This weeks WTF moment: Conan, the talk-show host not the barbarian, has a brief guest appearance in Young Justice thanks to Bruce Timm. A little while ago O’Brien and Timm sat down to design a new hero based on Conan called the Flaming-C which included all the left-field suggestions you’d expect from a comedian of O’Brien’s ilk. Unknown to O’Brien the WB Animation folks traced the Flaming-C into a scene from the end of “Fireworks” (the second Young Justice episode).
Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths is an original DC Universe direct-to-DVD animated film. Many comics fan will recognise the basic premise from Grant Morrisons’s acclaimed JLA: Earth-Two graphic-novel, but this movie is an original story. It has its roots in the transition between the second and third seasons of the Justice League cartoon when it rebranded as Justice League Unlimited. Dwayne McDuffie was commissioned to write a movie that explained the differences between the two set-ups, but it wasn’t made. Fast-forward a few years and WB Animation have dusted down that script, reworked it to stand on its own, and released it as Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths.
This clip from the movie of the JLA assembling their Watchtower/Satellite headquarters makes the connection pretty obvious – you can almost imagine the voices of the other original artists.
Newsarama hosted premier screens of the films on the East and West Coast. There was a live panel at the New York screening that was attended by James Woods (Owlman), writer Dwayne McDuffie, and voice director Andrea Romano. The West Coast premier was also have a panel hosted by Newsarama. It had larger roster including the executive producer Bruce Timm, the producers, and several actors.
At the East Cost panel James Wood’s described the thinking process of his Owlman character:
I was reading about an idiot savant chess player, and he went into real mental illness because he was so far ahead of his competitors that he got bored and was waiting to see them realize there was no way out.
McDuffie also expanded on the conversion from JLU to a standalone movie:
I was working on Justice League, and we were about to start Justice League Unlimited. The plan was to do a version of this story as a bridge from how they went from 6 characters to 60. There wasn’t the staff [at WB Animation] to do the design for both of these at once though.
Bruce Timm called me and asked if I’d be willing to rewrite it to be a bit more like the comics and less like the [cartoon] series. We switched Green Lanterns, we switched out all of the guest Justice Leaguers. In the TV series, they were all characters who had met Batman in other series. The only one who was in both versions was Aquaman, who was going to be in there, cause I think Aquaman’s cool.
Wood’s then noted that he was the villain in the spoof Aquaman movie featured in the Entourage.
In a studio provided interviewExecutive Producer Bruce Timm was asked about the biggest challenge in translating a Justice League Unlimited script into a stand-alone movie.
The biggest challenge, and this is kind of esoteric, was that we had to find the line between the original source material and making it feel like a stand-alone movie so anyone that didn’t watch JLU could follow it. We really didn’t have to tweak the script too much – I think about 95 percent remains untouched. In terms of visual styling, we also wanted it to stand on its own and not necessarily as a continuation of the old show. We have this brilliant character designer – Phil Bourassa – who draws in a style similar to my own in terms of simplicity, but slightly different. So it doesn’t look 180 degrees away from the old show, but it definitely feels unique.
And, MTV’s Splash Page picked up on comments Dwayne McDuffie made about already having written two other animated movies.
“I’ve written two more [animated] movies,” said McDuffie. “I can’t say what they are, although I’m dying to say what they are. They’re really cool. [Warner Brothers Animation] kind of likes to announce just the next [animated film] to keep focused, but I think people are going to be pretty excited.”
The DVD and Blu-Ray copies of Crisis on Two Earths go on sale on Tuesday. I’ve got my blue ray copy on pre-order from Amazon, but it looks like there are a lot of copies out there already. I’ve got a saved search with Google that alerts me to new articles or webpages mentioning the Justice League and for the last week or so it has been inundated with links to pirate sites offering the film for download. I won’t download it, but I certainly won’t claim to hold the moral high ground. Nevertheless, I’ve been surprised by just how many times it’s been downloaded. A quick check of a couple of torrent sites shows 9000+ seeds/leechers for the most popular Crisis on Two Earths rip, which is three times more than for Smallville: Absolute Justice and comparable with the aggregate numbers for many motion pictures. Hopefully this will translate into enough sales to warrant subsequent Justice League movies.
