Justice League: Difference between revisions
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The comic's early success was indirectly responsible for the creation of the [[Fantastic Four]]. When Marvel-Timely owner [[Martin Goodman (publisher)|Martin Goodman]] heard in 1961 how well DC's then-new book ''Justice League'' was selling, he told [[Stan Lee]], his comics editor, to come up with a team of superheroes for Marvel.<ref>{{cite book|last = Lee|first = Stan|author-link = Stan Lee|title = [[Origins of Marvel Comics]] |publisher = [[Simon & Schuster]]/[[Marvel Fireside Books|Fireside Books]]|date= 1974|location= New York, New York|page = 16|isbn = 978-0671218638}}</ref> The result was ''Fantastic Four'' #1 by Lee and [[Jack Kirby]], which debuted in November 1961.<ref>{{Cite book|last1= Lee|first1= Stan|last2= Mair|first2= George|title= Excelsior! The Amazing Life of Stan Lee|publisher= Fireside Books|date= 2002|location= New York, New York|isbn=978-0-684-87305-3}}</ref> |
The comic's early success was indirectly responsible for the creation of the [[Fantastic Four]]. When Marvel-Timely owner [[Martin Goodman (publisher)|Martin Goodman]] heard in 1961 how well DC's then-new book ''Justice League'' was selling, he told [[Stan Lee]], his comics editor, to come up with a team of superheroes for Marvel.<ref>{{cite book|last = Lee|first = Stan|author-link = Stan Lee|title = [[Origins of Marvel Comics]] |publisher = [[Simon & Schuster]]/[[Marvel Fireside Books|Fireside Books]]|date= 1974|location= New York, New York|page = 16|isbn = 978-0671218638}}</ref> The result was ''Fantastic Four'' #1 by Lee and [[Jack Kirby]], which debuted in November 1961.<ref>{{Cite book|last1= Lee|first1= Stan|last2= Mair|first2= George|title= Excelsior! The Amazing Life of Stan Lee|publisher= Fireside Books|date= 2002|location= New York, New York|isbn=978-0-684-87305-3}}</ref> |
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Marvel also introduced a team of villains in 1971 based on the Justice League called the [[Squadron Sinister]]. The characters are analogous to Superman (Hyperion), Batman (Nighthawk), Wonder Woman (Power Princess), Green Lantern (Doctor Spectrum), and the Flash (the Speed Demon |
Marvel also introduced a team of villains in 1971 based on the Justice League called the [[Squadron Sinister]]. The characters are analogous to Superman (Hyperion), Batman (Nighthawk), Wonder Woman (Power Princess), Green Lantern (Doctor Spectrum), and the Flash (the Speed Demon). |
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===Awards=== |
===Awards=== |
Revision as of 23:48, 27 June 2021
Justice League | |
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File:Justice League.png | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | The Brave and the Bold #28 (March 1960) |
Created by | Gardner Fox |
In-story information | |
Base(s) | The Hall Watchtower Satellite Secret Sanctuary Detroit Bunker The Refuge JLI Embassies |
Roster | |
See: List of Justice League members |
The Justice League is a team of fictional superheroes appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. The team was conceived by writer Gardner Fox during the Silver Age of Comic Books as a reimagining of the Golden Age's Justice Society of America. Originally consisting of Superman (Kal-El/Clark Kent), Batman (Bruce Wayne), Wonder Woman (Diana Prince), The Flash (Barry Allen), Green Lantern (Hal Jordan), Aquaman (Arthur Curry) and Martian Manhunter (J'onn J'onzz), they first appeared together as the Justice League of America (JLA) in The Brave and the Bold #28 (March 1960).[1]
The Justice League's roster has rotated throughout the years, consisting of various superheroes from the DC Universe, such as The Atom (Ray Palmer), Big Barda (Barda Free), Black Canary (Dinah Laurel Lance), Black Lightning (Jefferson Pierce), Blue Beetle (Jaime Reyes), Booster Gold ,Captain Marvel/Shazam (Billy Batson), Cyborg (Victor Stone), Elongated Man (Ralph Dibny), The Flash (Wally West), Firestorm, Green Arrow (Oliver Queen), Green Lantern (John Stewart), Hawkgirl (Kendra Saunders), Hawkman (Carter Hall), Metamorpho (Rex Mason), Orion, Plastic Man (Eel O'Brian), Supergirl (Kara Zor-El), Power Girl (Kara Zor-L), Red Tornado, Stargirl (Courtney Whitmore), and Zatanna. In the continuity of DC's 2011 relaunch of all of this monthly titles, The New 52 reboot, Cyborg replaced Martian Manhunter as one of the seven founding members.
The team received its own comic book title called Justice League of America in November 1960. With The New 52 in 2011, DC Comics released the second volume of Justice League. In July 2016, the DC Rebirth initiative again relaunched DC's entire line of monthly books, including the Justice League titles, with the third volume of Justice League. Since its inception, the team has been featured in various films, television programs, and video games.
Background
Various comic book series featuring the Justice League have remained generally popular with fans since inception and, in most incarnations, its roster includes DC's most popular characters. The Justice League concept has also been adapted into various other entertainment media, including various forms of television from the classic Saturday morning Super Friends animated series (1973–1986), a live-action series of specials Legends of the Superheroes (1979), an unproduced Justice League of America live-action series (for which the pilot film exists), the acclaimed Justice League animated series (2001–2004), its sequel Justice League Unlimited (2004–2006) and Justice League Action (2016–2018).
A live-action film was also in the works around 2008 before being shelved. On June 6, 2012, Warner Bros. announced a new live action Justice League film was in development with Will Beall hired as screenwriter. However, the project was scrapped again. After the success of the Superman reboot Man of Steel, a film titled Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice was released in March 2016, directed by Zack Snyder. Batman v Superman script writer Chris Terrio also penned the script for Justice League.[2]
Various origins of the Justice League
In a story told in flashback in Justice League of America #9 (February 1962), the Appellaxians infiltrated Earth.[3] Competing alien warriors were sent to see who could conquer Earth first, to determine who will become the new ruler of their home planet. The aliens' attacks drew the attention of Aquaman, Batman, Flash (Barry Allen), Green Lantern (Hal Jordan), Martian Manhunter, Superman and Wonder Woman. While the superheroes individually defeated most of the invaders, the heroes fell prey to a single competitor's attack; only by working together were they able to defeat the competitor. For many years, the heroes heralded this adventure as the event that prompted them to agree to pool resources when confronted with similar menaces.
In Justice League of America #144 (July 1977), Green Arrow uncovered inconsistencies in the team's records[4] and extracted admissions from his colleagues that the seven founders had actually formed the League after Martian Manhunter was rescued from Martian forces by the other six founders, along with several other heroes including Robin, Robotman, Congorilla, Rex the Wonder Dog and even Lois Lane.
Green Lantern participated in this first adventure solely as Hal Jordan, as he had yet to become the costumed hero, the biggest inconsistency that Arrow found, as they celebrated the earlier incident's date, while recounting only the later one's events. When the group formalized their agreement, they suppressed news of it because of anti-Martian hysteria. Because the heroes had not revealed their identities to each other at the time, they did not realize that Jordan and Green Lantern were one and the same when he turned up in costume during the event described in #9. While most subsequent accounts of the League have made little mention of this first adventure, the animated Justice League series adapted this tale as the origin of the Justice League as well.
Secret Origins (vol. 2) #32 (Nov. 1988) updated Justice League of America #9's origin for Post-Crisis continuity. Differences included the inclusion of the Silver Age Black Canary as a founding member and the absence of Batman, Wonder Woman and Superman. The JLA: Year One limited series, by Mark Waid, Brian Augustyn and Barry Kitson, further expanded the Secret Origins depiction.[5]
In Justice League Task Force #16 (Sept. 1994), during the "Zero Hour" storyline, a then-unknown superhuman named Triumph appeared. Triumph was revealed to have been a founding member of the Justice League and was their leader. On his first mission with the Justice League, Triumph seemingly "saved the world" but was teleported into a dimensional limbo that also affected the timestream, erasing all memory of him.
In Infinite Crisis #7 (June 2006), the formation of "New Earth" (the new name for the Post-Crisis Earth) restored Wonder Woman as a founding member of the Justice League. In Brad Meltzer's Justice League of America (vol. 2) #0 (September 2006), it was revealed that Superman and Batman were again founding members as well. 52 #51 (June 2007) confirmed that the 1989 Secret Origins and JLA: Year One origins were still in continuity at that time, with Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman joining the team with founding members' status shortly after the group's formation with Aquaman, Black Canary, Flash, Green Lantern and Martian Manhunter.[6] In Justice League of America #12 (October 2007), the founding members of the Justice League were shown to be Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern (Hal Jordan), Flash (Barry Allen), Aquaman, and the Martian Manhunter.
