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Justice League Justice League is an American animated series about a team of superheroes which ran from 2001 to 2004 on Cartoon Network. Since April 2006 it is being shown on Cartoon Network's sister channel, Boomerang. It is based on the Justice League and associated comic book characters published by DC Comics. There were a total of 52 episodes, along with multiple episodes of Static Shock in which the League appeared. Each episode was half an hour long including commercials. Justice League is an American animated television series about a team of superheroes which ran from 2001 to 2004 on Cartoon Network. ...
An animated series or cartoon series is a television series produced by means of animation. ...
Superman and Batman, two of the most recognizable and iconic superheroes. ...
Cartoon Network is a cable television network created by Turner Broadcasting which primarily shows animated programming. ...
Boomerang is the name of at least four TV networks owned by Cartoon Network in the United States. ...
The Justice League, sometimes called the Justice League of America or JLA for short, is a DC Comics superhero team. ...
A comic book is a magazine or book containing the art form of comics. ...
DC Comics (originally called Detective Comics, Inc. ...
Static Shock is an animated series. ...
Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow. Season 1: 2001-2002 | Image | Title | Director(s) | Writer(s) | Original Airdate(s) | # |
 | Secret Origins | Dan Riba and Butch Lukic | Rich Fogel | November 17, 2001 | 1, 2 & 3 | | As alien invaders begin to take over the Earth, Batman and Superman rescue J'onn J'onnz who telepathically recruits Wonder Woman, Hawkgirl, the Flash, and Green Lantern to defeat the invasion. The group decides to form a permanent team, the Justice League. |
 | In Blackest Night | Butch Lukic | Stan Berkowitz | November 19, 2001 (Part 1) November 26, 2001 (Part 2) | 4 & 5 | | Green Lantern surrenders himself to robotic Manhunters to stand trial for the destruction of a planet. The rest of the League discovers that the Manhunters are actually framing John. |
 | The Enemy Below | Dan Riba | Kevin Hopps | December 3, 2001 (Part 1) December 10, 2001 (Part 2) | 6 & 7 | | A nuclear submarine is attacked in the Atlantic, forcing the League to come face-to-face with Aquaman and his Atlantean army. Aquaman goes to Metropolis to take his problems up with the various governments of the world. When a mercenary Deadshot attacks Aquaman, the League steps in. Aquaman discovers that Lord Orm, his own brother, was behind the attack. Orm takes Aquaman and his infant son and place them on a cliff over a vein of molten lava and leaves them to die. In order to save his son, Aquaman must make a terrible sacrifice. |
 | Paradise Lost | Dan Riba | Joseph Kuhr | January 21, 2002 (Part 1) January 28, 2002 (Part 2) Image File history File links JLSecretOrigins. ...
Batman (originally referred to as the Bat-man, and still sometimes as the Batman) is a DC Comics fictional character and superhero who first appeared in Detective Comics #27 in May 1939. ...
Superman is a fictional character and the staple superhero of DC Comics. ...
The Martian Manhunter (Jonn Jonzz), alternately known as the Manhunter from Mars, is a comic book superhero appearing in DC Comics. ...
Wonder Woman is a DC Comics superheroine. ...
Hawkgirl is the name of several fictional superheroines in the DC Comics universe. ...
The Flash. ...
John Stewart is a fictional comic book superhero, and a member of the intergalactic police force known as the Green Lantern Corps, who appears in books published by DC Comics. ...
Image File history File links Inblackestnight_new. ...
The Manhunters are a fictional race of robot warriors that exists within the universe of DC Comics. ...
Image File history File links AquamanJL.jpg Summary Source URL: http://www. ...
German UC-1 class World War I submarine A model of Gunter Priens Unterseeboot 47 (U-47), German WWII Type VII diesel-electric hunter-killer (SSK) submarine USS Virginia, a Virginia-class nuclear attack (SSN) submarine A submarine is a specialized watercraft that can operate underwater. ...
Aquaman is a DC Comics superhero. ...
Metropolis is a fictional city that appears in comic books published by DC Comics, and is the home of Superman. ...
Floyd Lawton, aka Deadshot, is a fictional character in the DC Universe. ...
The Ocean Master is a DC Comics supervillain, and one of Aquamans greatest enemies. ...
Image File history File links Paradiselost. ...
| 8 & 9 | | Sorcerer Felix Faust blackmails Wonder Woman into gathering artifacts for him. He uses the artifacts to release Hades from Tartarus. The League succeeds in banishing Hades and his minions, but the victory is bittersweet as Diana is exiled from Paradise Island for summoning the males of the Justice League. |
 | War World | Butch Lukic | Stan Berkowitz | February 23, 2002 (Part 1) March 3, 2002 (Part 2) Felix Faust is a fictional sorcerer and supervillain who appears in stories published by DC Comics. ...
Hades [from Greek HadÄs (), originally HaidÄs () or AïdÄs (); of uncertain origin,[1] although it has been ascribed to Greek unseen[2]] refers to both the ancient Greek abode of the dead and the god of that underworld. ...
In Greek mythology, Tartarus, or Tartaros, is both a deity and a place in the underworld â even lower than Hades. ...
Themyscirian Amazons Art by Phil Jimenez Themyscira is a fictional island nation in the DC Comics universe. ...
Image File history File linksMetadata MongulWarWorld. ...
| 10 & 11 | | Superman and Martian Manhunter are abducted by extraterrestrial slavers and sold to a planet of the despotic ruler Mongul where the population spends its time watching aliens kill each other in an enormous coliseum. Green Lantern and Hawkgirl set out to rescue them. |
 | The Brave and the Bold | Dan Riba | - | March 10, 2002 (Part 1) March 17, 2002 (Part 2) Extraterrestrial, as an adjective, refers to something that originates, occurs, or is located outside Earth or its atmosphere. ...
Slavery is a condition in which one person, known as a slave, is under the control of another person, group, organization, or state. ...
Mongul is a fictional supervillain considered one of the best, yet least known, of Supermans enemies. ...
