Justice League vs. the Fatal Five 2019

When the future collides with the past, there's no time to waste.

6.8 / 10   321 vote(s)
PG-13
Animation Action Science Fiction

The Justice League faces a powerful new threat — the Fatal Five! Superman, Batman and Wonder Woman seek answers as the time-traveling trio of Mano, Persuader and Tharok terrorize Metropolis in search of budding Green Lantern, Jessica Cruz. With her unwilling help, they aim to free remaining Fatal Five members Emerald Empress and Validus to carry out their sinister plan. But the Justice League has also discovered an ally from another time in the peculiar Star Boy — brimming with volatile power, could he be the key to thwarting the Fatal Five? An epic battle against ultimate evil awaits!

Release Date 2019-03-29
Runtime 1h 17m
Directors Sam Liu, Wes Gleason
Producers Michael Uslan, Benjamin Melniker, Alan Burnett, Bruce Timm, Sam Liu, Sam Register, James Krieg, Amy McKenna, Matthew Mahoney
Writers Alan Burnett, James Krieg, Jim Shooter, Eric Carrasco, Eric Carrasco

I appreciate some of DC's smaller characters getting decent screentime in these sorts of things, but as with most of the animated offerings Warner Bros. serves up in this franchise, I didn't find it had any hook.

Final rating:★★ - Had some things that appeal to me, but a poor finished product.

Gimly

I wasn't quite sure what it was that bugged me about this movie at first. Then I realized that I didn't care. It wasn't so much a dislike of it as I simply didn't care. I didn't care about the characters. I didn't care about the plot. I didn't care about the stakes. I just didn't care.

This probably has to do with there being little to no characterization. The new characters (Jessica Cruz, Starboy, Miss Martian, etc.) are given personality quirks instead of actual characters. Sometimes they get downright annoying. Who are these people? How did Jessica Cruz get her GL ring? Who is Mr. Terrific? Where did Miss Martian come from? All these questions and more...will not be answered and you just have to accept that they appeared out of nowhere.

The plot doesn't get much better. The motivation for the villains? Seems to be little more than twirling their mustaches. The stakes? Unconvincing at best.

All around, this had the potential to introduce new characters in interesting was, but instead trips over it's own feet coming out the door with sloppy, shallow writing.

Sheldon Nylander