Injustice League
The Injustice League is the name of several fictional supervillain teams appearing in comic books published by DC Comics.
Publication history
The Injustice League first appeared in Justice League International #23 and was created by Keith Giffen and J. M. DeMatteis.Fictional team history
Original League
The original Injustice League was the brainchild of the interplanetary conqueror Agamemno. Bored with his dominion, he set out to conquer Earth and their champions, the Justice League. Aided by the alien former dictator Kanjar Ro, Agamemno contacted Lex Luthor and they recruited other supervillains to their cause.Agamemno then engineered a switch wherein the villains' minds switched with those of the JLA. In the true JLA's absence, other Silver Age superheroes came to clash with the now seemingly evil heroes. Eventually, Green Lantern used the power of Oa's Central Power Battery and a Thanagarian weapon called the "Absorbascon" to reverse the mind swap.
Having spent time in their enemies' bodies, the villains knew their heroic counterparts inside out. To regain the edge, the JLA used the power of Robby Reed's alien H-Dial to transform themselves into totally different heroes. Then, using his power ring through the Absorbascon, Green Lantern removed all knowledge of the heroes' secret identities from the villains' minds.
This incarnation was retconned as the first version of the Injustice League.
Members
- Lex Luthor
- Black Manta
- Chronos
- Catwoman
- Doctor Light
- Felix Faust
- Mister Element
- Penguin
- Sinestro
Injustice League International
After Giffen's run in the series, the team volunteered to join the Suicide Squad. On their first mission, Big Sir was killed; Multi-Man was shot through the head ; and the Clock King and Cluemaster were seriously injured.
Injustice League Unlimited
and The Joker recently formed an "Injustice League Unlimited", as first seen in the Justice League of America Wedding Special. While it seems the membership is much greater in the promotional image of Justice League of America vol. 2, #13, the core members of the team shown by Wizard magazine are a select group of various arch-nemeses.The team was created by Dwayne McDuffie, a writer from the animated series Justice League Unlimited, which featured a similar expanded Legion of Doom. Lex Luthor has the idea to bring the villains together, claiming it was a protection racket at first, but with the ultimate aim of dominating the world. During the storyline, the Injustice League splits up and manages to capture the Justice League members in small groups. However, the JLA is freed by Firestorm and battles the Injustice League at its swamp headquarters. In the ensuing melee, many of the villains flee, but most are taken captive by the League. It is revealed at this time that Lex Luthor actually had a secret goal in forming the League. He refuses to reveal details, but mentions that he planned for his capture. The remaining villains are then taken away by Amanda Waller and the Suicide Squad, who plan to ship them away to a distant planet, as seen in DC's Salvation Run storyline.
It is notable that the alternative covers of the second issue of the arc feature many more villains than were actually in the League, including Amazo, Bizarro, Black Adam, Sinestro, and the Rogues.
Members
Though the covers featured a large number of villains, membership differed in the actual story. Membership included:- Lex Luthor - Founder
- Joker - Founder
- Cheetah - Founder
- Cheshire - Core member
- Deathstroke the Terminator - Core member
- Doctor Light - Core member
- Fatality - Core member
- Giganta - Core member
- Gorilla Grodd - Core member
- Killer Frost - Core member
- Parasite - Core member
- Poison Ivy - Core member
- Shadow Thief - Core member
- Shaggy Man III - Core member
- Black Manta
- Black Spider
- Body Doubles
- Brain
- Clayface
- Doctor Sivana
- Double Dare
- Effigy
- Felix Faust
- Girder
- Hammer and Sickle
- Hyena
- Iron Cross
- Jewelee
- Jinx
- The Key
- Killer Croc
- Lady Vic
- Major Force
- Magenta
- Mammoth
- Manticore
- Metallo
- Mister Freeze
- Mister Terrible
- Mirror Master
- Monsieur Mallah
- Nocturna
- Phobia
- Prankster
- Psimon
- Queen Bee
- Rag Doll
- Riddler
- Rock
- Scarecrow
- Shimmer
- Shrapnel
- Silver Monkey
- Skorpio
- Sonar
- T. O. Morrow
- Tar Pit
- Toyman
- Tremor
- Two-Face
- Warp
Based on the covers
- Amazo
- Bizarro
- Black Adam
- Bolt
- Captain Cold
- Chemo
- Circe
- Despero
- Doctor Psycho
- Granny Goodness
- Icicle II
- Lion-Mane
- Merlyn the Dark Archer
- Mongul
- Sinestro
- Solomon Grundy
- Validus
- Zoom
The New 52
Members
- Lex Luthor - Founder
- Bizarro
- Black Adam
- Black Manta
- Captain Cold
- Catwoman
- Deathstroke the Terminator
- Sinestro
Other versions
In other media
Film
- In a post-credits scene of Justice League, Alexander Luthor Jr., in a conversation with Deathstroke, mentions that Superman came back from the dead and is now part of a team of super heroes and suggests to Slade that they should form a "league of their own".
Television
- A version of the Injustice League appeared in the Smallville episode "Injustice", featuring Livewire, Neutron, Plastique, Eva Greer, and Parasite. They search for Doomsday. When Tess Mercer assumed control of LuthorCorp, she began recruiting metahumans to form a team of heroes of Earth. Tess then kills Livewire using an explosive chip implanted in her skull. When Clark Kent discovers this and tells Parasite and Plastique, they manage to disable the chips and attempt to form their own group of criminals. They are defeated by Green Arrow and Clark.
- The Injustice League appears in the Young Justice episode "Revelation". Its members include Count Vertigo, Poison Ivy, Black Adam, Wotan, Atomic Skull, Ultra-Humanite and Joker. They unleash giant plant monsters upon the major cities of the world. The team is assembled by the more secretive supervillain cabal known as The Light to act as scapegoats for them, which is accomplished after the Injustice League is defeated. The Justice League and the Team operate under the belief that the actions of the other villains are simply continuing the Injustice League's plans until the penultimate episode of the season, "Usual Suspects". This is the first incarnation of the Injustice League to actually be referred to as such, as all previous appearances could easily be considered the Injustice Gang or Injustice Society.
Web Series
- In the season 2 premiere of Harley Quinn, the Injustice League is founded in order to take control of Gotham City after Joker destroyed it and divide what's left between them. This iteration's members consisted of Bane, Riddler, Penguin, Mr. Freeze, and Two-Face. After Harley interferes with their plans, they attempt to negotiate peace with her, but she disagrees with them, so they have her frozen and put on display in Penguin's Iceberg Lounge. She later gets free and murders Penguin. Throughout the rest of season 2, Harley and her crew continue to fight and take down the Injustice League one by one. In "Riddle U", they capture Riddler after learning his territory had power and clean water, and use him to power their mall lair. In "Thawing Hearts", Mr. Freeze sacrifices himself to cure his wife. In "There's No Place to Go But Down", Harley and Ivy defeat Bane while Commissioner Gordon defeats and incarcerates Two-Face.
Video games
- The Injustice League appeared in Lego DC Super-Villains as the central focus of the game.
Miscellaneous
- In the Dynomutt, Dog Wonder episode "The Injustice League of America", the Blue Falcon's enemies the Worm, the Queen Hornet, Lowbrow, Superthug, Fishface and the Gimmick join forces as the Injustice League of America.
- * A similar group appears briefly in Scooby-Doo! Mask of the Blue Falcon, albeit with Superthug and Fishface amalgamated into one character while the Worm is replaced by the Serpent Lady's Ironface form and the Swamp Rat.