DC Animated Universe
DC Animated Universe | |
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Created by | |
Original work | Characters by DC Comics |
The DC Animated Universe (DCAU, also referred to as the Timmverse series by fans) is a shared universe centered on a group of animated television series based on DC Comics and produced by Warner Bros. Animation. It began with Batman: The Animated Series in 1992 and ended with Justice League Unlimited in 2006.[1][2] Animated feature films and shorts, comic books, video games, and other multimedia adaptations are also in the continuity that continued to be released years later.
List of DC Animated Universe media
While there are many animated projects based upon DC Comics characters, the DC Animated Universe consists of TV series and films that spin off from Batman: The Animated Series. While the series is largely standalone, two characters outside of the normal
After Batman Beyond's third season, the
Television series
The DC Animated Universe consists of the following animated television series:
Series | Season | Episodes | Originally aired | 2 | 20 | May 2, 1994 | September 15, 1995 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
3 | 13 | September 19, 1998 | February 12, 2000 | ||||||||
3 | 13 | August 19, 2000 | December 18, 2001 | ||||||||
4 | 13 | January 17, 2004 | May 22, 2004 | ||||||||
2 | 14 | March 23, 2002 | August 17, 2002 | ||||||||
2 | 26 | July 5, 2003 | May 29, 2004 | ||||||||
3 | 13 | September 17, 2005 | May 13, 2006 |
Feature films
The DCAU continuity also includes the following feature films:
Film | U.S. release date | Director | Screenwriters | Release | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Batman: Mask of the Phantasm | December 25, 1993 | Eric Radomski and Bruce Timm | Story by: Alan Burnett Screenplay by: Alan Burnett, Paul Dini, Martin Pasko and Michael Reaves |
Theatrical[3][4] |
Continuation of Batman: TAS |
Batman & Mr. Freeze: SubZero | March 17, 1998 | Boyd Kirkland | Boyd Kirkland and Randy Rogel | Direct-to-DVD | |
Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker | December 12, 2000 (edited version) April 23, 2002 (uncut version) |
Curt Geda | Story by: Paul Dini, Glen Murakami and Bruce Timm Screenplay by: Paul Dini |
Continuation of Batman Beyond, Batman: TAS, and The New Batman Adventures | |
Batman: Mystery of the Batwoman | October 21, 2003 | Story by: Alan Burnett Screenplay by: Michael Reaves |
Continuation of Batman: TAS and The New Batman Adventures |
Short films
Film | U.S. release date | Director | Screenwriters | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
The Dark Knight's First Night | 1991 | Bruce Timm & Eric Radomski | Story by : Bruce Timm Teleplay by : Eric Radomski |
A short film which acted as the developmental pilot for Batman: TAS. |
Justice League: The First Mission | 2000 | James Tucker | Story by: Bruce Timm | A short film which acted as the developmental pilot for Justice League. |
Chase Me | October 21, 2003 | Curt Geda | Paul Dini and Alan Burnett | A short film with no dialogue based on The New Batman Adventures. |
Batman Beyond | April 20, 2014[5] | Darwyn Cooke[6][7] | A short film based on Batman Beyond created by Darwyn Cooke for Batman's 75th anniversary. The short features the original voice cast of the show, as well as cameos of robotic batmen from The New Batman Adventures, The Batman, Batman: The Brave and the Bold, Beware the Batman, The Dark Knight Returns, Michael Keaton's Batman, Adam West's Batman, and the original comic book Batman from 1939. |
Digital series
Series | Season | Episodes | Originally aired | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
First aired | Last aired | Network | ||||
warnerbros.com | ||||||
3 | 10 | July 16, 2002 | November 19, 2002 |
Offshoot material
The DCAU also includes tie-in materials such as comic books, video games, and direct-to video films with a similar animation style; however, their canonicity is disputable. While they are sometimes marketed as being part of the DCAU, some of these works have contradictory elements or are written by a different team.
