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Monthly Archives: October 2009

Justice League: War World Part Two

Screen Shots

Episode Credits

Writer Director Music Voice Director
Stan Berkowitz Butch Lukic Lolita Ritmanis Andrea Romano
Main Cast Guest Cast
Maria Canals Hawkgirl Eric Roberts Mongul
Phil LaMarr Green Lantern William Smith Draaga
Carl Lumbly J’onn J’onzz David Paymer Chancellor
George Newbern Superman Ian James Corlett Thug
Phil Proctor First Humanoid
Animation Timing Director Storyboard Character/Prop Design Animation Services
  • Frank Andrina
  • James T. Walker (as James Tim Walker)
  • Ricardo Morales
  • Bob Smith
  • Sean Song
  • Robert Fletcher
  • Shane Glines
  • Glen Murakami
  • Tommy Tejeda
  • Bruce Timm
  • James Tucker
  • Glenn Wong
Koko Enterprise Co. Ltd.
Animation Directors
  • Sukhyung Son
  • Sungman Huh
Series Story Editors Series Directors Producers Associate Producers
  • Stan Berkowitz
  • Rich Fogel
  • Butch Lukic
  • Dan Riba
  • Rich Fogel
  • Glen Murakami
  • Bruce Timm
  • James Tucker
Shaun McLaughlin
Executive Producers
Sander Schwartz
Theme: Lolita Ritmanis, Main Title Design: Bruce Timm, Main Title Animation: Cantina Pictures Visual Effects

Synopsis

Previously in “War World” Part One: An accident while demolishing an asteroid leaves Superman and J’onn J’onzz floating unconscious in space. The plight attracts the attention alien slavers who kidnap them before the rest of the Justice League can respond. Superman awakens to finds himself on War World, a planet where the poor, underfed, unemployed masses are kept placid by the endless spectacle of violent gladiatorial games. Mongul, the charismatic ruler of War World, announces that Superman is to fight his champion, Draaga. Superman refuses to fight for Mongul’s amusement, but its clear that his hold over Draaga is stronger. Superman eventually bests Draaga, however, Mongul orders Superman’s execution after he refuses to kill his vanquished opponent.

Continue reading

Current series could have begun with issue #500

The first issue of the current run was the 500th ongoing issue of a normal Justice League comic.

We get to this number by adding up the issues in the JLA main line. The League runs through four numbering sequences:

  1. The original series – Justice League of America (vol 1) #1-261 (261 issues)
  2. The JLI era – Justice League #1-6, Justice League International #7-25, Justice League America #26-113, 0 (114 issues)
  3. The Big Seven era – JLA #1-125, 1000000 (126 issues)
  4. Current series – Justice League of America (vol 2). #0-38+. (39 issues)

Ignoring annuals, specials, mini-series, and variants that makes a total of 540 issues. An argument could be made for the inclusion of Legends and Midsummer’s Nightmare as they bridged the gaps between the first and second and the second and third incarnations, but I’m only including regular ongoing issues.

The first issue of the current run, Justice League of America (vol 2) #0, would have been the 502nd issue if there had been continuous numbering. The 500th issue would have been JLA #124. If we ignore specially numbered issues (0 and 1,000,000) the 500th issue would have been the first issue, Justice League of America (vol 2) #1, of the current run.

So technically, the most recent issue Justice League of America (vol. 2) #38 is actually issue #539 is the entire run. The next landmark issue, overall #550, will be Justice League of America (vol. 2) #49 in about a years time.

It’s a pity they didn’t renumber when they had the chance.

Wonder Twins and available characters

Smallville is adding so many DC characters to its world that its rapidly becoming Justice League Unlimited-lite, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing I might add. It looks, however, like they’re still hampered by the eternal conflict between the TV and film development. IGN’s Eric Goldman asked Smallville Executive Producer Brian Peterson about the issue,

IGN: Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, The Flash… What’s the status with a few of those bigger players from DC and the possibility of seeing them on Smallville?

Peterson: Yeah, I will just say that as of right now – and I’m not saying things won’t change – but as of right now, unfortunately Wonder Woman and Batman are just off limits, as are certain characters that are being used in movies that are in the pipeline. We try to be respectful of that and we are trying to be understanding, though of course everyone would love to have Wonder Woman and Batman on the show, but it just is not something that’s within our realm of possibility right now.

