“Batman/Spawn”
Writers: Frank Miller (Image) Alan Grant, Chuck Dixon and Doug Moench (DC)
Artists: Todd McFarlane (Image) and Klaus Janson (DC)
Color Artists: Steve Oliff (Image) and Klaus Janson (DC)
Letterers: Tom Orzechowski (Image) and Todd Klein (DC)
Review by Carl Bryan
Batman/Spawn – The Stories
Guess Who’s Coming To Gotham?
Spawn’s visit to Gotham is rather more camp. The setup is historical and provides a solid origin, but apparently to get Spawn to Gotham, it takes some convenient amnesia. DC’s Batman/Spawn tale turns the tables.
At this time in the Spawn story, Al Simmons was subject to having memory flashbacks. So it’s convenient in the story to have him appear in Gotham.
Batman isn’t necessarily the best “Welcome Wagon” for Spawn, and DC conveniently has him being bested by the Dark Knight. Powerless as the suit recognizes Batman as being a “hero”, they both team up to defeat a demon.
Ah, where are JL Dark when you need them? Or the Gotham City Monsters? Spawn fits right in there! Sadly the dialogue is weak for this version of Spawn.
It’s clear that DC wanted Batman to be the “model hero” and for Spawn to demonstrate some sort of “hero worship” at the end where he wanted to be the same type of hero that Batman is. “He gives and asks for nothing” and is “a man who knows what his real face is and offers no apology”… that’s not Spawn.
What Could Have Been
Todd McFarlane later unveiled a glimpse of a planned Spawn/Batman crossover that never saw the light of day. In what the Image Comics co-founder characterizes as “a bit of fate,” the project was to have been drawn by legendary Batman artist, and longtime McFarlane collaborator, Greg Capullo.
McFarlane took it on his shoulders that with scheduling conflicts, the issue never came to light, but it would have been Batman and Spawn battling the Joker and the Clown.
Sigh… who better than the Joker and the Clown/Violator to be pitted against the Dark Knight and Spawn. Alas, some things are not to be.
Come on Todd… you and Capullo could easily put that together! McFarlane’s storytelling has become stronger and Capullo’s art could easily compliment both Spawn and Batman as he’s worked with each character a lot.
But to see the Clown and the Joker in a frame together…. well… it would look like this!
Why the Visit to 1994?
Batman has been teamed with a lot of characters in DC, and he’s even battled Captain America before in a DC versus Marvel series in 1996. In 1994, for DC comics to recognize Image Comics’ main hero and for both companies to allow other authors and artists to “play” with them in their own sandboxes, that was unheard of. These Batman/Spawn crossovers are hellaciously great.
Given the recent events of COVID-19 and print issues being on a hiatus, it would sure be great that when the comic world returns back to normal for heroes like Batman and Spawn to reunite. Maybe Spidey could join as well, as McFarlane draws some mean capes and webbing! a DC/Image/Marvel crossover! Can you imagine?
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