Superman/Batman: Apocalypse | |
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![]() DVD cover | |
Directed by | Lauren Montgomery |
Written by | Tab Murphy |
Produced by | Bruce Timm Alan Burnett Bobbi Page Lauren Montgomery Sam Register Benjamin Melniker Michael Uslan |
Starring | Kevin Conroy Tim Daly Summer Glau Andre Braugher Edward Asner Susan Eisenberg Julianne Grossman Rachel Quaintance |
Music by | John Paesano |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Warner Home Video |
Release dates |
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Running time | 78 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $7,937,311[1] |
Superman/Batman: Apocalypse is a 2010 animated superhero film based on the Superman/Batman comic book storyline "The Supergirl from Krypton" and is a sequel to Superman/Batman: Public Enemies. The art style is partly based on that of Michael Turner, who penciled the Superman/Batman comic book arc. Released on September 28, 2010 by Warner Premiere and Warner Bros. Animation, it is the ninth film in the DC Universe Animated Original Movies. The film stars Andre Braugher, Kevin Conroy, Tim Daly and Summer Glau. Despite the title, the film focuses primarily on Supergirl and Superman, with Batman playing a supporting role.
The two-disc special edition and Blu-ray also includes an animated short featuring Green Arrow.[2]
Plot[]
Weeks after the events that led to Lex Luthor's arrest, the impeachment of his presidency, and Superman and Batman's success in saving the world from a kryptonite meteor, a spaceship crash-lands in Gotham City Harbor. While Batman investigates the sunken craft, a beautiful young girl emerges from the water and accidentally wrecks Batman's boat. She is naked and has no knowledge of Earth languages or customs. On the shore, she encounters three longshoremen, one of whom tries to advance on her. She attacks two of them out of self-defense, while the third one gives her his coat to cover herself. As the girl progresses into the city, she inadvertently wreaks havoc with her strong Kryptonian powers (with Batman in pursuit) until Superman arrives to correct the damage, allowing Batman to eventually expose her to a piece of Kryptonite which weakens and injures her mentally.
With Superman's help, they discover the girl is Kara Zor-El, the niece of Jor-El and Superman's biological cousin. She has been in suspended animation for decades due to her rocket crashing off course. This results in Kara being physically younger than her younger cousin. While Superman welcomes Kara, teaches her English, and helps her adjust to Earth's society, Batman remains suspicious even considering the possibility of Kara being an enemy. Kara states that she would never hurt her baby cousin. After which she tells Batman that he doesn’t have a heart. Tipped off by Batman, Wonder Woman and Lyla ambush Kara and Clark Kent, Superman's alter ego, in a park and suggest they train Kara at Themyscira, the only place where she can learn how to control her powers. Superman reluctantly agrees to let them train Kara, but still prefers to watch over her himself; however, Batman and Wonder Woman inform Superman to steer clear of Kara, criticizing him of his care for her.
On the desolate planet Apokolips, Darkseid learns of Kara's presence on Earth and orders Granny Goodness to have her brought to Apokolips as a possible leader for the Female Furies, as Big Barda is no longer his servant and the warrior Treasure being a failed candidate. Two months later, Batman and Superman are checking on Kara on Themyscira during a sparring match against Artemis. While Kara and Lyla later sneak away for a swim, a horde of Doomsday clones arrives from Apokolips. Superman, Wonder Woman and the Amazonian army fight them until Superman vaporizes them all with his heat vision. Batman, however, guesses the reason for the clones' attack and discovers Kara missing and Lyla dead; a last manifestation of her precognition reveals that the culprit is none other than Darkseid, who ordered a diversion to keep them busy allowing time for Granny to kidnap Kara. After being brought to Apokolips, Darkseid brainwashes her into serving him and she wears a seductive outfit and a sharp hairstyle.