Image File history File links File history Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version. ...
| 12 & 13 | | Green Lantern and the Flash uncover a plot by Grodd, an intelligent talking gorilla, to destroy Gorilla City, a hidden city of hyperintelligent talking gorillas in Africa. Grodd has the power to control the minds of others with his device and the assistance of his lover, Dr. Sarah Corwin. Grodd mind control's The Flash into stealing radioactive isotopes. While under Grodd's control, Flash suffers hallucinations, only to wake up remembering nothing that happened. The only protection our heroes have against Grodd's mind control is a special headband, given to Flash and Green Lantern by Solovar, Gorilla City's chief of security. |
 | Fury | Butch Lukic | - | April 7, 2002 (Part 1) April 14, 2002 (Part 2) Gorilla Grodd is a fictional character appearing in DC Comics, primarily as an opponent of The Flash. ...
Type Species Troglodytes gorilla Savage, 1847 Species Gorilla gorilla Gorilla beringei The gorilla, the largest of the primates, is a ground-dwelling herbivore that inhabits the forests of Africa. ...
The Flash. ...
Radioactive decay is the set of various processes by which unstable atomic nuclei (nuclides) emit subatomic particles. ...
Isotopes are forms of an element, therefore their nuclei have the same atomic number â the number of protons in the nucleus â but different mass numbers because they contain different numbers of neutrons. ...
Cover to Green Lantern: Rebirth #6, art by Ethan Van Sciver. ...
Solovar is a DC Comics characters For many years, Solovar was the leader of a hidden city of hyper-intelligent gorillas. ...
Image File history File links Aresia. ...
| 14 & 15 | | A rogue Amazon (born in the mortal world, raised in Themyscira) sets out to kill all men in the world as punishment for the men who killed her family in a war. |
 | Legends | Dan Riba | Andrew Kreisberg | April 21, 2002 (Part 1) April 28, 2002 (Part 2) Image File history File linksMetadata JusticeGuild. ...
| 16 & 17 | | The Justice League are accidentally transported to a parallel world that is the home of the Justice Guild of America, who are comic book characters in the Justice League's world. |
 | Injustice For All | Butch Lukic | Stan Berkowitz | September 6, 2002 (Part 1) September 13, 2002 (Part 2) Parallel universe (fiction) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ...
A Justice League two-part episode called Legends pays homage to the Justice Society with a team of imaginary comic book superheroes in a perfect world. ...
Image File history File linksMetadata Ww_vs_c. ...
| 18 & 19 | | Exposed as a criminal, sentenced to prison and terminally ill due to long term kryptonite exposure, Lex Luthor escapes and assembles a supervillain team consisting of The Joker, Cheetah, The Shade, Solomon Grundy, Star Sapphire, Copperhead, and Ultra-Humanite to take on the Justice League. |
 | A Knight of Shadows | Butch Lukic | Keith Damron | September 20, 2002 (Part 1) September 27, 2002 (Part 2) Superman, Phantom Zone criminals, and Jimmy Olsen, in front of a display of kryptonite models. ...
Lex Luthor is a fictional character, a DC Comics supervillain and archenemy of Superman. ...
Doctor Doom, one of the most archetypal supervillains and his arch-enemies The Fantastic Four (in background). ...
The Joker is a DC Comics supervillain, widely considered Batmans arch-enemy. ...
The Cheetah is a fictional character in the Wonder Woman stories published by DC Comics. ...
The Shade, as painted by Tony Harris on the cover of Starman #6 (1995) The Shade is a DC Comics character, a villain created in the 1940s who would fight against two generations of superheroes, most notably the Golden Age and Silver Age Flashes. ...
Solomon Grundy is a DC Comics character, a large, strong zombie supervillain. ...
For millions of years, an immortal race of warrior women, The Zamarons, had chosen physically identical mortals from across the cosmos to serve as host body for their Queen, whom they called âStar Sapphireâ. The last incarnation of Star Sapphire was an Earth woman named Carol Ferris, the only child...
Copperhead is a DC Comics supervillain, appearing primarily as a foe of Batman. ...
The Ultra-Humanite is a fictional supervillain appearing in stories published by DC Comics. ...
Image File history File links KnightOfShadowsMorgan. ...
| 20 & 21 | | The Demon, also known as Etrigan, seeks the assistance of the Justice League in preventing the Philosopher's stone from falling into the hands of his ancient enemy, the sorceress Morgan le Fay. |
 | Metamorphosis | Dan Riba | - | October 4, 2002 | 22 & 23 | | Green Lantern's old friend Rex Mason, now working for a shady industrialist, suffers an "accident" arranged by his jealous employer, and becomes the superhero Metamorpho. |
 | The Savage Time | Butch Lukic and Dan Riba | Stan Berkowitz | November 9, 2002 | 24, 25 & 26 | | The Justice League return from a mission in space to find the world altered - a result of supervillain Vandal Savage feeding information to his younger self in the 1940s, allowing him to have taken over the world during World War II. The Justice League travel back in time themselves to stop him, with the assistance of DC Comics' WWII-era heroes (including Easy Company, the Blackhawks, and Steve Trevor). | The Demon is a DC Comics superhero series created by prolific comic book writer-artist Jack Kirby. ...
The philosophers stone, in Latin philosophi lapis, is a mythical substance that supposedly could turn inexpensive metals into gold and/or create an elixir that would make humans younger, thus delaying death. ...
DC Morgan le Fay by John Byrne In DC Comics, Morgaine Le Fey is a major opponent of The Demon Etrigan, and has also shown up as one of Wonder Womans foes. ...
Picture taken by Marvelvsdc This image has been released into the public domain by the copyright holder, its copyright has expired, or it is ineligible for copyright. ...
Metamorpho (alias Rex Mason) is a superhero appearing in comic books published by DC Comics. ...
Image File history File links SavageTime. ...
Vandal Savage is a fictional character and supervillain in the DC Comics Universe. ...
Combatants Allies: Soviet Union, United Kingdom, France/Free France, United States, Canada, China, India, Australia, Poland, New Zealand, South Africa, and others Axis Powers: Germany, Italy, Japan, Bulgaria, Finland, Romania, Hungary, Burma Casualties Military dead: 17 million Civilian dead: 33 million Total dead: 50 million Military dead: 8 million Civilian...
// Overview Sgt. ...
Blackhawk #12 (Autumn, 1946), Quality Comics. ...
Steve Trevor is a fictional character appearing in DC Comics, as a member of Wonder Womans supporting cast. ...
