Hereafter
Talk10this wiki
| Justice League episode | |
|---|---|
| | |
| "Hereafter" | |
| Airdate: | November 29, 2003 |
| Production Number: | 43-44 |
| Airdate Order: | 45-46 |
| Animation Services by: | Koko Enterprise Co., LTD. |
| Written by: | Dwayne McDuffie |
| Directed by: | Butch Lukic |
| Episode images (8) | |
"Hereafter" is the forty-third and forty-fourth episodes of Justice League. It first aired on November 29, 2003.
Contents |
Plot
Edit
Part I
Edit
A group of supervillains are gathered around and plotting to take their revenge on Superman. They arrange an ambush for the Man of Steel by attacking Metropolis. They battle the rest of the Justice League, but when Superman arrives, Toyman reveals his secret weapon: a giant toy robot equipped with a disintegrator beam. Toyman fires several times, and sections of the city disappear without trace. Superman evades the beams, but Toyman takes aim at Batman and Wonder Woman. Superman throws himself in front of them, and takes the blast, disappearing without trace. Shocked, the League and the world must accept what seemed impossible: Superman is dead. In anger, Wonder Woman threatens to kill Toyman, but Flash talks her out of it.
The only person who refuses to believe it is Batman. He analyzes the evidence from the battle, insisting that objects can't disappear without a trace, citing the law of conservation of mass. He snubs the invitations of Alfred and the other Leaguers to attend Superman's funeral in Metropolis.
At Superman's funeral, the attendants include the League (minus Batman), the staff of the Daily Planet, Jonathan and Martha Kent, several world leaders, superheroes, Lois Lane and even Lex Luthor, who genuinely admits that he will also miss Superman greatly. J'onn J'onzz pronounces an eulogy, and the League ceremonially inters a coffin in a monument. As they bring the coffin to his memorial, Wonder Woman spots Batman watching the procession from the shadows.
Holding a wake for Superman in the Watchtower, the League swaps stories about him, then J'onn tentatively proposes adding a new member. Suddenly, Lobo crashes through the window, announcing that he's there to take Superman's place. When the League orders him out, he decides to "audition" by tearing the Watchtower apart and attacking them. They hold him off, then hear that dozens of supervillains are running amok in Metropolis, celebrating Superman's death in their own fashion. The League reluctantly bring Lobo along as they go to fight, mainly because they don't trust him alone in the Watchtower.
Investigating another of his theories, Batman follows a trail to Superman's memorial. Finding nothing, he wonders if he's wrong, and Superman really is dead. Alone, he takes this opportunity to tell Clark that, despite their differences, he has always respected him and what he taught him, and that he will miss him... But Batman's tribute is interrupted by a nearby explosion. Batman takes off to battle the attacking supervillains.
The League attacks, with difficulty subduing the rogue villains. Lobo makes himself useful in his own fashion, beating Kalibak into submission with a few cars, causing plenty of destruction in the process. To an already grieving League, Lobo boasts how with him on the team, Superman is no longer needed. The leaguers bow their heads, contemplating life without the Man of Steel.
Elsewhere, on a barren landscape, under a red sun and some rubble lies... Superman.
Part II
Edit
Superman regains consciousness, and sees the barren landscape, as well as a few sections of Metropolis that were hit by Toyman's disintegrator beam. Wherever he is, the beam transported him there instead of destroying him. He sees that the sun is red, and his powers aren't working. Also, his communicator does not have any audio. He picks up a signal on the communicator, and decides to move closer to it. Salvaging what food and supplies he can from the cars in the street fragments, he then siphons gas into one of them, and drives off.
Unable to find anything else, he makes camp one night, and is menaced by a pack of wolf-like creatures. He attempts to scare them off, without effect, then manages to drive them away with fire. To prepare for any more dangers that lie ahead, he uses tools from the car to fashion an iron bar into a crude but effective sword.
Before too long, his car is out of gas, and he is forced to walk. Attacked that night by the creatures again, he kills their leader, and subjugates the rest of the pack, harnessing them as sled dogs for a new improvised vehicle.
After a few more days, he reaches the ruins of a city, and finds the source of the signal: the Watchtower, crashed to the ground. Entering, he tries to access its computer. It tells him that the rest of the League's whereabouts are unknown, then shuts down due to low power. Superman bangs his fists down in frustration and asks aloud, "What happened to everybody?" A voice answers, "They died, Superman. Thousands of years ago". A figure appears from the shadows... Vandal Savage.
