Talk:Gorillas in comics
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What about Arthur Adams' Monkeyman & O'Brien? Your line about brain transplants also reminded me of the Grant Morrison Animal Man story with B'Wana Beast and that evil scientist who got merged with an ape. I'd have to look up the issue... Aha! Issue 3-4! But this may not be exactly what you're talking about. Also, you may want to double-check your use of silver age of comics/silver age of comic books: you use both, multiple times. -leigh (φθόγγος) 20:16, May 19, 2005 (UTC)
Under "Modern age", if you want to talk about "several writers" you should probably have more examples that are not Alan Moore... ←Hob 09:42, 2005 May 21 (UTC)
To say that the films King Kong and Mighty Joe Young "immediately preceded" the Silver Age of comics is dubious at best. The Silver Age is generally considered to have begun with the introduction of the new Flash in 1956, but Might Joe Young came out eight years before that. King Kong, released in 1933, stretches "immediately" way beyond breaking point. There surely must be some better - if less well known today - examples availible. --MockTurtle 07:27, 18 July 2005 (UTC)