Season 2: 2003-2004 | Image | Title | Director(s) | Writer(s) | Original Airdate | # |
 | Twilight | Dan Riba | Rich Fogel and Bruce Timm | July 5, 2003 | 27, 28 | | The League is tricked into defending Apokolips, Darkseid's homeworld against the threat of Brainiac. The team meets the New Gods (including Orion, Lightray and Highfather), who are at war with Darkseid, and learn about the treaty between Darkseid and Brainiac. Desaad is killed by Darkseid's Omega Beams in a moment of rage. |
 | Tabula Rasa | Dan Riba | Stan Berkowitz | October 4, 2003 | 29, 30 | | Lex Luthor manipulates a powerful android named Amazo with the ability to copy and collect any superpower, posing as a father figure to it. Meanwhile, J'onn questions the nature of humans, and struggles with the burden of hearing thousands of their minds in his head at the same time. |
 | Only a Dream | Butch Lukic | Stan Berkowitz | October 11, 2003 | 31, 32 | | Small time crook John Dee volunteers for an experimental treatment. Overdosing, he becomes the dream-controlling Doctor Destiny. Destiny takes telepathic control of the team in their sleep, with the exception of Batman and J'onn. |
 | Maid of Honor | Dan Riba | Dwayne McDuffie | October 18, 2003 | 33, 34 | | Wonder Woman befriends the princess of Kasnia, a jet-setting party girl who is reluctant to end her wild ways in order to get married. Unfortunately her fiancé is the immortal Vandal Savage, and he already has plans for both the throne and the Justice League. It is up to Wonder Woman and Batman to stop them. |
 | Hearts and Minds | Butch Lukic | Keith Damron | October 25, 2003 | 35, 36 | | Green Lantern must rescue his fellow Lanterns from the alien minions of Despero. Kilowog, who has just barely managed to escape to the League's headquarters, tells of the plight facing his fellow Lanterns. Sadly for Green Lantern, his former mentor and lover, Katma Tui, has joined the forces of Despero. |
 | A Better World | Dan Riba | Stan Berkowitz | November 1, 2003 | 37, 38 | | After the death of the Flash, the Lords launch an assault on the White House, where Superman kills President Lex Luthor. Two years later, the Justice Lords now rule over the planet with a firm iron fist. Bored with their position, the Justice Lords discover that there is an alternate dimension where their counterparts are still good, and the Flash is still alive. They cross over, trapping the League in a force field, and then take their places in a quest to make this Earth like theirs. The idea of evil counterparts from an alternate realm is loosely based on the Crime Syndicate of Earth-3 (Pre-Crisis)/Anti-Matter Universe (Post-Crisis). |
 | The Terror Beyond | Butch Lukic | Dwayne McDuffie | November 15, 2003 | 39, 40 | | Dr. Fate and Aquaman release Solomon Grundy, intent on using him to help battle an ancient evil. The pairing of these heroes is a homage to the Marvel Comics superhero team The Defenders and the plot is based upon H. P. Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos. |
 | Eclipsed | Dan Riba | Joseph Kuhr | November 8, 2003 | 41, 42 | | An ancient lunar crystal called The Black Heart is discovered. Little do the members of the Justice League know, it harbors an evil alien spirit with the ability to possess its bearer. The Alien's power contaminates almost all of the League, except for The Flash, who manages to prove his mettle and save his friends from the Solar Eclipse which will destroy both the Sun and the Earth. |
 | Hereafter | Butch Lukic | Dwayne McDuffie | November 29, 2003 | 43, 44 | | A band of supervillains (all previously seen on Superman: The Animated Series) attack Metropolis to get revenge on Superman. In the process, Toyman seemingly vaporises Superman. The League attempts to cope with their lost as best they can while fighting against the villains still plaguing Metropolis. However, Superman isn't dead. Instead, he is left trapped on what seems to be another planet with Vandal Savage. |
 | Secret Society | Dan Riba | Stan Berkowitz | November 22, 2003 | 45, 46 | | While the Justice League are quarreling, Grodd organizes a Secret Society comprised of Parasite, Giganta, Sinestro, The Shade, Clayface, and Killer Frost. Green Lantern is the only League member willing to put his differences aside and fight the bad guys. |
 | Comfort and Joy | Butch Lukic | Paul Dini | December 13, 2003 | 47 | | After saving two worlds, the members of the Justice League decide to take a break to celebrate the holidays. Flash spends his Christmas Eve with the children of an orphanage, Green Lantern and Hawkgirl show each other how they spend the holidays, all while Superman invites J'onn over to Smallville for Christmas Eve with his adopted parents. |
 | Wild Cards | Butch Lukic | Stan Berkowitz and Dwayne McDuffie | December 6, 2003 | 48, 49 | | Taking over a TV station in Las Vegas, the Joker announces that he has placed a series of bombs that will destroy the Vegas Strip in thirty minutes if they are not stopped by the Justice League. But with the whole world watching Joker's version of reality television, the League must first get past the Joker's own super-team, the Royal Flush Gang. Also, Hawkgirl and Green Lantern admit to their feelings for each other. |
 | Starcrossed | Butch Lukic(Pts.1 & 3) and Dan Riba (Pt.2) | - | May 29, 2004 | 50, 51, 52 | | After Earth is attacked by a Gordanian battleship, the Justice League are aided by an army of hawkmen from Hawkgirl's home planet of Thanagar. They discover that Hawkgirl has been providing her people with details about Earth... and about the League. The Thanagarians offer to help Earth defend against the Gordanians, but Batman discovers that this is just a ruse. Meanwhile, Shayera Hol finds herself torn between her allegiance to Thanagar and love for Hro Talak and her love for Earth and for John Stewart. Whom will she betray? | Image File history File links Kalibak. ...
In the DC Comics fictional shared Universe, Apokolips was the planet ruled by Darkseid, established in Jack Kirbys Fourth World series. ...
Darkseid is a DC Comics supervillain created by Jack Kirby, originally as part of The Fourth World series of comic books in the early 1970s. ...
Brainiac is a fictional supervillain in the DC Comics universe, most often appearing as an opponent of Superman. ...
Cover to New Gods #1 (1971). ...
Orion is a fictional character, a superhero of the New Gods in the Jack Kirbys Fourth World meta-series in the DC Comics universe. ...