With DC's history rewritten due to the Flashpoint limited series, an entirely new origin for the Justice League appeared in the subsequent Justice League series which debuted with an October 2011 cover date as part of DC's company-wide relaunch of all of its monthly books, The New 52. Issue #1 portrayed the first meeting between Batman and Hal Jordan, with the two encountering each other during a battle against a Parademon in Gotham City. After realizing the creature is extraterrestrial in origin, the two heroes head to Metropolis to seek out Superman only to be attacked by him.[7] Later, after a brief fight in which the Flash arrives and Batman convinces Superman they are on the same side, they move to an abandoned building to work on analyzing a mysterious alien box, when it suddenly activates and more Parademons arrive.[8] While fighting the Parademons, Aquaman and Wonder Woman appear and join forces with the other heroes.[9] The mysterious box leads to Darkseid's arrival on Earth, and the heroes come together, along with the newcomer Cyborg, to defeat him. The public becomes enamored with the heroes, and a writer dubs the group the "Justice League", following the Flash's suggestion of "Super Seven".[10]
Justice League
Character | Real name | Joined in | Notes |
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New 52 Justice League
The Justice League was rebooted in 2011. | |||
Aquaman | Arthur Curry | Justice League Vol. 2 #6 | Co-Founder of the Justice League; Currently missing but Later Return in # 32 |
Batman | Bruce Wayne | Co-Founder of the Justice League; Active; Former member of the Justice League of America II and Justice League International | |
Cyborg | Victor Stone | Co-Founder of the Justice League; Active | |
Flash | Barry Allen | Co-Founder of the Justice League; Active | |
Green Lantern | Hal Jordan | Co-Founder of the Justice League; Active as a reserve member, Active in the Green Lantern Corps | |
Superman | Kal-El/Clark Kent | Co-Founder of the Justice League; Active | |
Wonder Woman | Princess Diana/Diana Prince | Co-Founder of the Justice League; and leader of the Justice League Dark. Transcended into the heavens in "Dark Nights: Death Metal" | |
Martian Manhunter | J'onn J'onzz/John Jones | Between Justice League (vol. 2) #6 and Justice League (vol. 2) #7 | Joined but later attacked the Justice League and left, as noted in Justice League (vol. 2) #8; Former member of Stormwatch, the Justice League of America, and Justice League United, Return a main member in vol 3 |
The Atom/Atomica | Rhonda Pineda | Justice League (vol. 2) #18 | Revealed in Justice League (vol. 2) #23 to actually be a member of the Crime Syndicate of America and a spy posing as a member of the Justice League; Died in Forever Evil #7 |
Element Woman | Emily Sung | Left after Forever Evil #7; Joined the Doom Patrol | |
Firestorm | Ronnie Raymond and Jason Rusch | Left after Forever Evil #7 | |
Shazam | Billy Batson | Justice League (vol. 2) #31 | No longer a member after the DC Rebirth event |
Lex Luthor | Justice League (vol. 2) #33 | ||
Captain Cold | Leonard Snart | ||
Green Lantern | Jessica Cruz | Justice League (vol. 2) #35 | Left the team in Justice League (vol. 3) #8, but returned in (vol. 3) #11 |
Simon Baz | Green Lanterns: Rebirth #1 | Former member of the Justice League of America | |
Mera | Justice League (vol. 3) #24 | Active; Former member of Justice League United | |
Green Arrow | Oliver Queen | Justice League: No Justice #4 | Active as a reserve member and rogue agent of the League; Former member of Justice League United |
Hawkgirl | Kendra Saunders | Dark Nights: Metal #6 | Active; Former member of the BlackHawks |
Green Lantern | John Stewart | Justice League (vol. 4) #1 | Active; Active in the Green Lantern Corps |
Vixen | Mari McCabe | Active as a reserve member; Former member of the Justice League of America II and Justice League International | |
Adam Strange | Active as a reserve member; Former member of the Justice League United | ||
Animal Man | Bernhard Baker | Active as a reserve member; Former member of the Justice League United | |
Hawkman | Carter Hall | Active as a reserve member | |
Mister Terrific | Michael Holt | Active as a reserve member; Also active in the Terrifics | |
Plastic Man | Patrick "Eel" O'Brian | ||
Swamp Thing | Alec Holland | Active as a reserve member; Also active in Justice League Dark | |
Atom | Ray Palmer | Active as a reserve member | |
Miss Martian | M'gann M'orzz | Active as a liaison of the League to the Titans | |
Firestorm | Ronnie Raymond and Martin Stein | Active as a reserve member | |
Green Lantern | Guy Gardner | Active as a reserve member; Also active in the Green Lantern Corps; Former member of Justice League International | |
Jarro | Starro | Justice League (vol. 4) #11 | Active |
Starman | Will Payton | Justice League Annual (vol. 4) #1 | Deceased in #34 |
World Forger | Alpheus | Justice League (vol. 4) #25 | Brother of the Over-Monitor and the Anti-Monitor; Active |
Over-Monitor | Mar Nova | Justice League (vol. 4) #27 | Brother of the World Forger and the Anti-Monitor; Active |
Anti-Monitor | Mobius | Justice League (vol. 4) #32 | Brother of the Over-Monitor and the World Forger; betrayed the League and joined Perpetua in #34 |
Black Adam | Teth Adam | Justice League (vol. 4) #60 | Active |
Antagonists
The Justice League often unite to face supervillains who pose catastrophic challenges to the world.
Publication history
Golden Age
Justice League of America | |
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File:Jla v1 001.jpg | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
Schedule | List
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Format | Ongoing |
Genre | Superhero |
Publication date | List
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No. of issues | List
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Creative team | |
Created by | Gardner Fox Mike Sekowsky |
Written by | List
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Penciller(s) | List
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Inker(s) | List
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Colorist(s) | List
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Having successfully reintroduced a number of DC Comics' (then known as National Periodical Publications) Golden Age superhero characters (Flash, Green Lantern, etc.) during the late 1950s, editor Julius Schwartz asked writer Gardner Fox to reintroduce the Justice Society of America. Schwartz, influenced by the popularity of Major League Baseball's National League and American League, decided to change the name of the team from the Justice Society of America (JSA) to the Justice League of America (JLA).[11]
The Justice League of America debuted in The Brave and the Bold #28 (March 1960),[12] and after two further appearances in that title, got its own series, which quickly became one of the company's best-selling titles.[13] Fox and artist Mike Sekowsky were the creative team for the title's first eight years. Sekowsky's last issue was #63 (June 1968) and Fox departed with #65 (September 1968). Schwartz was the new title's editor and oversaw it until 1979.[14]
Silver and Bronze Age
The initial Justice League lineup included seven of DC Comics' superheroes who were regularly published at that time: Superman, Batman, Aquaman, Flash, Green Lantern, Martian Manhunter, and Wonder Woman. Rarely featured in most of the stories, Superman and Batman did not even appear on the cover most of the time. Three of DC's other surviving or revived characters, Green Arrow,[15] the Atom,[16] and Hawkman[17] were added to the roster over the next four years.
The Justice League operated from a secret cave outside of the small town of Happy Harbor, Rhode Island. A teenager named Lucas "Snapper" Carr tagged along on missions, becoming both the team's mascot and an official member. Snapper, noted for speaking in beatnik dialect and snapping his fingers, helped the group defeat the giant space starfish Starro the Conqueror in the team's first appearance.
The supervillain Doctor Light first battled the team in issue #12 (June 1962).[18] Justice League of America #21 and #22 (August–September 1963) saw the first team-up of the Justice League and the Justice Society of America as well as the first use of the term "Crisis" in reference to a crossover between the characters.[19] The following year's team-up with the Justice Society introduced the threat of the Crime Syndicate of America of Earth-Three.[20] The character Metamorpho was offered membership in the Justice League but declined.[21] Following the departures of Gardner Fox and Mike Sekowsky, writer Denny O'Neil and artist Dick Dillin became the new creative team. Dillin would draw the title from issue #64 (August 1968) through #183 (October 1980).[22]
O'Neil reshaped the Justice League's membership by removing Wonder Woman in issue #69 and the Martian Manhunter in issue #71.[23] Following the JLA–JSA team-up in issues #73–74 and the death of her husband, the Black Canary decided to move from Earth-Two to Earth-One to make a fresh start, where she joins the Justice League.[24] The following issue saw the character develop the superpower known as her "canary cry".[25] In issue #77 (December 1969), Snapper Carr is tricked into betraying the cave headquarters' secret location to the Joker, resulting in his resignation from the team.[26]
Satellite years
In need of a new secure headquarters, the Justice League moved into an orbiting satellite headquarters in Justice League of America #78 (February 1970).[27] The Elongated Man,[28] the Red Tornado,[29] Hawkgirl,[30] Zatanna,[31] and Firestorm[32] joined the team, and Wonder Woman returned during this period.
Len Wein wrote issues #100–114, in which he and Dillin re-introduced the Seven Soldiers of Victory in issues #100–102[33] and the Freedom Fighters in issues #107–108.[34] In the fall of 1972, Wein and writers Gerry Conway and Steve Englehart crafted a metafictional unofficial crossover spanning titles from both Marvel and DC. Each comic featured Englehart, Conway, and Wein, as well as Wein's first wife Glynis, interacting with Marvel or DC characters at the Rutland Halloween Parade in Rutland, Vermont. Beginning in Amazing Adventures #16 (by Englehart with art by Bob Brown and Frank McLaughlin), the story continued in Justice League of America #103 (by Wein, Dillin and Dick Giordano), and concluded in Thor #207 (by Conway and penciler John Buscema). As Englehart explained in 2010, "It certainly seemed like a radical concept and we knew that we had to be subtle (laughs) and each story had to stand on its own, but we really worked it out. It's really worthwhile to read those stories back to back to back—it didn't matter to us that one was at DC and two were at Marvel—I think it was us being creative, thinking what would be really cool to do."[35][36][37] Justice League of America #103 also featured the Justice League offering membership to the Phantom Stranger. Len Wein commented on the Phantom Stranger's relationship with the JLA in a 2012 interview stating that the character "only sort of joined. He was offered membership but vanished, as per usual, without actually accepting the offer. Over the years, other writers have just assumed [he] was a member, but in my world, he never really said yes."[38] Issues #110 (March–April 1974) to #116 (March–April 1975) of the series were in the 100 Page Super Spectacular format.[39] Libra, a supervillain created by Wein and Dillin in Justice League of America #111 (May–June 1974),[40] would play a leading role in Grant Morrison's Final Crisis storyline in 2008.
