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JUSTICE
LEAGUE |
| REVIEW |
STORE |
PERSONALITY
TEST |
GALLERY |
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Release Year:
2002 |
| Episodes:
75 (with more in production for season 3) |
| Directed
by:
Bruce Lukic, Butch Lukic, Dan Riba |
| Written
by: Andrew Kreisberg, Bruce Timm, Dwayne
McDuffie, Ernie Altbacker, Joseph Kuhr, Keith Damron, Kevin
Hopps, Len Uhley, Paul Dini, Rich Fogel, Stan Berkowitz |
| Story
by: Dwayne McDuffie, Ernie
Altbacker, John Semper Jr., Len Uhley |
| Music
by: Kristopher Carter, Lolita
Ritmanis, Michael McCuistion |
| Distributed by:
Cartoon Network, Warner Bros. |
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| Parental
Warning: Combat
violence and a young-adult sense of
humor. Fine for kids over 7 years old. |
| Rating: Super |
Review
by: Mark
Capitelli |
Review
Date: 11/2/03 |
| Super...what
an appropriate rating! Yes the Justice League are
back in a new more modern format. The animation
innovators at Warner Brothers Animation Studios have
taken a cue from the success of their Superman and
Batman cartoons and brought the whole Justice League to
the small screen. |
| The
series focuses on Superman, Wonder Woman, Batman, Green
Lantern, The Flash, Hawkgirl, and The Martian Manhunter.
Although they don't always appear in every episode
together, each hero gets particular episodes that
spotlights his or her abilities and character
development. This tactic enabled the creators to
avoid some of the pitfalls that older incarnations of
the Justice League suffered from. Characters don't
get lost in the shuffle this way. Each character
gets the attention he or she deserves this way. It
is a good system that keeps the show fresh and the
characters interesting.
The
first season suffered some growing pains. For
instance, Superman was too weak, Wonder Woman was too
naive, etc. This season has already made up for
those shortcomings and more. The stories are more
daring, the villains are more sinister, and even the
humor is more adult. All in all, Justice League
has grown into a great example of modern American
animation.
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See Show Schedule
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