For instance, many of the DCAU tie-in comics were written by a different team than the animated crew, such as the Ty Templeton penned The Batman Adventures comic series. However, some of the comics, such as the Batman: The Adventures Continue comics were written by the animated series writers, Paul Dini and Alan Burnett. Per the opinion of Bruce Timm, who has commented about the canonicity of the DCAU comics previously, said "we didn't have any direct input on the comics...DC never solicited our opinions on what they were doing, nor would we have had time to give them notes if they had--I learned very early on not to get my nose bent out of joint if they did something in the comics we would never have done--my own personal way of dealing with it was to consider only the animated episodes themselves as true canon-which means that even Mad Love wasn't purely canonical until we adapted it for the animated series."[9]
In terms of feature films, the 2006 feature film Superman: Brainiac Attacks has been stated by writer Duane Capizzi that it was not intended to be part of the DCAU, despite using the same animation style and many of the voice actors from Superman: The Animated Series.[10] The 2017 film Batman and Harley Quinn features the animation style of The New Batman Adventures, though co-writer Jim Krieg has stated that the film is DCAU adjacent, due to the sillier and raunchier elements of the film.[11][12] Justice League vs. the Fatal Five is a 2019 film done in the style of Justice League Unlimited, but the film's canonicity is considered to be open-ended. It has been stated by Bruce Timm that the film is set within the DCAU sometime after the end of JLU, although in the audio commentary for the film, Timm also mentioned that due to the film's production (it was originally slated to be done in a different art style before being changed during post production) the film would cause some continuity issues, and that fans could ultimately decide on their own.[13][14]
It has been confirmed that Kevin Conroy’s DCAU Batman will return for Justice League: Crisis on Infinite Earths Part Three.[15]
Cancelled projects
An animated series based on the
In 1998, writer
Before the release of Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker, a third animated feature based on Batman: The Animated Series was planned, entitled Batman: Arkham. The film was supposed to be a follow-up for Batman & Mr. Freeze: SubZero, and Boyd Kirkland was attached to write and direct; but the project was soon scrapped. A second Batman Beyond movie was planned for release but was finally scrapped due to the dark tones and controversies of Return of the Joker in 2001.[17] Around 2003, during the production of Batman: Mystery of the Batwoman, Warner Bros. approached Kirkland to write a Catwoman direct-to-video feature film as a tie-in with the 2004 live-action film. Although the script was written, the project was soon scrapped after the poor reception of the live-action film.[18]
Also, a direct-to-video feature-length animated film entitled Justice League: Worlds Collide was planned to connect
Comic books
Many of the DCAU productions have also had comic books created based on the characters of the various series, though their canonicity is disputable. The comics are:
Year | Title | Issues |
---|---|---|
1992 | The Batman Adventures (vol. 1) | #1–36 Mad Love Holiday Special Batman: Mask of the Phantasm Annuals (#1–2) |
1993 | Superman & Batman Magazine | #1–8 |
1995 | Batman and Robin Adventures | #1–25 Annuals (#1–2) Batman & Mr. Freeze: Sub-Zero Dark Claw Adventures |
1996 | Superman Adventures | #1–66 Annual World's Finest Superman vs. Lobo Exclusive Edition (Superman '64 prequel) |
Two-Face: Two of a Kind[21] | #0 | |
1997 | Adventures in the DC Universe
|
#1–19 Annual |
1998 | The Batman Adventures: The Lost Years | #1–5 |
Batman: Gotham Adventures | #1–60 | |
Batgirl Adventures | One-Shot | |
1999 | Batman Beyond (vol. 1) | #1–6 |
Batman Beyond (vol. 2) | #1–24 Return of the Joker | |
Claritin Syrup Presents Batman[22] | One-Shot | |
2001 | Gotham Knights | #14 (backstory by Paul Dini)[23] |
2002 | Gotham Girls | #1–5 |
Justice League Adventures
|
#1–34 #1-8 (Burger King miniseries)[24] | |
2003 | Batman Adventures (vol. 2) | #1–17 |
Batman: Shadow of Sin Tzu | #1–260 | |
2004 | Batman: Harley and Ivy | #1–3 |
Justice League Unlimited
|
#1–46 | |
2010 | Batman Beyond (vol. 3) | #1–6 |
Superman/Batman Annual | #4 | |
2011 | Batman Beyond (vol. 4) | #1–8 |
Superman Beyond | #0–20 | |
2012 | Justice League Beyond | #1–25 |
Batman Beyond Unlimited | #1–18 | |
2013 | Batman Beyond 2.0 | #1–40 |
Justice League Beyond 2.0 | #1–24 | |
Batman Beyond Universe | #1–16 | |
2015 | Batman Beyond (vol. 5) | #1-16 |
Scooby Doo Team Up[25] | #12, #17, #23, #24 (series uses DCAU character models but ignores the lore) | |
2016 | Batman/TMNT Adventures | #1-6 |
Batman Beyond (vol. 6) | #1-50 Rebirth | |
Love is Love[26] | Harley and Ivy story by Paul Dini | |
Harley Quinn[27] | #17-26 (backstory by Paul Dini) (used the art style and character models but has been stated before its follow-up mini-series "Harley loves Joker" to be canon to the current main universe instead) | |
2017 | Harley Quinn and Batman | #1-5 (a prequel to the 2017 animated film Batman and Harley Quinn) |
2017 | Batman and Harley Quinn | #1-7 (a sequel to the 2017 animated film of the same name) |
2018 | Harley loves Joker | #1-2 (used the art style and character models, is also a follow-up to the Harley Quinn main series backstory but is then hinted to be canon to the main comic universe in Harley Quinn #42 with the "next issue" area and then is stated to be in the main universe by its official description) |
2020 | Batman: The Adventures Continue Season One | #1-8 (print); 17 (digital) |
2021 | Batman: The Adventures Continue Season Two | #1-7 |
2021 | Justice League: Infinity | #1-7 |
2023 | Batman: The Adventures Continue Season Three | #1-8 |
Recurring cast and characters
The future of the DCAU
With the conclusion of the Justice League Unlimited animated series, Warner Bros has moved on to producing standalone films based on the various DC comics properties rather than reviving the DCAU counterparts.