Writers Cary Bates and Elliot S. Maggin wrote themselves into the 1975 JLA–JSA crossover in issues #123–124 with Bates becoming a supervillain.[41][42]
Wonder Woman rejoined the team following a major two-year story arc, largely written by Martin Pasko. To prove her worthiness to rejoin the JLA, Wonder Woman voluntarily underwent 12 trials analogous to the 12 labors of Hercules, each of which was monitored in secret by a member of the JLA.[43] After the conclusion of the storyline in Wonder Woman #222, the character's return to the JLA occurred in a two-part story in Justice League of America #128–129 (March–April 1976).[44]
Steve Englehart wrote the series beginning with issue #139 and provided another unofficial crossover with Marvel Comics in issue #142 by reworking his character Mantis into the DC Universe as a character named "Willow".[45] Englehart left the title with issue #150. From issue #139 to #157 on, the issues were giant-sized.
Writer Gerry Conway had a lengthy association with the title as well. His first JLA story appeared in issue #125 (December 1975) and he became the series' regular writer with issue #151 (February 1978). With a few exceptions, Conway would write the team's adventures until issue #255 (October 1986).[46] Julius Schwartz, who had edited the title since the first issue, left the series with issue #165 (April 1979).[14] The 1979 crossover with the Justice Society in issues #171 and 172 saw the death of the original Mister Terrific.[47] After Dick Dillin's death, George Pérez, Don Heck, and Rich Buckler would rotate as artist on the title. The double-sized anniversary issue #200 (March 1982) was a "jam" featuring a story written by Conway, a framing sequence drawn by Pérez, and chapters drawn by Pat Broderick, Jim Aparo, Dick Giordano, Gil Kane, Carmine Infantino, Brian Bolland, and Joe Kubert.[48] Bolland's chapter gave the artist his "first stab at drawing Batman."[49] Pérez would leave the title with issue #200[50] to concentrate on The New Teen Titans although he would contribute covers to the JLA through issue #220 (November 1983). The 1982 team-up with the Justice Society in issues #207–209 crossed over with All-Star Squadron #14–15.[51][52] A Justice League story by Gerry Conway and Rich Buckler originally intended for publication as an issue of All-New Collectors' Edition saw print in Justice League of America #210–212 (January–March 1983).[53][54][55]
Detroit
Seeking to capitalize on the popularity of their other team books, which focused upon heroes in their late teens/early 20s, Gerry Conway and artist Chuck Patton revamped the Justice League series. After most of the original heroes fail to help fend off an invasion of Martians, Aquaman dissolves the League and rewrites its charter to allow only heroes who will devote their full-time to the roster.[56] The new team initially consists of Aquaman, Zatanna, Martian Manhunter, Elongated Man, the Vixen, and a trio of teenage heroes Gypsy, Steel, and Vibe.[57] Aquaman leaves the team after a year, due to resolving marital problems, and his role as leader is assumed by the Martian Manhunter.
The final storyline for the original Justice League of America series (#258–261), by writer J. M. DeMatteis and artist Luke McDonnell,[58] concludes with the murders of Vibe and Steel at the hands of robots created by long-time League nemesis Professor Ivo, and the resignations of Vixen, Gypsy, and the Elongated Man during the events of DC's Legends miniseries, which sees the team disband.
Modern incarnations
Justice League International
The 1986 company-wide crossover "Legends" concluded with the formation of a new Justice League. The new team was dubbed "Justice League," then "Justice League International" (JLI) and was given a mandate with less of an American focus. The new series, written by Keith Giffen and J. M. DeMatteis with art initially by Kevin Maguire[59] and later by Adam Hughes, added quirky humor to the team's stories. In this incarnation, the membership consisted partly of heroes from Earths that, prior to their merging in the Crisis on Infinite Earths, were separate. The initial team included Batman, Black Canary, Blue Beetle, Captain Marvel, Doctor Light (Kimiyo Hoshi), Doctor Fate, Martian Manhunter, Mister Miracle, and Guy Gardner; and soon after inception, adds Booster Gold, Captain Atom, Fire (then known as the Global Guardians' Green Flame), Ice (then known as the Global Guardians' Icemaiden), and two Rocket Reds (one was a Manhunter spy, the other was Dimitri Pushkin). The Giffen/DeMatteis team worked on Justice League for five years and closed out their run with the "Breakdowns" storyline in 1991 and 1992.[60] The series' humorous tone and high level of characterization proved very popular.
After Giffen and DeMatteis' departure DC created numerous spin-off titles. In 1996, the series was canceled, along with spinoffs Justice League Europe, Extreme Justice, and Justice League Task Force.
JLA
This section needs additional citations for verification. (March 2010) |
The low sales of the various Justice League spinoff books prompted DC to revamp the League as a single team (with all of the branch teams disbanded) in a single title. A Justice League of America formed in the September 1996 limited series Justice League: A Midsummer's Nightmare by Mark Waid and Fabian Nicieza, which reunited the "Original Seven" of the League for the first time since Crisis on Infinite Earths. In 1997, DC Comics launched a new Justice League series titled JLA, written by Grant Morrison with art by Howard Porter and inker John Dell.[61]
Morrison introduced the idea of the JLA allegorically representing a pantheon of gods, with their different powers and personalities, incorporating such characters as Zauriel, Big Barda, Orion, Huntress, Oracle (Barbara Gordon), Steel (John Henry Irons), and Plastic Man.[62] Aztek, Tomorrow Woman, and Green Arrow (Connor Hawke) were also added as temporary members.
Morrison revamped the League's Rogues Gallery by introducing new powerful adversaries for them to face, including: White Martians, Renegade Angels, a new incarnation of the Injustice Gang led by Lex Luthor and the Key. Other foes introduced were the new villain Prometheus, the existing JLA villain Starro the Conqueror, "The Ultra-Marines" and a futuristic Darkseid.
During the 2005–2006 event Infinite Crisis, the series ended as Green Arrow struggled in vain to keep the League afloat (JLA #120–125).
52
In 52 Week 24, Firestorm recruited a group to reform the Justice League. It consisted of Firehawk, Super-Chief, Bulleteer and Ambush Bug. The team fought a deranged Skeets, who takes Super-Chief's powers, killing him and numerous people who had received powers through Lex Luthor's Everyman Project. Afterward, Firestorm broke up the team. Also in the series, Luthor's new Infinity, Inc. was informally referred to as a "Justice League" in solicitations and on covers.
Justice League of America (vol. 2)
This section needs additional citations for verification. (November 2012) |
One year after the events of Infinite Crisis, Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman reunite in the Batcave to re-form the League in Justice League of America #0, the kick-off for a new series by Brad Meltzer and Ed Benes.[63] The series featured a roster which included Green Lantern (Hal Jordan), Black Canary, Red Arrow (Green Arrow's former sidekick), Red Tornado, Vixen, Black Lightning, and Hawkgirl. The first arc of the series focused upon Red Tornado and pitted the team against a new intelligent incarnation of Solomon Grundy and the rebuilt Amazo. The new incarnation of the team has two main headquarters, linked by a transporter. At the first site is the Hall, which in the mainstream DC Universe is a refurbished version of the Justice Society of America and the All-Star Squadron's former headquarters located in Washington, D.C. Black Canary is elected as the first official Chairperson after the fight against Amazo and Solomon Grundy, and led both the Justice League and Justice Society in a complex quest to reunite time-lost members of the pre-Crisis Legion of Super-Heroes, who had been sent back in time to free both Bart Allen and Flash from the other-dimensional realm of the Speed Force. Meltzer left the series at the end of issue #12, with one of his subplots (Per Degaton, a pre-nuclear fire mutation version of Despero, and a circa 1948 version of the Ultra-Humanite gathering for an unknown plot) resolved in the pages of Booster Gold.[volume & issue needed]
Dwayne McDuffie took over the writing job with the Justice League Wedding Special and the main book with issue #13. Due to DC Comics seeking to launch a spin-off Justice League book led by Hal Jordan, the character was removed from the main League series and replaced by John Stewart. Firestorm also joined the roster, with the series entering into a series of tie-in storylines towards Countdown to Final Crisis, with the arrest of a large number of supervillains (gathered by Lex Luthor and Deathstroke to attack the League on the eve of the wedding of Black Canary and Green Arrow) setting up the Salvation Run tie-in miniseries. Also, roster members Red Tornado and Geo-Force were written out. Jordan was restored to the roster by issue #19 of the series, only to be removed once again by issue #31.
