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Justice (DC Comics)

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Justice (DC Comics) (Comic Book)
And this isn't even the entire cast.

Justice is a 12-issue limited series published by DC Comics from 2005-2007, created by Jim Krueger, Alex Ross, and Doug Braithwaite.

It's a departure from normal continuity, but not quite an Elseworlds story. It takes the concepts of the DC Comics characters as they were in the Silver and Bronze Ages and writes a new story using them.

The plot concerns the villains reforming and using their abilities to help mankind. Naturally, it's not all as it seems, as the entire plot to "help" humanity requires the use of Brainiac's Mind Control worms. It's up to the assorted superhero teams (Justice League, Doom Patrol, Teen Titans, Metal Men) to save the day.

Notable for being very idealistic on the sliding scale, while not veering into Lighter and Softer or Camp territory. It's almost a higher-quality Superfriends.

Not to be confused with The New Universe comic of the same name. Or the French electronic band. Or the DC game/comic series Injustice.


Justice provides examples of:

  • Adaptation Expansion: In the original Superfriends cartoon, the Legion of Doom had 13 members; in addition to the original members, this comic adds Poison Ivy, Metallo, Parasite, Black Adam, and Clayface to the roster.
  • Adaptational Superpower Change: Aquaman has regenerative properties akin to a starfish, with his Healing Factor being strong enough to come back from vivisection and having parts of his brain being cut out.
  • Alas, Poor Yorick: In Justice #12, Superman does this with Brainiac's head. Subverted because he isn't sorry at all, and he angrily crushes the sadistic villain's metal head.
  • And I Must Scream: In the beginning, Hal Jordan is shot by Sinestro into nowhere. Since his ring is unable to determine where Hal is and how he can get back, Hal transfers himself into the ring to survive — a process that can only be undone from outside. To make things worse, Hal becomes absorbed by the world and memories he sees inside the ring.
  • Anti-Interference Lock Up: The bad guys have to get very creative in locking away Green Lantern because his ring is the only effective countermeasure against Brainiac's mind-control bugs. Since they can't just kill him (because then his ring would just pass on to the next GL candidate), they instead teleport him outside the confines of the known universe — so far that even his ring wouldn't have the energy to bring him back or even to contact other Green Lanterns.
  • Astral Finale: The final confrontation between the Justice League and the last and most dangerous member of the Legion of Doom, Brainiac, happens out of the Earth's atmosphere.
  • Author Appeal: If you couldn't tell by the character roster, Alex Ross is a really big fan of Superfriends.
  • Badass Arm-Fold: Batgirl does this in issue 8.
  • Badass Longcoat: The Riddler wears one of these instead of his usual suits.
  • Bait-and-Switch:
    • A very clever tactic on the Justice League's part; when several of the heroes attack the villains while wearing Powered Armor composed from the shape-shifting Metal Men, Parasite notices one Flying Brick wearing armor made from Lead featuring Superman's distinctive S-shield and tries to take him down with Kryptonite. Turns out he was really attacking Captain Marvel, who was impersonating Superman to draw out any Kryptonite users. Superman himself was wearing Gold.
    • Oliver Queen pulls this on a controlled Supergirl, telling Dinah he's shooting a Kryptonite arrow at her. Supergirl naturally dodges it and snarks that Oliver should have remembered her superhearing. Oliver shoots back just because he said it was a Kryptonite arrow didn't mean it was. Cue John Stewart recovering his Green Lantern ring from the arrow.
  • Batman Can Breathe in Space: Played with, in that Captain Marvel is able to talk in space because, well, magic, while Superman cannot talk. Supes manages to communicate without speaking anyway.
  • Batman Gambit: So much of the Justice League's final plan to stop the villains is composed of this. Though a crucial portion of it requires not Flaw Exploitation but Virtue Exploitation, as they counted on John Stewart to know exactly what he had to do as soon as he got the ring, without being told. See Exactly What I Aimed At and Identity Impersonator below for more.
