SUNDAY FUNNIES WITH KERRY CALLEN!

By KERRY CALLEN
Wrapping up my series reviewing 20th Century comic books that claim The Battle/Fight/Bout/Showdown of the Century on their covers…

This week’s battle — DC vs. MARVEL. First presented in 1996’s DC Versus Marvel/Marvel Versus DC #1-4. Written by Ron Marz and Peter David. Pencilled by Dan Jurgens and Claudio Castellini. Inks by Josef Rubinstein and Paul Neary.

This is the big one! Comics fans had long wanted to see their favorite, iconic characters, from the two biggest comic companies, take on each other! The unfortunate thing is, this was the ’90s. There was a crazy trend of constantly changing popular characters to increase sales. Soooo, our story opens with a Spider-Man, who is Peter Parker’s clone, Ben Reilly, in a variation of the iconic costume.

Later in the story, he asks people to call him “Peter.” Nice try Marvel.
I won’t point out every time a weird character variation shows up, but is this Thor iconic to anyone?

Anyone?
WHY ARE THEY FIGHTING?
In the first issue, we begin to see various characters from Marvel and DC appearing in each other’s universes. Some characters fight. Some characters team up.

This catches the attention of both universes’ cosmic guardians, the Spectre and the Living Tribunal. Something is terribly wrong!

This series is, of course, a joint venture between DC and Marvel. The issue ends with a page asking readers to vote on the outcome of certain battles, such as Superman vs. the Hulk. It’s American Idol before American Idol!

The results will play out in Issue #3!
In Issue #2, we find out why the realities are crossing. The two universes are shown personified as “brothers.” They weren’t aware of each other until now! I’ve had that happen. “Whoa! How long have you been standing there!” It can be quite a shock.

Their awareness is causing each reality to seep into the other. Both “brothers” consider themselves superior and wish to be the only reality to exist. Selfish realities. Instead of fighting it out themselves, they pick champions from their universes to do the fighting.
The losing side’s universe will VANISH FOREVER, so the stakes are pretty high. The combatants only have to immobilize each other, not kill. We want to keep it a friendly fight, right?
HOW EPIC IS THE BATTLE?
Due to page count restraints, each fight only lasts three or four pages. There are 11 battles. I’ll go over them very quickly:
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Thor vs. Captain Marvel. When Captain Marvel changes to Billy Batson (to crawl out from some wreckage) he shouts “Shazam!” to change back. But Thor controls lightning. Thor wins by conquering a powerless child. He’s still rockin’ that costume though!

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The Sub-Mariner vs. Aquaman. While they’re standing on the beach, Aquaman wins by having a whale jump and land on Sub-Mariner. WHAM!

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The Flash vs. Quicksilver. C’mon, the Flash is much faster. He wins by speed-punching Pietro into unconsciousness.

—
This takes us into Issue #3, where Jubilee’s diary gives us a recap.

I looked at this page quite awhile. It appears Daredevil is the only character without a partner. Is this a hilarious blind joke?
The story continues as Robin and Jubilee fall in love and then fight. Robin wins because he’s Robin.


Ah, young love. Sweet and creepy. Next up…
Green Lantern (Kyle Rayner) vs. Silver Surfer. Surfer wins. The only explanation we get is this panel with a green burst in it.

—
Catwoman vs. Elektra. Elektra drops Catwoman off a building. Wins.

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Lobo vs. Wolverine. Hey! Didn’t I already cover this? Oh, wait, that was Loco vs. Pulverine. My mistake.

Wolverine wins, but it’s unclear how. I guess he immobilizes Lobo by removing his innards?

—
Wonder Woman vs. Storm. I would have counted on Wonder Woman to win, but this is the result of public voting and the X-Men were super popular at the time. The bout goes to Storm.

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Spider-Man vs. Superboy. Spider-Man wins by tricking Superboy to crash into an electrical panel. Ugh. I wanted Spider-Man to win, but is there ANY more cliché way to beat an opponent stronger than yourself?

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Superman vs. the Hulk. This is the “smart” Hulk, who still has the brain of Bruce Banner. I’ve never considered him as strong as the “limitless rage” Hulk. Superman wins by hitting harder.

—
Last up! Batman vs. Captain America. Now here’s a battle! They are very evenly matched in fighting ability. As the battle takes place inside a sewer, water comes unexpectedly rushing in, and Batman takes Captain America out with a batarang to the head.

This was the result of the fans’ vote. I’ve always wondered if the penciller, Dan Jurgens, was expecting Cap to win. To my eye, these pre-drawn character poses don’t match the added dialogue.

