2001 TV News Archives

Justice League

November 15, 2001: Comic Genius on the "Justice League"

"'Justice League' is a 'Superfriends' for the next generation of cartoon lovers." states an article by Adam Rogers written as a Newsweek Web Exclusive article. Here's an excerpt from the article...

My normal friends - the ones who don't collect comic books or know "Star Trek" episodes by their titles - watched the World Trade Center collapse with a sense of never having seen anything like that before.

WE GEEKS, THOUGH, had. I have seen cities under attack and the postapocalyptic aftermath in so many comics, sci-fi novels and movies that when I saw the World Trade Center site in real life I had a crushing sense of "well, yeah." It was the ending that wasn't right, the climactic final reel. Superman did not come to stop the second plane. The Fantastic Four did not fly up in their Fantasticar. Secret agent Nick Fury did not infiltrate the hijackers months earlier and stop the plan before it started. Stupid as that sounds, even to me, in my mind's theater that is how these things are supposed to go. That's why I'm really glad there are more superheroes on television this season. There's "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," of course, but I'm going even more deeply geeky on you. I'm talking about "The Tick" on Fox. I'm talking about the brilliant, impressionistic "Samurai Jack" on Cartoon Network, from Genndy Tartakovsky, who created "Dexter's Laboratory." And best of all, starting on Cartoon Network Nov. 17: "Justice League." You know who the Justice League is because you remember "Superfriends." Basically, it's the big guns of the DC Comics superhero universe: Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Flash, Green Lantern, Hawkgirl and the Martian Manhunter. They meet on a satellite called the Watchtower, orbiting the Earth. When there's a problem no one else can solve - like in the first episodes, when evil, shape-shifting White Martians try to cause an unending night - the League comes to the rescue.

Read the complete interview/article at the Comic Genius website.



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