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| - Es un personaje de Los Vengadores: Nueva Generacion.
- Grant Morrison ist ein britischer Comic-Autor. Folgende Comic-Geschichten schrieb er für das Doctor Who Magazine:
* Changes
* The World Shapers
* Culture Shock
- Grant Morrison is a writer.
- Grant Morrison (born January 31, 1960) is a British comics writer and artist. He wrote a couple of strips for the Marvel UK weekly title Action Force as well as Action Force Monthly. Amongst his numerous other comics works are Starblazer, Zoids, Doctor Who, 2000AD, Batman, Superman, JLA, Seven Soldiers, Animal Man, Doom Patrol, The Invisibles and New X-Men.
- Oh, and he wrote some Doctor Who comics back in the 80s. One of which involved the Voords turning into Cybermen, and old man Jamie killing himself. Nobody wanted to admit that comic actually happened, until The Doctor Falls mentioned the Voord's home planet as a source of Cybermen. Sorry, Jamie. Grant has repeated requested to write for the actual show, believing that his Scottish heritage may have given him some leverage. But Moffat, a noted Scottish nationalist, hasn't returned any calls. Time will tell if Chibnall will give him a go.
- In 2008, IDW Publishing reprinted colourised versions of Morrison's comics in a two issue publication entitled Grant Morrison's Doctor Who.
- Grant Morrison es un guionista de cómics nacido en Escocia, aunque también ha escrito guiones para obras de teatro, películas y videojuegos. Se dice que su éxito reside en el trato de temas como las drogas, la fantasía, la violencia o el sexo. Es reconocido en el universo de Batman por el guión de la novela gráfica Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth, un clásico de 1989 considerada obra de culto.
- __NOEDITSECTION__ Image:Information-silk.png|Character Template rect 0 0 20 20 Staff Template desc none Grant Morrison File:Grant morrison.jpg Gallery Real Name Grant Morrison Gender Date of Birth January 31, 1960 Place of Birth Glasgow, Scotland Creations Redeemer First publication Spawn #16
- Grant Morrison, MBE is a Scottish comic book writer. He has worked on multiple Batman titles as well as other DC Comics titles and characters.
- Grant Morrison (born January 31, 1960) is a Scottish comic book writer and artist. He is best-known for his nonlinear narratives and counterculture leanings.
- Grant Morrison is a Scottish writer, best known for the complex use of meta-fiction within his stories. Morrison's first published comic book work was Gideon Stargrave in 1978. After a few attempts at Marvel UK, he started writing Zenith for Britain's Two Thousand AD magazine. Like pretty much every superhero comic by English/Scottish/Irish writers during the eighties, it was both a superhero deconstruction and an excuse to take shots at Margaret Thatcher. It was because of Zenith that Morrison was hired to do a comic about Animal Man, a character few knew and nobody cared about, and started his long tradition of taking total losers and transforming them into something completely awesome. Next was the Doom Patrol, turning them into the greatest constant Mind Screw ever put into Four Colore
- A key figure in the "UK-Invasion" of the American comics field in the 1980s, Morrison is most well known for his edgy late 1980s/1990s work for DC/Vertigo Comics titles initially such as Arkham Asylum, Animal Man, Doom Patrol, and then The Invisibles and JLA. More recently, he has been known as one of the main writers of such headlining DC Comics titles as Batman, All-Star Superman, Final Crisis and many others. He has also had prominent runs on main Marvel Comics titles such as New X-men and Fantastic Four: 1234.
- Grant Morrison first appeared in 1978, created by Alan Moore as a throwaway character for an underground UK magazine 3000 AD. Moore's strip, Grant the Magic Scot, centered around an anthropomorphic Scotsman who performed magic tricks. Though the strip was initially based on Moore's pet Scot, Scott (who was indeed trained to perform magic tricks), the title character soon took a life of its own and began rebelling against his creator. Morrison's anarchic behaviour led to a falling out with Moore, who relegated the character to a supporting status, focusing the strip on a houseplant instead.
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ProfessionalHistory
| - In 2001 Morrison left DC to take over Marvel's flagship comic which he retitled New X Men, rebooting the franchise in the process. Morrison's stint on X-Men is considered one of his more controversial runs, as he radically altered many aspects of the book. He introduced many new concepts including the Weapon Plus program, Fantomex, secondary mutations, the drug kick, and portrayed Magneto as a senile genocidal madman. Morrison ended many long established X-Men tropes, including disposing with their superhero costumes, ending the marriage of Scott Summers and Jean Grey by involving Cyclops in a psychic affair with The White Queen, and once again killing Jean Grey, this time by giving her a massive, catastrophic stroke. Despite all the changes, the series was still well received.
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