Justice League: The New Frontier Special Edition (2008)
Facts
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Justice League: The New Frontier Special Edition [Blu-ray]
DVD Price: You save 40%! As of Jul 25 11:34 EDT (details)
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| Directed by | Dave Bullock |
| Cast | Phil Morris, Neil Patrick Harris, Lucy Lawless, Miguel Ferrer and David Boreanaz |
| Theatrical Release | February 26, 2008 |
| DVD Release | February 26, 2008 |
| Running Time | 75 minutes |
| Disc Type | |
| MPAA Rating | PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) |
| UPC Code | 085391171645 |
| Buy this item | $17.95 at Amazon.com As of Jul 25 11:34 EDT (details) 1 Blu-ray, Warner Home Video, Usually ships in 24 hours, Animated, Closed-captioned, Color, Special Edition, Widescreen Languages: English (Original Language), Portuguese (Original Language) Or 32 new from $16.00, 17 used from $12.46, 1 collectible from $29.99 |
About Justice League: The New Frontier Special Edition
Inspired by the best-selling graphic novel by Darwyn Cooke and produced by the multiple Emmy® award winning animation legend, Bruce Timm, The New Frontier is the epic tale of the founding of the Justice League. Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman are all here of course, and so are Green Lantern, Martian Manhunter and Flash - whose incredible origins will be told for the very first time. Strangers at first, these very different heroes must overcome fear and suspicion to forge an alliance against a monster so formidable, even the mighty Superman can not stop it. If they fail, our entire planet will be "cleansed" of humanity.
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Jeremy Sisto Sucks bat balls |
| Justice For All |
Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Martian Manhunter, The Flash (Barry Allen), and The Green Lantern (Hal Jordan) join forces, for the first time, in a classic JL movie. The Classic characters, in a new fresh movie, based in the old WWII era. July 18, 2008
| A Great Story but Look Gets Old |
By the late 80s and early 90s, Hollywood began to truly recognize the potential worth of bringing comic characters to the big screen beginning with its take on Batman. Though the Superman franchise was run into the ground (1987), Batman did pretty well, surviving a change in its lead actor (1995), even if the third time (1997) wasn't a charm. Before audiences could even mourn the decline of the Batman and Superman franchises, along came X-Men (2000), closely followed by Spiderman (2002). Thanks to the care taken to fully develop its characters, the wonderfully crafted story lines, and the amazing CGI, it was as if Hollywood finally got it. And if it hadn't been for the success of these two previous franchises, there would have been no Fantastic Four, no restart of the Superman franchise, no Hulk movies, and especially no Batman movies by Chris Nolan.
In the wake of Polar Express, the Golum of Peter Jackson's movies, Beowulf, and the last two Hulk pictures, it's time for Hollywood to take the same caring approach to an all-CGI film when transferring comic heroes from page to screen. Why? The reason is simple: the cartoon form of yesterday looks tired and old. Perhaps this reviewer has been spoiled by Pixar's beautifully rendered movies; perhaps it's also anime films such as Appleseed: Ex Machina that have me, as a viewer, yearning for something more spectacular for the superheroes I grew up with.
Justice League: The New Frontier was a masterstroke of storytelling. Set in the 1950s, the story is taken from Darwyn Cooke's 2004 DC miniseries. Though the film could have been even longer to incorporate more from the original storyline, all the necessary elements are present to show how these super beings came together to form the Justice League. And its message of coming together to work towards a common goal, regardless of differences, resonates throughout the picture.
The artwork of the original series in print echoed the Silver Age of comics. If only that same motif could have transferred more successfully to the film adaptation. Admittedly, especially when it comes to storytelling about beings with super powers, the story can be told much easier (and cheaper) in cartoon form. But now it's time to take that medium to a whole other level. It's time to give it some super powers of its own. July 14, 2008
| Absolute Trash |
| Nice To See Some Of The Early Characters Of The DC Universe But The Movie Was Not Worth It |
So I say to the fans if you became one from the year 2000- than you would most likely enjoy this dvd for the most part but if you're a fan from before 2000 pass this one up you won't be missing much July 12, 2008
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