  • Beauty Is Never Tarnished: While Wonder Woman is horrifically disfigured into a charred unrecognizable form, by the very end of the story, she's ultimately restored to her original beauty.
  • Big Bad: While the story features many villains, Brainiac is the mastermind behind the entire conflict.
  • Big Damn Heroes: Captain Marvel's rescue of Superman is almost a Trope Codifier.
  • Blessed with Suck: While being forced to run, the Flash laments how he always used to dream of traveling to far away places, which he can now reach in no time, and wishes to slow down just to have Iris in his arms right now.
  • Body Horror:
    • Giganta's growth powers are rendered rather disturbingly. Instead of simply increasing her size like she normally does, her body gruesomely twists and contorts itself in the most horrific and painful-looking manner imaginable.
    • Clayface sports a disturbingly human-looking face in the middle of his blobbish form.
    • The result of Cheetah's poisoning of Wonder Woman by the end. Diana is reduced to a shriveled husk of a person, though she thankfully returns to normal by the story's end.
    • Not quite shown, but Zatanna's reaction to finding Aquaman with most of his encephalitic cavity exposed and part of his brain missing speaks volumes. Turns out the merman is still alive even after that.
    • Martian Manhunter's immolated form in his Grodd-induced nightmare makes for a very disturbing sight.
  • Brainwashed and Crazy:
    • At certain points in the story, Batman, Captain Marvel, and the entire Teen Titans become mind-controlled henchmen, and even poor Alfred gets in on the action.
    • In the final act, most of the second generation of heroes — Supergirl, Batgirl, Robin, Wonder Girl, Aqualad, Captain Marvel Jr., and Mary Marvel — were mind-controlled by Brainiac's worms and forced to fight the older heroes, and it's even implied that some of the villains are only doing as much as they did for Brainiac and Luthor due to being subtly mind-controlled themselves.
  • Call-Forward: Hal recreates his hometown inside the ring, becoming progressively more unconcerned about coming back. But the Phantom Stranger takes his ring away from him, while Hal rants about how he's in charge of this world. The Stranger's dialogue is loaded with Mythology Gaggery, ranging from saying that Hal would become like the very monsters he fights if he allowed him to stay and that he should not try to remake the universe in his own image.
  • Cannot Tell a Lie: The Riddler's habit of leaving clues is a compulsion caused by his abusive father beating him for lying as a kid.
  • Card-Carrying Villain: Black Manta's retort to Aquaman's "The Reason You Suck" Speech? Essentially, "You're right, I'm a bastard and I really don't give a shit."
  • Cardboard Prison: Arkham Asylum, as usual. Lampshaded by the Joker. Captain Marvel expresses incredulity it's been able to hold Doctor Sivana, for very good reasons. For starters, Sivana can walk through walls. Had he been lucid, it's likely he would have been out before breakfast.
  • The Cavalry: Captain Marvel has a great rescue for Superman in one chapter and the Green Lantern Corps lends some very timely assistance at the climax.
  • Chekhov's Gunman: The Joker. He makes a few cameo appearances expressing his outrage over not being part of the Legion of Doom, but never really does anything important... until the Scarecrow is about to make his getaway, at which point he receives a helping of Laser-Guided Karma in the form of the Clown Prince of Crime.
  • Comic-Book Fantasy Casting: Brainiac is modeled after Grant Morrison.
  • Convenient Enemy Base: Aquaman is captured and held underwater by Brainiac. While this might seem an average plot convenience, the villain himself invokes this trope because he wants Aquaman to use his telepathic powers to summon sea creatures and, eventually, the Justice League's help.
  • Crazy-Prepared: The Flash snatches Captain Cold's freeze gun away at super speed, only to find out it's a fake, allowing Captain Cold to whip out his real one.