This happens a lot. When Warner Brothers develops a particular DC character they tend to ring-fence that character’s associated properties from appearing in similar projects. This is why Lois Lane could only appear in a limited under of Smallville episodes while Superman Returns was being promoted or why The Batman The Animated Series‘s extended cast couldn’t appear in later episodes of Justice League unlimited. It’s all about the Marketing Department  trying to create a singular brand for a character. The reason I find Peterson’s comments interesting is that it’s a sign that films are far enough ahead in development for DC Entertainment to start ring fencing characters.

Two characters that unsurprisingly don’t seem to have any trouble getting approved are the Wonder Twins. In comic book terms they’re pretty obscure characters having only appeared in continuity in one almost forgotten 1990s Justice League series (Extreme Justice if you’re wondering). They are, however, widely known by the public because of their association with the Super Friends. They came about because of the sidekick syndrome – the need for middle-aged men to add “funny” or “youth” characters to cartoons and comics because they think kids want somebody to identify with. It’s the logic that gave us Robin, Orko, Wesley Crusher, Scrappy Doo, and Godzuki.

Peterson also commented on having the Wonder Twins in Smallville.

IGN: I was very amused to hear about the Wonder Twins appearance. Those characters obviously come with a lot of baggage from their history. What is your take on it? I’d imagine some comedy has to be involved…

Peterson: Yeah. These last couple of seasons have been interesting in that we’ve kind of found that the rhythm of the show tends to be we’ve gotten a little lighter with the comedy, but we’ve also gotten a lot darker in some ways. We have this very interesting bifurcation of the show which I think keeps it really alive and dynamic. So having them come into the show was really fun. They both knocked it out of the park and we had a lot of fun with how Clark and Chloe deal with these two slightly screwed up twins that are trying to be heroes and there’s a really nice emotional takeaway. It was really fun to have them in the show.

The Wonder Twins are Zan and Jayna, a pair of shape-shifting alien-twins who have to make contact with each other to use their powers. Zan can turn into any inanimate object and Jayna can turn into any animal. They usually activated their powers by bumping fists and shouting “Wonder Twins, Power Activate!” The description of them as “two slightly screwed up twins that are trying to be heroes,”  accurately mirrors what most viewers would have thought of the Twins in Super Friends.

It’ll be interesting to see how well the Wonder Twins translate to live action, but I couldn’t resist linking to this Wonder Twins slot from Cartoon Network’s Adult Swim.

New ‘Voices of Krypton’ magazine with exclusing Crisis on Two Earths interviews

Voices of Krypton is a new magazine “devoted to superheroes on film and TV.” The premier issue features a special look at the animated Justice League including a look at all 52-episodes with producers Bruce Timm, James Tucker, and Dwayne McDuffie.

Their website has an exclusive chat with the writer (Dwayne McDuffie) and the cast of the upcoming Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths DVD feature film. They talk to  William Baldwin (Batman), Mark Harmon (Superman), James Woods (Owlman), Gina Torres (Super Woman), and Christopher North (Lex Luthor).

McDuffie commented on the nature of the second Earth.

“There are so many different continuities for all of the characters in the comics over the many years, that we’re sort of used to seeing Batman and Superman in different contexts, which is fun,” says writer Dwayne McDuffie, “but a lot of it, in this particular case, is seeing what the world would be like if they weren’t good people. They have enormous power and there are almost no checks on their power. We dealt with this on the Justice League TV series, where they went to a parallel world where the Justice League met parallel versions of themselves [the Justice Lords] who had decided that the way to get rid of crime was to control everything and had maybe gone too far in that direction. In this case, they’re meeting not direct parallels of themselves, but people who sort of take those same positions. You’ve got Owlman instead of Batman, Ultraman instead of Superman, and Super Woman instead of Wonder Woman. They’re completely different people who have chosen to use their power for personal gain.”

Voices of Krypton is available now and costs $12 with US shipping and $20 with international shipping.

An alternative League

Part of the fun of being a JLA fan is dreaming up your own potential line-up. The League’s in a state of flux at the moment so here’s what I think they would do.

