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The Exiles are a group of fictional characters that feature in three Marvel Comics series, ''Exiles'', ''New Exiles'', and ''Exiles'' vol. 2. The Exiles consists of characters from different dimensions, or realities, which have been removed from time and space in order to correct problems (often called "hiccups") in various alternate worlds and divergent timelines in the Marvel Multiverse. Created by writer Judd Winick and artist Mike McKone, Exiles features a revolving team roster with new characters introduced and others replaced when they are killed or returned to their home reality. The series is notable for the number of characters who stay dead, in contrast to the frequent resurrections that occur in the main Marvel and DC continuities. It has featured familiar characters or settings from previous Marvel storylines, such as the "Age of Apocalypse" and "House of M". The first volume of ''Exiles'' ran for 100 issues, ending after a crossover with the members of New Excalibur in ''X-Men: Die by the Sword'' and the one-shot ''Exiles: Days of Then and Now''. In March 2008 ''New Exiles'' began with Chris Claremont and artist Tom Grummett at the helm. ''New Exiles'' #1 sold out prompting Marvel to release ''New Exiles'' #0 which collected ''Exiles'' #100 and ''Exiles: Days of Then and Now''.〔("New Exiles" #2 sells out, second printing announced ) (press release), Comic Book Resources, February 20, 2008〕 Writer Jeff Parker and artist Salvador Espin relaunched the series with a new #1 in April 2009, but the book was canceled after only six issues.〔(Agents of Atlas Lives! EXILES However... ) by Jeff Parker, accessed July 23, 2009〕 ==Publication history== ''Exiles'' was created by Mike Marts, Mike Raicht, Judd Winick and also artists Mike McKone and Jim Calafiore. ''Exiles'' was created after a period of development aimed at creating a new ''What If?'' book for Marvel. In an interview Raicht speaks of the Exiles' early origins: "We were eventually going to visit some alternate realities and flesh out some stories. We were attempting to give the readers a ''What If?'' X-Men book. Eventually that idea shifted into a ''Quantum Leap'' type thing where Blink, Morph, and maybe Sabretooth from the Age of Apocalypse would join some other heroes, most likely from the ''Millennial Visions'' books, to form a reality-hopping super team that righted wrongs."〔(Raiding The Marvel Multiverse: Mike Raicht on "Exiles:Days of Then and Now" ) by Benjamin Ong Pang Kean. Newsarama, accessed December 13, 2007〕 Raicht and Winick would develop the initial formula of ''Exiles reality-hopping adventures. Chuck Austen came aboard as interim writer after Winick's move to DC Comics. Tony Bedard took over, writing roughly half the series, from #46-89. Chris Claremont came onboard as of issue #90 and ended the series with the crossover ''X-Men Die by the Sword'', before restarting the series as ''New Exiles''. ''New Exiles'' ran for 18 issues before being canceled. A few months later the series was restarted again with a second volume of ''Exiles'', written by Jeff Parker. This relaunch only lasted 6 issues before being canceled as well. A number of artists have penciled the series including Mike McKone, Jim Calafiore, Kev Walker, Clayton Henry, Mizuki Sakakibara, Casey Jones, Steve Scott, Paul Pelletier, and Tom Mandrake. Tom Grummett, Roberto Castro, Paco Diaz, and Tim Seeley worked on ''New Exiles''. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Exiles (Marvel Comics)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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