Alan Moore Et univers uten grenser [Alle Tiders Superhelter] #[nn]
A 2007 Norwegian-language edition of All Time Superheroes features the story "Til mannen som har alt," written by Alan Moore and Jens E. Røsåsen, with art by Dave Gibbons and coloring by Tom Ziuko. The issue includes the characters Alan Moore, Jens E. Røsåsen, and Dave Gibbons. The cover was created by Brian Bolland.
In "Til mannen som har alt," Superman’s birthday celebration at the Fortress of Solitude takes a dark turn when he falls under the influence of the Black Mercy, a flower from Mongul that plunges him into a dream of Krypton’s untouched past. With Wonder Woman battling Mongul, Batman and Robin race to free Superman—only for the flower to briefly claim Batman before Robin redirects it onto Mongul, trapping him in his own deepest fantasy.
In "Night Olympics del 1," Black Canary and Green Arrow patrol a city where crime has grown duller, their banter sharpening into concern as they notice a troubling shift in the villains' boldness. From a distant rooftop, an arrow flies—silent, precise—and Black Canary is struck, leaving the moment suspended in sudden danger.
In "Father's Day del 1," Vigilante is summoned by a terrified woman whose abusive husband has just been released from prison and is threatening her and her daughter. By the time he arrives, the woman is dead and her child has vanished. Tracking the girl through the city’s underbelly, he finds her hidden with a pair of kind-hearted sex workers—only to learn her father has found her and is closing in.
In "The Jungle Line," Clark, weakened by a Kryptonian fungus slowly consuming him, flees south as his powers begin to fail. After a crash in a dense swamp, he stumbles upon the only being who might hold the key to his survival—Swamp Thing.
In "Tygers," Abin Sur ventures into the forbidden reaches of space to locate a crashed ship on the desolate planet Ysmault, where he encounters the nightmarish Empire of Tears. There, face to face with the tormenting entity Qull of the Five Inversions, Abin dares to ask three questions—about the ship, his fate, and the Guardians’ greatest tragedy—unaware that each answer will unravel his future.
In "Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow? del 1," Lois Lane Elliot recounts the final days of Superman to journalist Tim Crane, ten years after his disappearance. As Bizarro turned violent, the Toyman and the Prankster exposed Superman’s identity, and a wave of Metallos attacked the Daily Planet, forcing Superman to retreat with his closest allies to the Fortress of Solitude. When Brainiac seized Lex Luthor’s body and the Kryptonite Man emerged, the Legion of Super-Heroes arrived with Supergirl, bearing a mysterious statuette that would mark a turning point in the crisis.
In "Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow? del 2," Lois recounts the final, desperate stand of Superman as he battles a wave of enemies—Brainiac in Luthor’s body, the Kryptonite Man, and the Legion of Super-Villains—within the Fortress of Solitude, only to uncover the true architect behind the assault. With the revelation came a fateful choice, one that forced him to summon Mr. Mxyzptlk, leading to a moment of tragic consequence that would change everything. As the interview ends, Lois, her husband Jordy, and their young son Jonathan find peace in the quiet of their home.
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↩ Reprints Detective Comics #549 (1985), Detective Comics #550 (1985), Green Lantern #188 (1985), The Omega Men #26 (1985), The Vigilante #17 (1985), The Omega Men #27 (1985), The Vigilante #18 (1985), DC Comics Presents #85 (1985), Superman Annual #11 (1985), Action Comics #583 (1986), Superman #423 (1986), The Green Lantern Corps Annual #2 (1986), Secret Origins #10 (1987), Batman Annual #11 (1987), Green Lantern Annual #3 (1987), Batman: The Killing Joke #[nn] (1988), Batman: Det glade vanvidd #[nn] (1989), DC Universe: The Stories of Alan Moore #[nn] (2006)
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