Justice League characters should be node characters, central figures who link into wider groups of heroes. That automatically means Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman no matter who is now inside those costumes. Beyond them you always need a centre of classic, recognisable Leaguers…

  • Green Arrow (Queen) – Roy is good, but he ain’t Queen. The reason Oliver Queen belongs in the Justice League more than any other similar character is personality. The bombastic, moral centre of the League is pivotal to keeping them on the straight and narrow. We’re starting to see that again in Cry For Justice, but the League appears to desperately need Oliver Queen to kick some sense into them.
  • Atom (Choi) – Don’t get me wrong, Ray Palmer is a great character, but the Atom should be fun and he just isn’t a fun character any more. Ryan Choi on the other hand has got all that uberweirdness from Ivy Town and the slight inexperience that would make him the team’s rookie. He also fills the “science guy” slot. I think that weirdness element would play well with the Bride and Metamorpho (see below).
  • Hawkman (Carter) and Hawkgirl (Kendra) – Winged barbarians with honking great maces! What’s not to like? Carter always rubs GA the wrong way and I can’t imagine him getting on that well with the “not-Ray” Atom. Kendra otherwise would flirt with GA and I imagine she’d probably get on quite well with the Bride. If they’re both dead again in Blackest Night then there is the possibility of completely redesigning their alter egos. They need not be white Americans any more, they could revert to being true Egyptians, or even Kahndaq refugees – that’d play interesting against Black Adam.
  • A “Flash” and “Green Lantern”. The quartet of GA, Atom, and the Hawks is going to give you the recognisable centre to the League. The League has to look like a Justice League otherwise it might as well be the Outsiders or some other random team. I’d also add two rotating chairs one labelled “Flash” and the other labelled “Green Lantern”. The real identity of those characters would be left open to the individual story, but theoretically Hal Jordan, John Stewart, Guy Gardner, Kyle Rayner, Barry Allen, and Wally West would all be members. Personally I’d like to see Guy Gardner and Wally West back in the League. They’d connect with the 1980s/90s League history and Guy would work great character wise against the more straight-laced Leaguers.
  • Mera – I’ve been impressed with the way the character has been handled in Blackest Night. Aquaman may be King of Atlantis, but that comes with too many responsibilities for him to be running around as an adventurer. It would be better to have his Queen running around on the surface with Neptune’s Trident. She knows Carter and Olly from the old days, but I’d suggest that they probably don’t know her very well at all. She’d also up the international quotient of the League.
  • The Bride – The four arms, eight foot tall undead Bride has been married to Ra’s Al Ghul and presumably also Frankenstein’s Monster. She green, mean, and is the coolest undead damsel in DC’s line up. She met Green Arrow and Firestorm whilst they were lost in the 1940s (JLA 80-Page Giant #1). You never know, maybe the Bride’s left arm comes from one of Hawkgirl’s former incarnations.
  • Metamorpho (Rex Mason) – I thought about Plastic Man or the Elongated Man, but neither of them is as versatile as Rex. He’s an experienced hero, a family man, and has been described as one of the post powerful men on the planet. Not only that, but before he was transformed into the Element Man he was an adventurer/archaeologist of the Lara Croft school. Choi would be sat on Rex’s shoulder suggesting new and exotic compounds for him to transform himself into.
  • Vixen – An internationally recognised supermodel with animal powers. She has so much untouched potential as a character. She isn’t American and, by her secret origin, English probably isn’t even her first language. She is a true African hero and that is too often forgotten. Not only that, but she is probably an international celebratory on a scale to match Iman or Grace Jones.

I’ve tried to avoid any of the franchise characters that DC has been renting/buying up (Red Circle, Milestone, etc) as I’m not so familiar with them and many of them wouldn’t really fit into a classic Justice League. Static is too young, Icon replicates Superman, the Shield is too much like Capt America (this is the JLA not the Avengers), etc.