Lightray (Sollis) is a DC Comics superhero. ...
Highfather is a comic book character. ...
In DC Comics comic books, Desaad is one of the followers of Darkseid from the planet of Apokolips in Jack Kirbys Fourth World meta-series. ...
Image File history File linksMetadata AmazoCartoon. ...
Lex Luthor is a fictional character, a DC Comics supervillain and archenemy of Superman. ...
The android Data, portrayed by Brent Spiner, from the TV series Star Trek: The Next Generation An android is a robot made to resemble a human, usually both in appearance and behaviour. ...
Amazo is a fictional android from DC Comics. ...
Image File history File links Volcana. ...
Dr. Destiny is a DC Comics supervillain. ...
Image File history File links Voxkasnia2. ...
Kasnia is a fictional country which appears in the Superman, Justice League, Justice League Unlimited, and Batman: Mystery of the Batwoman cartoons. ...
Image File history File links HeartsAndMinds. ...
Cover to Green Lantern: Rebirth #6, art by Ethan Van Sciver. ...
Despero is the name of a fictional supervillain in the DC Comics universe. ...
Kilowog is a fictional character from DC Comics, a member of the Green Lantern Corps. ...
Katma Tui is a fictional comic book superhero, an extraterrestrial from the planet Korugar, and a member of the intergalactic police force known as the Green Lantern Corps. ...
Image File history File links Justice_Lords. ...
The Crime Syndicate of America is a team of supervillains from one of DC Comics parallel universes, and are the evil counterparts of the Justice League of America. ...
Image File history File links TerrorBeyond. ...
Doctor Fate, as seen in Justice League Unlimited Doctor Fate is a comic book superhero and wizard in the DC Comics universe, and a member of the Justice Society of America. ...
Solomon Grundy as depicted in Justice League Unlimited Solomon Grundy is a DC Comics character, a large, strong zombie supervillain. ...
Marvel Comics is an American comic book line published by Marvel Entertainment, Inc. ...
The Defenders was a comic book series about a loosely-organized team of superheroes in the Marvel Comics universe. ...
Howard Phillips Lovecraft (August 20, 1890 â March 15, 1937) was an American author of fantasy, horror and science fiction, noted for combining these three genres within single narratives. ...
Cthulhu Mythos is the term coined by the writer August Derleth to describe the shared elements, characters, settings, and themes in the works of H. P. Lovecraft and associated writers. ...
Image File history File links Eclipsed. ...
The Flash. ...
Photo taken during the 1999 eclipse. ...
Image File history File links Hereafter. ...
Superman: The Animated Series is the unofficial title given to Warner Bros. ...
Superman is a fictional character and the staple superhero of DC Comics. ...
The Toyman is a supervillain in the DC Comics universe and an enemy of Superman. ...
Vandal Savage is a fictional character and supervillain in the DC Comics Universe. ...
Image File history File links Gigantass. ...
Gorilla Grodd is a fictional character appearing in DC Comics, primarily as an opponent of The Flash. ...
The Parasite is a fictional character and supervillain who appears in Superman stories published by DC Comics. ...
Giganta (Real name Doris Zuel) is a powerful DC Comics supervillainess with the ability to grow into a towering, incredibly strong giantess. ...
Sinestro is a fictional character, a supervillain within the DC Comics universe. ...
The Shade, as painted by Tony Harris on the cover of Starman #6 (1995) The Shade is a DC Comics character, a villain created in the 1940s who would fight against two generations of superheroes, most notably the Golden Age and Silver Age Flashes. ...
The four Clayfaces, from Secret Origins #44, September 1989. ...
Killer Frost is either of two DC Comics supervillains and one of Firestorms foes. ...
Cover to Green Lantern: Rebirth #6, art by Ethan Van Sciver. ...
Image File history File links JLChristmas. ...
Smallville is a fictional town in the United States which Superboy protects and where most of his crime-fighting adventures take place. ...
Justice Leagues Harley Quinn This is a screenshot of a copyrighted website, video game graphic, computer program graphic, television broadcast, or film. ...
The Royal Flush Gang are fictional characters in DC comics. ...
Image File history File links Hawkgirl301. ...
Thanagar is a fictional planet in the DC Comics universe. ...
| Image | Title | Director | Writer(s) | Original Airdate | # |
 | A League of Their Own | - | - | - | 34-35 | | When the Watchtower has a sudden power drain, the Justice League are forced to recruit Static Shock to "jump start" their station before it reenters the atmosphere. Unbeknownst to either Static or Gear, the power drain also releases Brainiac from his confinement. |
 | Fallen Hero | - | - | - | 44 | | Static faces off against his idol, Green Lantern, when he causes chaos all over town.. | Static Shock is an animated series. ...
Image File history File links ALEAGUEOFTHEIROWN_STATICSHOCK.jpg Summary Screenshot from WB/DC Comics TV show, STATIC SHOCK. Fair use. ...
A watchtower is a type of fortification. ...
Static Shock is an animated series. ...
Brainiac is a fictional supervillain in the DC Comics universe, most often appearing as an opponent of Superman. ...
Image File history File links Fallenhero_STATICSHOCK.jpg Summary Screenshot from WB/DC Comics TV show, STATIC SHOCK. Fair use. ...
Justice League Unlimited Justice League Unlimited (or JLU) is an animated television series produced by and aired on Cartoon Network, which ran from 2004 to May of 2006. Featuring a wide array of superheroes from the DC Comics universe, and specifically based on the Justice League superhero team, it is a direct sequel to the previous Justice League animated series. Justice League Unlimited (or JLU) was an American animated television series produced by and aired on Cartoon Network. ...
An animated series or cartoon series is a television series produced by means of animation. ...
A television program is the content of television broadcasting. ...
Cartoon Network is a cable television network created by Turner Broadcasting which primarily shows animated programming. ...
Superman and Batman, two of the most recognizable and iconic superheroes. ...
DC Comics (originally called Detective Comics, Inc. ...
The Justice League, sometimes called the Justice League of America or JLA for short, is a DC Comics superhero team. ...
Justice League is an American animated television series about a team of superheroes which ran from 2001 to 2004 on Cartoon Network. ...
Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow. Season 1: 2004-2005 | Image | Title | Director | Writer(s) | Original Airdate | # |
 | Initiation | - | - | July 31st, 2004 | 1 | | A reluctant Green Arrow joins the new Justice League. He teams up with Green Lantern, Supergirl, and Captain Atom to stop a rampaging nuclear monster in Asia. |
 | For the Man Who Has Everything | - | - | August 7th, 2004 | 2 | | Batman and Wonder Woman visit the Fortress of Solitude on Superman's birthday, only to find him trapped by Mongul. Based on the popular story by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons from Superman Annual #11. |
 | Kid Stuff | - | - | August 14th, 2004 | 3 | | Morgan le Fay transforms Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, and Green Lantern into 8-year-olds after Mordred uses his magic to remove all adults from Earth. |
 | Hawk and Dove | - | - | August 21st, 2004 | 4 | | Wonder Woman teams up with two super powered brothers, one warlike (Hawk), the other a pacifist (Dove), to stop Ares' plans to escalate a European civil war into World War III by loosing a war machine called the Annihilator into the fray. |
 | This Little Piggy | - | - | August 28th, 2004 | 5 | | Circe transforms Wonder Woman into a pig as revenge against Diana's mother. Batman and Zatanna work together to return her to normal. Contains the famous scene of Batman singing the standard "Am I Blue" to a nightclub audience. |
 | Fearful Symmetry | - | - | September 4th, 2004 | 6 | | Supergirl, Green Arrow, and The Question investigate Supergirl's disturbing dreams. They discover that Cadmus created a clone of Supergirl named Galatea. |
 | The Greatest Story Never Told | - | - | September 11th, 2004 | 7 | | The Justice League battle Mordru in the background, while the narrative follows Booster Gold as he attempts to close a walking black hole while he's supposed to be on "crowd control". |
 | The Return | - | - | September 18th, 2004 | 8 | | The full power of the Unlimited League is unleashed for the first time while trying to keep an all-powerful android from reaching his goal: vengeance against the recently-reformed Lex Luthor. Luthor and the Atom attempt to create a weapon to neutralize Amazo's nanotechnology. |
 | Ultimatum | - | - | December 4th, 2004 | 9 | | The Justice League meets the Ultimen, a popular group of young heroes. The Ultimen discover they are actually genetically created and attack the Justice League out of anger. As a nod to fans who grew up watching the Super Friends, the Ultimen are a pastiche of heroes unique to that show. |
 | Dark Heart | - | - | December 11th, 2004 | 10 | | Most of the League battles with powerful alien nanotechnology, but realize that the waves of self-replicating robots cannot be simply destroyed. The diminutive Atom shrinks himself to stop the robots from the inside. |
 | Wake the Dead | - | - | December 18th, 2004 | 11 | | Unintentionally invoked Chaos Magic resurrects Solomon Grundy. Grundy's body has returned more powerful than ever, but his memories have not. Dr. Fate, Amazo, Aquaman, and Shayera assist League regulars stopping his rampage. |
 | The Once and Future Thing, Part 1: Weird Western Tales | - | - | January 22nd, 2005 | 12 | | Batman, Wonder Woman, and Green Lantern chase Chronos to the past, where they team up with some of the greatest DC heroes of the Old West. After defeating stolen future tech in that era, they again follow Chronos to the future. Warhawk from the Batman Beyond era is revealed to be Green Lantern and Hawkgirl's son. |
 | The Once and Future Thing, Part 2: Time Warped | - | - | January 29th, 2005 | 13 | | The Justice League's adventures in time take them to a futuristic Gotham City, where they join forces with that era's Batman (Batman Beyond's Terry McGinnis) and the future Justice League Unlimited. The combined heroes defeat the retooled Jokerz (from Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker), and Batman traps Chronos in a time loop. | A screen shot from the Justice League Unlimited television series title sequence. ...
Green Arrow (Oliver Queen) is a DC Comics superhero. ...
Various incarnations of Supergirl: Original Kara Zor-El, Matrix, Kara in the 70s, Modern Kara, Linda Danvers, Power Girl, and Kara from Crisis on Infinite Earths. ...
Captain Atom is a fictional character, a comic book superhero. ...
World map showing the location of Asia. ...
Image File history File links Themanwhohaseverything2. ...
The Silver Age Fortress of Solitude, from Superman #187 (June 1966). ...
Mongul is a fictional supervillain considered one of the best, yet least known, of Supermans enemies. ...
Alan Moore Alan Moore (born November 18, 1953, in Northampton, England) is a British writer most famous for his work in comics, including the acclaimed graphic novels, Watchmen, V for Vendetta and From Hell. ...
Screenshot of Beneath a Steel Sky, backgrounds courtesy of Dave Gibbons. ...
Image File history File links KidStuff. ...
DC Morgan le Fay by John Byrne In DC Comics, Morgaine Le Fey is a major opponent of The Demon Etrigan, and has also shown up as one of Wonder Womans foes. ...
Mordred or Modred (Welsh: Medraut) is a legendary figure of Britain, known in Arthurian legend as a notorious traitor who fought King Arthur at the Battle of Camlann, where he was killed and Arthur fatally wounded. ...
Screen Capture Still from the Justice League Unlimited Television series This work is copyrighted. ...
Image File history File links MadCirce. ...
Circe is a fictional character in the DC Comics universe, centered in the Wonder Woman title. ...
Zatanna (nicknamed Zee) is a fictional character, a superheroine in the DC Comics universe. ...
Image File history File links Galatea-vs-supergirl. ...
The Question (Vic Sage) is a comic book superhero. ...
Project Cadmus is a fictional government genetic engineering project in the DC Comics Universe. ...
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged into Power Girl. ...
Screen Capture Still from the Justice League Unlimited Television series. ...
Mordru (also known as Mordru the Merciless) is a fictional character, a supervillain in the DC Comics Universe whose main foes are the Legion of Super-Heroes in the future world of the 30th and 31st centuries and the Justice Society of America and the Lord of Order Amethyst in...
Booster Gold is a comic book superhero in the DC Comics universe. ...
Image File history File links ThereturnJLU.jpg A screen shot of the DC Comics character Kyle Rayner, taken from the Cartoon Network series Justice League Unlimited. ...
Amazo is a fictional android from DC Comics. ...
Lex Luthor is a fictional character, a DC Comics supervillain and archenemy of Superman. ...
