The Strangest Cartoon Crossover You’ve Never Heard Of

This might be one of the strangest animated crossovers ever put on screen, and somehow it still works in that chaotic, offbeat UPA way. Magoo Meets Boing Boing throws together two completely different cartoon worlds by pairing the near-sighted Mr. Magoo with Gerald McBoing-Boing, the boy who speaks in sound effects. Directed by Abe Levitow and released theatrically in 1959, the short came at a time when United Productions of America was struggling to recapture its earlier success. The concept felt like a last-ditch idea: combine two of the studio’s most recognizable characters and hope audiences respond. The story leans fully into absurdity, with Magoo babysitting Gerald, mistaking him for a dog, and misinterpreting his sound effects as real emergencies, including a “fire” that only exists in Gerald’s noisy imagination. What makes it even more interesting is that this crossover did not come out of nowhere. Years earlier, the characters had already appeared together in Dell Comics, wh...

Taschen Marvel Comics Library: Spider-Man. Vol. 2. 1965–1966



Their collaboration on Spider-Man couldn't endure indefinitely, but Stan Lee and Steve Ditko's incredible partnership did persist for a significant five-year period, allowing their character to transform into an enduring icon and cultivate a fan base that would span generations. Taschen's second volume of Amazing Spider-Man tales compiles the latter portion of this dynamic duo's grand work, introducing new formidable foes like the Scorpion, Molten Man, and the Crime-Master, revisiting conflicts with Kraven the Hunter and the Green Goblin, and showcasing the memorable three-part "Master Planner Saga" that rekindled a rivalry with an enigmatic, iconic villain, ultimately leaving behind what many experts in the world of comics consider to be the greatest superhero narrative of all time.