The last script written for DCAU continuity was titled Justice League: Worlds Collide. This screenplay was created to bridge the several month gap between Justice League and Justice League Unlimited. The draft was eventually adapted into the February 2010 film Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths, with the removal of any references specific to DCAU continuity, replacing Green Lantern John Stewart with Hal Jordan, and the casting of different voice actors than those of the DCAU.
In 2009, Bruce Timm was asked at a ToonZone forum if the DCAU will return in the future, and he stated this:[28]
I very much appreciate that so many of you guys have so much love for the old series, from BTAS through JLU (I do too) -- but frankly, I doubt that we'll be formally, "officially" doing another movie or TV series set in that continuity (...) anything is possible, so conceivably that could change someday -- instead of saying "THE DCAU IS DEAD", maybe we can just say it's in a state of suspended animation until further notice...?
— Bruce Timm, 2009[29]
On June 8, 2015, during an interview with
In 2018, Kevin Conroy said work on the DCAU had stalled because the writers ran out of ideas for stories and believed stopping was best, as they did not want to "compromise on the quality of what they had and start creating kind of silly stories".[31]
The cast of Justice League has been vocal about wanting a revival of the series, while Bruce Timm has said he would return as well if they were asked.[32]
An audio revival of Batman: The Animated Series is in development with Alan Burnett, and others returning. Conroy was also set to return prior to his death in 2022.[33]
Comics
The Batman Beyond comic series is a loose adaptation of the Batman Beyond franchise, intended to fit the character and storylines from the series into the mainstream DC continuity. The miniseries began in June 2010, under the title Future Evil. In August 2010, the series was announced to continue following the completion of the first arc as an ongoing series.[34] That series concluded alongside the entire line of ongoing monthly DC Comics superhero books during the 2011 revamp and relaunch, titled The New 52.
Superman Beyond, a one-shot comic set in the same universe as Batman Beyond, was released in 2011.
Batman Beyond Unlimited, a title chronicling the adventures of the future Justice League introduced in the DCAU, was released in February 2012.[35] This series published monthly triple-sized issues, containing three stories of Terry McGinnis, Clark "Cal" Kent, and the future Justice League Unlimited, respectively.[36]
Batman Beyond Universe succeeded Unlimited in August 2013, condensing to double-monthly issues upon the elderly Superman's rejoining the future Justice League.[37]
Terry McGinnis was the central figure in The New 52: Futures End weekly series.[38]
In 2015–2016, DC Comics and IDW Publishing released a jointly produced, six-issue miniseries comic titled Batman/TMNT, where the New 52 Batman encounters the IDW incarnation of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. The success of this miniseries inspired a similar crossover story, with Batman's DCAU incarnation meeting the Amazing Adventures comic version of the 2012 CGI series' Turtles. Titled Batman/TMNT Adventures, the concept was first announced in late July 2016[39] and scheduled for a six-issue release starting November 9, 2016.[40]
A comic book continuation of seven-issues of Justice League Unlimited, called Justice League Infinity, was released monthly between July 2021 and January 2022; the series is set after the show's finale and explores the consequences of Darkseid's disappearance and the League clashing with alternate versions of themselves within the Multiverse.