A number of DC Comics superheroes have shared the name Atom. ...
Image File history File links Ultimen. ...
The Ultimen are a fictional superhero group featured in the animated series Justice League Unlimited. ...
The Title card for the first Super Friends series. ...
Image File history File links TheAtomImage. ...
A number of DC Comics superheroes have shared the name Atom. ...
Screenshot of Vixen in Justice League Unlimited. ...
Solomon Grundy is a DC Comics character, a large, strong zombie supervillain. ...
Image File history File links Onceandfuturething1jlu. ...
Chronos is a DC Comics supervillain who takes his name from the Greek personification of Time and has the ability to time travel and manipulate history. ...
Great Basin region, typical American West The Western United States has played a significant role in history and fiction. ...
Warhawk is a superhero created for the DC Animated Universe, voiced by Peter Onorati. ...
Batman Beyond (Batman of the Future in Europe, Latin America and Australia/New Zealand) was an American animated television series created by WB Network in collaboration with DC Comics as a continuation of the Batman legacy. ...
Image File history File links Onceandfuturething2jlu. ...
Gotham Citys skyline, as it appears in the 1989 Batman movie. ...
Batman Beyond (Batman of the Future in Europe, Latin America and Australia/New Zealand) was an American animated television series created by WB Network in collaboration with DC Comics as a continuation of the Batman legacy. ...
Terry McGinnis (age 17). ...
Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker is a direct-to-video animated film featuring the comic book superhero Batman. ...
Season 2: 2005 | Image | Title | Director | Writer(s) | Original Airdate | # |
 | The Cat and the Canary | - | - | (aired February 5th, 2005) | 14 | | Black Canary convinces Green Arrow to help save her mentor, Wildcat, from his involvement in an underground, super-powered fight club. |
 | The Ties That Bind | - | - | (aired February 12th, 2005 | 15 | | Mister Miracle and Big Barda solicit Justice League assistance to free Oberon from Apokolips. J'onn refuses, but Flash decides to help out on his own. |
 | The Doomsday Sanction | - | - | (aired February 19th, 2005 | 16 | | Superman battles Doomsday in the heart of a volcano. Doomsday is revealed to be an imperfect clone of Superman. Batman probes the Cadmus conspiracy to destroy the Justice League. |
 | Task Force X | - | - | (aired May 21st, 2005 | 17 | | In an homage to the Suicide Squad, a team of supervillains comprised of Deadshot, Plastique, Captain Boomerang, and the Clock King are recruited by Cadmus to steal the Annihilator machine from the Watchtower. |
 | The Balance | - | - | (aired June 4th, 2005 | 18 | | Felix Faust, imprisoned in a mirror, fools Tala into letting him out, where he possesses the Annihilator and casts Hades out of Tartarus. After unleashing the full power of her armor and lasso, Wonder Woman teams up with Hawkgirl to help Hades reclaim his kingdom at Zeus' command. |
 | Double Date | - | - | (aired June 4th, 2005 | 19 | | Huntress is kicked out of the Justice League for attempting to murder mob boss Steven Mandragora, the man responsible for her parents' death. She recruits the Question to assist her in finishing him off while Green Arrow and Black Canary attempt to thwart their efforts. (This episode was written by Gail Simone, who also writes the comic book Birds of Prey, a book that stars Black Canary and the Huntress). |
 | Clash | - | - | (aired June 11th, 2005 | 20 | | Lex Luthor's candidacy for President moves forward as Captain Marvel appears to endorse his candidacy. Luthor manipulates Superman's mistrust, causing Superman to get into an all-out brawl with Marvel. |
 | Hunter's Moon | - | - | , aired June 18th, 2005 | 21 | | When the Justice League receives a distress call, Hawkgirl, Vigilante and Vixen investigate only to find that it was a trap set out by the remaining Thanagarian warriors who blame Hawkgirl for their loss in the war alluded to in "Starcrossed". |
 | Question Authority | - | - | (aired June 25th, 2005 | 22 | | Captain Atom's Air Force Reserve commission is reactivated. The Question discovers the records about the Justice Lords, and Luthor's attempts to discredit the Justice League. The Question is captured, and Superman and Huntress attempt to rescue him. Almost successful, they are confronted by Captain Atom, who has orders to stop them. |
 | Flashpoint | - | - | (aired July 2nd, 2005 | 23 | | Lex Luthor seizes control of the Watchtower's main gun to fire on Cadmus, causing massive collateral damage on the city and falsely implicating the League as responsible. Convinced it is an act of revenge, Amanda Waller commands Galatea to attack the Watchtower with an army of Ultimen clones. |
 | Panic in the Sky | - | - | (aired July 9th, 2005 | 24 | | The founding members of the Justice League surrender to the government, with the exception of Batman, who tries to convince Amanda Waller that Lex Luthor hacked into the Watchtower with stolen Cadmus technology. In the middle of a huge battle between the secondary League characters and the Ultimen army, Supergirl and Steel battle Galatea to keep her from destroying the Watchtower. |
 | Divided We Fall | - | - | (aired July 16th, 2005 | 25 | | With most of the League unavailable, the League's original seven battle against the fused Luthor and Brainiac. Flash stands alone against the Luthor-Braniac team. |
 | Epilogue | - | - | (aired July 23rd, 2005 | 26 | | In the future, Amanda Waller reveals to an older Terry McGinnis that through her scientific manipulations, he is actually Bruce Wayne's genetic son. | Black Canary by Marvelvsdc This image has been released into the public domain by the copyright holder, its copyright has expired, or it is ineligible for copyright. ...
Black Canary is a female superhero in the DC Comics universe. ...
Wildcat is the name of four DC Comics characters, three of them superheroes. ...
Image File history File linksMetadata BardaFlash. ...
Mister Miracle is a DC Comics superhero created by Jack Kirby, originally as part of The Fourth World series of titles. ...
Big Barda is a fictional character, a DC Comics superheroine created by Jack Kirby, originally for The Fourth World series of titles. ...
There are two comic book characters called Oberon, both published by DC Comics. ...
Image File history File links DoomsdayCartoon. ...
Doomsday is the name of a fictional frankenstein-esque supervillain in the Superman comic book series best known for fighting and killing Superman. ...
