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Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths is a 2010 American animated superhero film directed by Lauren Montgomery and Sam Liu and written by Dwayne McDuffie. [1] It is based on the abandoned direct-to-video feature Justice League: Worlds Collide, which was intended as a bridge between the DC Animated Universe series Justice League and Justice League Unlimited, and reworked to act as a standalone ...
After it destroys Earth-146 and Earth-2, Question and Earth-1's Lois Lane deduce that Luthor revealed the Bleed's location to the Anti-Monitor in exchange for Earth-10's survival. Luthor explains that he and his Earths' team of villains have correctly concluded that life in the Bleed is unsustainable, so they captured Psycho Pirate and tortured ...
After the Apokolips War ended, Henry Jr. joined the World Army and took the code-name "Captain Steel". Captain Steel was sent on a mission to Rio de Janeiro to enter one of the fire pits left by the war, but something went wrong and Heywood left the pit after 35 hours, warning the people to close the pit before the Red Lantern got out, as she ...
Justice League: Doom is a 2012 American animated superhero film directed by Lauren Montgomery and written by Dwayne McDuffie.A standalone sequel to Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths (2010), it was loosely based on "JLA: Tower of Babel", a 2000 comic book storyline that ran in the DC Comics series JLA.
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 title of the series was changed from Dark Crisis to Dark Crisis on Infinite Earths on and after issue #4, which denoted how the series is a direct sequel to Crisis On Infinite Earths. [1] The series results in the return of the DCU's infinite multiverse which was destroyed in the original crisis in 1986.
The post-credits scene in Justice League: The Flashpoint Paradox sets up the film Justice League: War which officially began the DC Animated Movie Universe. [6] A plot point towards the end of the film is also revisited and expanded in Suicide Squad: Hell to Pay, which also belongs to the DC Animated Movie Universe continuity. [7]
The first issue of Final Crisis went on sale May 28, 2008. [15] Final Crisis was seven oversized issues released over nine months starting in May 2008. [16] Morrison explained that the sequence of stories in the main series and tie-ins is Final Crisis #1–3, Superman Beyond #1–2, Final Crisis: Submit, Final Crisis #4–5, Batman #682–683, and finally Final Crisis #6–7.