Classifier Instance:

Anchor text: Man-Thing
Target Entity: Man\u002dThing
Preceding Context: The Fountain of Youth lives on as a metaphor for anything that potentially increases longevity. It is a frequently used plot device in age regression stories. Nathaniel Hawthorne used the Fountain in "Dr. Heidegger's Experiment" to demonstrate that positive thinking is a far better remedy than deluded journeys to Florida for legendary cures; Orson Welles directed and starred in a 1958 TV program based on the legend; and Tim Powers featured it in On Stranger Tides, a novel of 18th century pirate-voodoo adventure. In 1953, the Walt Disney Company created a cartoon entitled Don's Fountain of Youth, in which Donald Duck had supposedly discovered the famous fountain and can't resist pretending to his nephews that it really works. Seven years later, in "That's no fable!" Carl Barks revisited the myth this time with Scrooge McDuck and his nephews finding the real fountain. In 1974, Marvel Comics featured the Fountain (which works if bathed in, but cripples if drunk from) in
Succeeding Context: and later The Savage She-Hulk. In the 1976 comedy series Big John, Little John, a middle-aged man drank from the Fountain of Youth and then switch back and forth from 12-years-old to 43-years-old throughout the series. In the 1994 computer game Sid Meier's Colonization, finding a Fountain of Youth in a Lost City rumor would bring several people to the docks in Europe; this could be found several times during one game. In 2005 the Fountain turned up in the DC Comics series Day of Vengeance. The fountain and its waters form the main plot device in Microsoft and Ensemble Studio's Age of Empires III campaign "Blood, Ice and Steel". Recently, characters in the 2006 Darren Aronofsky film The Fountain search for the Tree of Life to cure a brain tumor. Jorge Luis Borges refers to the Fountain of Life in a short story in the book , in which the people who are immortal get tired of it and eventually start looking for the Fountain of Death to reverse their immortality.
Paragraph Title: Literature and popular culture
Source Page: Fountain of Youth

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