Issue #21 saw the return of Libra and the Human Flame, setting up their appearances in Final Crisis. Later issues would resolve issues involving Vixen's power level increase and see the integration of the Milestone Comics characters the Shadow Cabinet and Icon, who fought the Justice League over the remains of the villainous Doctor Light. The group suffered greater losses during Final Crisis with the deaths of Martian Manhunter and Batman, as well as the resignations of Superman and Wonder Woman, who could no longer devote themselves full-time to the League due to the events of the New Krypton and Rise of the Olympian storylines in their respective titles. Hal Jordan would resign as well, clearing the way for John Stewart's return to the team. Black Canary found herself declaring the League no more, though the group would continue with Canary taking a secondary role. Her last act as leader was to assign John Stewart and Firestorm the task of hunting down the Human Flame,[volume & issue needed] for his part in the murder of Martian Manhunter, as seen in the Final Crisis Aftermath: Run! miniseries.
Vixen would take over the team, with Plastic Man rejoining the group. Len Wein wrote a three-part fill-in story for Justice League of America[64] that ran from #35 to #37. McDuffie was fired from the title before he could return, after discussion postings to the DC Comics message board, detailing behind-the-scenes creative decisions on his run, which were republished in the rumor column "Lying In The Gutter".[65] James Robinson was announced as the new Justice League of America writer.[66]
Wein's fill-in run would be published as Justice League: Cry For Justice neared its conclusion, as Vixen and Black Canary's group (san Stewart) confronted Hal Jordan and Green Arrow's makeshift Justice League group, which had stumbled upon a plot by the villain Prometheus that had resulted in much death and carnage. During the confrontation over Jordan's group using torture to extract information from the villains being blackmailed into carrying out Prometheus' plan, both Roy Harper and Supergirl would discover that one of Jordan's heroes, Captain Marvel Jr., was really Prometheus in disguise. In the ensuing battle, the League would suffer horrible losses: Roy Harper was maimed and his daughter Lian and hundreds of thousands of people in Star City would be killed by a doomsday device that Prometheus had activated. Vixen had her leg broken and Plastic Man had his powers permanently scrambled, making him a slowly-disintegrating puddle creature. To save other cities from being destroyed like Star City, the League reluctantly allowed Prometheus to go free; Green Arrow (with help from the Shade) would later track down and kill Prometheus.[volume & issue needed]
Following the events of the "Blackest Night" storyline, a reluctant Donna Troy began the task of rebuilding the League, with Hal Jordan, Green Arrow, the Atom, Batman, Mon-El, Donna, Cyborg, Doctor Light, Starfire, Congorilla, and the Guardian.[volume & issue needed]
At the end of issue #43, the majority of the new members left. Mon-El and the Guardian leave after Mon-El returns to the future, Black Canary returns to the Birds of Prey, Starfire leaves to join the R.E.B.E.L.S., Green Lantern leaves to locate the other Lantern Corps entities and Green Arrow is forced to leave due to his fugitive status. James Robinson said this was due to having second thoughts about his decision to use so many characters and that the team would have a different roster in the coming months.[67] To replace the departed members, Jade, Supergirl, and Jesse Quick were added to the team. Cyborg remained with the team in a reduced capacity and was eventually given his own co-feature storyline for issues #48–50.[68]
DC announced that Saint Walker of the Blue Lantern Corps would be joining the Justice League during a tie-in to the Reign of Doomsday crossover, but the character did not become a full member due to the cancellation of the title.[69]
The series ended with issue #60 (October 2011), the title being one of the numerous DC books canceled after the "Flashpoint" crossover. The finale issue was set one year after the events of #59 and saw Batman disbanding the League due to most of the individual members becoming preoccupied with personal commitments. The final storyline recounted the League's activities during the year-long gap, summarizing story arcs that had been planned for upcoming JLA issues but abandoned due to the transition to the New 52 continuity.
The New 52
Justice League | |
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File:Justiceleague v2 01.jpg | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
Schedule | Monthly |
Format | Ongoing |
Publication date | List
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No. of issues | List
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Main character(s) | Justice League |
Creative team | |
Created by | Geoff Johns Jim Lee |
Written by | List
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Penciller(s) | List
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Inker(s) | List
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Colorist(s) | List
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In September 2011, following the conclusion of the "Flashpoint" storyline, all DC titles were canceled, and replaced with 52 monthly titles that each debuted with an issue #1, as part of DC's New 52 initiative, which rebooted DC's fictional continuity. Justice League of America was relaunched as Justice League, written by Geoff Johns and drawn by Jim Lee, and was the first of the new titles released, coming out the same day as the final issue of Flashpoint.[70] The first six-issue storyline is set five years in the past and features a new origin for the team.[71] The series then shifted to the present in issue #7.[72] After the first 12 issues, Jim Lee was succeeded as artist by Ivan Reis.[73] Subsequently, Jason Fabok succeeded Reis as the book's regular penciller.
The initial roster of the team consists of Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern (Hal Jordan; who has since left the team), Aquaman, the Flash (Barry Allen), and Cyborg,[74][75] while the Atom (Rhonda Pineda), Firestorm (Ronnie Raymond), and Element Woman join as additional members.[76]
In addition to this series, two other Justice League-related titles were launched during the same month: a new Justice League International; written by Dan Jurgens and drawn by Aaron Lopresti;[77] featuring an initial roster of Batman, Booster Gold, Rocket Red (Gavril Ivanovich), Vixen, Green Lantern (Guy Gardner), Fire, Ice, August General in Iron,[78] and Godiva,[citation needed] and Justice League Dark; written by Peter Milligan and drawn by Mikel Janin; featuring an initial roster consisting of John Constantine, Shade, the Changing Man, Madame Xanadu, Deadman, Zatanna, and a new character called Mindwarp.[79] In May 2012, DC announced the cancellation of Justice League International with issue #12 and an Annual.[80]
The cancellation of Justice League International led into the launch of a new Justice League of America title (volume 3). The new Justice League of America is entirely separate from the main Justice League as the new team was formed by Amanda Waller and consists of Steve Trevor, Martian Manhunter, Green Arrow, Hawkman, Catwoman, the new Green Lantern Simon Baz, Stargirl, Katana, and Vibe.[81] Katana and Vibe later received their own ongoing titles, although both were cancelled after 10 issues.[82] The new Atom, Rhonda Pineda, is also a member of the Justice League of America. She works as a spy to gain intel on the Justice League, reporting to Amanda Waller and Steve Trevor.[83] It is later revealed that, unknown to the members of either team, she is actually a member of Earth-3's Crime Syndicate, and is betraying both teams. Each member of the Justice League of America is intended to be a counterpart to the members of the Justice League, in case the Justice League would ever go rogue.[84] Catwoman and Green Arrow both serve as counterparts for Batman.[85]
The Justice League, Justice League of America and Justice League Dark clash in the "Trinity War" storyline, and Shazam (whose origin was told in a back-up feature in Justice League) joins the Justice League. Atom is revealed to be from a parallel universe; she is, in fact, a mole spying on both teams for the evil Crime Syndicate of Earth-3. The Syndicate roundly defeats the assembled Leagues, triggering the "Forever Evil" crossover storyline. In the aftermath of "Forever Evil", following their crucial and public role in defeating the Crime Syndicate, Lex Luthor and Captain Cold join the Justice League. A young woman named Jessica Cruz joins the team after becoming attached to the Crime Syndicate's sentient Power Ring and gaining control of its Green Lantern-like abilities.
In August 2013, it was announced that Justice League of America would be retitled Justice League Canada following "Forever Evil",[86][87] with the team relocating to Canada, although in the end it launched as a new series, Justice League United in January 2014. Its team members are Animal Man, Martian Manhunter, Green Arrow, Hawkman, Stargirl, Supergirl, Adam Strange and his wife Alanna,[88] along with new Canadian superhero Equinox, a 16-year-old Cree teenager from Moose Factory whose civilian name is Miiyahbin and whose powers change with the seasons.[89] The series, written by Lemire and drawn by Mike McKone. This new team has taken part in mostly space-faring adventures and its adventures have not involved the other Justice League.
In April 2015, DC began "Justice League: The Darkseid War", which would be the final installment in Geoff Johns' five-year run of Justice League. The event consisted of 10 Justice League issues, six one-shots and one Special. The story took hidden elements from Johns' run, as well as answering all questions posed since the beginning.
In June 2015, DC launched Justice League of America (vol. 4), written and illustrated by Bryan Hitch. It features the same members from Justice League. In this 10-issue run, the Justice League fights the Kryptonian deity Rao.
DC Rebirth
In February 2016, DC announced a follow-up to The New 52 called DC Rebirth, which would again involve a relaunch of books and a change in their fictional continuity,[90] which would restore aspects of DC's pre-"Flashpoint" continuity with elements from the New 52 storylines that came after it.[91] In March, DC announced a new line of books, including a Justice League series written by Bryan Hitch and drawn by Tony Daniel and Fernando Pasarin, which debuted in June 2016.[92][93] The team consisted of Superman (pre-Flashpoint version, prior to the Superman Reborn event), Batman, Wonder Woman, the Flash (Barry Allen), Aquaman, Cyborg, and two Green Lanterns, Jessica Cruz and Simon Baz & Mera.
