A doppelgänger or fetch is the ghostly double of a living person, a sinister form of bilocation.
Doppelgänger is the title of a 1983 album by rock band Daniel Amos, released on Alarma! Records.
Doppelgänger was a 1969 Science Fiction film directed by Robert Parrish. The English language version was released as Journey to the Far Side of the Sun. The crew of a spacecraft journey to a previously unknown planet far side of the Sun, only to seemingly find themselves returning back to the Earth.
In the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game, Doppelgängers are monstrous humanoids, infamous for their shapeshifting abilities, which allow them to mimic almost any humanoid creature. In D&D, doppelgängers are lazy but cunning creatures, who kill or dispose of people then assume their place. They are not downright evil, but extremely self-centered and liable to look down on their victims.
Doppelgänger is the sophomore full-length album from Mukilteo, WA's The Fall of Troy, which followed up the band's bootlegged Ghostship demos from 2004 as well as their self-titled LP from 2003. Four of the songs ("I Just Got This Symphony Goin'," "F.C.P.R.E.M.I.X.," "Mouths Like Sidewinder Missiles," "Whacko Jacko Steals the Elephant Man's Bones") were re-recorded versions of tracks from the self-titled album. "Macaulay McCulkin" was taken from the Ghostship EP.
Doppelgänger is an album by the British band Curve. The album contains elements of shoegazing music, as well as alternative rock and alternative dance.