  • Creepy Monotone: In contrast to the other characters, Brainiac's speech bubbles are almost entirely free of Bold Inflation and exclamation points, fitting his cold, arrogant demeanor.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle: Supergirl vs Poison Ivy. The former is super-strong, invulnerable, and possesses heat vision. The latter, while among the most powerful members of Batman's rogues gallery, isn't quite on the same level as a Kryptonian. As such, the fight ends with Supergirl handily thrashing Ivy.
  • Cut Lex Luthor a Check: The supposed motive for the fake villain reforms. They assert that the superheroes never actually make the world any better, they just maintain the status quo. Such technological marvels as Captain Cold creating oases in the desert and Scarecrow using his medical knowledge to cure the blind would be genuine examples of this trope if they were sincere.
  • Darker and Edgier: While having the reputation of being Lighter and Softer than the current DCU, the straightforward story is still fairly chilling compared to Superfriends (its main inspiration), and some aspects of the story are heavy-duty Nightmare Fuel.
  • Darkest Hour:
    • All the hostages (dozens) and all the victims of the mindcontrol worms (also dozens).
    • Hal Jordan being thrown out to the edge of the universe and trapped inside his own ring.
    • Superman weakened by kryptonite in the presence of superstrong foes.
    • Flash unable to stop his superspeed.
    • Aquaman captured by the enemy.
    • The Atom in the hospital after a gunshot wound, and enemies coming after him there.
  • Deus ex Machina: Green Lantern, sent into the darkness beyond the universe, converts himself into energy and stores himself within an illusion in his ring, but almost immediately realizes everything needs his direct input to do anything. He very nearly goes insane with Cabin Fever... and then a helpful fellow in a fedora drags him out of the illusion, and gives him his lantern and a way home.
  • Downer Beginning: The story begins with a dream about the world exploding from nuclear explosions, with Superman being the only survivor. On their selfish plan to avert that, the villains steal Batman's data on the heroes' identities, putting so many of them out of commission that backup members of the Justice League become needed to save the day.
  • The Dragon: Lex Luthor — in something of a departure from the norm — acts as the second-in-command to Brainiac and the figurehead for his plan... at first.
  • Emotional Regression: Due to going mad from the isolation of being trapped inside his own Green Lantern ring, Hal Jordan eventually mentally regresses back to childhood — since the ring creates virtual environments for him inside itself, this is shown as a child Hal playing in a sandbox. Thankfully, the Phantom Stranger arrives to bring him back to reality, both literally and figuratively.
  • Even Evil Has Standards:
    • Black Manta's mooks, once freed from his mind-control, flat-out refuse to obey his order to kill Aquaman's son.
    • This was the reason Brainiac hit Dr. Sivana with the mind-control worms. Sivana found out about Brainiac's real plan and objected to it, so Brainiac injected him with the worms to keep him from alerting the Justice League.
  • Evil Has a Bad Sense of Humor: When Brainiac has Aquaman Strapped to an Operating Table and is preparing to cut into his brain, the otherwise unemotional android taunts Aquaman with a couple of morbid puns, saying that he's "just trying to get inside your head" and telling Aquaman to "have an open mind".
  • Evil Is Petty: The Joker, as always. When Brainiac doesn't recruit him for his Legion of Doom, not seeing how getting him would be in any way useful, the Joker's response is to escape Arkham Asylum, sneak into the Legion's compound, and blow a significant chunk of it to smithereens in revenge, adding insult to injury during the climactic battle. And kill Scarecrow because he's the one member of the Legion he meets as they wander through the compound's corridors.
  • Exactly What I Aimed At: When the mind-controlled Supergirl is holding several heroes hostage, Green Arrow fires a glowing green arrow at her, which Black Canary says is kryptonite. Supergirl easily sidesteps the shot, then mocks them for telegraphing what they're doing out loud. Arrow retorts, "Superhearing that my arrow was tipped with kryptonite doesn't mean it is." Cue John Stewart retrieving his power ring from the arrow and then freeing the controlled heroes.
  • Falsely Reformed Villain: The entire Legion of Doom pretends to reform in order to discredit the superheroes.