During the events of Justice League vs. Suicide Squad, Maxwell Lord used the Heart of Darkness to infect Superman, Wonder Woman, Aquaman, the Flash, Cyborg and the two Green Lanterns. In order to stop Lord and the infected League members, Batman recruited and temporarily inducted Suicide Squad members: Deadshot, Harley Quinn, Killer Croc, Captain Boomerang, Killer Frost and Lobo (a member of Waller's first Suicide Squad) into the Justice League.[94] Following this crisis, Batman, concluding that the world needed more human, relatable heroes to prepare for a new threat, assembled his new Justice League, selecting Killer Frost due to her actions in the battle with Lord, the Black Canary to act as the team's conscience, Lobo in return for a favor that he owes Batman after beating Lord, the Atom and the Ray as he sees their potential, and Vixen to act as the team's core due to her ability to coordinate so much in her life.
Starting in February 2017 as part of DC Rebirth 's second wave, a new Justice League of America series was released. The team consisted of the Atom, Vixen, the Ray and Killer Frost. In the month prior to this, each of these members received a one-shot issue. On October 28, it was revealed that Batman, the Black Canary and Lobo would be joining the team as well;[95] Batman had dual membership in both Justice League teams. This series ended in April 2018 with the release of issue #29.[96]
In Justice League #24, Mera joined the team, but left in issue #34.
In the Dark Nights: Metal crossover storyline series written by Scott Snyder and Greg Capullo, the League roster reverted to Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern Hal Jordan, the Flash, Cyborg and Aquaman. In the event, the League fought against the Dark Knights with the assistance of Mr. Terrific, Hawkgirl and Doctor Fate.
DC Universe
DC Comics ended the Rebirth branding in December 2017, opting to include everything under a larger DC Universe banner and naming. The continuity established by Rebirth continued across DC's comic book titles.[97][98] In March 2018, it was announced that the Justice League series was going to be relaunched, written by Scott Snyder. The new roster consists of Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Flash (Barry Allen), Aquaman, Hawkgirl, Cyborg, Martian Manhunter, and Green Lantern (John Stewart). The first issue was released on June 6, 2018.[99] Following the Justice League/Aquaman crossover event Drowned Earth, with Aquaman missing/presumed dead, Mera takes his place as a member of the Justice League.[100] In 2019, Robert Venditti took over from Snyder, relaunching the title, taking place before Snyder's run and after Metal.
In addition, two more Justice League titles were released. A new volume of Justice League Dark featuring a team led by Wonder Woman and John Constantine. The other, Justice League Odyssey, features Cyborg, Starfire, Green Lantern (Jessica Cruz), Azrael, and Darkseid as they search for answers in the Ghost Sector in one of Brainiac's old starships.[101]
Following Dark Nights: Death Metal, Endless Winter and the beginning of Infinite Frontier, Brian Michael Bendis and David Marquez took over the reins of Justice League from Issue 59. While Superman, Batman, Aquaman, and Hawkgirl remained on the team, the team also includes Green Arrow, Black Canary, Black Adam, Queen Hippolyta and Naomi. It also include a Backstory for Justice League Dark.
Related series
Throughout the years, various incarnations or subsections of the team have operated as Justice League Dark, Justice League Elite, Justice League Europe, Justice League International, Justice League Task Force, Justice League United, and Extreme Justice.
Formerly Known as the Justice League
In 2003, Giffen, DeMatteis, and Maguire returned with a separate limited series called Formerly Known as the Justice League[102] with the same humor as their Justice League run, and featuring some of the same characters in a team called the "Super Buddies" (a parody of the TV series Super Friends). A follow-up limited series, entitled I Can't Believe It's Not the Justice League, soon was prepared, although it was delayed due to the events shown in the Identity Crisis limited series, but was eventually released as the second arc in JLA: Classified. The Super Buddies consisted of Blue Beetle, Booster Gold, Captain Atom, Fire, Mary Marvel, the Elongated Man with his wife, Sue Dibny, Maxwell Lord, and L-Ron. The second story arc of JLA: Classified focuses on the Super Buddies in a humorous story that features Power Girl and Guy Gardner, with and assisted by Doctor Fate.
JLA/Avengers
In 2003–2004, George Pérez and Kurt Busiek produced a JLA/Avengers crossover,[103] an idea that had been delayed for 20 years for various reasons. In this limited series, the Justice League and Marvel Comics' superhero team the Avengers were forced to find key artifacts in one another's universe, as well as deal with the threats of villains Krona and the Grandmaster.
JLA: Classified
In 2004, DC began an anthology series titled JLA: Classified, which would feature rotating writers and artists producing self-contained story arcs and aborted miniseries projects that were reappropriated for publication within the pages of the series, starring the JLA. While the bulk of the stories took place within the continuity of the series (circa JLA #76–113) some of the stories take place outside of regular DC Universe canon. The series was canceled as of issue #54 (May 2008).
Justice
In October 2005, DC began publishing the 12-issue miniseries Justice by writer Jim Krueger, writer/illustrator Alex Ross, and artist Doug Braithwaite. The story, which takes place outside regular DC continuity, has Lex Luthor assembling the Legion of Doom after he and several other villains begin to have nightmares about the end of the world and the failure of the Justice League to prevent the apocalypse. As the Legion begins engaging in unprecedented humanitarian deeds throughout the world, they also launch a series of attacks on the Justice League and their families. The threat that the Legion was warned about destroying the Earth turns out to be caused by Brainiac, who seeks to destroy Earth during the chaos.
Justice League: Cry for Justice
Originally planned as an ongoing title, Justice League: Cry For Justice is a miniseries created by writer James Robinson and artist Mauro Cascioli. The miniseries, set after the events of Final Crisis, has Hal Jordan leaving the League following the deaths of Batman and Martian Manhunter, as their deaths have caused Hal to seek a more proactive manner of dealing with supervillains. Hal, along with Green Arrow, and later joined by Supergirl, Captain Marvel Jr., and Batwoman are then recruited by Ray Palmer to investigate a murder of a former colleague that had been carried out on orders from Prometheus. This ties into another string of murders, bringing Starman Mikaal Tomas and Congorilla together as their investigation of the murders of several European superheroes are also revealed to be the work of Prometheus.
With help from the Hawkman villain I.Q., Prometheus plans on creating the ultimate weapon in mass murder, a massive doomsday device which he plans on using to destroy entire cities, as part of his revenge scheme against the JLA for lobotomizing him. Disguised as Captain Marvel Jr., Prometheus maims Roy Harper and brutally injures JLA members Dr. Light II, Vixen, and Plastic Man while using the JLA Satellite to activate his doomsday device, which destroys Star City, killing 90,000 innocent civilians, including Roy Harper's young daughter Lian. Prometheus ultimately extorts his freedom from the League in exchange for the codes that will shut down his weapon, much to the horror of the JLA members. Green Arrow (with help from reformed supervillain the Shade), tracks Prometheus down and kills him by firing an arrow into his head.
The miniseries leads directly into the formation of a brand new JLA roster with Green Lantern Hal Jordan, Donna Troy, Dick Grayson as Batman, Doctor Light (Kimiyo Hoshi), Mon-El, Cyborg, Starfire, Congorilla, Guardian, and Mikaal Tomas.
JLA/The 99
Launching in October 2010, JLA/The 99 was a crossover mini-series featuring the Justice League teaming up with the heroes of Teshkeel Comics' The 99 series. The JLA consisted of Batman, Superman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern (John Stewart), The Flash (Barry Allen), The Atom (Ray Palmer), Doctor Light (Kimiyo Hoshi), Hawkman, and Firestorm (Jason Rusch).
Cultural impact
The comic's early success was indirectly responsible for the creation of the Fantastic Four. When Marvel-Timely owner Martin Goodman heard in 1961 how well DC's then-new book Justice League was selling, he told Stan Lee, his comics editor, to come up with a team of superheroes for Marvel.[104] The result was Fantastic Four #1 by Lee and Jack Kirby, which debuted in November 1961.[105]
Marvel also introduced a team of villains in 1971 based on the Justice League called the Squadron Sinister. The characters are analogous to Superman (Hyperion), Batman (Nighthawk), Wonder Woman (Power Princess), Green Lantern (Doctor Spectrum), and the Flash (the Speed Demon).
Awards
The original Justice League of America series has won:
- 1961 Alley Awards for "Best Comic Book"[106]
- 1961 Alley Awards for "Best Adventure-Hero Group"[106]
- 1963 Alley Awards for "Favorite Novel" ("Crisis on Earth-One/Crisis on Earth-Two" in Justice League of America #21–22 by Gardner Fox and Mike Sekowsky)[107]
- 1963 Alley Awards for "Strip that Should Be Improved"[107]
- 1963 Alley Awards for "Artist Preferred on Justice League of America" (Murphy Anderson)[107]
- 1973 Shazam Awards for "Best Inker (Dramatic Division)" (Dick Giordano)[108]
In other media
Film
Animation
- The Justice League appear in Justice League: The New Frontier, which was based on Darwyn Cooke's comic book limited series & DC: The New Frontier, where the heroes of Earth unite to take on an evil entity called the Centre. It was released on February 26, 2008. The film received mostly positive reviews. Screener copies were sent to website reviewers a month before the DVD's official release. Most of the reviews were positive and geared up the film's release even more.
