User:AndyJones/Marduk in popular culture

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Marduk was the historic patron deity of the city of Babylon, in the 18th century BC. The name Marduk has been used for numerous other entities since.

Music[edit]

Films and television[edit]

  • In the science fiction series Stargate SG-1, Marduk is a Goa'uld System Lord who was betrayed by his own priests. He was left trapped in a sarcophagus with a flesh-eating parasite which would continually eat away at his flesh as he was being perpetually revived.
  • In the anime movie Metropolis, the Marduk are a quasi-fascist, anti-robot secret police force that plays a key role in the plot of the overall story.
  • In the OVA Macross II a race called the Marduk enslaves a large number of Zentraedi (giant cloned warriors) and use them to attack Earth.
  • In Neon Genesis Evangelion, the Evangelion pilots are chosen by a mysterious organization called the "Marduk Institute." The Institute is actually a front for SEELE, who are in possession of secret Dead Sea scrolls that fortell the fate of humanity and the end of the world.
  • In the episode "Stimutacs" of the cult animated series Sealab 2021, Marduk is mentioned as, "son of Ea, Slayer of Tiamat" and a sun God, living within the smart version of the normally stupid character Stormy Waters, talking with Sparks later in the episode (telling him to "Eat more pills, pillhead"), and ending the episode playing guitar with Sparks on drums, a metal version of the ending theme song.
  • In the Real Ghostbusters episode I Am The City, Marduk visits Manhattan, though Tiamat follows when Marduk's visit causes problems, and the two must do battle. The Ghostbusters help, the end result seemingly eliminating both Marduk and Tiamat. Marduk, however, merely changed his form after the battle so as not to attract Tiamat's attention.

Computer and video games[edit]

Literature[edit]

  • In both the Ancient Future trilogy and the Celestial Triad by author Traci Harding, Marduk is a Nephilim, the son of Enki and father of the Chosen Ones. Tracy Harding's Trilogies are based almost entirely on Mesopotamian and Sumerian mythology.
  • Marduk is the name of a planet in H. Beam Piper's 'Terro-Human' future history stories and novels.
  • The 1980s independent comic book series Samurai by Barry Blair had a villain who was named Marduk.

Role-playing games[edit]

  • Marduk and other gods of the Babylonian and Sumerian pantheons appeared initially in the first edition of Deities & Demigods, an index used in the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game.
  • A demon going by the name of Marduk appeared to be the main antagonist behind "The Traveler Saga" in the Living Greyhawk Veluna regional campaign. The series was never completed.