Second Coming: Difference between revisions

Content added Content deleted
(update links)
(fix double vertical bars in link)
Line 6: Line 6:
Related to [[Rightful King Returns]].
Related to [[Rightful King Returns]].


----
{{Examples}}
{{Examples}}
== Anime and Manga ==
== Anime and Manga ==
Line 38: Line 37:


== Live Action TV ==
== Live Action TV ==
* In an episode of ''[[The Flash (TV 1990)||The Flash]]'', Barry Allen is accidentally thrust 10 years into a future where Central City has been taken over by his brother's killer, Nicholas Pike, and where an underground group of citizens were waiting for the Flash to return in order to [[Set Right What Once Went Wrong|set things right]].
* In an episode of ''[[The Flash (TV 1990)|The Flash]]'', Barry Allen is accidentally thrust 10 years into a future where Central City has been taken over by his brother's killer, Nicholas Pike, and where an underground group of citizens were waiting for the Flash to return in order to [[Set Right What Once Went Wrong|set things right]].
* The 2003 ''[[The Second Coming (TV series)|The Second Coming]]'' Two-Part Drama by Russell T Davies, which is about Steve Baxter, an ordinary Englishman who turns out to be the second coming of Christ.
* The 2003 ''[[The Second Coming (TV series)|The Second Coming]]'' Two-Part Drama by Russell T Davies, which is about Steve Baxter, an ordinary Englishman who turns out to be the second coming of Christ.
* ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]'' had a Klingon religious caste try to use [[Clone Jesus|cloning]] and [[Fake Memories|memory construction]] to recreate their local Messiah Kahless, so that they (with he as their puppet) could take over the Klingon Empire and "[[Glory Days|restore it to greatness]]". The episode ended with the truth being revealed, and both the clone and Klingon Society took it remarkably well: as a compromise Kahless II ends up becoming the figurehead Emperor (a previously vacant position).
* ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]'' had a Klingon religious caste try to use [[Clone Jesus|cloning]] and [[Fake Memories|memory construction]] to recreate their local Messiah Kahless, so that they (with he as their puppet) could take over the Klingon Empire and "[[Glory Days|restore it to greatness]]". The episode ended with the truth being revealed, and both the clone and Klingon Society took it remarkably well: as a compromise Kahless II ends up becoming the figurehead Emperor (a previously vacant position).