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The earliest appearance of a direct reference to Ben telling Peter the phrase is the 1987 Spider-Man vs. Wolverine #1 by Jim Owsley, M. D. Bright, and Al Williamson. [ 21 ] [ 22 ] The series finale of Spider-Man: The Animated Series (episode 65, "Spider Wars Chapter II: Farewell, Spider-Man") makes reference Ben saying it in January 1998 too.
A second attempt at recreating Allen's accident restores his powers and health. He concludes that the Reverse-Flash changed history to prevent the formation of the Justice League. He also learns that Kal-El was taken by Project: Superman. Flash, Batman and Cyborg join the cause to stop Wonder Woman and Aquaman.
But Darrk's young son Adam Strange notifies Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, and the Flash of Darrk's intentions. Darrk, beaten by the five heroes, kills his son and then flees, bluffed into doing so by Green Lantern, who (unbeknownst to Darrk) is too weak to fight because his strength has been drained by the Parasite.
"The Batman is its own thing," Gunn told DC.com, adding that the officially-titled sequel, The Batman Part II, will be in theaters on Oct. 3, 2025 — four months after Superman: Legacy. "Matt’s ...
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 ...
THE FLASH SPOILERS AHEAD!After watching The Flash, even the biggest DC Comics fans might be asking why Nicolas Cage played Superman in one of the many colliding alternate universes in Barry Allen ...
As Superman, Batman, and later a restored Aquaman and J'onn move on Ra's' base, Flash, Green Lantern, Plastic Man and Wonder Woman are able to prevent the release of the toxin thanks to Ra's al Ghul's daughter Talia providing them with the locations of the bombs, feeling disgusted at how her father has used her knowledge of Batman to steal his ...
Dennis O'Neil wrote Batman during the 1970s, as well as working with artist Mike Grell [1] on the mid-1970s version of Green Lantern. The Retroactive line also brought back writers and artists had not worked for DC for many years; some of whom had retired from comics, such as Rich Buckler , who drew one Wonder Woman story.