To save Kara, Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman recruit Big Barda to help them find their way on Apokolips. There, Superman infiltrates Darkseid's palace while Wonder Woman and Barda go through the sewers directly into the fighting arena, where Granny Goodness and the Female Furies ambush them. After a hard fight, Granny and the Furies are subdued. Separating himself from the others, Batman finds Darkseid's supply of Hell Spores, the source of the fire pits on Apokolips. Superman encounters Darkseid, demanding that Kara is to go back with him. Darkseid says that Kara may leave, if she wants to, but sets Kara on Superman. Kara fights a reluctant Superman while Darkseid watches, until Batman confronts Darkseid and informs him that he has activated the Hell Spores, which will destroy Apokolips. He issues Darkseid an ultimatum: free Kara and promise to leave her alone, and Batman will deactivate the Spores. Superman defeats Kara, and Barda and Wonder Woman present Darkseid with the subdued Granny, whereupon Darkseid finally releases Kara, and the heroes leave Apokolips, bringing Kara back to Themyscira.
Back on Earth, with their lives apparently normal again, Clark takes Kara to meet his adoptive parents in Smallville. However, Darkseid, who was waiting to kill Superman, ambushes them: he had promised to leave Kara alone, but not Superman or Earth. Darkseid almost kills Superman with his Omega Beams before Kara takes the blast for her cousin. Superman attempts to fight Darkseid, but is quickly overwhelmed by Darkseid’s vastly superior prowess and punched into space. Kara engages Darkseid in a lengthy battle and manages to hold her own, having received Amazonian and Apokoliptan training, but he eventually gains the upper hand and knocks her into unconsciousness with a single kick. Before Darkseid can leave, Superman returns to Earth and reengages him. Superman sends Darkseid through the barn and attempts to crush him under a mountain. This fails to even scratch Darkseid as he severely injures Superman with a single blast of omega beams. Quickly Superman pummels the villain with all his strength. Superman only manages to give Darkseid a small nosebleed and Darkseid easily regains his hold and tortures Superman with his Omega Beams almost killing him. Kara recovers and uses Darkseid's Mother Box to activate a Boom Tube behind him, and Superman blasts Darkseid through with his heat vision. While Superman anticipates Darkseid's eventual return from Apokolips, Kara informs him that she changed the coordinates to a random spot in space, leaving Darkseid floating, helplessly frozen.
Having saved her cousin's life and found her place on Earth, Kara decides to use her powers to fight for altruism under the alias of Supergirl, and she is met with applause by Wonder Woman, the Amazons, and finally Batman. Superman and Supergirl fly to Metropolis together, happy as two cousins can be.
Cast[]
- Kevin Conroy as Bruce Wayne / Batman
- Tim Daly as Clark Kent / Superman
- Summer Glau as Kara Zor-El / Supergirl
- Andre Braugher as Darkseid
- Susan Eisenberg as Diana Prince / Wonder Woman
- Julianne Grossman as Big Barda
- Edward Asner as Granny Goodness
- Rachel Quaintance as Harbinger / Lyla Michaels, Artemis (uncredited)
- Salli Saffioti as Gilotina, Mad Harriet (uncredited)
- Andrea Romano as Stompa, News Anchor Vicki Vale (uncredited)
- Jim Ward as Radio DJ, Cop (uncredited)
- Dave B. Mitchell as Bearded Longshoreman
- Greg Alan Williams as Terrified Longshoreman
- John Cygan as Male Radio Caller, Gus (uncredited)
- April Winchell as Female Radio Caller 1, Treasure (uncredited)
- Tara Strong as Female Radio Caller 2, Lashina (uncredited)
Notably, Daly, Conroy, Eisenberg and Asner all reprise their respective roles of Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, and Granny Goodness from the DC Animated Universe.
Reception[]
The World's Finest said that it was "not something I'll be coming back to any time soon," and specifically targeted Andre Braugher's performance of Darkseid as lacking in any presence.[3] Batman-on-Film gave the film a D, the lowest grade they have given to a DC animated film.[4]
IGN gives the film a positive review with a score of 8 out of 10. The reviewer forgives the misleading title, recognising the story is all about "Supergirl of Krypton" and once you know what you're in for the story is not bad. Glau is praised for giving depth to what could have come across as a whiny beautiful teenager girl, and her story is a complete journey but unfortunately the other characters are not given much to do.[5]
Home media []
Released direct-to-video, Superman/Batman: Apocalypse took in $2,622,752 in its first week and has earned $7,892,515.[1] The Blu-ray presentation received an overall score of 8 out of 10 from IGN.[5]
References[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Superman/Batman: Apocalypse - DVD Sales". The Numbers. Nash Information Service. Retrieved August 24, 2014.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Younis, Steve (June 25, 2010). ""Superman/Batman: Apocalypse" DVD Artwork". supermanhomepage.com. Retrieved June 26, 2010.
