Comic book crossovers always elicit both excitement and trepidation. As demonstrated by the worst Marvel Cinematic Universe cameos, there’s something inherently gimmicky about crossovers in general, and lord knows comic books have given us some janky, cynical attempts at uniting our favorite heroes across company divides. but every now and then we get a genuinely great crossover, as was the case wiht the 1995 one-shot “Spider-Man and Batman.”
This book came courtesy of artist Mark Bagley and writer J.M. DeMatteis, who gave us a story in which bats and Spidey team up to take on Joker and Carnage. That by itself should be enough to intrigue those yet to read this historic team-up. But “Spider-Man and Batman” has so much more going for it than a long-awaited collaboration between two of the biggest superheroes in the world.
Rather than relying solely on action and mining the mismatched personalities of its leads for humor, the story actually delves into the characters themselves, exploring the psyches of both the heroes and villains and telling a satisfying tale with discernable character arcs for everyone involved. In this very way, “Spider-Man and Batman” remains one of the great comic book crossovers of all time.
Spider-Man and Batman was more than just a cool hero team-up