  • Finger Poke of Doom: In Justice #12, Superman does this to Lex Luthor when they manage to catch him.
  • Foreshadowing: Dr. Sivana is first seen in Arkham looking distressed and sweaty. One might assume he had the same nightmare as some of the villains. It's actually due to experimenting with the mind-controlling worms.
  • Garden of Evil: Poison Ivy turns the Batcave into one when she attacks and brainwashes Batman.
  • Genre Throwback: To Challenge of the Superfriends, albeit far, far Darker and Edgier.
  • Glowing Eyes of Doom: When Superman finds Toyman and sees what he has done, his eyes glow as he quietly states "You have no idea what losing your world is like." It's incredibly scary.
  • Go Mad from the Isolation: After Sinestro teleports him to the farthest reaches of space, with his ring unable to determine where he is and how he can get back, Hal Jordan has the ring store his being within itself to keep him alive indefinitely. Inside the ring, Hal occupies himself by creating illusions, first of a city full of people (who disappear when he isn't looking at them) and then of people from his life (who confront him about his failings) — eventually leaving him in a Black Bug Room of sorts as he succumbs to despair. By the time that the Phantom Stranger rescues him, Hal has almost completely lost it, having regressed back to childhood.
  • God Is Good: Queen Hippolyta prays to Aphrodite and Athena for Diana's life. And they grant her request.
  • Gonk: Dr. Sivana was always fairly ugly, but here he looks the hideous love child of Ross Perot and a goat.
  • Guile Hero: The entire League are forced into unconventional ways of defeating the Legion of Doom.
  • Healing Factor: After Aquaman is vivisected by Brainiac, his body is recovered by the heroes and taken to Dr. Caulder of the Doom Patrol, who discovers that Aquaman's cells possess the ability to regenerate from any injury, even growing back the part of his brain that was cut out.
    Caulder: Cut a lizard's tail off, and it will grow back. Aquaman's unique physiology, as it turns out, is not so unique.
  • Healing Vat: In issue #7, the Chief prepares a tank full of liquid for Aquaman that accelerates his Healing Factor.
  • Heroic Bystander: The patrons at The Batcave all give as good as they get against the villains.
  • Hoist by His Own Petard: Dr. Sivana, who invented the mind-control probes, is driven insane by them.
  • Hurl It into the Sun: Captain Marvel throws Superman into the sun to burn out the mind control probes that were infecting him. At the end, the Green Lantern Corps also get rid of every nuclear bomb in the same fashion.
  • Hypocrite:
    • Black Manta attempts to excuse his actions away by claiming that he's taking revenge for the slavery and suffering black people have suffered throughout history, and yet he effectively mind-controls and enslaves his mooks, all of whom are black. Aquaman calls him out on it.
    • Similarly, Lex Luthor believes that humanity is growing too complacent and dependent on the godlike alien Superman. So he sells them out to a different godlike alien, Brainiac.
  • I Cannot Self-Terminate: The Ring won't allow Hal Jordan to commit suicide, even as he loses his mind from isolation.
  • Identity Impersonator: In the final battle sequence, Parasite tries to use Kryptonite against the superhero wearing a metal suit with a giant S symbol on it. Turns out the superhero inside is Captain Marvel.
  • Imposter Forgot One Detail: Clayface assumes Dinah Lance is a natural blonde when he takes her form, unaware that she actually wears a wig when she's Black Canary. Oliver does notice, but thinks Dinah was being kinky and so puts earplugs in. It ends up protecting him from the real Dinah's Canary Cry.
  • Insult Backfire: Although the intent isn't quite to insult, in issue #7, the Chief responds to Martian Manhunter's theory about the intent of Brainiac's experiments by telling him that he's "thinking too much like an Earthman". J'onn thanks the Chief for the compliment.
  • Jack Bauer Interrogation Technique: Batman's interrogation of Captain Cold ends up taking a turn for the violent. What's more, because he's wearing Wonder Woman's Lasso of Truth, he has to be serious about following through with his threats in order to make them.