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: - ↑ Demeter, Zach (September 28, 2010). "Reviews - Film Review". Worldsfinestonline.com. Retrieved October 2, 2010.
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: - ↑ Jett (September 28, 2010). "Film Review: SUPERMAN/BATMAN: APOCALYPSE". batman-on-film.com. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved October 2, 2010.
{{cite web}}
: ; deadurl - ↑ 5.0 5.1 White, Cindy (September 30, 2010). "Superman/Batman Apocalypse Blu-ray Review. DC Universe's latest animated original introduces Supergirl ... and Darkseid". IGN. Retrieved October 14, 2012.
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External links[]

- Official website
- Superman/Batman: Apocalypse at the Internet Movie Database
- Superman/Batman: Apocalypse at Rotten Tomatoes
- Superman/Batman: Apocalypse at The World's Finest
Superman franchise media | ||
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Comic strips | Superman (1939–1966) •
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Radio | The Adventures of Superman (US, 1940–51) • The Adventures of Superman (UK, 1988) | |
Live-action serials and films | Serials | Superman (1948) • Atom Man vs. Superman |
1951 film series | Superman and the Mole Men • Stamp Day for Superman (short film) | |
1978 film series | Superman (1978) • Superman II (The Richard Donner Cut) • Superman III • Supergirl • Superman IV: The Quest for Peace • Superman Returns | |
DC Extended Universe | Man of Steel • Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice | |
DC Universe | Superman | |
Animated films | Superman animated shorts (1941–1943) • Brainiac Attacks • Doomsday • All-Star Superman • Unbound • Superman/Batman: Public Enemies • Superman/Batman: Apocalypse • Superman/Shazam!: The Return of Black Adam • vs. The Elite • The Death of Superman • Reign of the Supermen • Red Son • Man of Tomorrow • Battle of the Super Sons | |
Documentary films | Look, Up in the Sky: The Amazing Story of Superman • The Death of "Superman Lives": What Happened? • Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story | |
Television | Live-action | Adventures of Superman • The Adventures of Superboy (pilot) • Superboy • Lois & Clark • Smallville • Supergirl • Krypton • Superman & Lois |
Animation | The New Adventures of Superman • The Adventures of Superboy • Superman • The Animated Series • Krypto the Superdog • Legion of Super Heroes • My Adventures with Superman | |
Novels | The Adventures of Superman (1942) • Superman: Last Son of Krypton • Miracle Monday • Superman: Doomsday & Beyond • Lois & Clark: A Superman Novel • It's Superman! • Superman Returns • Enemies & Allies | |
Video games | Superman (1979) • Superman: The Game (1985) • Superman (1987) • Superman (1988) • The Man of Steel (1989) • Superman (1992) • The Death and Return of Superman • The New Superman Adventures • Shadow of Apokolips • The Man of Steel (2002) • Countdown to Apokolips • Returns • MultiVersus | |
Music | "You've Got Possibilities" • Superman III (soundtrack) • Superman Returns (soundtrack) • "Save Me" (Remy Zero song) • Man of Steel (soundtrack) • Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (soundtrack) • Metropolis Symphony | |
Parodies | Captain Caveman (The Flintstone Comedy Show segment) • Mighty Mouse • My Hero (UK TV series) • Stupor Duck • "Superduperman" • Super-Rabbit • Underdog (TV series) • Super Grover (Sesame Street) | |
Other media | It's a Bird... It's a Plane... It's Superman (musical) • The Adventures of Seinfeld & Superman (advertisement) | |
Toys | Lego Superman | |
Related characters | Lois Lane in other media • Lex Luthor in other media • Supergirl in other media | |
