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Justice League Unlimited

American animated television series


American animated television series

FieldValue
imageJustice League Unlimited logo.png
genreSuperhero
Action
based_on
developerBruce Timm
voices
theme_music_composerMichael McCuistion
composerKristopher Carter
Michael McCuistion
Lolita Ritmanis
countryUnited States
languageEnglish
channelCartoon Network
executive_producer
producer
editorJoe Gall
companyDC Comics (season 3)
Warner Bros. Animation
num_seasons3
num_episodes39
list_episodesList of Justice League Unlimited episodes
runtime21–23 minutes
first_aired
last_aired
relatedJustice League

Action Michael McCuistion Lolita Ritmanis Warner Bros. Animation Justice League Unlimited (JLU) is an American animated superhero television series produced by Warner Bros. Animation with DC Comics (in season 3) and airing on Cartoon Network. Featuring a wide array of superheroes from the DC Universe, and specifically based on the Justice League superhero team, it is a direct sequel to the previous Justice League animated series and picks up around two years after it. JLU debuted on July 31, 2004, on Toonami and ended on May 13, 2006.

It is the eighth and final series of the DC Animated Universe, serving as the conclusion to a shared universe which began with Batman: The Animated Series. Notably, it is the most continuity-heavy show of the DC Animated Universe, and weaves together characters and plot lines from past series. Justice League Unlimited received critical acclaim.

Overview

According to producer Bruce Timm, the series finale of Justice League, "Starcrossed", was possibly meant to be the final episode of the series; however, Cartoon Network ordered the production of season 3 and 4. The network wanted the show to be rebranded, including changing the episode format, so instead of two-part episode stories, the standard half an hour format was used. Additionally, alongside the name change, the show 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. This extension of the Justice League was originally planned to be explained in a planned direct-to-video feature film, but the project never materialized.

Production

Justice League Unlimited features both episodic and serialized episodes, the first major overarching story arc involves the growing 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), and would go on to affect 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, 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, particularly characters associated with Batman, were restricted due to the unrelated animated series The Batman and Christopher Nolan's live-action The Dark Knight Trilogy, to avoid continuity confusion, thus leading to the popular term known as "Bat-embargo". 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 (planned to be a spin-off of Smallville). To compensate for this, the last season focused their stories on previously overlooked DC Comics characters and mythos. These included characters like Deadman, Viking Prince, and Warlord.

The series, along with the entire DC Animated Universe, was originally planned to end after the second-season finale "Epilogue", which concluded the story of Batman Beyond and thus the entire DCAU chronologically. But a third season was greenlit by Cartoon Network. The third season started in 2005 with the episode "I Am Legion" (which was written before the announcement of a third season) and ended in 2006 with the episode "Destroyer". Stan Berkowitz, a member of the production team, left the show later for the TV series Friends and Heroes, and writer Matt Wayne was contracted to replace him. According to Wayne, if the show had been renewed for a fourth season, he would have liked to write more episodes focusing on Superman and Wonder Woman.

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, which did not have the same restrictions regarding character appearances.

Justice League Unlimited, like the second season of Justice League, is animated in widescreen. The show also features new theme music and intro (nominated for an Emmy). The two-part series finale was aired in the UK on February 8 and 18, 2006, and in the United States on May 6 and 13, 2006.

Episodes

Main article: List of Justice League Unlimited episodes

Cast

Protagonists

Voice actorRole
George Newbern
Kevin Conroy
Phil LaMarr
Carl Lumbly
Susan Eisenberg
Michael Rosenbaum
Maria Canals-Barrera