Savage seems uncharacteristically glad to see Superman, and he soon explains why: the planet they are on is Earth, 30,000 years in the future, and the entire human race, except for Savage, is dead. When Superman asks Savage how he's still around, he responds that he is immortal, and as such, all of Earth now belongs to him.
Savage explains that, only a few months after Superman disappeared, he developed a weapon that allowed him to control the force of gravity. Without Superman, Savage killed the rest of the Justice League and proclaimed himself ruler of the world. But his newfound powers disrupted the balance of the solar system, killing the rest of the human race. Superman is initially enraged, but Savage says he's reformed: after millennia of loneliness and isolation, he's come to realize that his obsession with power was meaningless.
With plenty of time on his hands, Savage has built himself a luxurious mansion in the ruins of Metropolis, with a large garden and plenty of technological amenities. He passes his time reading, working on various inventions, or on hobbies such as restoring other parts of the city. One of them includes a spaceship that he intended to use to explore the universe, but he chose not to, feeling that he needed to be punished. He treats Superman to a home-cooked meal, and invites him to stay. Wandering around the mansion one night, Superman finds a time machine.[1] He asks Savage why he did not finish it. Savage says there would be no point, as the machine would not allow him to travel back to any time where he was already alive. Superman points out that he can, since he's dead, and can stop Savage's destruction of the world.
He and Savage work together to complete the machine, but find that they can't keep the portal open without a much larger power source. Savage knows of only one: a zero-point energy generator that he built, but was stolen some years ago by a colony of giant cockroaches. Building another one will take fifty years. He and Superman sneak into the colony to get it back. In battle with the roaches, Superman apparently falls to his death into the pit containing the generator – but instead, the device, which, as Savage has explained, is like a "miniature sun", instantly restores his powers, and he is able to get himself and Savage away safely.
Savage opens the portal, giving Superman the information he needs to thwart his younger self's plan. Before going, Superman asks what will happen to Savage if he succeeds. Savage tells him not to worry: "Do what you do best... what you were born to do: Save the world". The two men shake hands, and Superman departs.
Back in the present, while Lobo is crowing over Kalibak, Deadshot takes aim at Batman with a missile. Superman's hand appears and catches it. In wonder, the League crowds around him (except for Batman). Superman tells Lobo he's fired, and the bounty hunter angrily jets away on his bike. Superman says he'll explain what happened to him, but first they have a job to do. The League flies into action, with Superman leading the way.
In the future, Savage is sitting alone among the ruins of Metropolis. He sees a ghostly figure of a child run by, then more people. Slowly, the ruins disappear, and a living city replaces it, filled with people. Savage sees his own body becoming translucent, and says, "Thank you, my friend..." before fading from existence.
Continuity
Edit
- Metallo claims that he and his teammates have been wronged by Superman. This refers to all the times that each villain felt aggravated by the Man of Steel:
| Villain | Episode | Aggravation |
|---|---|---|
| Metallo | "The Last Son of Krypton, Part III" | Corben was defeated after battling Superman with the Lexo Suit and then was thrown to jail. |
| "Action Figures" | Metallo was defeated and stranded by Superman in a volcanic island, trapped under solidified magma without his Kryptonite battery. | |
| "Superman's Pal" | Metallo tried to kill Superman using Jimmy Olsen as bait, but was bested again. | |
| Toyman | "Fun and Games" | Superman foiled his attempt to kill Bruno Mannheim. |
| "Obsession" | Superman prevented him from retrieving Darci Mason. | |
| "Toys in the Hood" | Superman interfered with Toyman's plot to build a new body for Darci, which ultimately ended with Toyman's defeat and arrest. | |
| Weather Wizard | "Speed Demons" | Superman foiled his extortion plan and jailed him. |
| Livewire | "Livewire" | Leslie blamed Superman for becoming Livewire. Even before that, she made a career airing her many grievances about him on her radio show. |
| Kalibak | "Father's Day" | Superman defeated Kalibak in battle, thus humiliating him in his father's eyes. |
| "Legacy, Part II" | Superman bested Kalibak with two swift blows, again humiliating him in front of Darkseid. | |
| "Twilight, Part II" | Superman was partially responsible for Darkseid's demise. |
- For this one episode, Toyman, Metallo, and Weather Wizard were all portrayed by Corey Burton, despite being played by different actors previously.
