enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. JLA (comic book) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JLA_(comic_book)

    JLA was a monthly comic book published by DC Comics from January 1997 to April 2006 featuring the Justice League of America (JLA, Justice League). [1] The series restarted DC's approach to the Justice League, which had initially featured most of the company's top-tier superheroes but shifted in the 1980s to featuring a rotating cast of established characters alongside newer ones and also saw ...

  3. List of Justice League members - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Justice_League_members

    DC Comics had the first fictional universe of superheroes, with the Justice Society of America forming in the Golden Age of Comic Books in the 1940s. This shared continuity became increasingly complex with multiple worlds, including a similar team of all-star superheroes formed in the 1960s named the Justice League of America, debuting in The Brave and the Bold Volume 1 #28.

  4. Justice League - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justice_League

    The Justice League appears in Justice League: The New Frontier (2008), an adaptation of Darwyn Cooke's graphic novel DC: The New Frontier. The team appears in Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths (2010). The movie was based on an unused script for a never-made movie that was to bridge the TV shows Justice League and Justice League Unlimited.

  5. List of Justice League titles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Justice_League_titles

    Justice League (vol. 2) #40–50, Justice League: The Darkseid War Special, DC Sneak Peek: Justice League: October 2018 978-1401284558: Justice League Volume 7: Darkseid War Part 1 HC: 176: Justice League Vol. 2 #40–44, plus a story from DC Comics Divergence #1: March 9, 2016 [3] Justice League Volume 8: The Darkseid War Part 2 HC: 200

  6. Justice League Sourcebook - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justice_League_Sourcebook

    Mayfair Games first published the licensed role-playing game DC Heroes in 1985, and followed this with several supplements and adventures including the Justice League Sourcebook, a 128-page softcover book published in 1990 that was designed by Jack A. Barker and Ray Winninger, with interior illustrations by the staff of DC Comics, cartography by Mari Paz Cabardo, Jerry O'Malley, and Ike ...

  7. JLA: Act of God - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JLA:_Act_of_God

    JLA: Act of God is a three issue limited series published by DC Comics under the Elseworlds banner in 2000.It is written by Doug Moench and illustrated by Dave Ross.. The story is a psychological look at what could happen to many superheroes if their powers were taken away by an unseen natural event, and has them pondering whether it is right for them to have powers in the first place.

  8. Justice League 3000 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justice_League_3000

    Justice League 3000 #1–7 October 2014 978-1401250461: Justice League 3000 Vol. 2: The Camelot War: Justice League 3000 #8–13 April 2015 978-1401254148: Justice League 3001 Vol. 1: Deja Vu All Over Again: Justice League 3000 #14–15, DC Sneak Peek: Justice League 3001 #1, Justice League 3001 #1–6 March 2016 978-1401261481: Justice League ...

  9. JLA: The Nail series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JLA:_The_Nail_series

    JLA: The Nail is a three-issue comic book mini-series published by DC Comics in 1998 under its Elseworlds imprint. The story, written and drawn by Alan Davis, is set in a parallel universe where Jonathan and Martha Kent's truck experiences a flat tire caused by a nail, which stops them from discovering a Kryptonian spaceship outside Smallville containing the baby Kal-El, negating Superman.