Related articles | Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation • "Crisis on Infinite Earths" • Hollywoodland • Lucy and Superman • "Man of Steel, Woman of Kleenex" • National Comics Publications, Inc. v. Fawcett Publications, Inc. • Sunman (1992 video game) • Superman curse • Superman ice cream • "Superman and Paula Brown's New Snowsuit" • "The Reign of the Superman" • Superman and Lois Lane • Superman '78 |
Supergirl | ||
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Creators | Otto Binder • Al Plastino • Curt Swan | |
Supergirls | Kara Zor-El • Matrix • Linda Danvers • Cir-El • Laurel Gand • Power Girl • Ariella Kent | |
Characters | Supporting | Alura • Batgirl • Cat Grant • Comet • Justice League • Lana Lang • Lena Luthor • Lucy Lane • Mary Marvel • Maxima • Streaky the Supercat • Superman • Zor-El |
Enemies | Anti-Monitor • Black Star • Brainiac • The Council • Cyborg Superman • Darkseid • Decay • Despero • Female Furies • Insect Queen • Lesla-Lar • Lex Luthor • Livewire • Psi • Reactron • Satan Girl • Silver Banshee • Twilight | |
Titles | Adventure Comics • Supergirl • Supergirl and the Legion of Super-Heroes • Superman Family • Elseworld's Finest: Supergirl & Batgirl | |
Other media | Supergirl (film) • Supergirl (TV series) (characters • episodes |
Template:Wonder Woman in popular media
Superman / Batman crossover media | |
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Comic books | World's Finest Comics • Batman/Superman/Wonder Woman: Trinity • Superman/Batman • Superman and Batman versus Aliens and Predator |
Television | The Batman/Superman Hour • The Superman/Batman Adventures • The New Batman/Superman Adventures |
Books | Enemies & Allies |
Films | Superman/Batman: Public Enemies • Superman/Batman: Apocalypse • Lego Batman: The Movie – DC Super Heroes Unite • Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice |
Video games | Lego Batman 2: DC Super Heroes • Lego Batman 3: Beyond Gotham |
The Dark Knight Universe | The Dark Knight Returns (film) • The Dark Knight Strikes Again • The Dark Knight III: The Master Race |
Fan films and parodies | World's Finest • HISHE: Super Cafe |
Miscellanea | Composite Superman • Hiro Okamura |
The New Gods | ||
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Creator | Jack Kirby | |
Inhabitants of New Genesis | Bekka • Big Barda • Forager • Forever People • Highfather • Lightray • Orion • Mister Miracle • Takion | |
Inhabitants of Apokolips | Darkseid • DeSaad • Devilance • Doctor Bedlam • Female Furies (Bernadeth • Lashina • Mad Harriet • Stompa) • Glorious Godfrey • Granny Goodness • Grayven • Kanto • Mantis • Parademons (Pharzoof) • Steppenwolf • Virman Vundabar | |
Other characters | Black Racer • Infinity-Man • Metron • Shilo Norman • Oberon • Sonny Sumo | |
Locations | New Genesis • Apokolips | |
Storylines | Jack Kirby's Fourth World • The Great Darkness Saga • Legends • Cosmic Odyssey • Genesis • Countdown to Final Crisis • Death of the New Gods • Final Crisis | |
In other media | Super Friends: The Legendary Super Powers Show (1984–1985) • The Super Powers Team: Galactic Guardians (1985–1986) • Superman/Batman: Apocalypse (2010) • Smallville (season 10) (2010–2011) • DC Universe Online • Steppenwolf (DC Extended Universe) | |
Related articles | Anti-Life Equation • Boom tube • Eternals • Mother Box • The Source |
Warner Bros. Animation | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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See also | List of Warner Bros. Animation productions • Warner Animation Group • Warner Bros. Feature Animation • Warner Bros. Cartoons • Warner Bros. Family Entertainment • Hanna-Barbera • Cartoon Network Productions (Cartoon Network Studios • Williams Street • Hanna-Barbera Studios Europe) • Unproduced projects • List of Warner Bros. theatrical animated feature films |