A screen capture from Justice League Unlimited This is a screenshot of a copyrighted movie or television program. ...
Suicide Squad is a name for a variety of organizations created for and owned by DC Comics. ...
Floyd Lawton, aka Deadshot, is a fictional character in the DC Universe. ...
Plastique is a DC Comics character who has evolved over the decades from supervillain to superhero, one of a handful of DC characters depicted as Canadian in origin. ...
George Digger Harkness and his son Owen Mercer, both known as Captain Boomerang, are fictional supervillains in the DC Universe. ...
Warning Spoiler Ahead To the best of my knowledge Clock King (Clock King isnât his real name or even his villain name. ...
Image File history File links TheBalance. ...
Felix Faust is a fictional sorcerer and supervillain who appears in stories published by DC Comics. ...
Tala is a fictional character in DC Comics The Phantom Stranger titles. ...
Hades [from Greek HadÄs (), originally HaidÄs () or AïdÄs (); of uncertain origin,[1] although it has been ascribed to Greek unseen[2]] refers to both the ancient Greek abode of the dead and the god of that underworld. ...
In Greek mythology, Tartarus, or Tartaros, is both a deity and a place in the underworld â even lower than Hades. ...
Image File history File links Huntressani. ...
The Huntress is a superheroine from DC Comics. ...
Gail Simone at the 2002 SDCC. Photo copyright 2002-2005 Lea Hernandez Gail Simone is a popular American writer of comic books. ...
If you are looking for other meanings of the term, refer to Bird of prey (disambiguation). ...
Image File history File links Shazam6. ...
Captain Marvel is a comic book superhero, originally published by Fawcett Comics and now owned by DC Comics. ...
Image File history File links HuntersMoon. ...
Vigilante is the name used by several fictional characters appearing in DC Comics. ...
Thanagar is a fictional planet in the DC Comics universe. ...
Image File history File linksMetadata QuestionAuthority. ...
The United States Air Force (or USAF) is the aerospace branch of the United States armed forces and one of the seven uniformed services. ...
Captain Atom is a fictional character, a comic book superhero. ...
Image File history File links Jlu_flashpoint_revised. ...
Dr. Amanda Blake Waller is a fictional character from the DC Universe, first appearing in Legends #1 in 1986. ...
Image File history File linksMetadata AnimatedSteel. ...
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Image File history File links Justice_League_Unlimited_Divided_We_Fall_. ...
Brainiac is a fictional supervillain in the DC Comics universe, most often appearing as an opponent of Superman. ...
Image File history File links EpilogueJLUrevised. ...
Epilogue (airdate July 23, 2005) is the season finale episode in season four of the animated series Justice League Unlimited. ...
Season 3: 2005-2006 | Image | Title | Director | Writer(s) | Original Airdate | # |
 | I Am Legion | - | - | (aired September 17th, 2005 | 27 | | After Lex Luthor escapes from prison, Gorilla Grodd baits him into joining the new Legion of Doom with a piece of Brainiac technology. Luthor, the Key, and Doctor Polaris steal the Spear of Longinus from Blackhawk Island despite Flash, Fire, Shayera and the last surviving Blackhawk's attempts to stop them. |
 | Shadow of the Hawk | - | - | (aired September 17th, 2005 | 28 | | Shayera agrees to meet with Carter Hall, an archaeologist who has discovered Thanagarian artifacts from ancient Egypt. With a suspicious Batman eavesdropping, Carter reveals himself to be her reincarnated lover from the past and Hawkman to a confused Shayera. |
 | Chaos at the Earth's Core | - | - | (aired September 24th, 2005 | 29 | | Supergirl, Stargirl, S.T.R.I.P.E. and Green Lantern help Warlord liberate Skartaris (a hidden world inside the Earth's core) from Deimos, a brutal dictator while protecting a very large piece of Kryptonite from Metallo and Silver Banshee. Originally titled "Heart of Stone." Image File history File links IamlegionJLU.jpg Summary Screen shot from TV show Justice League Unlimted episode I AM LEGION, owned Warner Bros. ...
Gorilla Grodd is a fictional character appearing in DC Comics, primarily as an opponent of The Flash. ...
The Hall of Doom, the Legion of Dooms headquarters The Legion of Doom was a group of supervillains led by Lex Luthor that appeared in Super Friends, a 1970s and 1980s animated series that starred superheroes from DC Comics. ...
The Key is a DC Comics supervillain with several major incarnations. ...
Dr. Polaris is a DC Comics supervillain, often clashing with Green Lantern Hal Jordan. ...
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Holy Lance. ...
Fire is a fictional character, a superheroine from Brazil in the DC Comics universe. ...
Image File history File links ShadowofthehawkJLU2. ...
Khafres Pyramid (4th dynasty) and Great Sphinx of Giza (c. ...
Cover to Hawkman v4 # 1. ...
Screen Capture Still from the Justice League Unlimited Television series. ...
Courtney Whitmore is the fictional superheroine Stargirl in the DC Comics Universe. ...
Stripesy is a fictional superhero in the DC Comics universe. ...
The Warlord was a sword and sorcery comic book published by DC Comics from 1976 - 1989. ...
In DC Comics comic books, Deimos was a character created by Mike Grell as a villain for the Warlord in the comic series of the same name. ...
Metallo is a fictional supervillain and android who appears in Superman stories published by DC Comics. ...
Silver Banshee is a fictional character appearing in DC Comics, primarily as an opponent of Superman. ...
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 | To Another Shore | - | - | (aired September 24th, 2005 | 30 | | Wonder Woman protects the body of the Viking Prince from Legion agents who want it for reverse engineering of invulnerability powers. J'onn leaves the Justice League to better understand humanity. Originally titled "Elegy." Image File history File links ToAnotherShore. ...