Outside media
Video games
There have also been a number of DCAU tie-in video games released to correspond with the various animated television series and films. Some of these games have original plots, while others follow previous stories; their status in DCAU canon is unknown. The games are:
Year | Title | Platforms |
---|---|---|
1993 | Batman: The Animated Series | Game Boy |
1994 | The Adventures of Batman & Robin | |
1997 | Superman[41] | Game Boy |
1999 | Superman | Nintendo 64 |
2000 | Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker | Game Boy Color, PlayStation, Nintendo 64 |
2001 | Batman: Chaos in Gotham | Game Boy Color |
Batman: Gotham City Racer | PlayStation | |
Batman: Vengeance | PlayStation 2, Game Boy Advance, GameCube, Xbox, Microsoft Windows | |
2002 | Justice League: Injustice for All | Game Boy Advance |
Static Shock (canceled game)[42] | ||
Superman: Shadow of Apokolips | PlayStation 2, GameCube | |
2003 | Batman: Rise of Sin Tzu | Xbox, PlayStation 2, Game Boy Advance, GameCube |
Justice League: Chronicles | Game Boy Advance | |
Superman: Countdown to Apokolips | ||
2016 | View-Master Batman Animated VR | iOS, Android |
Six of these games feature voice acting from the casts of the original shows. These are: The Adventures of Batman and Robin (SEGA CD/Mega CD version), Superman, Batman Vengeance, Superman: Shadow of Apokolips, Batman: Rise of Sin Tzu, and View-Master Batman Animated VR. The SEGA CD/Mega CD game, The Adventures of Batman and Robin, also features animation from one of the studios that worked on Batman: The Animated Series.
The Heart of Batman
A 90-minute documentary film was released on October 16, 2018, as part of the Batman: The Complete Animated Series Deluxe Limited Edition[43] and Batman: The Complete Animated Series Blu-ray/Digital box set,[44][45] and was later made available on the official Warner Bros. Entertainment YouTube channel.[45][46][47]
Crossovers, adaptations, and references
TV series
Year | Series | Episode | DCAU Reference |
---|---|---|---|
1995 | Freakazoid
|
Dance of Doom | Batman appears, but is unable to help due to being on a different network[48] |
1995 | Animaniacs | A Hard Day's Warners | Paul Dini and Bruce Timm can be seen at the Batman booth in episode #73 with a Mask of the Phantasm poster[49] |
2011 | Batman: The Brave and the Bold | Night of the Batmen | Batman's TNBA design shows up among the Batmen of other worlds along with Batman Beyond[50] |
2013 | Teen Titans Go! | multiple | Meta-gags referencing the DCAU have been made[51] |
Comics
Year | Title | Issue | DCAU Reference |
---|---|---|---|
1994 | Man of Steel | #37 | Batman appears in his BTAS design on the front cover[52] |
1999 | Fan Boy | #5 | Bruce Timm was a featured artist, lending his Batman to the issue[53] |
1999 | Superman/Fantastic Four | One-Shot | Superman's DCAU counterpart makes a cameo |
2001 | Catwoman | #89 | Harleen Quinzel pitches a TV series in the same style of The New Batman Adventures[54] |
2005 | Krypto the Super Dog | #1-6 | Artist Min S Ku draws many characters in their DCAU style. |
2007 | Teen Titans Go! | #45 | The Justice League is presented in their DCAU style |
2008 | Legion of Superheroes in the 31st Century | #11 | The Justice League appears in their DCAU versions |
2013 | Green Lantern: The Animated Series | #13 | Lobo shows up in his DCAU design |
2014 | Adventures of Superman | #40 | The Joker shows up in multiple styles, including his TNBA look.[55] |
2017 | Action Comics | #975 | Mr. Mxyzptlk and Superman appear in their STAS style.[56] |
Characters adapted from the DCAU
Though the DCAU is an offshoot of the mainstream DC comics universe, it has also affected the DC universe in return. The following characters were originally created for their respective series in the DCAU, but were eventually adapted via retroactive continuity into the mainstream DC comic continuity:
- Nora Fries (Batman: The Animated Series)
- Harley Quinn (Batman: The Animated Series)
- Renee Montoya (Batman: The Animated Series)
- Lock-Up(Batman: The Animated Series)
- Sewer King(Batman: The Animated Series)
- The Condiment King(Batman: The Animated Series)
- Mercy Graves (Superman: The Animated Series)
- Livewire (Superman: The Animated Series)
- Roxy Rocket (The New Batman Adventures)
- Terry McGinnis/Batman (Batman Beyond)
- Gray Ghost(Batman: The Animated Series)
- Phantasm (Batman: Mask of the Phantasm)
- Blight (Batman Beyond)
In addition, the backstory of
See also
- Arrowverse (2012–2023)
- DC Extended Universe (2013–23)
- DC Animated Movie Universe (2013–20)
- Tomorrowverse (2020–24)
- DC Universe (2024)
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