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Vengeance of the Moon Knight : ウィキペディア英語版
Moon Knight

Moon Knight is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character exists in the Marvel Universe and was created by Doug Moench and Don Perlin. He first appeared in ''Werewolf by Night'' #32 (August 1975).
==Publication history==
The character debuted in the title ''Werewolf by Night'' #32 (August 1975), written by Doug Moench with art by Don Perlin, as an enemy of the title character in a two-part story continuing in issue #33. The character proved popular with readers, and was granted a solo spot in ''Marvel Spotlight'' #28–29 (1976), written by Doug Moench with art by Don Perlin.
He then had appearances in ''Spectacular Spider-Man'' issues #22 and #23 (September/October 1978), both written by Bill Mantlo with art by Mike Zeck on #22 and Jim Mooney on #23; ''Marvel Two-in-One'' #52, written by Steven Grant with art by Jim Craig; and ''Defenders'' #47–50. Moon Knight then gained a backup strip in the ''Hulk! Magazine'' in issues #11–15, #17–18, and #20, as well as ''Marvel Preview'' #21 (on which he was the cover feature), all written by Doug Moench. Art was done by Gene Colan in #11, Keith Pollard in #12, and Bill Sienkiewicz on the rest. These were reprinted in ''Moon Knight Special Edition'' #1–3.
A new ongoing series was then launched (November 1980), titled ''Moon Knight'', which also had writing by Doug Moench and art by Bill Sienkiewicz. With issue #15 (January 1982), Marvel pulled the series from newsstand distribution, resulting in it being only available through direct market purchase at comic book stores. The series continued until #38 (July 1984), at which point the comic was cancelled. A new series, ''Moon Knight – Fist Of Khonshu'' by Alan Zelenetz and Chris Warner followed the cancellation to try and establish a new status quo, but it was cancelled after six issues. Afterwards, the character was incorporated into the pages of ''West Coast Avengers'' from issue #21 through issue #41 and Annuals #1–3. After an appearance in ''Punisher Annual'' #2 in 1989, the character was once more given an ongoing series, this time titled ''Marc Spector: Moon Knight''. At the time, Moon Knight also had a major guest star role in the pages of ''The Amazing Spider-Man'', as ''The Amazing Spider-Man'' #353–358 served as the conclusion to an ongoing storyline in the pages of the character's title, as far as the character's war with the Secret Empire. The series was canceled with issue #60 (March 1994), with four of the last six issues drawn by Stephen Platt, who was hired by Image Comics based on the strength of his work on the series. Two one-shots, ''Marc Spector: Moon Knight Special Edition'' #1 and ''Moon Knight: Divided We Fall'' were published during the run of the title, followed in January 1998 and January 1999 by two further four-issue limited series, which resurrected the character who had died in the final issue of the 1989 series.
A ''Moon Knight'' ongoing series was launched in April 2006, written by Charlie Huston with art by David Finch.〔(Huston Talks Moon Knight ), Newsarama, July 25, 2005〕〔(Dark Side of the Moon Knight: Huston talks "Moon Knight: The Bottom" ), Comic Book Resources, August 8, 2005〕〔(Waxing Moon Knight: Huston talks "Moon Knight" ), Comic Book Resources, February 1, 2006〕 As of issue 14 of this series, Mike Benson took over writing duties〔(Mike Benson: Of Moon Knight and Redemption ), Comics Bulletin, August 31, 2007〕〔(Bring on the Knight: An Interview with Moon Knight's Mike Benson ), Comics Bulletin, March 4, 2008〕 with Huston acting as story-outline adviser according to Benson in an interview with Marvel published as a one-page excerpt in various Marvel comic books throughout late 2007 and early 2008. Peter Milligan also wrote a 2008 seasonal one-shot "Moon Knight: Silent Knight" with artist Laurence Campbell.〔(O Holy Knight: Milligan on Moon Knight Xmas Special ), Comic Book Resources, November 18, 2008〕 The 2006 series ended with issue #30 (July 2009), and only one Annual in the series was printed in 2008.
That series was followed by a ten-issue series titled ''Vengeance of the Moon Knight'', beginning in September 2009, written by Gregg Hurwitz and drawn by Jerome Opena.〔(), Comic Book Resources, June 19, 2009〕 After ''Vengeance of the Moon Knight'' was canceled, Moon Knight was placed in the team book ''Secret Avengers'' (appearing for the title's first 21 issues), in the ''Shadowland'' three issue storyline and in a 2010 relaunch of ''Heroes for Hire''.
It was announced at the New York Comic Con that 2011 would see the launch of a new ''Moon Knight'' series by Brian Michael Bendis and Alex Maleev, which Bendis has described as a "complete reinvention of the character on every conceivable level."〔http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=29174〕 This volume launched in May 2011 and ended with issue #12 in April 2012.〔http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page=article&id=36560〕
In March 2014, Marvel launched a new ongoing series as part of the All New Marvel NOW! initiative.

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「Moon Knight」の詳細全文を読む



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