Justice League (animation)

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
This is not your parents' League.

Superman: I once thought I could protect the world by myself, but I was wrong. Working together, we saved the planet, and I believe that if we stay together as a team, we could be a force that could truly work for the ideals of peace and justice.
The Flash: What, like a bunch of Super Friends?
Superman: More like a... Justice League.

This animated Adventure Series is Cartoon Network's update of Superfriends, with seven core heroes: Superman, Wonder Woman, Batman, Green Lantern, the Flash, Hawkgirl and Martian Manhunter. Existing in the same universe as Batman: The Animated Series, Superman: The Animated Series, Static Shock, The Zeta Project and Batman Beyond, this show continued several story threads from those series and introduced new characters who had not previously appeared.

Justice League (Seasons One and Two)

Banding together for the first time to face powerful alien conquerors, Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, The Flash, the Green Lantern John Stewart, Hawkgirl, and the Martian Manhunter officially organize themselves as a team, anticipating having to deal with other threats that they cannot face alone. This incarnation lasted two seasons and 52 episodes (most of which were two-parters, with three three-parters and a single standalone episode). What immediately separated this show from Superfriends (aside from actual characterization and the writers' capacity to remember what the characters' powers were) was the decision to not feature every member in every episode. Between two and five members would have an episode together and only a couple of times did the entire League appear. The decision to also turn most stories into two or three part episodes allowed for a much larger scope that could not be accomplished in 22 minutes.

Justice League Unlimited (Seasons Three, Four and Five)

The successor series, Justice League Unlimited, added more heroes from DC Comics, many of whom had never before been animated. Instead of the two or three part episodes, this series returned to the single episode format, which allowed for the more obscure heroes to be spotlighted. To balance this out, a very strong Myth Arc was formed telling of a Government Conspiracy against the League, picking up from a few previous episodes. This incarnation lasted 39 episodes.

Both iterations of Justice League were distinctive among superhero series for being true ensemble pieces. Pick any member of the core cast and in any given episode he or she might be the main hero of the story, used mainly as part of the larger team, or never even mentioned at all. Supporting cast members rotated out weekly, especially in Unlimited. In addition, while Jack Kirby's Fourth World creations were used extensively in Superman: The Animated Series, Steve Ditko's creations got the same treatment in this incarnation.

To date, it comprises the last installments of the DC Animated Universe.

For the comic this show was based on, see Justice League of America. See also Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths, which started off as a movie bridging the gap between the end of Justice League and the beginning of Unlimited. Though not set within the DC Animated Universe, the film retains many of the plot points and themes of the original story.


Justice League (animation) is the Trope Namer for:
Tropes used in Justice League (animation) include:

Due to the number of tropes present, the page has been split into two sections.