughter who's been in a coma since Miracleman's battle with Kid Miracleman in London.

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* BlueAndOrangeMorality: Miracleman warmly agrees to help a woman with her capacity to draw the images in her head, stating everyone has a right to art but coldly turns down a father's plea to help his daughter who's been in a coma since Miracleman's battle with Kid Miracleman in London.London while refusing to explain why.
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Creator/NeilGaiman and Mark Buckingham's run on ''ComicBook/{{Miracleman}}'' begins with ''The Golden Age'', a RotatingProtagonist arc examining the lives of different people within Miracleman's new utopia.

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''Miracleman: The Golden Age'' is a comic storyline by writer Creator/NeilGaiman and artist Mark Buckingham's Buckingham, the first part of their ComicBook/{{Miracleman}} trilogy.

The trilogy as a whole is a sequel to Creator/AlanMoore's
run on ''ComicBook/{{Miracleman}}'' begins ''Miracleman'', which ended with the titular superhuman transforming Earth into a new utopia. ''The Golden Age'', Age'' is a RotatingProtagonist arc examining the lives of different people within Miracleman's new utopia.



The series is followed by the second part of Gaiman and Buckingham's trilogy, ''[[ComicBook/MiraclemanTheSilverAge The Silver Age]]''.

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''The Golden Age'' was originally published as issues 17-22 of the Eclipse Comics ''Miracleman'' series. After the rights eventually moved to Creator/MarvelComics it was republished as a miniseries of its own.

The series is followed by the second part of Gaiman and Buckingham's trilogy, ''[[ComicBook/MiraclemanTheSilverAge The Silver Age]]''.
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Miracleman and Miraclewoman do appear, but they're largely out of sight while the stories focus on normal people and the radical changes to the wider world. Each of the first five issues is a standalone story, with the final one bringing many of the characters together to a single event.

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Miracleman and Miraclewoman do appear, but they're largely out of sight while the stories focus on normal people and the radical changes to the wider world. Each of the first five issues is a standalone story, with the final one sixth bringing many of the characters together to a single event.
event.

The series is followed by the second part of Gaiman and Buckingham's trilogy, ''[[ComicBook/MiraclemanTheSilverAge The Silver Age]]''.
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** [[spoiler: The spies within The City have their memories of the outside world modified. When they start to break free of this conditioning, they're considered for reintroduction to society]].

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** [[spoiler: The spies within The City have their memories of the outside world modified. When they start to break free of this conditioning, they're considered for reintroduction to society]].society]].
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[[redirect:ComicBook/{{Miracleman}}]]

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[[redirect:ComicBook/{{Miracleman}}]]!!'''Warning: ''The Golden Age'' is a direct sequel to Creator/AlanMoore's original ''Miracleman'' stories and unmarked {{Late Arrival Spoiler}}s for those comics appear on this page.'''

Creator/NeilGaiman and Mark Buckingham's run on ''ComicBook/{{Miracleman}}'' begins with ''The Golden Age'', a RotatingProtagonist arc examining the lives of different people within Miracleman's new utopia.

Miracleman and Miraclewoman do appear, but they're largely out of sight while the stories focus on normal people and the radical changes to the wider world. Each of the first five issues is a standalone story, with the final one bringing many of the characters together to a single event.

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!!''Miracleman: The Golden Age'' provides examples of:
* BackFromTheDead: The end of the Olympus arc mentions that Mors is bringing back the dead, including Creator/AndyWarhol, who's the protagonist of one of the ''Golden Age'' issues. [[spoiler:Mors keeps trying to revive Dr. Gargunza, but each attempt ends in some sort of failure due to Gargunza's behaviour. Evelyn Cream is also back and, at the very end of the arc, so is Young Miracleman]].
* BlueAndOrangeMorality: Miracleman warmly agrees to help a woman with her capacity to draw the images in her head, stating everyone has a right to art but coldly turns down a father's plea to help his daughter who's been in a coma since Miracleman's battle with Kid Miracleman in London.
* {{Bowdlerise}}: Marvel's reprint of of "Notes from the Underground" replaces an instance of the word "faggot" with "fairy".
* BrainwashingForTheGreaterGood:
** [[spoiler: Mors keeps trying this with Dr. Gargunza, tinkering with his mind and memories each time he's revived, but it proves impossible to keep his genius without keeping the dangerous aspects of his personality as well]].
** [[spoiler: The spies within The City have their memories of the outside world modified. When they start to break free of this conditioning, they're considered for reintroduction to society]].
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[[redirect:ComicBook/{{Miracleman}}]]

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