Justice League Unlimited
Justice League Unlimited | |
---|---|
Genre |
Superhero Science fiction Action/Adventure |
Starring |
Carl Lumbly Michael Rosenbaum Kevin Conroy Phil LaMarr Susan Eisenberg George Newbern María Canals |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of seasons | 3 |
No. of episodes | 39 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Running time | 21–23 minutes |
Release | |
Original network | Cartoon Network |
Original release | July 31, 2004 – May 13, 2006 |
Chronology | |
Preceded by | Batman Beyond, Static Shock, The Zeta Project, and Justice League |
Related shows | Super Friends, Young Justice |
Website |
Justice League Unlimited (JLU) is an American animated television series that was produced by Warner Bros. Animation and aired on Cartoon Network. Featuring a wide array of superheroes from the DC Comics universe, and specifically based on the Justice League superhero team, it is a direct sequel to the previous Justice League animated series. JLU debuted on July 31, 2004 on Toonami and ended with the episode aired May 13, 2006. It was also the final series set in the long-running DC animated universe, which started with Batman: The Animated Series in 1992.
In August 2012, The CW's Vortexx Saturday morning block began airing reruns of this series. Reruns of this show ended in August 2014.
Overview
Taking up soon after Justice League ended, it features a greatly expanded League, in which the characters from the original series—now referred to as "founding members"—are joined by many other superheroes from the DC Universe; in the first episode, well over 50 characters appear. A number of these were heroes who had made guest appearances in Justice League, but many heroes and other characters made their first animated appearances in this series. The general format of each episode is to have a small team assemble to deal with a particular situation, with a focus on both action and character interaction.
Most episodes tell a self-contained story, but the series also features extended story arcs, the first involving the building conflict between the League and a secret government agency known as Project Cadmus. This plot line builds upon events that occurred during the second season of Justice League (which in turn built upon events in Batman: The Animated Series, Superman: The Animated Series, Batman Beyond, Static Shock, and The Zeta Project),[1] and has affected the plotlines of most of its episodes. It was resolved in a four-part story at the end of the second season of Justice League Unlimited. The third and final season story arc focuses on the new Secret Society (which is based on the Legion of Doom) as the main villains, a loose-knit organization formed to combat the increased superhero coordination of the first season.
Towards the end of the series, certain characters became off-limits to the show. Characters associated with Batman and those who appeared in Batman: The Animated Series (aside from Batman himself) were restricted due to the unrelated animated series The Batman to avoid continuity confusion. However, in the episode "Grudge Match", a silhouette of Nightwing can be seen in one shot crouching amongst the stone gargoyles. Aquaman and related characters were unavailable due to the development of a pilot for a live-action series featuring the character as a young man (similar to Smallville), which was not picked up. Characters from DC's "mature readers" Vertigo imprint were also not allowed. No characters from the Teen Titans animated series appeared in JLU, nor vice versa, though Speedy appeared in an episode referencing the Seven Soldiers of Victory after Teen Titans was canceled.
To compensate for this, the producers used previously overlooked DC Comics characters to focus on in the stories. These include characters like Deadman, Warlord, and an unnamed modern equivalent of The Seven Soldiers of Victory. Also, reflecting the previous series, Superman: The Animated Series' focus on Jack Kirby's modern DC characters, Justice League Unlimited similarly focused on the DC/Charlton Comics characters created by Steve Ditko.
DC Comics created an ongoing monthly comic book series based on the TV series, as part of its Johnny DC line of "all ages" comics.
Justice League Unlimited, like the second season of Justice League, is animated in widescreen. The show also features new theme music and Intro. The two-part series finale was aired in the UK on February 8 and February 18, 2006 and in the United States on May 6 and May 13, 2006.
Some romantic relationships develop as in Justice League. Some of these relationships are Question and The Huntress, Black Canary and Green Arrow, and the love-triangle between Green Lantern, Hawkgirl (ex) and Vixen (current). Additionally, the series continuously hints at a mutual attraction between Batman and Wonder Woman. However, Batman is reluctant to develop a full romantic relationship due to his duty as a superhero, Diana's immortality, and his belief that a relationship within a team will bring issues and disaster. He nonetheless has at least once admitted that he and Wonder Woman may have something special.
