Justice League Unlimited (or JLU) was an American animated television series produced by 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 at 8:30 p.m. EST/PST on Toonami and ended with the episode aired May 13, 2006 at 10:30 p.m. EST/PST.
Overview
The series is a continuation of its predecessor, taking up soon after
Justice League ended. It is sometimes considered to be the same series as the original; the first season of
Justice League Unlimited is referred to by the producers as the third season of
Justice League. However, seasons referred to below treat
Justice League Unlimited as a separate series.
It features a greatly-expanded League, in which the characters from the original series are joined by a number of superheroes (in the first episode, well over 50 characters appear), as well as a number of DC heroes who had made guest appearances in the first two seasons of Justice League.
Also unlike Justice League, Justice League Unlimited features ongoing story arcs, the first involving the building conflict between the league and a secret government agency known as Project Cadmus. This plot line heavily builds upon events that occurred during the second season of Justice League, 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 season story arc focuses on the Legion of Doom as the main villains, a loose-knit organization formed to combat the increased superhero coordination of the first two seasons.
Besides the addition of dozens of new League members, the show has changed format somewhat, though keeping the same Bruce Timm style artwork. Justice League Unlimited stories are mostly half-hour episode in length, unlike stories for Justice League which almost all ran for a full hour. The stories in the second and third seasons of Unlimited have, however, tended to align along a season-long story arc.
Justice League Unlimited, similar to the second season of Justice League, is animated in widescreen. The show also features a new theme song. It was the last Dini/Timm show in production, although there is currently one other, nonrelated cartoon set in the DC universe: The Batman. 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.
Characters
The seven founding members on
Justice League Unlimited consist of the League's members during the original two
Justice League seasons; these members continue to have greater authority and responsibility in the League.
|
| Founding Members:
Other Prominent Members:
Connection with Batman Beyond
The term "Justice League Unlimited" was used first in the two-part episode ("The Call") of the animated series
Batman Beyond that aired more than a year before the first
Justice League series began. Decades into the future of the DC Animated Universe, the Justice League still exists, and is referred to as the "Justice League Unlimited". This future League consists of
Superman, a new
Green Lantern,
Big Barda,
Warhawk,
Aquagirl, and
Micron. Like his predecessor, the new
Batman becomes a part-time member of the League.
Justice League Unlimited's first season two-part finale ("The Once and Future Thing") again features the league of the future, with a reduced lineup. Villain David Clinton and the Jokerz killed most of the future members of the league, leaving only the original Batman (now the 80-year-old Bruce Wayne), the second Batman (Terry McGinnis), Warhawk and Static alive. This episode also features the revelation that Warhawk is the son of Jon Stewart and Shayera Hol. Some of these members appear again, along with the rest of the now-restored future heroes, in the season two finale, "Epilogue".
Within the Justice League Unlimited series, the present team has never been referred to as the Justice League Unlimited or the JLU.
DVD releases
- Saving the World (released February 15, 2005) - Contains Season One episodes "Initiation", "Hawk and Dove", and "Kid Stuff".
- Joining Forces (released September 20, 2005) - Contains Season One episodes "For the Man Who Has Everything", "The Greatest Story Never Told", and "The Return".
Fans of the series have been lobbying for the release of complete seasons (along with the original Justice League episodes) rather than collected editions such as those above, and with the announced first season box which was released on March 21, 2006 for Justice League it seems likely Justice League Unlimited will receive similar treatment. There are tentative reports that there will be 2 more single-disc releases, New Heroes and Once and Future, after which the complete first season will be released; there is at present no information on release dates.However Warner Video's website, "Year of Superman" lists Season 1 as coming out fourth quarter 2006.[http://www.warnervideo.com/yearofsuperman/
Episode trivia
- The final scene in "Epilogue" is an homage to "On Leather Wings", the opening scene in the very first episode of the first Batman animated series that the Timm/Dini team collaborated on. Both scenes share very similar visuals - dark rain-laden clouds, Batman streaking past darkened buildings and buzzing a pair of astonished policeman in an airship/aircraft.
- Hawk and Dove were voiced by Fred Savage and Jason Hervey, who played the bickering brothers Kevin and Wayne on the TV series Wonder Years. Ironically, Fred voiced the older, more aggressive brother Hawk/Hank Hall while Jason voiced the younger, more docile brother Dove/Don Hall, which was a complete reversal of their roles on Wonder Years. It was originally intended for Jason to voice Hawk and Fred to voice Dove, mirroring the Wonder Years relationship, but during the voice over readings they unexpectedly swapped parts and it was left that way for the episode.