Justice League: War World Part One

Screen Shots

Episode Credits

Writer Director Music Voice Director
Stan Berkowitz Butch Lukic Lolita Ritmanis Andrea Romano
Main Cast Guest Cast
Maria Canals Hawkgirl Eric Roberts Mongul
Phil LaMarr Green Lantern William Smith Draaga
Carl Lumbly J’onn J’onzz Ian James Corlett Thug
George Newbern Superman David Paymer Chancellor
Phil Proctor First Humanoid
Animation Timing Director Storyboard Character/Prop Design Animation Services
  • Kirk Tingblad
  • James T. Walker (as James Tim Walker)
  • Aluir Amancio
  • Tim Eldred
  • Butch Lukic
  • Ricardo Morales
  • Bob Smith
  • Robert Fletcher
  • Shane Glines
  • Glen Murakami
  • Tommy Tejeda
  • Bruce Timm
  • James Tucker
  • Glenn Wong
Koko Enterprise Co. Ltd.
Animation Directors
  • Sukhyung Son
  • Youngchul Park
Series Story Editors Series Directors Producers Associate Producers
  • Stan Berkowitz
  • Rich Fogel
  • Butch Lukic
  • Dan Riba
  • Rich Fogel
  • Glen Murakami
  • Bruce Timm
  • James Tucker
Shaun McLaughlin
Executive Producers
Sander Schwartz
Theme: Lolita Ritmanis, Main Title Design: Bruce Timm, Main Title Animation: Cantina Pictures Visual Effects

Synopsis

The Justice League investigate a 3-mile wide asteroid that is on a collision course with the Earth. It is still orbiting beyond Saturn, but the League want deal with the threat as early as possible. Superman and J’onn J’onzz wear space suits to place explosives on the asteroid while Hawkgirl monitors their progress from Justice League Watchtower. She detects unstable hydrogen pockets within the asteroid and warns J’onn and Superman. They try to retreat, but the asteroid’s explosion is a lot bigger than they were expecting. Hawkgirl can only watch in horror as the explosion engulfs her teammates and her radio link with them goes silent.

Continue reading

Batman Legends HD

Batman Legends is a montage of clips from Aaron Schoenke’s Bat in the Sun fan studio. I haven’t seen this HD version before so I thought I’d give it a shout out.

Justice League of America (vol. 2) #38

Issue Credits

  • Writer: James Robinson
  • Penciller: Mark Bagley
  • Inker: Rob Hunter
  • Colourist: Pete Pantazis
  • Letterer: Rob Leigh
  • Cover: Mark Bagley, Rob Hunter & Pete Pantazis; variant: Andy Kubert & Alex Sinclair
  • Associate Editor: Adam Schlagman
  • Editor: Eddie Berganza

Characters

Featuring

  • Doctor Light
  • Plastic Man
  • Red Tornado
  • Vixen
  • Zatanna (last appeared in Blackest Night #2; the Blue Devil mentions in Phantom Stranger #42 (March 2010) that, off-screen, the Phantom Stranger had dispatched Zatanna to find the JLA)

Guest stars

  • Blue Jay (last survivors of the pre-Infinite Crisis Angor, deceased this issue)
  • Gypsy

Villains

  • Despero
  • Unknown villain (kills Blue Jay, identity now shown)

Synopsis

JLA #38 opens with a desperate Blue Jay (remember him?) weaving his way through the Justice League trophy room. He is trying to evade an unseen attacker, but despite his agility, the villain’s blasts finally catch up with him and it seems that it’s the end for Angor’s last son. Meanwhile, at the JLA’s original base, the Cave in Happy Harbour, Rhode Island, Vixen has called together the surviving members of the current League (Plastic Man, Dr Light, Red Tornado, and herself) to debate their condition. Their recent encounter with Prometheus (Cry For Justice, which hasn’t been published yet) has left them battered, bruised, and demoralised. Vixen had promised Superman that she’d keep the JLA name going, but she now doubts whether there is any point in continuing when they’re so under resourced.

As if to prove how underpowered they are, the quartet suddenly come under attack from Despero. He carries the unconscious Gypsy with him and taunts them that his attack on her was just the warm up. Despero tears though them and overwhelms the weakened League. Even with Gypsy’s help they don’t stand a chance against a villain of his class. Despero’s reason for attacking them isn’t clear, but he does quote quid pro quo at them (latin “something in return”) suggesting that he’s operating for somebody else. Zatanna’s equally sudden appearance promises to even the odds, but Despero vanishes in a puff of smoke and Zatanna confesses that his departure was not her doing.

Zatanna had actually come to warn Vixen and co. that the dead are rising from their graves (Blackest Night #1-3). The issue ends with Zatanna teleporting them all away to face whatever is occurring at the Hall of Justice.