Episodes
Cast
Founding members
- Kevin Conroy – Batman (Bruce Wayne)
- George Newbern – Superman (Clark Kent / Kal-El)
- Susan Eisenberg – Wonder Woman (Diana of Themyscira / Princess Diana)
- Michael Rosenbaum – Flash (Wally West)
- Carl Lumbly – Martian Manhunter (J'onn J'onnz / John Jones)
- Phil LaMarr – Green Lantern (John Stewart)
- María Canals Barrera – Hawkgirl (Shayera Hol)
Expanded League members
- Scott Rummell – Aquaman (Arthur Curry / Orin)
- John C. McGinley – Atom (Dr. Ray Palmer)
- Kevin Conroy – Atom Smasher (Albert Julian Rothstein)
- Scott Patterson – Aztek (Uno / Curtis "Curt" Falconer)
- Morena Baccarin – Black Canary (Dinah Laurel Lance)
- Lex Lang – Blue Devil (Daniel Patrick Cassidy)
- Tom Everett Scott – Booster Gold (Michael Jon Carter)
- Peter Onorati – B'wana Beast (Michael Payson Maxwell)
- Chris Cox (George Eads in "Initiation") – Captain Atom (Captain Nathaniel Adams)
- Jerry O'Connell – Captain Marvel (Billy Batson)
- Kevin Conroy – Commander Steel (Henry "Hank" Heywood III)
- Kevin Conroy – Crimson Avenger (Lee Travis)
- Oded Fehr – Doctor Fate (Kent Nelson / Nabu)
- Lauren Tom – Doctor Light (Kimiyo Hoshi)
- Jason Hervey – Dove (Don Hall)
- Jeremy Piven – Elongated Man (Ralph Dibny)
- Michael T. Weiss – Etrigan the Demon (Jason Blood)
- Maria Canals Barrera – Fire (Beatriz "Bea" Bonilla Da Costa)
- Kin Shriner – Green Arrow (Oliver Queen)
- Fred Savage – Hawk (Hank Hall)
- Amy Acker – Huntress (Helena Bertinelli)
- Gregg Rainwater – Long Shadow (Apache Chief)
- Tom Sizemore – Metamorpho (Rex Mason)
- Michael Beach – Mister Terrific (Michael Holt)
- Ron Perlman – Orion
- Jeffrey Combs – Question (Charles Victor Szasz / Vic Sage)
- Mike Erwin – Speedy (Roy Harper)
- Powers Boothe – Red Tornado (John Smith)
- Chris Cox – Shining Knight (Sir Justin)
- Giselle Loren – Stargirl (Courtney Whitmore)
- Phil LaMarr – Steel (John Henry Irons)
- Phil LaMarr – S.T.R.I.P.E. (Pat Dugan)
- Nicholle Tom – Supergirl (Kara In-Ze / Kara Kent)
- Nathan Fillion (Michael Rosenbaum in "Task Force X") – Vigilante (Greg Saunders)
- Gina Torres – Vixen (Mari Jiwe McCabe)
- Dennis Farina – Wildcat (Ted Grant)
- Jennifer Hale (Juliet Rose Landau in "The Balance") – Zatanna (Zatanna Zatara)
Recurring/other characters
- Hynden Walch – Ace
- Armin Shimerman – Dr. Achilles Milo
- C.C.H. Pounder – Dr. Amanda Waller
- Robert Picardo – Amazo ("The Android")
- Ben Browder – Bat Lash (Bartholomew Alouysius Lash)
- Farrah Forke – Big Barda (Barda Free)
- Googy Gress – Bouncing Boy (Charles Foster Taine)
- Matt Czuchry – Brainiac 5 (Querl Dox)
- Seymour Cassel – Chuck Sirianni
- Raphael Sbarge – Deadman (Boston Brand)
- Nestor Carbonell – El Diablo (Lazarus Lane)
- Robert Foxworth – Professor Emil Hamilton
- Adam Baldwin – Green Lantern (Hal Jordan)
- Kim Mai Guest – Green Lantern (Katma Tui)
- Dennis Haysbert – Green Lantern (Kilowog)
- Will Friedle – Green Lantern (Kyle Rayner)
- Clancy Brown – Guardians of the Universe
- Adam Baldwin – Jonah Hex
- David Kaufman – Jimmy Olsen
- Christopher McDonald – Jor-El
- Kevin Conroy – Joe Chill
- Mike Farrell – Jonathan Kent
- C. C. H. Pounder – Juice (Black Vulcan)
- James Remar – Hawkman (Carter Hall / Katar Hol / Joseph Gardner)
- Ed Asner – Hephaestus
- Jason Bateman – Hermes
- Susan Sullivan – Hippolyta
- Scott Patterson – Agent King Faraday
- Kim Mai Guest – Linda Park
- Dana Delany – Lois Lane
- Shelley Fabares – Martha Kent
- Phil LaMarr – Machiste
- Tim Matheson – Maxwell Lord
- Daniel Dae Kim – Metron
- Ioan Gruffudd – Mister Miracle (Scott Free)
- Jeffrey Combs – Doctor Moon
- Dick Miller – Oberon
- Robert Forster – The President of the United States
- Jonathan Joss – Pow Wow Smith (Ohiyesa Smith)
- Adam Baldwin – Captain Rick Flag Jr.