- Dwayne McDuffie stated that the golden shield on the back of Superman's cape would never appear in Justice League Unlimited
- Supergirl received a redesign because they said that the white-T design was "too 90s". The new design is described as being partially based on the new Supergirl from the Loeb/Churchill series
- All characters but Batman received minor redesigns following the end of Justice League and start of Justice League Unlimited. Some, like Green Lantern, were redesigned with new haircuts, or (in the case of Hawkgirl and Supergirl) completely redesigned wardrobes. Superman had some face lines changed, because his facial expression in Justice League was "too" mature. The Flash had some of his lines changed, while Wonder Woman got a more feminine face and her lines softened in general.
- The Justice League's Metro-Tower in Metropolis at the start of the third season is the former site of Lexor City and the future site of the Justice League Watchtower in Batman Beyond's time. Its current design is based a homage of the Hall of Justice from the television series Superfriends, with its shape extrapolated as a tower and pavilion rather than a hall.
- The cast of the TV show Firefly has made several appearances in Justice League Unlimited. Nathan Fillion (Captain Malcolm Reynolds) voices Vigilante, and Gina Torres (Zoe) provides the voice of Vixen. They appear together in the episode Hunter's Moon. Morena Baccarin (Inara Serra) plays Black Canary, and Adam Baldwin (Jayne Cobb) has played three supporting roles: Jonah Hex, Hal Jordan, and Rick Flag, Jr.
- Two actresses and one actor from Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel have made several appearances. Amy Acker does the voice of Huntress while Juliet Landau has done Tala and Plastique and Alexis Denisof has appeared as Mirror Master. In addition, Giselle Loren, the voice of Stargirl, was the voice of Buffy in video games.
- The voice actors for 6 out of 7 of the main characters of the show Futurama have appeared in JLU. Phil LaMarr (Hermes) is the voice of Green Lantern, Static, and Steel. Billy West (Fry, Farnsworth, Zoidberg) appeared as Booster Gold's robot, Skeets. John DiMaggio (Bender) voiced Dreamslayer in the episode "Shadow of the Hawk." Lauren Tom (Amy) voiced Dana Tan, Dr. Light, and the Future Green Lantern in "Epilogue."
- In Justice League and Justice League Unlimited, several actors from the various Star Trek series have provided voices: Michael Dorn (Worf) voiced Kalibak. Rene Auberjonois (Odo) played Kanjar-Ro, DeSaad and General Steppenwolf. Armin Shimerman (Quark) voiced Doctor Achilles Milo. Robert Picardo (The Doctor) played Blackhawk and Amazo. Jeffrey Combs (Weyoun, _Deep_Space_Nine_characters#Brunt, Shran) voices The Question.
- In the episode "Double Date", the flashback of the assassination of Huntress' father Franco Bertinelli shows him to appear very similar to another famous gangster, Scarface.
- Also in "Double Date", Tommy Monaghan is mentioned in passing. In the comics, Monaghan was a superpowered hitman and star of the comic series "Hitman" by Garth Ennis and John McCrea.
- In the episode "The Great Brain Robbery," Luthor and Flash switch bodies and their voice actors trade roles. Clancy Brown, Luthor's original voice, becomes the Flash and Michael Rosenbaum, the Flash's original voice, becomes Luthor. Coincidentally, Rosenbaum also plays Lex Luthor on Smallville.
- In the final episode of the third season, "Destroyer," there is a scene at the end where the League descends down a flight of stairs at the Metro Tower. The rows of heroes and the order in which they descend are indicative of generations of the League in the comics: Starting with Steel III, the first row is the Brave and the Bold characters (Metamorpho, B'wana Beast) and Steve Ditko's contributions (the Question, Captain Atom, the Creeper and Hawk and Dove), the Seven Soldiers of Victory (Stargirl and STRIPE, Crimson Avenger, Vigilante, and Shining Knight), the JSA (Hourman, Doctor Mid-Nite, Doctor Fate, and Wildcat) the "Detroit" JLA (Vibe, Steel II, Gypsy, and Vixen), the "Giffen era" JLA (Fire, Ice, Booster Gold, and Elongated Man), the "Satellite era" JLA (Red Tornado, Atom, Zatanna, Green Arrow, and Black Canary) and finally the seven mainstays (Flash, Martian Manhunter, Green Lantern, Hawkgirl and Superman, Wonder Woman, and Batman in the middle). This was the final visual for the show paying homage to the various characters that were incorporated into the cartoon. Also, as Superman, Wonder Woman, and Batman run toward camera, Batman is the last image before fading to black, which pays homage to the Dini/Timm era which began with The Animated Series.
Cancellation
Paul Dini, writer for the show, announced on January 25, 2006 via a
reply to a blog entry that the show had been cancelled.
Voice cast
See also
External links
2000s TV shows in the United States | Animated television series | Batman television series | DC Comics titles | Justice League | Programs broadcast by YTV | Shows on Toonami | Superman television series | Television programs based on DC Comics | Wonder Woman television series
Liga de la Justicia Ilimitada | Liga da Justiça (desenho animado)