Justice League Unlimited

Justice League Unlimited is an American animated television series, produced by Warner Bros. Animation. The series featured a wide array of superheroes from the DC Comics Universe, and was specifically based on the Justice League. The series is a direct sequel to the previous Justice League animated series. It was also the final series set in the long-running DC Animated Universe, which started with Batman: The Animated Series in 1992.

The series spans three seasons consisting of 13 episodes each. The first two seasons have been re-packaged for DVD sale as Season One, and the last TV season, the third, was renamed Season Two.

JLU debuted on July 31, 2004 on Cartoon Network's Toonami block and ended with the episode aired on May 13, 2006.

Plot
Picking up soon after Justice League ended, it features a greatly expanded League, in which the characters from the original series—now referred to as "founding members"—are joined by a large number of other superheroes from the DC Universe. A number of these were heroes who had made guest appearances in Justice League, Batman: The Animated Series, and Superman: The Animated Series, but many heroes and other characters made their first animated appearances in this series. The general format of each episode is to have a small team assemble to deal with a particular situation, with a focus on both action and character interaction.

Most episodes tell a self-contained story, but the series also features extended story arcs, the first involving the building conflict between the League and a secret government agency known as Project Cadmus. This plot line builds upon events that occurred during the second season of Justice League (which in turn built upon events in Batman: The Animated Series, Superman: The Animated Series, Batman Beyond, Static Shock, and The Zeta Project), and has affected the plotlines of most of its episodes. It was resolved in a four-part story at the end of the second season of Justice League Unlimited. The third and final season story arc focuses on the new Secret Society (which is based on the Legion of Doom) as the main villains, a loose-knit organization formed to combat the increased superhero coordination of the first season.



Characters
Towards the end of the series, certain characters became off-limits to the show. Characters associated with Batman and those who appeared in Batman: The Animated Series (aside from Batman himself) were restricted due to the unrelated animated series The Batman to avoid continuity confusion. However, in the episode "Grudge Match", a silhouette of Nightwing can be seen in one shot crouching amongst the stone gargoyles. Aquaman and related characters were unavailable due to the development of a pilot for a live-action series featuring the character as a young man (similar to Smallville), which was not picked up. Characters from DC's "mature readers" Vertigo imprint were also not allowed. No characters from the Teen Titans animated series appeared in JLU, nor vice versa, though Speedy appeared in an episode referencing The Seven Soldiers of Victory after Teen Titans was canceled.

To compensate for this, the producers used previously overlooked DC Comics characters to focus on in the stories. These include characters like Deadman, Warlord, and an unnamed modern equivalent of The Seven Soldiers of Victory. Also, reflecting the previous series, Superman: The Animated Series'  focus on Jack Kirby's modern DC characters, Justice League Unlimited similarly focused on the DC/Charlton Comics characters created by Steve Ditko.



Episodes
Justice League Unlimited is based on the Justice League superhero team created by DC Comics and consists of 39 episodes spanning three seasons. Justice League Unlimited is a direct sequel to the previous Justice League animated series. The series premiered on July 31, 2004 on Toonami and ended with the episode aired May 13, 2006.

All episodes of Justice League Unlimited have been released on DVD and Blu-Ray by Warner Home Video. Warner Home Video also released a DVD box set titled: Justice League The Complete Animated Series. It contained all 91 episodes of Justice League and Justice League Unlimited on a 15 disc set with the 15th disc containing a bonus documentary.

List of Justice League Unlimited Episodes