- Lobo claims having saved Superman's life once, alluding to the events of Superman: The Animated Series' "The Main Man". John promptly objects that this is not an entirely truthful account, although technically it is, as Superman and Lobo saved each other once in the episode.
- Superman made a deal with Lobo in Superman: The Animated Series' "The Main Man" to free Lobo from his cell if Lobo would "leave me and everyone else on Earth in peace", to which Lobo agreed. In this episode, Lobo only battles the League in the Watchtower, which is in orbit (believing it to be an audition and not intending permanent harm), and on Earth, he only fights Kalibak (who is not from Earth, but Apokolips). Technically speaking, Lobo has kept his word.
- Superman carries a box of Lightspeed Energy Bars that the Flash sponsored in "Eclipsed".
- John suggests Metamorpho as a team member. Metamorpho first appeared in (and was established as John's friend in) "Metamorphosis". Metamorpho would later join the league in Justice League Unlimited.
- Superman references the times Vandal Savage attempted to conquer the world in "The Savage Time" and "Maid of Honor".
- The future Vandal Savage mentions that in order to stop his past self, the League must prevent his theft of a piece of dwarf star matter from a scientist named Ray Palmer, who would later appear in Justice League Unlimited as The Atom. In the comics, this piece of matter is what enables The Atom to manipulate his own size.
- This is Vandal Savage's last appearance in the series. It is never shown or explained exactly how the League stopped his plan involving Ray Palmer.
Background information
Edit
Home video releases
Edit
Production notes
Edit
- Prior to the premiere of Justice League Season 2, interviews stated that the team was to have a temporary addition. This episode, in which Superman was supposedly killed, would prompt the rest of the team to recruit a new member. Originally, the new member was to be Captain Marvel. However, legal rights prevented that appearance and Lobo was chosen instead as the least likely suspect. [1]
- In part I, when Volcana absorbs her fire blast, there's an explosion that is reused footage from Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker, when the console that the Jokerz tried to steal blows up.
Production inconsistencies
Edit
- This episode raises some questions regarding the people's awareness of Superman's secret identity.
- Nobody notices that Clark Kent was absent for Superman's funeral.
- Considering that Superman's funeral would be a world-class event, Jonathan and Martha Kent are still invited, even though their relation to Superman is unknown to the world.
- Jonathan and Martha are consoled by Kara (Clark's "cousin") and Lana Lang (Clark's high-school sweetheart) at Superman's funeral without Clark, their own son.
- Jonathan is placed near the front in the march to the burial without raising suspicions.
- Considering the first two questions, Superman's secret identity is still not exposed.
- Snapper Carr mentions heads of state from over 400 countries attending; even with "in-universe" countries such as Kaznia and Atlantis, the actual number does not even reach 200.
- John Stewart wears a green overcoat throughout Superman's funeral, including when he is a pallbearer for the coffin. However, in the final scene of the funeral, it is missing.
- The ground at Superman's memorial is all green except for his S-Shield on the ground. When Batman gets close to it, however, there's a straight pathway behind him.
- When Flash redirects a blast of fire Volcana aimed at Wonder Woman, an ATM in the background reads "MTA", indicating the background has been mirrored.
Trivia
Edit
- The attendants at Superman's funeral include:
- This episode features many characters from Superman: The Animated Series, such as Livewire, Metallo, Volcana, and Lobo.
- Corey Burton replaces Bud Cort, Malcolm McDowell, and Miguel Ferrer as the voices of Toyman, Metallo, and Weather Wizard, respectively. Both Cort and McDowell would return to their roles in Justice League Unlimited, while Burton would reprise his role as the Weather Wizard in "Alive!".
- Kalibak is the only member of the Revenge Squad with his original voice actor.
- Several elements of the story are similar to the comics storyline Funeral for a Friend, including Batman watching Superman's memorial procession from a rooftop.
- Part II is reminiscent of Richard Matheson's novel I Am Legend, and its film adaptation The Omega Man, both depicting the life of a single man on Earth after the rest of humanity is wiped out by some disaster.
- Vandal Savage's fade in Part II is similar to the way the characters of the Back to the Future trilogy do so when time is altered.
- Virgil and Richie from Static Shock do not attend the funeral, despite the Justice League's guest appearances on their show.
- Although Barbara Gordon was a close friend of Supergirl, she was not seen at the funeral, nor was Dick Grayson.
- Snapper Carr appears to have been Superman's sixth pallbearer, though he can only be seen as such when the pallbearers are seen from behind.
