Final Crisis



"You turned your back and I wrecked your world. Deprived your people of their powers, their hopes, their future, themselves. What will you do when your friends, your enemies, your lover, are all Darkseid? When there is one body. One mind. One will. One life that is Darkseid. Will you be the enemy of all existence, then? What irony that will be, Son of Krypton."

- Darkseid

Final Crisis was DC Comics' Crisis Crossover for the year 2008. Announced in 2006, writer Grant Morrison set out to accomplish the following goals with the event:


 * Bring an end to the dual "Crisis Trilogies": The Multiverse trilogy started by Crisis On Infinite Earths and the "Hero Exploration" trilogy started by Identity Crisis; Infinite Crisis is considered the second chapter of both.
 * Officially re-introduce The Multiverse to the DCU.
 * Renew interest in the New Gods, particularly Darkseid, who was suffering from massive Villain Decay.

To help achieve the last goal, Morrison did two things:
 * He first used his Seven Soldiers Of Victory series (particularly the Mister Miracle issues) to set up key plot points for Final Crisis.
 * He then asked DC to declare a moratorium on creators using the New Gods series, so that their return in the pages of Final Crisis would have the proper emotional impact. Whether it was done intentionally or due to miscommunication, DC editorial ignored his request, and the New Gods ended up getting passed around like chlamydia at Burning Man, most prominently in the weekly Countdown to Final Crisis series. (DC also commissioned a Death of the New Gods miniseries to be published before Final Crisis. The Resulting Continuity Snarl led Morrison to Retcon away as much of these two series as he possibly could, while including a scenario that still allows for the events of these series to have happened.)

The story to Final Crisis begins with Darkseid having killed his son, Orion; he has also sent his minion Libra to Earth to gather Earth's villains under his control and arrange for the murder of the Martian Manhunter. In the meantime, Darkseid orders fellow god Granny Goodness to possess a Green Lantern, who is used to frame Hal Jordan for killing Orion and capture Batman. As Barry Allen returns from the void of death in a (failed) attempt to save Orion, Darkseid unleashes the Anti-Life Equation upon Earth, enslaving billions of humans. This event forces the few remaining non-corrupted heroes and villains into hiding as Earth struggles to defeat Darkseid and prevent the coming of a greater threat... one that looms within the multiverse and seeks to finish what Darkseid started in bringing about -- the end of everything.

The series featured several tie-in events:

Final Crisis: Rogues' Revenge:
The "Rogues Gallery", a group of The Flash's most dangerous enemies, sever their ties with Libra and the Secret Society following Martian Manhunter's murder, which causes Libra to demand revenge. The Rogues also seek out Inertia, the boy who manipulated the Rogues into killing his hated rival, Bart "Impulse/Kid Flash" Allen.

Final Crisis: Revelations:
Crispus Allen and Renee Montoya meet in their secret identities as The Spectre and The Question for the first time since Allen's death. As Spectre goes after the Secret Society, killing off those villains who were involved in the murder of Martian Manhunter, Libra seeks to use the Spear of Destiny to enslave Spectre and keep him from interfering with Darkseid's plans.

Final Crisis: Superman Beyond:
Superman travels across the multiverse and meets up with the various "Supermen of the Multiverse" (including an alternate Captain Marvel, an alternate Captain Atom who bears a passing resemblance to Dr. Manhattan, a Nazi Superman, and the insane Ultraman) in order to obtain the vial of Applied Phlebotinum that will save Lois Lane's life after a Secret Society bomb mortally wounds her. This causes Superman to meet the Monitors -- who are recast by Morrison as Vampire Gods who must fight Mandrakk, the "first Monitor" -- in a Mind Screw of a tie-in that is probably the most required reading of the tie-ins. To add to the screwiness, the issues were printed in 3-D.

Final Crisis: Legion of 3 Worlds:
The "Crisis of the 31st Century" occurs as the Time Trapper brings Superboy-Prime to the future to kill people and ruin Superman's name in the process -- with the help of the combined might of just about every single Legion villain alive. This forces Superman to unite all three incarnations of the Legion of Super-Heroes, along with resurrecting both Bart Allen and Conner "Superboy" Kent, to stop both Superboy-Prime's murderous rampage and his benefactor, the Time Trapper. This miniseries has little to do with the main plot of Final Crisis, though Superman arrives in the final act of the main story just as he leaves the 31st century.

Final Crisis: Requiem:
The first part of this one-shot expands Martian Manhunter's death scene to show that he put up more of a fight than previously indicated. The rest of the book focuses on the reaction from his friends as his death triggered a telepathic event in their heads that compelled them to write down the history of the now-extinct Martian race.