Supporting cast

Voice actorRole
Nicholle Tom
Kin Shriner
Jeffrey Combs
Amy Acker
Oded Fehr
Scott Rummell
Michael T. Weiss
Morena Baccarin
Dana Delany
Will Friedle
Farrah Forke
Olivia d'Abo
Peter Onorati
Lauren Tom
Michael Beach
Giselle Loren
Chris Cox
Jeremy Piven
Gina Torres
John C. McGinley
Tom Everett Scott
Ioan Gruffudd
Christopher McDonald
Robert Picardo
Jennifer Hale
Nathan Fillion
James Remar
Ron Perlman
Mike Erwin
Scott Patterson
Jerry O'Connell
Gregg Rainwater
Dennis Farina
Paul Guilfoyle
Jonathan Joss
Raphael Sbarge
Jason Hervey
Fred Savage
Maria Canals-Barrera
Susan Sullivan
Néstor Carbonell
Ben Browder
Seymour Cassel
Matt Czuchry
Daniel Dae Kim
Dick Miller
Kim Mai Guest

Antagonists

Voice actorRole
Clancy Brown
Corey Burton
Powers Boothe
CCH Pounder
J. K. Simmons
Michael Ironside
Michael Dorn
Ed Asner
Malcolm McDowell
Bud Cort
Robert Foxworth
Olivia d'Abo
Armin Shimerman
Donal Gibson
Alexis Denisof
Alan Rachins
Mark Hamill
Charles Napier
Lisa Edelstein
Robert Englund
Ted Levine
Peter MacNicol
James Remar
Sheryl Lee Ralph
Michael Jai White
Robin Atkin Downes
Douglas Dunning
Rachel York
Michael York
Virginia Madsen
Héctor Elizondo
Lex Lang
Don Harvey
Melissa Joan Hart
Michael Rosenbaum
Adam Baldwin
Juliet Landau
Jennifer Hale
Hynden Walch
Bob Joles
Glenn Shadix
Michael Beach
Arte Johnson

Reception

Justice League Unlimited received overwhelming critical acclaim and is listed as one of the best animated television shows of all time. IGN named Justice League/Justice League Unlimited as the 20th best animated television series of all time. Similarly, IndieWire also ranked the series as the 20th best animated show of all time. James Whitbrook, editor of io9, wrote "Justice League Unlimited is simply the greatest superhero show of all time", further stating "it embraced its source material wholly, and was unafraid to be the wildest, biggest, comic-book-iest show it could be." Producer Bruce Timm has stated that amongst all the shows he has worked on, this show is his favorite.

Home media

From 2006 to 2007, Warner Home Video (via DC Entertainment and Warner Bros. Family Entertainment) released the entire series of Justice League Unlimited on DVD. The series is presented in original broadcast presentation and story arc continuity order. The series was also released on Blu-ray.

NameRelease dateEp #Notes
Season OneOctober 24, 2006264 DVDs. Contains all episodes of Seasons One and Two from the original airing. 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.” Episode 21 – "Hunter's Moon (AKA Mystery in Space)" – is placed out of order between episodes 22 ("Question Authority") and episode 23 ("Flashpoint").
Season TwoMarch 20, 2007132 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 FunJuly 19, 2011113 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 SeriesNovember 10, 2015393 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.

Warner Home Video also released another DVD set titled Justice League: The Complete Series. It contained all 91 episodes of Justice League and Justice League Unlimited on a 15-disc set with the 15th disc containing a bonus documentary. The same episodes were later sold as a 10-disc set without the bonus documentary.

Soundtrack

La-La Land Records released a 4-disc Justice League soundtrack on July 29, 2016. A potential Justice League Unlimited soundtrack depends on how well the Justice League soundtrack sells.

Adaptations

Justice League Unlimited

DC Comics published a series of 46-issue numbered comics based on the television series, between 2004 and 2008.

  • Justice League Unlimited: Jam-Packed Action! (2005-09-28): Adaptation of episodes 'Initiation' and 'For the Man Who Has Everything'.

