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A Justice League Unlimited promotional image showing several of the most prominent members of the DC Animated Universe. The DC Animated Universe was a series of shows and feature-length films that aired or were released during the period from 1992 through 2006 and featured many characters from the DC Comics roster. While many characters played ...
Auxiliary, associate, honorary, and other members of the Justice League Character Real name Non-full membership in Notes This section is for honorary and other non-full members. Snapper Carr: Lucas "Snapper" Carr Made honorary member, and team mascot in The Brave and The Bold #28 Resigned in Justice League of America #77.
Also, a direct-to-video feature-length animated film entitled Justice League: Worlds Collide was planned to connect Justice League with its follow-up Justice League Unlimited, but the production was finally cancelled in 2004, and the script was later rewritten for the animated film Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths, removing all connections ...
The majority of the films are rated PG-13 by the MPAA except All-Star Superman and Green Lantern: Emerald Knights, which are rated PG, and Batman: The Killing Joke, Justice League Dark, Batman: Gotham by Gaslight, Suicide Squad: Hell to Pay, Justice League Dark: Apokolips War, Batman: Soul of the Dragon, Batman: The Long Halloween, Part Two ...
Promotional image of the Justice League by Bruce Timm. Justice League is an American animated series about a team of superheroes, which ran from 2001 to 2004 on Cartoon Network. The series is based on the Justice League and associated comic book characters published by DC Comics.
Collecting Justice League Dark #0–40; Justice League Dark Annual #1–2; Justice League Dark: Futures End #1, Constantine #5, #9–12; I, Vampire #7–8; Justice League #22–23; Justice League of America #6–7; The New 52: Free Comic Book Day Special Edition #1; Trinity of Sin: Pandora #1–3, #6–9; and Trinity of Sin: Phantom Stranger ...
The franchise is initially loosely based on a set of New 52 storylines from the DC Universe.Following a teaser in the franchise's first film Justice League: The Flashpoint Paradox, a five-film story arc loosely based on the "Darkseid War" event written by Geoff Johns, started from Justice League: War and was later revisited in The Death of Superman, Reign of the Supermen and concluded in ...
The Justice League was created to boost the profiles and sales of said characters through cross-promotion and helped develop the DC Universe as a shared universe, as it is through teams like the Justice League that the setting's characters regularly interact with each other. [2]