  • Joker Immunity: Subverted with the Scarecrow, who gets killed by the Joker just as he's about to make his escape.
  • Just a Machine: In issue #8, Aquaman tells everyone assembled at the Fortress of Solitude that Brainiac is "a machine. Only a machine." Strange, considering that the group includes the Metal Men and his own teammate Red Tornado, all well-known sapient robots, and that Brainiac is clearly no less of a person than them.
  • Kryptonite Ring: The mind-controlled Batman attempts to use his on Superman.
  • Last-Second Chance: Wonder Woman tries to reach out to Cheetah several times, but when they fight in issue 12, Diana makes it very clear that she's run out of patience and Cheetah has zero shots at redemption left.
  • Legion of Doom: Deconstructed. The Legion's leaders have to resort to mind control to get its members to work together. Otherwise, they're just too selfish and/or insane to stay focused on a single unified goal and would inevitably turn on one another or pursue their own personal vendettas.
  • Lobotomy: Brainiac cuts Aquaman's brain out to replicate his ability to communicate with animals. Don't worry, he gets better.
    "How is it you Earthmen put it? Oh, yes... I'm just trying to get inside your head."
  • Maniac Monkeys: Gorilla Grodd is just as evil as ever.
  • Metaphorically True: When the Riddler and his goons break into a building owned by Wayne Enterprises, they notice a security camera picking up Bruce Wayne's heat signature.
    Riddler: Good evening, Mr. Wayne.
    Batman: No... Not Wayne. Not even close.
  • Mind-Control Device: Brainiac's microscopic worms infect several of the heroes over the course of the story. Turns out Luthor stole them from Sivana. The worms are used on the villains as well, not because they're incapable of following through with the plan, but rather, so that the manipulation focuses them in a single line instead of wreaking havoc like they always do.
  • Mind Rape: Gorilla Grodd is able to make Martian Manhunter think that he's on fire through psychic manipulation, all the while when J'onn is actually at the bottom of the ocean.
  • More than Mind Control: The Scarecrow himself states that the parasites never forced him to do anything he would not have done anyways.
  • Ms. Fanservice: Poison Ivy fulfills fanservice duty as usual, but it’s exaggerated here because she's completely naked except for a few strategically placed leaves and vines.
  • Naked on Revival: Wonder Woman dies at the end, but is resurrected when Hippolyta prays for the gods to bring her back to life. Diana is noticeably nude when she's reborn in a new body.
  • Necessary Fail: At the very end, Batman reflects that he and his fellow Leaguers became heroes because of tragedies which forced them to rebuild themselves. Sure, his parents' deaths still hurt, but the existence of Batman has prevented many children from becoming orphans.
    Batman: "What if, this time, rebuilding really means moving forwards, beyond what was before? I wish my parents had never been killed, Alfred. But there would be no Batman without it. I'm sure Superman wishes his world, and his people, were still alive. Manhunter has to feel the same about Mars. But how many times have these two men saved this world? Aquaman lost both his parents, yet still forges a new family. Wonder Woman's sisters were freed from slavery. Yet look at Paradise Island. Hal Jordan got his power from a terrible accident. As did Barry. We have all been changed by our tragedies, no matter how much we have tried, and should try, to avert them. No matter what cures we seek, or whom we seek them from. Perhaps there exists a possible benefit when hardship is also accepted as a part of human life."
  • Nice Job Fixing It, Villain!: By the end of the story, most of the actions of the Legion of Doom that were meant to falsely create the impression of a better world for their imminent takeover end up genuinely creating a better world for all by the end of the story.
  • Nightmare Fetishist: The Joker complains that he wants to see the nightmares the villains were suffering from at the beginning.
  • Noodle Implements: Oliver seems to hint that he and Black Canary get a little kinky sometimes.
