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Nightcrawler is a superhero appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics, commonly in association with the X-Men.Created by writer Len Wein and artist Dave Cockrum, he debuted in the comic book Giant-Size X-Men #1 (May 1975). [1]
Created by Chuck Austen and Sean Philips, the character first appeared in Uncanny X-Men #428 (August 2003). He belongs to the subspecies of humans named mutants, who are born with superhuman abilities. He is the father of the X-Men's Kiwi Black [1] [2] and was originally the father of Nightcrawler as well until that was retconned in 2023.
In 1989, X-Men: Madness in Murderworld, simply known as X-Men, was released for DOS, Commodore 64, and Amiga computer systems. It was developed and published by Paragon Software in 1989 and featured the cast of Pryde of the X-Men. It was a side-scroller with puzzles set in Murderworld. A limited edition comic book was included.
Alan Cumming has a lot of thoughts about his role as Nightcrawler in the 2003 Marvel movie X2: X-Men United. "Oh, I think the X-Men film I'm in is the gayest film that I've ever done — and that ...
In the X-Men Forever series, Kitty and Nightcrawler have left Excalibur and rejoined the X-Men after the events of X-Men #1-3. Of the X-Men, she undergoes the most drastic changes from the events of X-Men Forever #1. [139] During the battle with Fabian Cortez, she phases through Wolverine while he is being affected by Cortez's power.
The X-Men arrive at the castle; Nightcrawler finds Illyana chained to a pillar. At her direction, he stabs her with Pixie's soul dagger, re-releasing the Soulsword ...
Abyss is a mutant and the half-brother of Nightcrawler.He was created by Scott Lobdell, Mark Waid, Roger Cruz, and Steve Epting, and he first appeared in Age of Apocalypse: Alpha, which takes place in an alternate reality.
X-Men: Evolution is an American animated television series based on the superhero series X-Men published by Marvel Comics. [1] Taking inspiration from the early issues of the original comics, the series portrays the X-Men as teenagers rather than adults, following their struggle to control their mutant powers as they face various threats. [2]