- The team appear in Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths. In 2004, Bruce Timm revealed that a DCAU direct-to-video Justice League feature was in development to connect Justice League and Justice League Unlimited. The film was titled as Justice League: Worlds Collide. Later the film was rewritten by the late Dwayne McDuffie for DC Universe Animated Original Movies as Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths, but removing all connections with the animated series. Based on Grant Morrison's 2000 comic book JLA: Earth 2, Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths dealt with a heroic Lex Luthor from an alternate universe appearing to recruit the Justice League to help save his Earth from the Crime Syndicate, a gang of villainous characters who are essentially evil versions of the Justice League. A sequel titled Justice League: Doom was released and is loosely based on JLA: Tower of Babel.
- They appear in Justice League: Gods and Monsters. In July 2014, as part of the San Diego Comic-Con, DC Comics announced Justice League: Gods and Monsters for a 2015 release. The movie, featuring an original plot, was written by Alan Burnett and directed by Sam Liu and executive produced by Bruce Timm and Sam Register. Along with the film, a three-part animated series entitled Justice League: Gods and Monsters Chronicles was released before the film on Machinima with Timm as an executive producer in 2015.
- They appear in Justice League: The Flashpoint Paradox. The film received very positive reviews. The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 100% approval rating. Critics and audiences said that the film stays true to its source material. It is generally praised for its mature storyline and the way Flash obtains justice, but criticized for its excessive violence and use of blood that exceeds the comics it is adapted from.
- The team are prominently featured in the DC Animated Movie Universe, making their debut in Justice League: War which was followed up by Justice League: Throne of Atlantis and Justice League vs. Teen Titans. They are also featured in Justice League Dark in which they aid John Constantine in a magical invasion, The Death of Superman and Reign of the Supermen and Justice League Dark: Apokolips War in which the Justice League will team up with the Teen Titans, Suicide Squad and Justice League Dark to defeat Darkseid in one final epic battle to save Earth.
Live action
DC Extended Universe
The team makes their live action debut in the 2017 DC Extended Universe film Justice League, consisting of Batman, Wonder Woman, Superman, Aquaman, the Flash and Cyborg.
A director's cut of the film, Zack Snyder's Justice League, was released on HBO Max on March 18, 2021.
Television
Animation
- The team appear in Super Friends. Super Friends is an American animated television series about the Justice League, which ran from 1973 to 1986 on ABC as part of its Saturday morning cartoon lineup. It was produced by Hanna-Barbera and was based on the Justice League of America (JLA) and associated comic book characters published by DC Comics. There were a total of 109 episodes preceded by two backdoor pilot episodes of The New Scooby-Doo Movies.
- An animated television series titled Justice League ran from 2001 to 2006 on Cartoon Network. It is part of the DC animated universe. The show was produced by Warner Bros. Animation. It is based on the Justice League of America and associated comic book characters published by DC Comics. After the second season, the series name changed to Justice League Unlimited.
- Another series titled Justice League Action was also released. It is an American animated television series based on the DC Comics superhero team of the same name. The series is produced by Jim Krieg, Butch Lukic, and Alan Burnett. This show debuted on Cartoon Network UK on November 26, 2016, and premiered in the United States on Cartoon Network on December 16, 2016.
- The Justice League make minor appearances in the adult animated web television series Harley Quinn, making cameos in the episodes "So You Need a Crew?" wherein they defeated the Queen of Fables and had Zatanna imprison her in a tax book, "Devil's Snare" when Batman called them in to help to stop mutant killer trees before the Queen traps them in her fairy tale book, and "A Fight Worth Fighting For" when Zatanna frees them to help stop Doctor Psycho and his Parademon army. In "Lover's Quarrel", they successfully defeat the latter, but Psycho uses Poison Ivy's love pheromones on them. Known members of this incarnation of the Justice League include Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Zatanna, Aquaman, John Stewart / Green Lantern, and Barry Allen / Flash.
Live-action
- The Justice League are mentioned in the first season of Titans during a conversation between Dick Grayson and Donna Troy during flashbacks.
- At the end of the Arrowverse crossover Crisis on Infinite Earths, the heroes of the newly created Earth-Prime gather at an abandoned S.T.A.R. Labs building and around a table; forming a team to defend their new world following a memorial for Oliver Queen / Green Arrow, who gave his life to save the multiverse. While never referred to as the Justice League, this group consists of White Canary, The Flash, Supergirl, Batwoman, Superman, Black Lightning and Martian Manhunter, with an empty seat in honor of Oliver.
Theme park attractions
Justice League: Alien Invasion 3D
Justice League: Alien Invasion is an interactive dark ride at Warner Bros. Movie World on the Gold Coast, Australia. In the ride, guests board vehicles equipped with blasters as they join the Justice League in the fight against Starro, who has mind-controlled the citizens of Metropolis.
Justice League: Battle for Metropolis
Justice League: Battle for Metropolis is an interactive dark ride at seven Six Flags parks across the United States and Mexico. In the ride, Lex Luthor and the Joker have captured Supergirl, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, and Flash, and it is up to the combined forces of the remaining members of the Justice League and the Justice League Reserve Team to save them from their capture at LexCorp. Guests board motion-enhanced and stun blaster-equipped vehicles designed by A.R.G.U.S. as they ride through Metropolis and join the fight against the henchmen of Lex Luthor and the Joker.
Collected editions
Silver Age Justice League of America
This series has been collected in the following volumes:
# | Title | Material collected | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Justice League of America Archives Volume 1 | The Brave and the Bold #28–30, Justice League of America #1–6 | 978-1563890437 |
2 | Justice League of America Archives Volume 2 | Justice League of America #7–14 | 978-1563891199 |
3 | Justice League of America Archives Volume 3 | Justice League of America #15–22 | 978-1563891595 |
4 | Justice League of America Archives Volume 4 | Justice League of America #23–30 | 978-1563894121 |
5 | Justice League of America Archives Volume 5 | Justice League of America #31–38, 40* | 978-1563895401 |
6 | Justice League of America Archives Volume 6 | Justice League of America #41–47, 49–50* | 978-1563896255 |
7 | Justice League of America Archives Volume 7 | Justice League of America #51–57, 59–60* | 978-1563897047 |
8 | Justice League of America Archives Volume 8 | Justice League of America #61–66, 68–70* | 978-1563899775 |
9 | Justice League of America Archives Volume 9 | Justice League of America #71–80 | 978-1401204020 |
10 | Justice League of America Archives Volume 10 | Justice League of America #81–93 | 978-1401234126 |
11 | Showcase Presents Justice League of America Volume 1 | The Brave and the Bold #28–30; Justice League of America #1–16; Mystery in Space #75 | 978-1401207618 |
12 | Showcase Presents Justice League of America Volume 2 | Justice League of America #17–36 | 978-1401212032 |
13 | Showcase Presents Justice League of America Volume 3 | Justice League of America #37–38; 40–47; 49–57; 59–60* | 978-1401217181 |
14 | Showcase Presents Justice League of America Volume 4 | Justice League of America #61–66; 68–75; 77–83* | 978-1401221843 |
15 | Showcase Presents Justice League of America Volume 5 | Justice League of America #84; 86–92; 94–106* | 978-1401230258 |
16 | Showcase Presents Justice League of America Volume 6 | Justice League of America #107–132* | 978-1401238353 |
17 | Justice League of America Chronicles Volume 1 | The Brave and the Bold #28–30; Justice League of America #1–3 | 978-1401240820 |
* Omitted issues that featured reprints of material from earlier volumes
Also collected in Omnibus volumes:
# | Title | Material collected | Release Date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Justice League of America Omnibus Volume 1 | The Brave and the Bold #28–30, Justice League of America #1–30 | April 2014 | 978-1401248420 |
2 | Justice League of America: The Silver Age Omnibus Volume 2 | Justice League of America #31–76, Mystery in Space #75 | June 2016 | 978-1401266608 |
