Anti-Justice League

Anti-Justice League

The Anti-Justice League plotting against Superman. From Action Comics #443. Art by Curt Swan and Tex Blaisdell.
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
First appearance Action Comics #443 (Jan 1975)
Created by Elliot S! Maggin
Curt Swan
In-story information
Member(s) Queen Bee
Brainiac
Chronos
Clayface
Gorilla Grodd
Harpy
Merlyn
Ocean Master
Sinestro

The Anti-Justice League is the name of a fictional team of supervillains in the DC Comics Universe.

Publication history

The Anti-Justice League first appeared in Action Comics #443 and were created by Elliot S! Maggin and Curt Swan.

Fictional team history

In another bid for world domination, the alien conqueror Queen Bee forms a group intended as the antithesis of the Justice League of America. In other words, Brainiac to Superman, Clayface to Batman, Sinestro to Green Lantern, Gorilla Grodd to Flash, Ocean Master to Aquaman, Merlyn to Green Arrow, a Harpy to Black Canary, and Chronos to Atom. Her plan is to ambush members of the superhero team before they can realize the group as a whole is under attack and in this she's mostly successful, even capturing members Elongated Man and Red Tornado. However, Superman becomes aware of his allies' disappearances and uses Kryptonian technology to make the world switch their perceptions of Superman and Clark Kent (as the villains are off-planet on a space vessel, they're unaffected). This tactic confuses Brainiac and Queen Bee is forced to send her Bee-Men to try to capture Superman. Inevitably, Superman follows the minions back to their headquarters and manages to enable his comrades to escape as he faces the villains by himself. With the Justice League free, they soundly defeat Queen Bee's group. Superman uses his technology to erase memories of his dual identity from the minds of the villains save Brainiac and return Earth to its original perception.[1]

Membership

See also

References

  1. Action Comics #443

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.