Commentary

If you were expecting JLA #38 to be the start of a dramatic new era for the Justice League you will be sorely disappointed. The new creative team of James Robinson and Mark Bagley may have taken over, but their new team doesn’t launch until January. We are still in the story telling interregnum between the departure of Dwayne McDuffie and the launch of James Robinson’s full team. The new team spins out of the events of the Cry For Justice mini-series and of Blackest Night, however, neither of those events have concluded yet. The first three issues of the interregnum (JLA #35- 37) were by Len Wein and show cased the remaining JLA members against the Royal Flush Gang. This issue takes place after Cry for Justice, but parallel to Blackest Night #1-3, and (I think) before Blackest Night #4. JLA #39-40 will then feature a cross-over with Blackest Night and the new JLA line-up will launch in JLA #41.

Even if Dwayne McDuffie had stayed on the title he still would have had to deal with the absence of Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman and the effects of Blackest Night/Cry For Justice. In response to questions about whether he had planned to bring the Milestone characters Icon and Hardwire into the League McDuffie replied,

Dan [Didio DC Executive Editor] wanted Icon in JLA, but I wasn’t sold. Eddie [Berganza JLA Editor] seemed to want Hardware in there. I’d planned to have Jon Stewart blackmail Hardware into helping for a while (until the real team came back), and bringing Icon back as a guest star in a year or so. Neither would join, in my plans. But then, the JLA wouldn’t have reconstituted until spring 2011.

I really wouldn’t be surprised if that spring 2011 time scale still remains. The reason is that it will probably take most of 2010 to wrap up the big story arcs in the Superman and Batman franchises that have pulled them out of the team. These are the same story arcs that are propelling Mon-El and the Dick Grayson Batman into Robinson’s League.

In many ways Justice League of America #38 is the only thing it could have been. It is best seen as a prologue to the Robinson/Bagley’s run and sets up a mystery villain that attacked Blue Jay and sent Despero after Vixen’s friends. Len Wein’s three-part story ended with the reveal that Roulette and the Key had worked for an unseen villain so it is reasonable to assume that it’s the same unseen villain as hinted at in this issue. I had originally suspected Prometheus, but the implication is that this takes place, one assumes, after his defeat in Cry For Justice.

Blue Jay fans should be mollified by an exchange between James Robinson and a fan on Twitter:

TecJohnson: @JamesDRobinson I thought you said you finished your first arc of JLA and nobody died. What happened to that? (12:40 PM Oct 20th)

JamesDRobinson: @TecJohnson No idea what you’re talking about. And I was talking about plotting out my first arc. I’m writing it now. (12:55 PM Oct 20th)

TecJohnson: @JamesDRobinson They just released the first 5 pages of JLA #38 with Bluejay. (1:12 PM Oct 20th)

JamesDRobinson: @TecJohnson I wouldn’t assume you’ve seen the last of Blue Jay. I consider him a little guy with a big future. (1:23 PM Oct 20th)

TecJohnson: @JamesDRobinson Then I humbly apologize for jumping the gun. (1:27 PM Oct 20th)

TecJohnson: @JamesDRobinson oh, and thank you for answering. (1:29 PM Oct 20th)

Later on Robinson reiterated that,

JamesDRobinson: For the record Blue Jay isn’t dead. And he has a big heroic heart in a little body and a big future. And I confess to always liking him. (1:10 AM Oct 23rd)

People’s Reactions

Brian Cronin @ Comics Should Be Good numerates the editorial challenges facing this issue and then concludes:

Luckily, Robinson acquits himself pretty well – he tells an engaging story with a lot of strong action (Mark Bagley is particularly good on the art for the book). If it weren’t for those obstacles which are mostly outside of his control, I think this would be a comic I might even recommend, which is a big improvement over Justice League: Cry For Justice.

J. Caleb Mozzocco @ Blog@Newsarama takes the apparent sacrifice of Blue Jay as a sign of a dark conspiracy with the DC offices.

DC Comics have long been full of dark and evil gods, constantly making trouble for our heroes and heroines. But as bad as Darkseid, Ares and their ilk might be, you know the comic book gods that really scare me?