Final Crisis: Submit:
Essentially Final Crisis #3.5, this one-shot shows Black Lightning responding to a rescue call to save the new Tattooed Man and his family from Darkseid's forces. The climax features Black Lightning giving Tattooed Man the symbol that can protect someone from being infected by the Anti-Life Equation -- right before Lightning gets turned into an Anti-Life Slave.

Final Crisis: Resist:
This tie-in covers the fall of humanity; Mr. Terrific and Snapper Carr form an alliance with the villainess Cheetah to try and stay alive while Checkmate, the black ops spy organization, is corrupted by Darkseid.

Batman #682-683:
The two-part "Last Rites" storyline involves more Mind Screw storytelling as henchmen of Darkseid attempt to find a way to suck Batman's mind out of his body and into clones of himself that they have created using him as a template. This tie-in is largely known for two things: setting up a major plot point as far as Batman carrying around the bullet used to kill Orion in his utility belt right before his capture by Granny Goodness, and for establishing that "Batman R.I.P." takes place immediately before Final Crisis, with Batman (upon crashing into Gotham River) swimming to shore, going straight to the Batcave, and promptly being summoned to help the JLA find Orion's killer.

The Dark Side Club:
This is the name given to several Final Crisis tie-ins throughout The DCU -- Birds of Prey #118, The Flash vol. 2 #240, Infinity Inc vol. 2 #11-12, The Teen Titans vol. 3 #59-60, and Terror Titans #1-6. Shortly before Final Crisis, Darkseid (in the mortal guise of Boss Dark Side) captures several adolescent superhumans and forces them to fight to the death for his amusement. Mostly notable for introducing Static to the DC Universe.

This series contains examples of:
""Give In.""
 * All the Myriad Ways:.
 * All There in the Manual: Final Crisis: Sketchbook gave more information on several characters than was actually provided in the series itself. Most of it wasn't terribly important (e.g. backgrounds for members of Super Young Team) but some of it, like the true identities of the New Gods in disguise, was a little more significant (let's just say, if you didn't read Sketchbook, it could get a little confusing reading reviews that referred to the New Gods in disguise with the names of characters they had yet to be revealed to be.)
 * Anachronic Order: Trying to follow the timeline of the build-up and actual events of the story can get a bit confusing. The order is about this: Seven Soldiers (where we see the first seeds being planted), Infinite Crisis (the Crisis which reestablished the Multiverse), Fifty Two (confirmation of the Multiverse, Religion of Crime), Morrison's Batman, tertiary Countdown/Death of New Gods info (including Salvation Run), DC Universe #0 (not really needed, but shows Darkseid's resurrection), Requiem, Rogues' Revenge, Final Crisis #1-3, Submit, Resist, Revelations, Superman Beyond (taking place within seconds in reality to save Lois), Legion of 3 Worlds (taking place after Superman returns and is then whisked into the future, however this time around, time continues to pass in both time periods), Final Crisis #4-5, Batman #682-683 (included in the collected Batman R.I.P.), finally concluding with Final Crisis #6-7.
 * Let's also not forget Crisis On Infinite Earths and Identity Crisis, if only for the sake of introduction to the Multiverse/The Monitor and the general tone and info respectively.
 * The Antichrist: Cain, the first human to commit murder, is said to slay The Spectre and herald the coming of Darkseid.
 * Anyone Can Die: Martian Manhunter and Batman.
 * Assimilation Plot: The Anti-Life Equation + Darkseid on Earth = Humans without humanity.
 * Awesome Moment of Crowning: The end of Dan Turpin and the return of Darkseid.