- Nathan Fillion – Spy Smasher (Alan Armstrong)
- Mark Hamill – Trickster (Giovanni Giuseppe)
- J. K. Simmons – General Wade Eiling (The General)
- Paul Guilfoyle – Warlord (Travis Morgan)
- James Sie – Wind Dragon ("The Samurai" Toshio Eto)
- Grey DeLisle – Downpour ("Zan" The Wonder Twin)
- Grey DeLisle – Shifter ("Jayna" The Wonder Twin)
Non-speaking members
- Creeper (Jack Ryder)
- Crimson Fox (Vivian D'Aramis)
- Doctor Mid-Nite (Dr. Charles McNider)
- Gypsy (Cynthia "Cindy" Reynolds)
- Hourman (Rick Tyler)
- Ice (Tora Olafsdotter)
- Johnny Thunder (John L. Thunder)
- Nemesis (Thomas Andrew Tresser)
- Obsidian (Todd James Rice)
- Plastic Man (Patrick "Eel" O'Brian)
- Ray (Raymond C. "Ray" Terrill)
- Rocket Red (Dimitri Pushkin)
- Sand (Sanderson "Sandy" Hawkins)
- Starman (Prince Gavyn)
- Thunderbolt (Yz)
- Vibe (Paco Ramone)
- Waverider (Matthew Ryder)
Future League (Batman Beyond era)
- Kevin Conroy – Bruce Wayne
- Will Friedle – Batman (Terry McGinnis)
- Jodi Benson – Aquagirl (Mareena)
- Lauren Tom – Green Lantern (Kai-Ro)
- Wayne Brady – Micron
- Phil LaMarr – Static (Virgil Hawkins)
- Peter Onorati – Warhawk (Rex Stewart)
Footnote: It is also implied that there are many more undisplayed heroes in the League.
Villains
- Mark Hamill – The Joker
- Michael York – Ares
- Julie Bowen – Aresia
- Lex Lang – Atomic Skull (Joseph Martin)
- Jennifer Hale – Bernadeth
- George Newbern – Bizarro
- Dee Bradley Baker – Blockbuster (Mark Desmond)
- Corey Burton – Brainiac
- Donal Gibson – Captain Boomerang (George "Digger" Harkness)
- Lex Lang – Captain Cold (Leonard Snart)
- Sheryl Lee Ralph – Cheetah (Barbara Ann Minerva)
- Peter MacNicol – Chronos (David Clinton)
- Rachel York – Circe
- Alan Rachins – Clock King (Temple Fugate)
- Jose Yenque – Copperhead ("John Doe")
- Michael Ironside – Darkseid
- Michael Rosenbaum – Deadshot (Floyd Lawton)
- Douglas Dunning – Deimos
- Michael Beach – Devil Ray (Black Manta / David Reynolds)
- Michael Rosenbaum – Doctor Polaris (Neal Emerson)
- Michael Jai White – Doomsday
- John DiMaggio – Dreamslayer
- Joanne Whalley – Emerald Empress (Cara Kesh)
- George Newbern – Evil Star
- Robert Englund – Felix Faust (Dekan Drache)
- Nicholle Tom – Galatea (Power Girl / Karen Starr / Kara Zor-L)
- Robin Atkin Downes – Gentleman Ghost (James Craddock)
- Jennifer Hale – Giganta (Dr. Doris Zeul)
- Powers Boothe – Gorilla Grodd
- Ed Asner – Granny Goodness
- Bob Joles – Hades
- Héctor Elizondo – Hath-Set
- Lex Lang – Heat Wave (Mick Rory)
- Kevin Conroy – Batman (Justice Lord)
- Michael Rosenbaum – Flash (Justice Lord)
- Phil LaMarr – Green Lantern (Justice Lord)
- Maria Canals Barrera – Hawkgirl (Justice Lord)
- Carl Lumbly – Martian Manhunter (Justice Lord)
- George Newbern – Superman (Justice Lord)
- Susan Eisenberg – Wonder Woman (Justice Lord)
- Michael Dorn – Kalibak
- Corey Burton – Key
- Jennifer Hale – Killer Frost (Dr. Louise Lincoln)
- Clancy Brown – Lex Luthor
- María Canals – Live Wire (Leslie Willis)
- John DiMaggio – Lord Havok
- J.K. Simmons – Mantis
- Malcolm McDowell – Metallo (John Wayne Corben)
- Alexis Denisof – Mirror Master (Evan McCulloch)
- Eric Roberts – Mongul
- Olivia d'Abo – Morgaine Le Fey
- Brian George (Marc Worden in "Epilogue") – Parasite (Rudy Jones)