3 | Justice League of America: The Bronze Age Omnibus Volume 1 | Justice League of America #77–113 | March 2017 | 978-1401268060 |
4 | Justice League of America: The Bronze Age Omnibus Volume 2* | Justice League of America #114–146, DC Super-Stars #10 | March 2018 | 978-1401277857 |
Justice League of America: The Detroit Era Omnibus | Justice League of America #233–261, Justice League of America Annual #2–3, JLA Classified #22–25,
JSA Classified #14–16,DC Retroactive: JLA – The 80's #1 and Infinity Inc. #19 |
December 2017 | 978-1401276850 |
Justice League/Justice League International/Justice League America (1987–1996)
This series has been collected in the following collections (there are hardcover and trade paperback versions of all volumes):
# | Title | Material collected | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Justice League International Volume 1 | Justice League #1–6, Justice League International #7 | 1-4012-1666-8 |
2 | Justice League International Volume 2 | Justice League International #8–14, Justice League International Annual #1 | 1-4012-1826-1 |
3 | Justice League International Volume 3 | Justice League International #15–22 | 1-4012-1941-1 |
4 | Justice League International Volume 4 | Justice League International #23–25, Justice League America #26–30 | 1-4012-2196-3 |
5 | Justice League International Volume 5 | Justice League International Annual #2–3, Justice League Europe #1–6 | 978-1-4012-3010-4 |
6 | Justice League International Volume 6 | Justice League America #31–35, Justice League Europe #7–11 | 978-1-4012-3119-4 |
Justice League Breakdowns (cancelled by the publisher) | Justice League America #52–60, Justice League Europe #29–36 | N/A | |
1 | Superman and Justice League America Volume 1 | Justice League America #61–68, Justice League Spectacular #1 | 978-1-4012-6097-2 |
2 | Superman and Justice League America Volume 2 | Justice League America #69–77, Justice League America Annual #6 | 978-1401263843 |
1 | Wonder Woman and Justice League America Volume 1 | Justice League America #78–85, Justice League America Annual #7 | 978-1401268343 |
2 | Wonder Woman and Justice League America Volume 2 | Justice League America #86–91, Justice League International (vol. 2) #65–66 and Justice League Task Force #13–14 | 978-1401274009 |
JLA (1997–2006)
This series has been collected in the following trade paperbacks:
# | Title | Material collected | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
1 | New World Order | JLA #1–4 | 1-56389-369-X |
2 | American Dreams | JLA #5–9 | 1-56389-394-0 |
3 | Rock of Ages | JLA #10–15 | 1-56389-416-5 |
4 | Strength in Numbers | JLA #16–23, JLA Secret Files and Origins #2, New Year's Evil: Prometheus (one-shot) | 1-56389-435-1 |
5 | Justice for All | JLA #24–33 | 1-56389-511-0 |
6 | World War III | JLA #34–41 | 1-56389-618-4 |
7 | Tower of Babel | JLA #42–46, JLA Secret Files and Origins #3, JLA 80-Page Giant #1 | 1-56389-727-X |
8 | Divided We Fall | JLA #47–54 | 1-56389-793-8 |
9 | Terror Incognita | JLA #55–60 | 1-56389-936-1 |
10 | Golden Perfect | JLA #61–65 | 1-56389-941-8 |
11 | The Obsidian Age Book 1 | JLA #66–71 | 1-56389-991-4 |
12 | The Obsidian Age Book 2 | JLA #72–76 | 1-4012-0043-5 |
13 | Rules of Engagement | JLA #77–82 | 1-4012-0215-2 |
14 | Trial by Fire | JLA #84–89 | 1-4012-0242-X |
15 | The Tenth Circle | JLA #94–99 | 1-4012-0346-9 |
16 | Pain of the Gods | JLA #101–106 | 1-4012-0468-6 |
17 | Syndicate Rules | JLA #107–114, a story from JLA Secret Files and Origins 2004 | 1-4012-0477-5 |
18 | Crisis of Conscience | JLA #115–119 | 1-4012-0963-7 |
19 | World Without a Justice League | JLA #120–125 | 1-4012-0964-5 |
This series has also been collected in the following Grant Morrison-centric hardcover collections:
# | Title | Material collected | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
1 | JLA: The Deluxe Edition Volume 1 HC | JLA #1–9, plus a story included in JLA Secret Files and Origins #1 | 1-4012-1843-1 |
2 | JLA: The Deluxe Edition Volume 2 HC | JLA #10–17, Prometheus (one-shot), plus JLA/W.I.L.D.C.A.T.S. | 1-4012-2265-X |
3 | JLA: The Deluxe Edition Volume 3 HC | JLA #22–26, 28–31 and 1,000,000 | 1-4012-2659-0 |
4 | JLA: The Deluxe Edition Volume 4 HC | JLA #34, 36–41, JLA: Classified #1–3, JLA: Earth II | 1-4012-2909-3 |
Deluxe Edition trade paperbacks
# | Title | Material collected | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
1 | JLA: The Deluxe Edition Volume 1 | JLA #1–9, plus a story included in JLA Secret Files and Origins #1 | 978-1401233143 |
2 | JLA: The Deluxe Edition Volume 2 | JLA #10–17, Prometheus (one-shot), plus JLA/W.I.L.D.C.A.T.S., JLA Secret Files and Origins #2 | 978-1401235185 |
3 | JLA: The Deluxe Edition Volume 3 | JLA #18–31 | 978-1401238322 |
4 | JLA: The Deluxe Edition Volume 4 | JLA #32–46 | 978-1401243852 |
5 | JLA: The Deluxe Edition Volume 5 | JLA #47–60, JLA: Heaven's Ladder | 978-1401247508 |
6 | JLA: The Deluxe Edition Volume 6 | JLA #61–76 | 978-1401251369 |
7 | JLA: The Deluxe Edition Volume 7 | JLA #77–93 | 978-1401255282 |
8 | JLA: The Deluxe Edition Volume 8 | JLA #94–106 | 978-1401263423 |
9 | JLA: The Deluxe Edition Volume 9 | JLA #107–125, JLA Secret Files and Origins 2004 | 978-1401265670 |
Justice League of America (vol. 2) (2006–2011)
This series has been collected in the following hardcover collections:
# | Title | Material collected | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
1 | The Tornado's Path | Justice League of America (vol. 2) #1–7 | HC: 978-1401213497 SC: 978-1401215804 |
2 | The Lightning Saga | Justice League of America (vol. 2) #0, #8–12; Justice Society of America (vol. 3) #5–6 |
HC: 978-1401216528 SC: 978-1401218690 |
3 | The Injustice League | Justice League of America (vol. 2) #13–16; JLA Wedding Special #1 |
HC: 978-1401218027 SC: 978-1401220501 |
4 | Sanctuary | Justice League of America (vol. 2) #17–21 | HC: 978-1401219925 SC: 978-1401220105 |
5 | The Second Coming | Justice League of America (vol. 2) #22–26 | HC: 978-1401222529 SC: 978-1401222536 |
6 | When Worlds Collide | Justice League of America (vol. 2) #27–28, #30–34 | HC: 978-1401224226 SC: 978-1401224233 |
7 | Team History | Justice League of America (vol. 2) #38–43 | HC: 978-1401228385 SC: 978-1401232603 |
8 | The Dark Things | Justice League of America (vol. 2) #44–48; Justice Society of America (vol. 3) #41–42 |
HC: 978-1401230111 SC: 978-1401231934 |
9 | Omega | Justice League of America (vol. 2) #49–53 | HC: 978-1401232436 SC: 978-1401233563 |
10 | The Rise of Eclipso | Justice League of America (vol. 2) #54–60, Justice Society of America (vol. 3) #43 | SC: 978-1401234133 |
The New 52
# | Title | Part | Material collected | Pages | Cover | Publication date | ISBN | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Justice League (vol. 2) (2011–2016) | ||||||||||
1 | Origin | Justice League (vol. 2) #1–6 | 192 | HC | May 8, 2012 | 978-1401234614 | ||||
SC | February 5, 2013 | 978-1401237882 | ||||||||
2 | The Villain's Journey | Justice League (vol. 2) #7–12 | 160 | HC | February 5, 2013 | 978-1401237646 | ||||
SC | October 1, 2013 | 978-1401237653 | ||||||||
3 | Throne of Atlantis | Justice League (vol. 2) #13–17, Aquaman (vol. 7) #15–16 | 192 | HC | October 1, 2013 | 978-1-4012-4698-3 | ||||
SC | April 8, 2014 | 978-1-4012-4240-4 | ||||||||
4 | The Grid | Justice League (vol. 2) #18–20, 22–23 | 176 | HC | January 4, 2014 | 9781401247171 | ||||
SC | October 1, 2014 | 9781401250089 | ||||||||
5 | Forever Heroes | Justice League (vol. 2) #24–29 | 168 | HC | September 16, 2014 | 9781401254193 | ||||
SC | April 1, 2015 | 9781401254193 | ||||||||
6 | Injustice League | Justice League (vol. 2) #30–39 | 272 | HC | March 17, 2015 | 9781401252366 | ||||
SC | April 18, 2016 | 9781401258528 | ||||||||
7 | The Darkseid War | 1 | Justice League (vol. 2) #40–44 and a sneak peek from Divergence | 144 | HC | March 15, 2016 | 978-1401259778 | |||
SC | September 27, 2016 | 978-1401264529 | ||||||||
8 | 2 | Justice League (vol. 2) #45–50, Justice League: Darkseid War #1 | 200 | HC | 978-1401263416 | |||||
SC | December 13, 2016 | 978-1401265397 | ||||||||
Justice League of America (vol. 3) (2013–2014) | ||||||||||
1 | World's Most Dangerous | Justice League of America (vol. 3) #1–7 | 224 | HC | November 12, 2013 | 978-1401242367 | ||||
SC | July 15, 2014 | 978-1401246891 | ||||||||
2 | Survivors of Evil | Justice League of America (vol. 3) #8–14 | 160 | HC | September 16, 2014 | 978-1401247263 | ||||
SC | March 24, 2015 | 978-1401250478 | ||||||||
Justice League of America (vol. 4) (2015–2016) | ||||||||||
Power & Glory | Justice League of America (vol. 4) #1–4, 6–10 | 288 | HC | March 21, 2017 | 978-1401259761 | |||||
SC | March 13, 2018 | 978-1401278007 |
DC Rebirth
# | Title | Material collected | Publication Date | ISBN | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Justice League (vol. 3) (2016–2018) | |||||
1 | The Extinction Machine | Justice League: Rebirth #1, Justice League (vol. 3) #1–5 | January | 2017 | 978-1401267797 |