The ones some of DC writers seem to worship.

Now, the existence of a secret cult that meets in the basement of 1700 Broadway on the nights of full moons, their identities hidden even from one another by ritual cloaks and hoods, to chant in a secret, blasphemous language and bow before a profane, obscene stone idol of a hideous monster-god is just a theory of mine.

I have no actual proof of it, other than the suggestion that surely there must be some reason so many writers have begun their new series or new story arcs with a blood sacrifice, as if it were part of a ritual beseeching some entity for success.

Doug Zawisza @ CBR is damning in his assessment of the new team despite acknowledging the challenges facing them.

Robinson and Bagley are thrown into the deep end, having to set up a “Blackest Night” tie-in while trying to determine and set their own direction. Maybe my expectations were too high, but this is the “Justice Leaggue of America” not “Justice League Task Force.” This comic needs to be DC’s shining gemstone –- the one book that everyone who loves DC Comics should look forward to each and every month. Instead this issue is just hollow and lackluster.

Mart Gray ends a generally positive review with the note that,

One final, trivial word, though – if you’re giving us a new era for the JLA, DC, jolly well put the proper logo on the cover!

seventhsoldier @ Read/RANT! confesses to be their resident James Robinson fan, but wasn’t so impressed with the writing. His views on Mark Bagley’s art are more positive and are generally representative of what I’ve said elsewhere:

Mark Bagley, recent superstar of DC’s Trinity, does a fine job on the art.  His style is extremely traditional – impossibly thin, curvy women and enormous, muscle-bound men – but that hardly hurts the issue.  The action segments flow smoothly and he keeps the dialogue-driven scenes running well, too, most notably because of Plastic Man, who looks increasingly as though he’s about to fall apart as the issue progresses.

Joey Esposito @ Crave Online‘s review is balanced and well written sums up what a lot of us are thinking:

I have no doubt that Robinson’s run on Justice League will be, in the long run, epic and perhaps even legendary. However, this is the issue that will be looked over when it comes time to form a definitive collection of his run, or when you are pulling through your longboxes to re-read it as a whole. But, I’ll be damned if I’m going to pass up more Plastic Man action.

Excluding Dan Philips @ IGN who absolutely hated this this issue (“This is a bad comic.”), I think the general trend in the reviews I’ve read is towards the positive. There is, however, a general feeling of disappointment, maybe it’s better to call it frustration, that this wasn’t a massive event, flash-bang, launch issue, but it was never going to be that. There is certainly annoyance that yet another character appears to have been killed off (see the Twitter quotes above), but a lot a reviews recognise Robinson’s skill as a writer (despite the requisite cheap shot at Cry For Justice) and people suspect/hope that things will improve once we get beyond the crossovers.

Personally I think this issue, and probably the next two, should be seen as a prologue or warm up to the real relaunch of the Justice League that comes in January. If you’re a completest or are interested in the Blackest Night cross over then you should stick around, but if you’re thinking of picking the book afresh you may want to wait for JLA #41 when the title should hopefully be into clear water.

The Verdict

Site Reviewer Original Score %
Reviews Portal Comic Book Resources Doug Zawisza 2/5 40
Reviews Portal IGN Shawn Hill 3/5 60
Reviews Portal IGN Dan Philips 4.5/10 45
Community Reviews Comics Vine User Reviews Ave of 3 review/s 2.83/5 57
Community Reviews iFanboy 482 pulls 3.1/5 62
Character Site Superman Homepage Michael Bailey 2 (story) & 4 (art)/5 60
Reviews Blog A Comic Book Blog Wayland 65/100 65
Reviews Blog Comics Per Day Reviews Timbotron Average 40
Reviews Blog Major Spoilers Matthew Peterson 2/5 40
This Site Captain’s JLA Blog Jason Kirk starstarstarstarstar 40%
Grand Average starstarstarstarstar 51%

It must be the week for rumours, now its the JLA movie

Mike Scott, writing for the Time-Picayune, describes how a New Orleans studio is in negotiations to be the shooting location for the new Green Lantern film. The exchange rate of the US dollar has hit the financial advantage of filming in Australia which is where Green Lantern was going to film and was where Superman Returns was filmed.