- Juliet Landau – Plastique (Bette Sans Souci)
- Susan Eisenberg – Rampage (Karen Lou "Kitty" Faulkner)
- Virginia Madsen – Roulette (Veronica Sinclair)
- Stephen McHattie – The Shade (Richard Swift)
- James Remar – Shadow Thief (Carl Sands / "Katar Hol")
- Kim Mai Guest – Silver Banshee (Siobhan McDougal)
- Ted Levine – Sinestro (Thaal Sinestro)
- Bruce Timm – Solomon Grundy (Cyrus Gold)
- Corey Burton – Sonar (Bito Wladon)
- Olivia d'Abo – Star Sapphire (Carol Ferris)
- Glenn Shadix – Steven Mandragora
- Juliet Landau – Tala
- Tomas Arana – Tharok
- Bud Cort – Toyman (Winslow Percival Schott)
- Karen Maruyama - Tsukuri
- Arte Johnson – Virman Vundabar
- Peri Gilpin – Volcana (Claire Selton)
- Corey Burton – Weather Wizard (Mark Mardon)
Home releases
DVD/BD Name | Release Date | Ep # | Additional Information |
---|---|---|---|
Season One | October 24, 2006 | 26 | 4 DVDs. Featurette: And Justice for All: The Process of Revamping the Series with New Characters and a New Creative Direction, Themes of Justice: Choose Your Favorite JLU Musical Theme Audio Tracks, Creators' Commentary on "This Little Piggy" and 'The Return". Contains all episodes of Seasons One and Two from the original airing. Episode 21 - "Hunter's Moon (AKA Mystery in Space)" - is placed out of order between episodes 22 ("Question Authority") and 23 ("Flashpoint"). |
Season Two | March 20, 2007 | 13 | 2 DVDs. Actually Season Three from the original airing. Cadmus: Exposed: Mark Hamill and the Series Creative Personnel Discuss This Popular Series Story Arc, Justice League Chronicles: Series Writers, Producers and Directors Discuss Their Favorite Moments Among Final Season Episodes, Music-Only Audio Track for the Final Episode Destroyer. |
Justice League: 3-Pack Fun | July 19, 2011 | 11 | 3 DVDs. Contains "For The Man Who Has Everything," "The Return," and "The Greatest Story Never Told," as well as the two-part Justice League stories "The Brave and the Bold" and "Injustice For All", and the Young Justice episodes "Independence Day," "Fireworks," "Welcome To Happy Harbor," and "Drop Zone". |
The Complete Series | November 10, 2015 | 39 | 3 Blu-ray discs. Featurette: And Justice for All: The Process of Revamping the Series with New Characters and a New Creative Direction, Creators' Commentary on "This Little Piggy" and 'The Return",Cadmus: Exposed: Mark Hamill and the Series Creative Personnel Discuss This Popular Series Story Arc, Justice League Chronicles: Series Writers, Producers and Directors Discuss Their Favorite Moments Among Final Season Episodes. Episodes are shown in the correct order. |
See also
- List of Justice League episodes
- Justice League: Worlds Collide, a canceled Justice League DTV feature.
- Justice League Unlimited toyline
References
- ↑ "Key DCAU Episodes That Tie Into the Cadmus Conspiracy". Jl.toonzone.net. Retrieved 2011-01-02.
External links
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Justice League Unlimited |
- Justice League Unlimited at the Big Cartoon DataBase
- Justice League Unlimited at the Internet Movie Database
- Justice League Unlimited at TV.com
- Justice League Unlimited at The World's Finest
- Justice League Unlimited on the DC Animated Universe Wiki, an external wiki
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