  • No-Sell: Neither Wonder Woman nor Supergirl care for Poison Ivy's tactics. The former is super-strong, the second is super-strong, poison-resistant, and has heat vision.
  • "Not So Different" Remark:
    • Batman has an epiphany that Superman's methods are somewhat compatible with his "fight evil through fear" philosophy. The crime rate in Metropolis dropped dramatically ever since Superman revealed his powers, most importantly X-Ray Vision and Super-Hearing, in an interview. Batman concludes that this news has left the criminals too scared to try anything, since Supes would immediately find them. He then congratulates Supes on using fear to its fullest potential, but his reasoning only leaves Superman confused.
    • Subverted with Black Manta. Aquaman calls him out on his claims that his motive is revenge for the black people's slavery and discrimination by pointing out that Manta is using mind-control to enslave his minions (all black) into serving him. Manta comments on the irony, then says he doesn't care and keeps attacking.
  • Older Alter Ego: Several times in the story, it's apparent that Captain Marvel is really a 10-year-old boy. Batman is bothered by this, which gets him mocked by Superman for the existence of Robin.
  • Only in It for the Money: Money is Captain Cold's reason for joining up with the Legion.
  • Papa Wolf: Aquaman, when Brainiac kidnaps his son.
  • Pietà Plagiarism: In Justice #12, Kara does this to Poison Ivy after knocking her out with a blast of heat vision.
  • Plot-Irrelevant Villain: The Joker's influence in the plot is as follows: he isn't recruited by Brainiac when he springs all other villains from the Asylum, calling him irrelevant as an excuse, the Joker breaks out of the Asylum by himself and sneaks into Brainiac's compound to blow a significant chunk of it to kingdom come in revenge, and kills Scarecrow when he's trying to escape. The "blowing up Brainiac's stuff" part is just adding insult to injury because the Legion of Doom is getting its ass kicked by the Justice League at that exact same moment.
  • Powered Armor: Various heroes wear the Metal Men as armor.
  • Power Glows:
    • Superman and Supergirl’s whole bodies glow red when they use their eye beams.
    • A green aura surrounds Hal Jordan when he uses his ring.
  • Reconstruction: Of the Silver and Bronze Ages.
  • Red Eyes, Take Warning:
    • Brainiac's pupils are bright red and have a tendency to glint ominously in shadow, accentuating the villain's already creepy appearance.
    • Superman's eyes glow red when he's facing his enemies.
    • Supergirl's eyes glow red when she's about to blast Green Arrow and Black Canary, and when she burns Poison Ivy's plants and blasts her.
  • Sadistic Choice: The Legion of Doom brainwashes the younger heroes - Supergirl, Batgirl, the Teen Titans, and the Marvel family — and kidnaps the League members' relatives and friends. Superman puts it best: they were never frightened of dying while doing what's right... but can they risk their families and friends' lives for the sake of a mass of strangers?
  • Sell-Out: Plastic Man appears on a billboard endorsing his own credit card in issue 2.
    Life is Plastic!
  • Ship Tease: Captain Marvel/Wonder Woman and Superman/Zatanna.
  • Shooting Superman: Deconstructed by Superman himself when he says that being bulletproof means nothing because the bullets don't stop after bouncing off him and they can hurt someone else. This receives a Call-Back mixed with Batman Can Breathe in Space when Superman is teleported out of the atmosphere along with Zatanna.
  • Shout-Out: Several.
  • Sliding Scale of Idealism Versus Cynicism: Very much on the idealist side.
  • Space Is Noisy: Played with. Captain Marvel talks to Superman while in space, but the latter can't respond. Why? Cap is using magic to talk in space.
  • Spanner in the Works: Captain Marvel, the Phantom Stranger, the Metal Men, and John Stewart were all threats the Legion failed to take into account.
  • Spiritual Antithesis: Some fans have speculated that the miniseries was either Alex Ross doing a Take That! or at least a "measured response" to the Identity Crisis (2004) miniseries.
