Moon Knight By Huston, Benson & Hurwitz Omnibus... [ 90% Working ]
Marc, wheelchair-bound and addicted to painkillers, must reclaim his mantle. He doesn't just put on the suit; he carves his way back into it, driven by a Khonshu who appears as a gore-slicked version of his former enemy, Bushman.
The story focuses heavily on Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) and the unreliable nature of Marc’s reality. Moon Knight by Huston, Benson & Hurwitz Omnibus...
Marc Spector sat in the shadows of a decaying midtown brownstone, the silence broken only by the wet thud of rain against the glass. He wasn't alone. Inside his mind, the voices of Steven Grant and Jake Lockley bickered over the morality of their next move, while the booming, skeletal echo of Khonshu demanded blood. Marc Spector sat in the shadows of a
This wasn't the heroic vigilantism of the Avengers; this was a descent into the gutter. The Return of the Specter This wasn't the heroic vigilantism of the Avengers;
Marc believes he can only be saved if he suffers as much as his victims. The Climax: Blood on the White Suit
This era is famous for its "no-holds-barred" approach to combat, emphasizing the physical toll of being a non-powered vigilante.
In a climactic battle against the Black Spectre, Marc is forced to choose between his sanity and his duty. He embraces the madness to win, leaving the "hero" behind to become a true monster of justice. Themes of the Run