"Nix Uotan: Don't you understand? This is the end of everything and the super heroes couldn't save us any more than my stupid drawings could!
 * Back From the Dead: Barry Allen returns as The Flash for the first time in 23 years. Superboy and a de-aged Bart Allen are revived in Legion of 3 Worlds.
 * Belated Backstory: Final Crisis: Secret Files gives the origin of Libra, as a former student of Ted Knight who used Cosmic technology (with a bit of help from the evil New Gods) to become the original version of Libra from the original Justice League of America comics. It also shows how he officially started work for Darkseid.
 * Biblical Bad Guy: Revelations reveals that.
 * Big Bad Duumvirate: Darkseid and Mandrakk
 * More like Big Bad Ensemble, since they were never actually working together. You could even go further and say that Mandrakk is the Big Bad, and Darkseid is his Unwitting Pawn.
 * Big Damn Heroes: This series is FULL of examples, such as Batman, Superman   or the Green Lantern Corps.
 * Brainwashed and Crazy: Anyone exposed on Anti-Life Equation.
 * Canon Dis Continuity: Rip Hunter's chalkboard tells you 'don't worry about Countdown'.
 * Exception: Given the relative obscurity of Seven Soldiers, Morrison did acknowledge  at the end of Countdown and Death of the New Gods with the later issues of Final Crisis:.
 * Canon Welding: Morrison saw this series as his definitive statement about all of the themes that he has dealt with in his works, and ties up plot points left over from his runs on Seven Soldiers and Batman.
 * Also, some of Jack Kirby's personal creations (The New Gods, Kamandi, Dan Turpin) are brought together in order to give them all a Grand Finale.
 * Captain Ersatz: Superman Beyond is built on this trope, but Captain Allen Atom is a particularly noticeable example.
 * Much later, in Final Crisis #7, the entire army of Superman is made up of expies of Superman knock-offs from other companies.
 * Captain Ethnic: The Great Ten (a Chinese team that includes "Socialist Red Guardsman," "Shaolin Robot," "Mother of Champions" and more) and Super Young Team (a teenage Japanese team, all of whom are basically over-the-top superhero Otaku cosplayers with Gratuitous English codenames - and are contrasted against "traditional" Japanese heroes like, say, Rising Sun and Sonny Sumo).
 * The Cavalry: Lead by Nix Uotan, comprised of:
 * The Supermen of the Multiverse
 * The entire Green Lantern Corps
 * The angels of the Pax Dei
 * Captain Carrot and His Amazing Zoo-Crew
 * Mister Miracle, Sonny Sumo and the Super Young Team
 * The Forever People from the Fifth World
 * Crisis Crossover: Hyped as "The Final Crisis of Man and the Multiverse". While this is certainly not the final Crisis Crossover that DC will put out, this is the last one to deal with the destruction/rebirth of the Multiverse... for now.
 * DC announced that Final Crisis was the third part of two "trilogies". Final Crisis is the final part of the Multiverse Trilogy (which, natch, is about the life, death, and resurrection of The Multiverse starting with Crisis On Infinite Earths) and the final part of the Hero Exploration Trilogy (which takes an intimate look on the heroes and villains of the DCU, starting with Identity Crisis). In both cases, Infinite Crisis is the second part.
 * Curb Stomp Battle: Superman delivers this to
 * Dare to Be Badass: In a metafictional sense, the entire story can be viewed as one to the readers, to tell depression to go fuck itself.
 * Specifically within story:

Mystery Guy: If your super heroes can't save you, then maybe it's time to think of something that can. If it don't exist, dream it up. Then, make it real."


