Justice League

Justice League(2017)

PG-13
11/15/2017 (US)Action, Adventure, Science Fiction2h 0m
6.1

"You can't save the world alone."

Overview

Fuelled by his restored faith in humanity and inspired by Superman's selfless act, Bruce Wayne and Diana Prince assemble a team of metahumans consisting of Barry Allen, Arthur Curry and Victor Stone to face the catastrophic threat of Steppenwolf and the Parademons who are on the hunt for three Mother Boxes on Earth.

Gardner Fox

Characters

Jack Kirby

Characters

Chris Terrio

Screenplay

Bill Finger

Characters

Bob Kane

Characters

Jerry Siegel

Characters

Joe Shuster

Characters

Zack Snyder

Story

Chris Terrio

Story

Zack Snyder

Director

Joss Whedon

Screenplay

Where to Watch

Stream

HBO Max
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Amazon Video
Apple TV
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Plex

Buy

Amazon Video
Apple TV
Google Play Movies
YouTube
Fandango At Home

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Media

4K Trailer

4K Trailer

Trailer

Official Heroes Trailer

Official Heroes Trailer

Trailer

Comic-Con Sneak Peek

Comic-Con Sneak Peek

Trailer

Official Trailer 1

Official Trailer 1

Trailer

Special Comic-Con Footage

Special Comic-Con Footage

Trailer

Batman Recruits the Flash

Batman Recruits the Flash

Clip

DC Super Scenes: Superman vs The Justice League

DC Super Scenes: Superman vs The Justice League

Clip

DC Super Scenes: Save One Person

DC Super Scenes: Save One Person

Clip

Full Movie Preview

Full Movie Preview

Clip

Mind/Event

Mind/Event

Teaser

The Team

The Team

Teaser

Friends

Friends

Teaser

Ezra & Ray

Ezra & Ray

Featurette

Casting The Flash

Casting The Flash

Featurette

Social

G
A review by garethmb

Written on November 15, 2017

The long anticipated “Justice League” has finally arrived finally combining the biggest stars of the DC universe into one film. The proposed film has faced many obstacles on the way to the big screen ranging from script issues, massive reshoots and a change of Director for said reshoots due to a family tragedy that Director Zack Snyder suffered.

The film follows Batman (Ben Affleck) and Wonder Woman (Gal Godot), as they look to assemble a team of other gifted individuals to help fight off a pending invasion.

The death of Superman has left a void on the Earth, and this has paved the way for an ancient evil to return as he attempts to conquer the planet after he collects the three needed artifacts that his plan requires.

In a race against time, Batman and Wonder Woman recruit Aquaman (Jason Momoa), The Flash (Ezra Miller), and Cyborg (Ray Fisher), to battle to save the planet. Naturally they battle amongst themselves as well as their massing enemies but ultimately decide on a dangerous plan that can tip the odds in their favor and save the day.

The action in the film is good but it often plays out like a video game. With so many blatantly obvious CGI backgrounds, the movie looked like a video game. There were numerous scenes that looked like they were lifted from Injustice and Injustice 2 that I mused to myself that someone must have used their Power Up for the shot.

Affleck and Gadot are good and work well with one another, but there are some serious casting issues with the film. The biggest for me was Ezra Miller as The Flash. I did not like his effeminate, nerdy, socially awkward, and neurotic and at times cowardly take on the character. This is not the Barry Allen I grew up reading in comics or the one that has been portrayed twice in a much better fashion on television. His comic relief status grew old fast and his character really offered little to the film.

It has been well-documented that Joss Whedon not only handled the rewrites for the film but took over directing duties to complete the film. You can see elements of his humor scattered throughout and the film does move along at a steady pace without dragging.

The biggest issue is that so many of the characters are just stiff and one-dimensional. They really are not overly interesting so it is hard to really connect with them and the tasks they are facing. Unlike Marvel who have excelled with dysfunctional groups who fight amongst themselves as well as the forces of evil, this group seems to be going through the paces rather than being fully engaged with the task at hand and each other.

In the end “Justice League” is better than I expected, and the two bonus scenes in the credits show some interesting potential down the road. As it is, it is flawed entertainment that requires audiences to overlook a lot of issues.

3 stars out of 5