The name of the next DC direct-to-DVD animated feature is Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths. It appeared on the preview box artwork for their current release, Superman/Batman: Public Enemies, but we knew nothing beyond it and that it was written by Dwayne McDuffie. When that news broke I conjectured that, based on the name, it were probably going adapt the first Silver Age JLA/JSA story, however, it now looks like they’re going for a more up to date story.
Ain’t Cool News has a synopsis of the story and a couple of preview images:
In Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths, a “good” Lex Luthor arrives from an alternate universe to recruit the Justice League to help save his Earth from the Crime Syndicate, a gang of villainous characters with virtually identical super powers to the Justice League. What ensues is the ultimate battle of good versus evil in a war that threatens both planets and, through a diabolical plan launched by Owlman, puts the balance of all existence in peril.
The World’s Finest website have confirmed the details with their tame WB insider. The announced cast are:
All-star voice cast led by Mark Harmon (NCIS) as Superman, James Woods (Ghosts of Mississippi) as Owlman, Chris Noth (Sex and the City, Law & Order) as Lex Luthor, William Baldwin (Dirty Sexy Money) as Batman, Gina Torres (Serenity, Firefly) as Super Woman and Bruce Davison (X-Men) as the President.
First off, this looks like it’s based on Grant Morrison’s JLA: Earth-Two which is itself based on an older Silver Age story. Specifically the flight by the “good” Luthor and the appearance of Owlman draws comparison’s with the JLA:Earth-Two graphic novel. The leaked group shot is using the current DC character models for Hal Jordan and the Martian Manhunter.
Bruce Timm is the executive producer. The Crime Syndicate is one of those stories they never got to on the animated Justice League cartoon. The closest they had got on air was the Justice Lords, a parallel-Earth Justice League that was more fascist/authoritarian than criminally evil. Yet, there were plans for a Crime Syndicate story. From an older Bruce Timm interview (also on Ain’t It Cool):
superhero: It’s been a few years now since technically the company with the original Bruce Timm animated DC Universe ended. Do you ever have that fear or have any anxiety that fans may look down on any new product not associated with the continuity?
BT: There’s always going to be that. I mean there are people, you go on any message board and some of them are OK with it and moving on and some of them are still bemoaning the fact that we aren’t doing more on that same universe. But you know it was time to move on and that’s the bottom line. It’s not to say we’ll never go back there because actually we do have a Justice League script which a lot of people know about which we actually wrote right at the beginning of the JLU era of “Justice League” which was supposed to transition from JL into JLU and it was a big sprawling adventure with JL vs. the Crime Syndicate. It’s a really terrific script that Ray[Dwayne?] McDuffy wrote and for a variety of reasons it just didn’t get made. But that comes up in conversation all the time, “hey when are we going to do Worlds Collide, when are we going to do Worlds Collide?” So I’m hoping we’ll actually get to do that one of these days.
That makes it sound like this JLA feature is a version of the Worlds Collide feature that they’d been working on for JL/JLU.
superhero: It’s been a few years now since technically the company with the original Bruce Timm animated DC Universe ended. Do you ever have that fear or have any anxiety that fans may look down on any new product not associated with the continuity?
BT: There’s always going to be that. I mean there are people, you go on any message board and some of them are OK with it and moving on and some of them are still bemoaning the fact that we aren’t doing more on that same universe. But you know it was time to move on and that’s the bottom line. It’s not to say we’ll never go back there because actually we do have a Justice League script which a lot of people know about which we actually wrote right at the beginning of the JLU era of “Justice League” which was supposed to transition from JL into JLU and it was a big sprawling adventure with JL vs. the Crime Syndicate. It’s a really terrific script that Ray McDuffy wrote and for a variety of reasons it just didn’t get made. But that comes up in conversation all the time, “hey when are we going to do Worlds Collide, when are we going to do Worlds Collide?” So I’m hoping we’ll actually get to do that one of these days.
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