 * Just as follow-up, how successful was this particular dare? By the time we return to young Nix, he's wearing a hat made out of the internet, and an ankle-length black leather trenchcoat fastened with a lightning bolt. (It Makes Sense in Context)
 * Demonic Possession: People are posessed by New Gods.
 * Despair Event Horizon: Darkseid had to break a strong-willed host's spirit in order to fully manifest.
 * Deus Est Machina: Superman uses one at the end to erase Darkseid's lingering presence and restore space/time. However, rather than being a god from a machine, the machine is the god, who can perform any one task.
 * Eldritch Abomination: Morrison's revamp of Darkseid and his minions reposition them as spirit-beings that can possess and destroy their hosts from within, though most of them (Glorious Godfrey and the scientists) were literally reborn as humans.
 * Mandrakk the Dark Monitor and the rest of  Monitors anyone?
 * Enemy Mine: All over the place. Luthor and Sivana hate each other but come together to take out Libra, Luthor's villain army backs up Superman, Cheetah joins up with Checkmate, and Captain Marvel enlists the aid of Black Adam.
 * Executive Meddling: Grant Morrison wanted the series to be the finale of the New Gods and asked DC not to use them until Final Crisis. DC didn't listen.
 * Even Evil Has Standards: When being told that Darkseid was the power behind Libra, the Rogues in Rogues' Revenge essentially tell Libra (who they have refused to work for) to go tell his master to get the hell off of their planet.
 * Same with Lex Luthor versus Libra. Luthor may be a miserable sociopath, but he loves life more than he does having to live in a evil-driven world run by Darkseid. The fact that Libra promised him first place in a rape train on Supergirl probably helped Luthor decide exactly what was what he wanted.
 * Dr. Sivana turns against Darkseid when he sees what the Anti-Life Equation does to his daughter.
 * Fate Worse Than Death: Darkseid's Omega Sanction causes the victim's soul to tumble through an endless number of worse and worse realities until the victim's spirit breaks from the despair.
 * Giant Space Flea From Nowhere: What Mandrakk will be to be to those who didn't read Superman Beyond, which thankfully is included in the hardcover.
 * God of Evil: DARKSEID IS.
 * Godzilla Threshold: It takes Darkseid coming back and causing The End of the World As We Know It for Batman to finally use a gun.
 * Goth: Mary Marvel's new Apokolips-enhanced image.
 * Individuality Is Illegal: There is only one will, and that will is DARKSEID.
 * Internal Affairs: the Alpha Lanterns serve this role for the Green Lantern Corps.
 * In the pages of the Green Lantern books, the Alpha Lanterns were specifically created to ensure they would be absolute, incorruptible Lanterns, specifically to ensure the Blackest Night would never happen..
 * It Gets Worse: The series starts out as an investigation of Orion's death and the mysterious Dark Side Club. Then, the Anti-Life Equation hits...
 * Last of His Kind: The ultimate fate for.
 * Madness Mantra: Those taken by the Anti-Life Equation tend to start ranting out things like "Anti-Life justifies my hate!"
 * Meta Fiction: All over the place in Superman Beyond and anything having to do with the Monitors. Interestingly, Legion of 3 Worlds dabbles with this in the end as well. Superboy-Prime is whisked back to the restored Earth-Prime and sees the comics with him in them. The last couple pages of the final issue is Prime literally reading the very issue the actual reader is reading.
 * Furthermore, it has him living as a leach in his parent's basement, ranting about how the modern comic industry is Ruined FOREVER, and fingerpecking a rant on the Official DC Comics forum in a thread about whether of not Superboy-Prime could be redeemed.
 * Mind Control Eyes: The Anti-Life Equation makes your eyes turn red.
 * Mind Screw: The final issue, which is told in flashback, contains a whole slew of Noodle Incidents (Wonder Woman's escape from the Female Furies, etc.)
 * No Celebrities Were Harmed: Glorious Godfrey as Reverend Good, looks like Don King (appearance-wise) with elements of Al Sharpton in his public persona (Godfrey poses as minister and social activist).
 * Rasputinian Death:.
 * Religion of Evil: The Religion Of Crime.
 * Screw the Rules I Have Money: Most Excellent Superbat's power.
 * Basically, he screws all the rules of time, space and money by employing a suit of armor powered by the energy of infinite money. Or something.
 * Shut UP Hannibal: Batman did this to Darkseid.
 * Subcultures in Japan: Super Young Team's amalgamate cosplay of American superheros come from what Morrison saw of Japan's youth taking Western fashion trends and making them their own often in new, hybrid ways.
 * Omnicidal Maniac: Darkseid is dying, so he decides to take the whole freaking multiverse to his black hole of a grave. Also Mandrakk, an Eldritch Abomination and cosmic parasite who hungers for the multiverse. He may or may not be the original Monitor
 * Time Skip: The series skips about a month (or more due to time distortion messing up the passage of time) forward in time at the end of the third issue, between the release of the Anti-Life Equation and the Flashes Wally West and Barry Allen's failed attempt to intercept the bullet that killed Orion. This was reflected with the Final Crisis mini-series skipping a month between #3 and #4, a move that was done mainly to give the book's artist a chance to catch up with deadlines. Which he couldn't do, leading to issues #4-6 being delayed and delayed again and again, forcing DC into the position to having to bring in fill-in artists to draw large portions of Final Crisis #5-6 and ultimately Final Crisis #7, due to the company refusing to delay 70-80% of their line of comics while the book was finished.
 * Interestingly, this was mostly done on just the planet Earth, the rest of the universe went on as normal with only a few days passing everywhere else while Earth was skipping time.
 * The Night That Never Ends: Darkseid's fall from the Fourth World has enough metaphysical momentum to drag Earth itself towards the pitch-black hole at the bottom of creation.
 * The Virus: The Anti-Life Equation turned was promoted to this.
 * There was also a God-Disease released that shut down many superhero's powers, including Dr. Mid-Nite's, but wasn't elaborated on any more than Frankenstein being immune to it (due to him not actually being alive).
 * This appears to be one of the things Countdown was supposed to explain. That did not go well.
 * Thigh High Boots: Mary Marvel.
 * Took a Level In Badass: Darkseid took several.
 * Don't forget Talky Tawny.
 * True Final Boss: The entire series is about the heroes of Earth defeating Darkseid. Once he's beaten, the final battle turns out to be against Mandrakk.
 * The War to End All Wars: It's in the title.
 * Writing for The Trade: Reading it in its original form was confusing at best, incomprehensible at worst. In the trade, where most of the important tie-ins were included, it becomes a tour-de-force, especially if you have the R.I.P. trade handy as well (as that has the Batman tie-ins by Morrison).
 * Reading Morrison's own Seven Soldiers is important, too. Whilst the various series got lost in the build-up to Infinite Crisis and was branded as 'on the eve of Infinite Crisis, this is what Character X was doing before that!', it actually proves to be very important in the setup for Final Crisis. It explains a variety of questions - Which DC Editorial then went and trampled over by having Countdown try to explain everything and try to line up the dots - Only to fail miserably.
 * You Have 24 Hours To Save The Universe