Pros: Action and a very fun premise
Cons: Lack of
character development
The Bottom Line:
Two
worlds collide
Superheroes fight themselves
Plenty of action
Average Super Heroes
I know I would enjoy superheroes more if I took the time to read the comic books. It’s just a case of too many books, not enough time. But when I heard of the idea behind Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths, I was definitely intrigued. So I jumped into the movie without the benefit of the TV show or knowing who all the members of the Justice League are. Maybe that was part of the problem, but I found it just average.
It’s a typical day for the Justice League as they are
working on their new base of operations.
That is until Lex Luthor (voiced by Chris Noth) shows up. He claims to be from a parallel Earth, an
Earth that is being overrun by the evil twins of the Justice League.
While Batman (William Baldwin) is hesitant to leave their
Earth to go save another one, Superman (Mark Harmon), Wonder Woman (Vanessa
Marshall), Green Lantern (Nolan North), Flash (Josh Keaton), and J'onn J'onzz
(Jonathan Adams) quickly go with Lex.
But fighting a league of villains like their own may prove to be too
much. Can they defeat…themselves?
As I say, the idea is intriguing, but it doesn’t really get
developed. Then again, maybe I’m asking
too much out of a 75 minute movie. It
was produced around the same time as the Justice League TV show, and maybe that
would have helped me some since part of my concern with the movie was the
characters. I felt like they were pretty
much all flat. Heck, the one guy I’d
never heard of before isn’t someone I still really know. And if it weren’t for the Green Lantern movie
last summer, I’d still be lost on who he is.
And we don’t really learn anything about the bad guys other than that
they’re bad.
The story is really just an excuse for a bunch of super hero
sized fights. There are a couple of
small twists to the story, but for the most part its straight forward. Nothing wrong with that, but it could have
been more entertaining.
The voice work was fine.
The big names (among those not already listed we've got Gina Torres and
James Woods) and the small names worked well together. Again, there was nothing that made it stand
out, although any time emotion was called for, the cast did deliver.
The animation was hand drawn but done for TV. It tells the story, but it was produced fast
with little to no attempts to be more artistic.
It’s not that I hated the movie; I was entertained while
watching it. But when it was over, I was
left asking if that was it. I guess I
was just expecting something more epic.
They certainly could have gone there from the premise. But to do that, it would have had to be
longer.
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