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Black Spider is the name of several supervillains and assassins appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. Most characters who operated under the alias are depicted as both lesser renown adversaries of Batman and a member of various super-villain organizations.
Spider-Man (Max Borne), also known as Spider-Man 2211, is a superhero who appears in comics published by Marvel Comics. Created by Peter David and Rick Leonardi, he first appeared in Spider-Man 2099 Meets Spider-Man (Nov. 1995). Within the context of the stories, Dr. Max Borne [39] is from the year 2211, the Spider-Man of that year.
In 1987, DC Comics relaunched Captain Marvel in a miniseries, Shazam!: The New Beginning , and purchased the full rights to all of the Fawcett superhero characters by 1991. [ 1 ] Captain Marvel has not proven to be a modern-day success for DC to the degree it had been for Fawcett, due in part to DC not being able to properly promote the ...
‘Invincible’ Creator Robert Kirkman on That Spider-Man Cameo, Recasting Ezra Miller and Splitting Season 2 Complaints: ‘I Understand’ It Was ‘Not the Best’ Jordan Moreau April 4, 2024 ...
An alternate universe variant of Robert Frank / Whizzer, amalgamated with DC Comics character Jay Garrick / Flash, called the Whiz appears in the Amalgam Comics one-shot Super Soldier: Man of War (June 1997). [32] He is a member of the All Star Winners Squad. A zombified, alternate universe variant of the Whizzer appears in Marvel Zombies 3 #3 ...
The Amazing Spider-Man". - Courtesy of DC. Walt Simonson, a comics artist whose work on the 1982 “X-Men and Teen Titans” crossover is featured in the collection, said executives at DC reached ...
Spider was a female proprietor of Durand's Nite Club who cross-dressed as a male criminal and fought Speed Saunders. [6] Spider was a spy and saboteur who fought Mister America. [7] Spider was a criminal mastermind who runs a murder racket and fought Green Lantern. He was served by Parrot Malone, Harry the Hood, and Snitch Carter. [8]
Comic books have been recalled for various reasons, including simple printing errors, stories or images which were deemed inappropriate, and to avoid potential lawsuits. The rarest of these books is probably The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, volume 1, issue #5, published by an imprint of DC Comics, which was recalled due to the inclusion of a vintage advertisement for Marvel Douche. [1]