WHO WINS?
Thanks to the public votes, the Marvel Universe wins, 6 to 5! I guess it’s bye-bye DC Universe.
Or is it?
As one universe is about to be wiped out of existence, the Spectre and the Living Tribunal attempt to stop the obliteration by combining forces!

The little guy in the above panel is called Access. He can travel between universes and dimensions. More on him later. The Spectre and the Living Tribunal effort leads to the two universes combining into one, creating an Amalgam Universe!

This led to a whole set of books starring composites of DC and Marvel characters. It was quite the event! I wish they would have combined the Human Torch and Aquaman. Then, we could have thrilled to the adventures of the Human Man! I digress.
The character Access has hidden the essences of the original universes and uses them to separate the realities once again. The cosmic brothers decide to fight it out on their own instead of relying on their chosen champions.
As they fight, everything is destroyed! But in that destruction, the brothers see glimpses of two characters, one from each universe.

They realize that there is nobility and uniqueness within each of them. They should happily co-exist together. Or something like that. Read it yourself:

Essentially, the essences of Batman and Captain America save the comic universes! Yay!
IS IT THE BATTLE OF THE CENTURY?
Lots of battles happening here. I suppose we should call the DC Universe vs. the Marvel Universe the Battle of the Century. The magnitude of it makes it an easy winner.
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MORE
— What WAS the Comic Battle of the 20th Century? PART 10 — 1991’s GUY GARDNER vs. BLUE BEETLE. Click here.
— What WAS the Comic Battle of the 20th Century? PART 9 — 1985’s X-MEN vs. ALPHA FLIGHT vs. LOKI. Click here.
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Want more SUNDAY FUNNIES WITH KERRY CALLEN? Come back next week!
Want a commission? Send an email to KerryCallenArt@gmail.com. You can also find other work at linktr.ee/kerrycallen.
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KERRY CALLEN spent much of his career as an artist and art director, developing product for Hallmark, but has also dabbled in comics for many years. As a freelancer, he creates work for a range of needs, spanning from Mad Magazine to children illustrations. He has two graphic novels available on Amazon worldwide, Halo and Sprocket: The Definitive Collection, as well as Dirtnap: Mystic Spit.
August 24, 2025
Still think the true battle that deserves the win is Superman vs Spiderman the first and best crossover ever
August 24, 2025
I enjoyed many of the Amalgam titles. But I thought the actual DC vs. Marvel battles were pretty lame. Each ended far too quickly. In retrospect, it all seemed underwhelming.
August 24, 2025
So, the Super Soldier serum didn’t give Cap the edge against a regular, human man with equal fighting abilities? Lame. Indestructible, indispensable Batman. I wish Marvel treated Spidey (the REAL Spidey) the way they treat Batman. I’d love to see Spidey beat everybody in large, all-star casts of books.
August 24, 2025
I would love to see more of Spider-Boy and Challengers of the Fantastic. Those were the best of the Amalgamated characters.
I was quite disappointed about the Dr. Strangefate. It felt too forced for my taste, especially with the third character’s addition. I expected “Adam Strange, Supreme Sorcerer of the Planet Rann”. (Though maybe Shi’Rann would be better).
August 24, 2025
Great writeup, and this whole retrospective series was fun.
If you want to see a more neatly-executed take on the Amalgam Universe concept, I’ve been a fan of this one for a long time:
https://www.deviantart.com/red-rum-18/gallery/10467425/new-amalgam
August 25, 2025
Marvel vs DC didn’t have quite the same impact on me as Superman vs Spider-Man, perhaps because the novelty wore off for me by then (even the JLA/Avengers, love though I did, didn’t have the same impact either), however, I still have fond memories of the fights, short and brief though it was. The positive point of the whole crossover for me was that my mom got the issue 3 of the series during my college exams, but never got issue 2, so for a decade, I only had issues 1,3 and 4. The amalgam characters were also a highlight, it was exciting to see Spider-Boy, Challengers of the Fantastic, etc, but the more confusing ones were those the combined three characters (or more?), nevertheless it was fun to read.
August 27, 2025
Hmm. In hindsight, I think perhaps Superman vs Spiderman SHOULD have won the title. As the FIRST DC/Marvel Superhero crossover, it had the most impact!
August 30, 2025
IMO: The winner is the Thing vs Hulk from FF 25-26. If one was young enough or reading it in its time, it was a f*** mind blower.
For the slightly younger, I’d give the nod to the first Superman/Spidey book.
Special mention just on the production level that Sub-Mariner/Human Torch book because it was big and produced in a weekend (or certainly in a very short time).