Compilations

  • Justice League Unlimited Vol. 1: United They Stand (2005-05-18): Includes #1-5.
  • Justice League Unlimited Vol. 2: World's Greatest Heroes (2006-04-19): Includes #6-10.
  • Justice League Unlimited Vol. 3: Champions of Justice (2006-04-19): Includes #11-15.
  • Justice League Unlimited: The Ties That Bind (2008-04-09): Includes #16-22.
  • Justice League Unlimited: Heroes (2009-04-08): Includes #23-29.
  • Justice League Unlimited: Galactic Justice (2020-08-25, /): Includes #4, 6, 18, 24, 34, 46.
  • Justice League Unlimited: Time After Time (2020-11-03, /): Includes Adventures in the DC Universe #10, Justice League Adventures #28, 30, 34; Justice League Unlimited #9, 19.
  • Justice League Unlimited: Girl Power (2021-07-06, //EAN-5 50999): Includes Adventures in the DC Universe #6, 9; Justice League Adventures #4; Justice League Unlimited #20, 22, 35, 42; DC Super Hero Girls: Ghosting (preview).
  • Justice League Unlimited: Hocus Pocus (2021-01-27, /): Includes #11, 14, 25, 33, 37, 40.
  • DC Comics: Girls Unite!/DC Girls Unite (2021-11-02, /EAN-5 53999): Includes Batman Adventures: Cat Got Your Tongue?, Supergirl Adventures: Girl of Steel, Batman Adventures: Batgirl A League of Her Own, Justice League Unlimited: Girl Power

Justice League Infinity

It is a sequel comic to Justice League Unlimited, written by James Tucker and J.M. DeMatteis with art by Ethen Beavers. 7 numbered issues were published by DC Comics between 2021 and 2022.

Compilations

  • Justice League Infinity (2022-07-05): Includes #1-7.

Notes

References

References

  1. "Comics Continuum".
  2. "Justice League Unlimited".
  3. "Top 1000 Animated Series - IGN.com".
  4. (4 March 2022). "The Best Animated Series of All Time".
  5. (13 November 2015). "Why Justice League Unlimited Was, and Still is, the Best Superhero TV Show".
  6. (8 June 2015). "Bruce Timm Interview: Justice League, Batman, Harley Quinn, & More".
  7. "film music – movie music- film score – JUSTICE LEAGUE – Michael McCuistion – Lolita Ritmanis – Kristopher Carter – Limited Edition".
  8. "FSM Board: Save DC Comics Animated Music!".
  9. [http://www.dccomics.com/graphic-novels/justice-league-unlimited-2004/justice-league-unlimited-jam-packed-action JUSTICE LEAGUE UNLIMITED: JAM-PACKED ACTION]
  10. [http://www.dccomics.com/graphic-novels/justice-league-unlimited-2004/justice-league-unlimited-vol-1-united-they-stand JUSTICE LEAGUE UNLIMITED VOL. 1: UNITED THEY STAND]
  11. [http://www.dccomics.com/graphic-novels/justice-league-unlimited-2004/justice-league-unlimited-vol-2-worlds-greatest-heroes JUSTICE LEAGUE UNLIMITED VOL. 2: WORLD'S GREATEST HEROES]
  12. [http://www.dccomics.com/graphic-novels/justice-league-unlimited-2004/justice-league-unlimited-vol-3-champions-of-justice JUSTICE LEAGUE UNLIMITED VOL. 3: CHAMPIONS OF JUSTICE]
  13. [http://www.dccomics.com/graphic-novels/justice-league-unlimited-2004/justice-league-unlimited-ties-that-bind JUSTICE LEAGUE UNLIMITED: TIES THAT BIND]
  14. [http://www.dccomics.com/graphic-novels/justice-league-unlimited-2004/justice-league-unlimited-heroes JUSTICE LEAGUE UNLIMITED: HEROES]
  15. [http://leagueofcomicgeeks.com/comic/4518182/justice-league-unlimited-galactic-justice-tp Justice League Unlimited: Galactic Justice TP]
  16. [http://www.dc.com/graphic-novels/justice-league-unlimited-time-after-time JUSTICE LEAGUE UNLIMITED: TIME AFTER TIME]
  17. [http://www.dc.com/graphic-novels/justice-league-unlimited-girl-power JUSTICE LEAGUE UNLIMITED: GIRL POWER]
  18. [http://www.dc.com/graphic-novels/justice-league-unlimited-hocus-pocus JUSTICE LEAGUE UNLIMITED: HOCUS POCUS]
  19. "JUSTICE LEAGUE INFINITY".
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