- The plot of Superman being shunted into a barren, uninhabited Earth under a red sun in a distant future through the actions of a Superman Revenge Squad shows similarities to "Superman Under the Red Sun", the leading story in Action Comics #300 (1963).
- Wonder Woman's ceremonial dress incorporates the eagle-shaped chest plate she has worn in the comics and the Super Friends animated series.
- Flash "riding" Lobo's bike (with a skull head on it) is a possible reference to the Amalgam Comic "Speed Demon", in which Flash (Barry Allen) has been combined with Etrigan and Marvel's Ghost Rider (Johnny Blaze) to become the Speed Demon (Blaze Allen) and Wally West joins with a new demon to become "Kid Demon" and rescue his uncle riding a motorcycle (in relation to Ghost Rider).
- Despite his hatred of Superman, Lex Luthor states that he will miss him, too. This moment is somewhat similar to Batman: The Animated Series episode The Man Who Killed Batman where Joker mourns Batman, lamenting the loss of his archenemy. In both cases, however, reports of the hero's death turned out to be greatly exaggerated.
- Green Lantern refers to Toyman's robot as "Iron Giant". This is likely a reference to the film of the same name about a giant robot from outer space meeting a young boy (voiced by Eli Marienthal) who introduces him to Superman comics. Incidentally, the government agent trying to find the robot is voiced by Christopher McDonald (the voice of Jor-El and older Superman).
- Superman's car appears to be a 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air.
Cast
Edit
| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| George Newbern | Superman |
| Kevin Conroy | Batman |
| Susan Eisenberg | Wonder Woman |
| Phil LaMarr | Green Lantern |
| Carl Lumbly | J'onn J'onzz |
| Maria Canals | Hawkgirl Livewire (uncredited) Watchtower computer (uncredited) |
| Michael Rosenbaum | The Flash Deadshot (uncredited) |
| Clancy Brown | Lex Luthor |
| Corey Burton | Metallo Toyman Weather Wizard |
| Dana Delany | Lois Lane Maggie Sawyer (uncredited) |
| Michael Dorn | Kalibak |
| Brad Garrett | Lobo |
| Jason Marsden | Snapper Carr |
| Phil Morris | Vandal Savage |
| Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. | Alfred Pennyworth |
Uncredited appearances
Edit
Quotes
Edit
Part I
Edit
Toyman: What are you going to do to me? |
The Flash: I used to be able to goof around so much because I knew Superman had my back. Now all I've got is his example, and that's gonna have to be enough. |
(Lex Luthor arrives at the funeral) |
J'onn J'onzz: Though we gather here today, bound together in sorrow and loss, we share a precious gift. We are, all of us, privileged to live a life that has been touched by Superman. The Man of Steel possessed many extraordinary gifts, and he shared them with us freely. None of these gifts were more remarkable than his ability to discern what needed to be done, and his unfailing courage in doing it, whatever the personal cost. Let us all strive to accept his gift, and pass it along, as an ongoing tribute to Kal-El of Krypton, the immigrant from the stars, who taught us all how to be heroes. |
Lobo: What's with all the long faces, Justice-Dweebs? It's like a wake in here. Lighten up! The answer to all your problems has arrived. Since we're gonna be workin' together, you can call me Lobo. |
Lobo: The Main Man happens to be the best bounty hunter in the known universe. You can ask Superman if he weren't busy pushing up daisies. |
Wonder Woman: You're no Superman. |
Lobo: You want an audition? C'mon, ladies, let's dance! |
Batman: I've got some things to say. I should've said them when you were here, but... despite our differences, I have nothing but respect for you. I hope you knew... know that. You showed me justice doesn't always have to come from the darkness. I'll miss... |
Kalibak: This looks like a job for Superman!... But I don't think he's coming. |
J'onn J'onzz: The Justice League is about more than physical power. It's about ideals, caring, helping. |
Kalibak: I'm going to grind you into paste! |
Part II
Edit
Superman: You're insane. |
(Superman is holding a rock over Savage's head after learning he wiped out the human race) |
Superman: Self-help books? You don't seem the type. |
Deadshot: Bang, you're dead. |
Vandal Savage: Thank you, my friend. (fades away) |
Footnotes
Edit
- ↑ Just like the one used in "The Savage Time"
| Previously produced episode: "Eclipsed" | Episodes of Justice League | Next produced episode: "Secret Society" |
| Previously aired episode: "Secret Society" | Next aired episode: "Wild Cards" |