Towards the end of Scott’s article he states that,

Green Lantern is expected to be the first in a trilogy of films focusing on D.C.’s Justice League heroes  –  the others being The Flash and Wonder Woman –  before uniting all three with fellow League members Batman,  Superman and Aquaman for a Justice League movie.

We’ve known that the three character films have been in the works for a while with various writers and directors being shuffled on and off staff and we obviously know about the abandoned Justice League film. The interesting information here is the strategy of spinning the individual films towards an eventual JLA film, similar to Marvel’s approach with the Iron Man, Hulk, and Avengers films.

This may just be the Scott over stating the current situation (he doesn’t name or mention a source for that particular rumour), however, there is a different rumour about casting for Green Lantern. It might feature a Superman cameo, albeit a rather low key one.

The Flash movie is said to be still progressing. Director Charles Rovin has pushed for a Flash film at WB, but he recently told IGN that,

“I was involved at one point with The Flash,” Roven informed us. “And Warner Bros. came to me and said, ‘The work that you’ve been doing hasn’t yet resulted in something that any of us, including the filmmaking team, feel could be greenlit as a movie. We’re trying to accomplish something that takes into account the entire, rich DC character world, and we’d like to pull it back. That doesn’t mean that you aren’t going to be a part of it. We just want to take a different kind of approach. Do you mind if we try that?’”

The emphasis is mine. If Superman does cameo in Green Lantern and if Roven is correct about the “rich DC character world” it could signal that Warner Bros. are seriously thinking about producing films in an integrated universe and that would certainly make a Justice League film more probable. And this all feeds into DC Entertainment which was created around DC Comics just so that it could leverage this type of movie deals. Nevertheless, I suspect that we’ll have to wait to see how successful Green Lantern will be before DCE’s strategy for future films is revealed.

[Via MTV's Splashpage]

Jim Lee on a JLA book?

Take everything that follows with a liberal dose of “I’ll believe it when I see it.” For sometime there have been rumours that Geoff Johns and Jim Lee are going to collaborate on a Justice League story or title. As usual these rumours come from Rich Johnston at Bleeding Cool. The latest incarnation involves a question asked to Lee at a convention. From Bleeding Cool

Jim Lee was asked by a fan during his panel at the Wizard World Big Apple Comic Con if he would be working on Justice League in the next few months. Lee replied “wouldn’t that be awesome” before saying with a glint that it would be “foolish, foolish” to suggest that a late artist such as himself be given a book with many characters in it, before mentioning that it was very cool now that Hal Jordan and Barry Allen were back… before drifting off and repeating “wouldn’t that be awesome?”

Least we also forget that Lee is now free on his executive obligations at Wildstorm so has time, in a relative sense, to spend on drawing comic books. Unless, that is, he gets hired back as DC’s Publisher (another rumour).

This puts me in mind of another question that was put to Geoff Johns at CBR about his post-Blackest Night work.

[CBR: ] Schluffy wants to know if you’ll be returning to “Action Comics” or any of the other Superman titles after “Secret Origin” is complete?

[Geoff Johns: ]I will not. My stint on Superman ends with “Superman Secret Origin.” The guys have a lot of big plans ahead, but I am going to be focused on the Flash and Green Lantern. Gary Frank and I are moving on to a different project.

So Johns is rumoured to be writing a JLA project with Lee and he’s admitted to another undisclosed future project with Gary Frank. I’d love it if those two things were actually the same project – a JLA companion title in the same vein as Johns’ Action Comics run (a single writer paired with a succession of distinctive, high-profile artists) with Frank and Lee illustrating the first two arcs. Purely fanish pie-in-the-sky, but we can at least dream.

Updated several hours later to add:

CBR have more in depth coverage of the Jim Lee Big Apple Con panel and reproduce Jim’s quote in full:

Lee was asked about rumors that he’d work on a “Justice League of America” comic book within the next year or two. “That’d be awesome,” he answered. “But it’s taken me this long to finish ‘All-Star Batman and Robin,’ so for me to even suggest that I’d work on something else with more than one character on a page would be suicide. It’d be foolish if I said that–but it’d be awesome if that happened! I would love to do it, but I want to get ‘All-Star Batman and Robin’ done first.”

That sounds far less definite than the BC story, but the self-deprecation aside I still think he could do it if his schedule was clear enough.