
In the orange corner... it's the Thing and Doc Savage, written by Bill Mantlo and drawn by Ron Wilson and Pablo Marcos, Marvel Two-in-One #21, Black Sun Lives!
In the black corner... say hello to Batman and the Phantom Stranger, written by Bob Haney and drawn by Ross Andru and Mike Esposito, Brave and the Bold #89, Arise Ye Ghosts of Gotham
DING DING DING!
The Stars
Ben seems to have gone back to being the Thing, unassisted by exoskeletons, and that's how we love him. He makes the girls faint, and he smokes while he works out. He's that kind of a man. He's also the kind of man who tells it like it is:


Not only does Batman know his Gotham history, but he can tell where sand comes from just by sifting it through his fingers. He's that kind of a detective. However, one must question his political savy. As Councilman Bruce Wayne (when did he have TIME to do THAT?!), he's pretty quick to give up the Wayne Foundation building to the invading Hellerites and their claims of ancestral rights. Worse, it doesn't seem to be a ploy.


The Guests
Doc Savage?! Yes, though the Man of Bronze was published for many years (and still is) by DC, the license did once belong to Marvel. Consequently, this story won't be find in the Essentials collection. Savage starts out in his corner of history, investigating parallel occurrences to what Ben's going through, until he is brought forward in time by the accident that creates the villain (see below). Savage is not surprisingly accompanied by a couple of his friends, Monk and Renny, but when their "mercy-bullets" don't make a dent, there's no stopping him from charging the character who just punched the Thing into the ground.

This appears to be the first meeting between Batman and the Phantom Stranger, so he's not sure if he's friend or foe. Things gets more confused when Dr. Thirteen shows up to "debunk" the Stranger and karate chop him into unconsciousness!


The Villains
In 1936, evil wife-beating Raymond Lightner has built a sky cannon. In 1976, his evil, sister-beating son, Tom Lightner has rebuilt his father's sky cannon. 40 years apart, they use the cannon to steal star energy. 40 years apart, some heroes get in the way. And 40 years apart, the sky cannon malfunctions and explodes. This merges father and son across time and turns them into... Blacksun!

In 1818, an Amish-like sect called the Hellerites were kicked out of Gotham City and went to settle in the desert. In 1968, the Hellerites return to Gotham and ask for their land back. Who do these guys think they are? American Indians? People who work at Colonial Williamsburg? Or according to one cop, dreaded HIPPIES?

Odds vs. Ends
From Marvel Two-in-One:
-For most of the issue, Mantlo tells two parallel stories with a distinctive parallel panel structure.

-Having Monk and Renny in it is all well and good, but the real guest-star here has to be Monk's prize pig Habeus Corpus!

From Brave and the Bold:
-You gotta love how Commissioner Gordon embraces vigilantism:

Farewells and Scoring
With the Thing, it's important to have an Unfriendly Farewell, and though Doc Savage isn't exactly antagonistic (there's a bond between orange characters), he still leaves without giving Ben an autograph.

Batman's also the victim of a disappearing act, but he can't hold that against the Phantom Stranger, and in fact, credits him with far more:

Two stories with ancestral threats, but only one can come out the winner. After a final tally, it's Doc Savage 19, Phantom Stranger... 14! The Thing actually banks another point, bringing his cumulative score to 2-0 against the Batman! Might he actually have a chance this time? Stay tuned for more!
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