  • Strapped to an Operating Table: The first act involves Aquaman being held captive in Brainiac's laboratory, strapped down in preparation for Brainiac to examine his unique brain.
  • Superhero Speciation: The old Elongated Man/Plastic Man feud about who should be the "stretchy guy" on the team. Plastic Man responds that since Captain Marvel and Superman are both flying bricks, and there's room for both of them, there can be two stretchy guys on the League.
  • Super-Power Meltdown: At the beginning of the story, the Flash is stuck running around the world at light-speed and can't slow down. He's running so fast, he's racing himself.
  • Team Member in the Adaptation: The story's interpretation of the Legion of Doom swaps out Jack Nimball for Winslow Schott as the Toyman present and adds Parasite, Metallo, Poison Ivy, Clayface, and Black Adam as members.
  • Teleportation Rescue: This happens to Hal Jordan: after he's teleported by the villains so far outside the known universe that no Green Lantern ring, including his own, would help him get back, the Phantom Stranger eventually locates and teleports him back to Earth.
  • This Looks Like a Job for Aquaman:
    • Brainiac discusses and subverts this trope when operating on Aquaman by explaining that, though Aquaman’s powers are sometimes under-appreciated, he believes his telepathic powers are among the most impressive in the JLA. Considering Brainiac is talking to and about Aquaman himself, this may be an attempt to discredit this trope.
    • The trope is played more straight — though while still demonstrating Brainiac's point — when Aquaman is able to contact the sea creatures to make a gigantic X pointing to his location large enough to be seen from the Justice League's satellite. Good thing Aquaman was being held underwater.
  • Token Minority:
    • John Stewart for the good guys.
    • Black Manta looks like this at first, but racism ends up being a major theme of his arc.
  • Tranquil Fury: While Superman is absolutely furious when he faces Toyman, Brainiac and Lex Luthor, his demeanor and words are unnervingly calm.
  • Tron Lines: Green Lantern's armor sports several glowing lines.
  • Use Your Head: Wonder Woman ends her showdown with Cheetah by nailing her with a well-placed headbutt.
  • Victory by Endurance: In the final battle, Hal Jordan faces Sinestro. Eventually, Hal reveals that he's not using his own ring, but Sinestro's spare ring, with a chunk of blue kryptonite on it to make it look green (yellow + blue= green). Hal could either defeat Sinestro normally, or wait until both rings were depleted (they drew on the same power battery). Option 2 happens, and Hal defeats Sinestro with his fists. The blue kryptonite, meanwhile, was used to great effect against Bizarro.
  • Villain Has a Point: In issue #4, Luthor, Riddler, Ivy, and Black Manta deliver their mission statement to audiences worldwide, condemning the JLA for doing to little to improve the world's status quo.
  • Vorpal Pillow: When Ray Palmer is in the hospital, recovering from being shot by Giganta, the villainess impersonates a nurse in order to finish the job and attempts to smother him with a pillow. Thankfully, Ray manages to shrink himself just in time.
    Giganta: Would you like another pillow, Mr. Palmer?
    Ray: No, thank you, nurse.
    Giganta: I insist.
  • What Does She See in Him?: In Justice #7, a mind-controlled Supergirl tells Lois Lane that she doesn't know what her cousin sees in her in Justice #8:
    Supergirl: I don't know what Superman sees in you, Miss Lane. And don't tell me "X-Ray Vision". I have, too. And I don't see anything.
  • Wild Card: Invoked. The Joker is never recruited into the villains' plan because he's way too unpredictable and chaotic to follow said plan. As such, and in vengeance, the Joker does that very thing.
  • Wolverine Publicity: On the cover for the second trade paperback of the series, the Joker is featured prominently standing among the Legion of Doom members. He's far from the main villain, is never considered to be a member of the Legion, and really only makes cameo appearances in the story itself.
  • Xanatos Speed Chess: At one point, Green Arrow observes that the heroes' plan is expecting things to go wrong, unlike Brainiac's.

Alternative Title(s): Justice

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