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Superman: Secret Identity is a four-issue mini-series written by Kurt Busiek and illustrated by Stuart Immonen. It was first published monthly, starting January 2004 . The title was not released under the Elseworlds banner, but is regarded as a non- canonical story.
Superman vs. The Amazing Spider-Man: The Battle of the Century is a comic book jointly published by Marvel Comics and DC Comics in March 1976. It was the second co-publishing effort between DC Comics and Marvel Comics following their collaboration on MGM's Marvelous Wizard of Oz, and the first modern superhero intercompany crossover.
Number 28 (and final) in the Marvel Treasury Edition series, it is a sequel to 1976's Superman vs. the Amazing Spider-Man. Like the earlier Superman - Spider-Man crossover, the issue is noncanonical, as it assumes that the heroes and their respective cities of residence, Metropolis and New York, exist in the same universe.
During that time, the original The Amazing Spider-Man ended with issue #441 (Nov. 1998), and The Amazing Spider-Man started with volume 2, #1 (Jan. 1999). [42] In 2003, Marvel reintroduced the original numbering for The Amazing Spider-Man and what would have been volume 2, #59, became issue #500 (Dec. 2003). [42]
Johns planned their version of the origin story to be aligned with the modern stories, and as Man of Steel was "brilliant" and Birthright was a "beautiful book", Johns stated that this was not Smallville or Superman: The Movie, but Superman: Secret Origin by Johns and Frank. Johns also pointed out his love for "secret origins" because of how ...
From 1976 to 2003, crossovers between the DC and Marvel universes (“Superman vs. Incredible Hulk,” or “Batman vs. Daredevil”) were regular features as the companies sought to expand their ...
Although the banner only runs across the front covers of #546-564 and the Spider-Man: Swing Shift (Director's Cut) one-shot (itself a reprint, with new material, of the Free Comic Book Day 2007: Spider-Man one-shot), "Brand New Day" is also used to refer to the entire 102-issue run of stories featured in The Amazing Spider-Man #546-647 and ...
Upon release, Spider-Man became the number one film at the box office. [l] Spider-Man earned $39.4 million on its opening day, an average of $10,901 per theater. [150] This opening-day gross was the all-time highest until 2004, when it was surpassed by the $40.4 million opening of Spider-Man 2. [151]