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 | Flash and Substance | - | - | (aired February 11th, 2006 | 31 | | Orion attempts to understand Flash's antics as Wally and Batman battle four of Flash's rogues that attack the museum that is opening in his honor. |
 | Dead Reckoning | - | - | (aired February 18th, 2006 | 32 | | Deadman convinces Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman to help him retrieve the stolen souls of a mystic order of monks that the Legion has stolen. They force the Legion to retreat from Gorilla City, ending Grodd's attempt to turn all people on Earth into apes. Back at a general meeting in the Legion of Doom's HQ, Lex Luthor cites that (A); Grodd's plan failed and (B); his "master plan" -- turning everyone on Earth into apes -- was silly, and shoots him. Luthor takes over leadership of the Legion of Doom. |
 | Patriot Act | - | - | (aired February 25th, 2006 | 33 | | General Wade Eiling from Cadmus steals the "Captain Nazi" super-soldier serum and injects it into himself to protect the world from metahumans. With the more powerful League members busy, Green Arrow leads Stargirl, S.T.R.I.P.E., Shining Knight, Crimson Avenger, Vigilante and Speedy against him. This sub-team is an homage to the Golden Age Seven Soldiers of Victory. Though Eiling's transformation is due to the Captain Nazi serum, his resultant form is reminiscent of his more recent comic appearances in the body of the Shaggy Man. The WWII flashback that opens this episode shows Spy Smasher stealing the formula from the Nazis. |
 | The Great Brain Robbery | - | - | (aired March 4th, 2006 | 34 | | Magic and science collide, placing Lex Luthor and Flash's minds in each other's body. The Justice League must now contain super-speed powered Luthor on the Watchtower while Flash tries to hide the reversal from the Legion. |
 | Grudge Match | - | - | (aired January 30th, 2006 (UK)) (aired March 11th, 2006 (US) | 35 | | Roulette restarts Metabrawl, this time with an all-female fight card made up of mind-controlled Justice Leaguers. |
 | Far From Home | - | - | (aired February 1st, 2006 (UK))(aired April 15th, 2006 (US) | 36 | | Supergirl is kidnapped and taken to the 31st Century, where she is destined to embark on her very last mission. |
 | Ancient History | - | - | (aired February 6th, 2006 (UK)) (April 29th, 2006 (US) | 37 | | The Shadow Thief returns and so does Hawkman as more mysteries from “Shadow of the Hawk” are explored. |
 | Alive (Part 1) | - | - | (aired February 8th, 2006 (UK)) (May 6th, 2006 (US) | 38 | | Luthor and the Legion refit the Hall of Doom and fly into deep space in a last-ditch attempt to reanimate Brainiac. Enroute, the Legion is divided in loyalties towards Luthor and Grodd, who has been freed by Tala. A free-for-all ensues and in the end, Luthor sacrifices Tala thinking he has resurrected Brainiac... |
 | Destroyer (Part 2) | - | - | (aired February 18th, 2006 (UK)) (May 13th, 2006 (US) | 39 | | The Justice League reluctantly teams up with the Legion of Doom in anticipation of an omega-level threat. Darkseid at long last launches a full-scale invasion of Earth and while the combined League and Legion battle parademons across the planet. Meanwhile, Superman, Batman and Lex Luthor take on Darkseid atop the Daily Planet building. This episode was the finale to both the Justice League and Justice League Unlimited television series. It can be seen as a finale to the previous Dini/Timm animated Superman series as well, much as last season's episode, "Epilogue" can be seen as a finale to the stories of both the previous animated Batman and Batman: Beyond series, and their main characters. In that Batman-centric episode from Season 2, the basic final fate of both major Batman DCAU characters is explored, while here (and indirectly in the previous episode, "Alive") we see the possibly final fates of Superman's three major antagonists over the years and various series: Brainiac, Luthor, and Darkseid. | Image File history File links OrionCartoon. ...
Orion is a fictional character, a superhero of the New Gods in the Jack Kirbys Fourth World meta-series in the DC Comics universe. ...
Wally West is a fictional character in the DC Comics Universe, and the current (third) Flash. ...
The Flashs Rogues Gallery. ...
The Flash Museum is a museum that appears in stories published by DC Comics. ...
Image File history File links DeadReckoningCartoon. ...
Deadman is a DC Comics superhero created by Arnold Drake and Carmine Infantino in the comic book series, Strange Adventures, specifically in issue #205 (October 1967). ...
Image File history File linksMetadata Elling-Hulk. ...
General Wade Eiling is a military character from DC Comics. ...
Captain Nazi is a Fawcett Comics and DC Comics supervillain, a rival of Captain Marvel and Captain Marvel, Jr. ...
Shining Knight is the name of three fictional superheroes in the DC Comics universe. ...
The Crimson Avenger is a fictional character, a superhero who exists in the DC Comics universe. ...
Vigilante is the name used by several fictional characters appearing in DC Comics. ...
Arsenal is a fictional DC Comics superhero. ...
The Seven Soldiers of Victory (also known as Laws Legionaires) is a team of comic book superheroes in the DC Comics universe. ...
Shaggy Man is a DC Comics character, an indestructible hair-covered monster who fought the Justice League of America in the 1960s, and who was defeated only by being faced with his exact duplicate. ...
Spy Smasher (real name Alan Armstrong) is a DC Comics superhero, formerly owned by Fawcett Comics. ...
Image File history File links Jlu_greatbrainrobbery_revised. ...
Image File history File links JLUGrudgeMatch. ...
Image File history File links FarFromHome. ...
Image File history File links Ancienthistoryjlu. ...
Image File history File links Jlu_alive_revised. ...
Brainiac is a fictional supervillain in the DC Comics universe, most often appearing as an opponent of Superman. ...
Image File history File links DestroyerDarkseid. ...
Epilogue (airdate July 23, 2005) is the season finale episode in season four of the animated series Justice League Unlimited. ...
External links The comic series spun off from the show (Justice League Adventures and Justice League Unlimited respectively), are loosely set in the same continuity as the series. They occasionaly use characters unavailable for use on the show, such as Blue Beetle, Mary Marvel, Power Girl and Firestorm and sometimes contradict events already shown, such as Wonder Woman remembering the events from The Once and Future Thing. The first and second Blue Beetle. ...
Mary Marvel is a fictional character, a superhero derived from the DC Comics (formerly Fawcett Comics) character Captain Marvel. ...
Power Girl (real name Kara Zor-L, also known as Karen Starr) is a comic book superhero in the DC Comics Universe. ...
A firestorm in Hamburg (Germany) during WWII A firestorm is the mass movement of air resulting from fire, creating a fire of extreme intensity over a wide area. ...
- World's Finest - Justice League Adventures Comic Guide
- World's Finest - Justice League Unlimited Comic Guide
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