2 | Outbreak | Justice League (vol. 3) #6–11 | May | 978-1401268701 | |
3 | Timeless | Justice League (vol. 3) #14–19 | July | 978-1401271121 | |
4 | Endless | Justice League (vol. 3) #20–25 | November | 978-1401273972 | |
5 | Legacy | Justice League (vol. 3) #26–31 | March | 2018 | 978-1401277253 |
6 | The People vs. the Justice League | Justice League (vol. 3) #34–38 | June | 978-1401280765 | |
7 | Justice Lost | Justice League (vol. 3) #39–43 | September | 978-1401284251 | |
1 | Deluxe | Justice League: Rebirth #1, Justice League (vol. 3) #1–11 | July 2017 | 978-1401271138 | |
2 | Justice League (vol. 3) #12–25 | April | 2018 | 978-1401278281 | |
3 | Justice League (vol. 3) #26–33 | November | 978-1401284367 | ||
4 | Justice League (vol. 3) #34–43 | April 2019 | 978-1401288761 | ||
Justice League of America (vol. 5) (2017–2018) | |||||
The Road to Rebirth | Justice League of America: Rebirth #1, Justice League of America: Killer Frost #1, Justice League of America: The Ray #1, Justice League of America: The Atom #1, Justice League of America: Vixen #1, | June | 2017 | 978-1401273521 | |
1 | The Extremists | Justice League of America (vol. 5) #1–6 | August | 978-1401273538 | |
2 | Curse of the Kingbutcher | Justice League of America (vol. 5) #7–11 | November | 978-1401274498 | |
3 | Panic in the Microverse | Justice League of America (vol. 5) #12–17 | March | 2018 | 978-1401277840 |
4 | Surgical Strike | Justice League of America (vol. 5) #18–21, Annual #1 | July | 978-1401280581 | |
5 | Deadly Fable | Justice League of America (vol. 5) #22–29 | September | 978-1401284497 | |
1 | Deluxe | Justice League of America: Rebirth #1, Justice League of America: Killer Frost #1, Justice League of America: The Ray #1, Justice League of America: The Atom #1, Justice League of America: Vixen #1, Justice League of America (vol. 5) #1–6 | November 2017 | 978-1401276928 |
DC Universe Justice League (vol. 4) (2018–present)
# | Title | Material collected | Pages | Publication Date | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
No Justice | Justice League: No Justice #1–4, plus a story from DC Nation #0 | 144 | September 25, 2018 | 978-1401283346 | |
1 | The Totality | Justice League (vol. 4) #1–7 | 176 | November 27, 2018 | 978-1401284992 |
2 | Graveyard of Gods | Justice League (vol. 4) #8–12, Justice League/Aquaman: Drowned Earth #1, Aquaman/Justice League: Drowned Earth #1 | 200 | May 14, 2019 | 978-1401288495 |
3 | Hawkworld | Justice League (vol. 4) #13–18, Annual #1 | 184 | July 10, 2019 | 978-1401291389 |
4 | The Sixth Dimension | Justice League (vol. 4) #19–28 | 234 | November 13, 2019 | 978-1779501684 |
5 | The Doom War | Justice League (vol. 4) #29–39 | 272 | June 23, 2020 | 978-1401299361 |
Vengeance is Thine | Justice League (vol. 4) #40–47, Annual #2 | 232 | December 8, 2020 | 978-1779505897 |
Miscellaneous reprints
These trades reprint themed issues.
# | Title | Material collected | ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Justice League of America Hereby Elects | Justice League of America #4, 75, 105–106, 146, 161, 173–174 | 978-1401212674 |
2 | JLA: The Greatest Stories Ever Told | Justice League of America #19, 77, 122, 166–168, Justice League #1, JLA Secret Files and Origins #1, JLA #61 |
978-1401209322 |
3 | Crisis on Multiple Earths Volume 1 | Justice League of America ##21–22, 29–30, 37–38, 46–47 | 978-1563898952 |
4 | Crisis on Multiple Earths Volume 2 | Justice League of America #55–56, 64–65, 73–74, 82–83 | 978-1401200039 |
5 | Crisis on Multiple Earths Volume 3 | Justice League of America #91–92, 100–102, 107–108, 113 | 978-1401202316 |
6 | Crisis on Multiple Earths Volume 4 | Justice League of America #123–124, 135–137, 147–148 | 978-1401209575 |
7 | Crisis on Multiple Earths Volume 5 | Justice League of America #159–160, 171–172, 183–185 | 978-1401226237 |
8 | Crisis on Multiple Earths Volume 6 | Justice League of America #195–197, 207–209, All-Star Squadron #14–15 | 978-1401238223 |
9 | Crisis on Multiple Earths: The Team-Ups Volume 1 | The Flash (vol. 2) #123, 129, 137, 151, Green Lantern (vol. 2) #40, Showcase #55–56 and The Brave and the Bold #61 | 978-1401204709 |
10 | Crisis on Multiple Earths: The Team-Ups Volume 2 | The Flash (vol. 2) #170, 173, Green Lantern (vol. 2) #45, 52, The Brave and the Bold #62, The Atom #29, 36 and The Spectre #3 | 978-1401212285 |
See also
Affiliations and spin-off groups
- Extreme Justice
- Justice League 3000
- Justice League Antarctica
- Justice League Dark
- Justice League Elite
- Justice League Europe
- Justice League International
- Justice League Task Force
- Justice League United
- Justice Leagues
- Legion of Super-Heroes
- Super Buddies
- Super Friends
- Green Lantern Corps
- Teen Titans
- Young Justice
References
- ^ Fox, Gardner (w), Sekowsky, Mike (p), Sachs, Bernard, Giella, Joe, Anderson, Murphy (i). "Starro the Conqueror" The Brave and the Bold, no. 28 (March 1960).
- ^ Rosen, Christopher (June 6, 2012). "Justice League Movie: Warner Bros. Hires Gangster Squad Writer To Resurrect Superhero Supergroup". The Huffington Post. Archived from the original on June 6, 2012. Retrieved June 24, 2012.
- ^ McAvennie "1960s" in Dolan, p. 104: "While celebrating their anniversary as a team, the Justice League shared their pandu with Snapper Carr and new member Green Arrow. When representatives of the planet Appellax sought to conquer Earth, they drew the individual attention of the Flash, Green Lantern, Aquaman, Wonder Woman, and the Martian Manhunter."
- ^ McAvennie "1970s" in Dolan, p. 174: "Green Arrow thought he had learned the Justice League of America's origin back in issue #9...Now, he found inconsistencies in the story. Writer Steve Englehart and artist Dick Dillin revealed the truth as told by former JLA member J'onn J'onzz."
- ^ Manning "1990s" in Dolan, p. 282: "It was up to writers Mark Waid and Brian Augustyn and artist Barry Kitson to fill in the blanks. With their twelve-issue maxiseries JLA: Year One, the trio examined the early days of the team...JLA: Year One proved a success and cleaned up decades of convoluted comic history."
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The readers were more familiar with 'League' from the National League and the American League.
- ^ McAvennie, Michael; Dolan, Hannah, ed. (2010). "1960s". DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. London, United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. p. 99. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9.
Editor Julius Schwartz had repopulated the [superhero] subculture by revitalizing Golden Age icons like Green Lantern and the Flash. He recruited writer Gardner Fox and artist Mike Sekowsky, and together they came up with the Justice League of America, a modern version of the legendary Justice Society of America from the 1940s.
{{cite book}}
:|first2=
has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Daniels, Les (1995). "The Justice League of America A Team of Good Sports". DC Comics: Sixty Years of the World's Favorite Comic Book Heroes. New York, New York: Bulfinch Press. p. 127. ISBN 0821220764.
Justice League was a hit. It solidified once and for all the importance of superhero groups, and in the process provided a playground where DC's characters could attract new fans while entertaining established admirers.
- ^ a b "Julius Schwartz' run on the Justice League of America". Grand Comics Database.
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- ^ McAvennie "1960s" in Dolan, p. 109: "The two-part 'Crisis on Earth-One!' and 'Crisis on Earth-Two!' saga represented the first use of the term 'Crisis' in crossovers, as well as the designations 'Earth-1' and 'Earth-2'. In it editor Julius Schwartz, [writer Gardner] Fox, and artist Mike Sekowsky devised a menace worthy of the World's Greatest Heroes."
- ^ McAvennie "1960s" in Dolan, p. 112: "Writer Gardner Fox and artist Mike Sekowsky crafted a tale in which the Crime Syndicate...ambushed the JLA on Earth-1."
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- ^ Dick Dillin's run on Justice League of America at the Grand Comics Database. Dillin missed only the planned reprint issues #67, 76, 85 and 93; issue #153 which was penciled by George Tuska; and issue #157 where Dillin provided the intro and epilogue pages while Juan Ortiz penciled the main story.
- ^ McAvennie "1960s" in Dolan, p. 133: "In less than a year on the Justice League of America series, scribe Denny O'Neil and artist Dick Dillin had made major changes to the team. Two issues after Wonder Woman left the JLA, the Martian Manhunter did the same."
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Englehart next began a run on Justice League of America, and in issue #142, Mantis showed up! Only this time, she was calling herself Willow.
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