When I saw it, I was thinking "Restless."
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Discussion of Buffy and Angel comics, books, and more. Please don't get into spoilery details in the first week of release.
The very last shot, "Did you see that?" was the same as the opening shot of the very first Batman: TAS episode, "On Leather Wings".
The very last shot
It's the end of the Dini/Timm-verse as we know it.
Hey, just a quick pimp of my friend's comic-rec journal: jinx_says over on LJ. He puts up scans and different issues of comics that he recommends, and he takes requests as well.
Wait -- JLU is done for good?
The DC Animated Universe is done for good. It began in 1992 with "Batman: The Animated Series", was created by Bruce Timm. It had continuity with "Superman: The Animated Series", "Batman Beyond", "Justice League", and tangentially Static Shock. Paul Dini wrote many of the best episodes on these series.
There's also "Teen Titans" and "The Batman" cartoons, but Timm/Dini weren't involved with them, and don't share continuity.
There's also "Teen Titans" and "The Batman" cartoons, but Timm/Dini weren't involved with them, and don't share continuity.
I thought Timm was involved with Teen Titans until this season?
I thought Timm was involved with Teen Titans until this season?
Huh. He was. I didn't realize that. It's not part of the regular continuity, though.
It's not part of the regular continuity, though.
That's true, but it did play off continuity from time to time. Like the Dick Grayson hint about Robin, or the Robin/Speedy relationship or just sticking so closely to the original Wolfman storylines. It coyly winked at DCU continuity.
Superpeeps, where would you suggest picking up Big Blue Backstory? I just sort of jumped in a while back, so it's not like Gotham, where I can say, "Okay, here are the basics. This is where you start."
Probably John Byrne's excellent "Man of Steel" miniseries which, recent tweaks and all, is still pretty much the baseline for post-Crisis Superman.
Actually, Mark Waid/Lenil Yu's "Birthright" miniseries is considered the new Superman baseline, although I don't know if it's accepted by the fans yet. There seemed to be a bit of an effort to get Smallville - like continuity (Lex is a contemporary and was in Smallville when Clark was in high school, but the friendship angle isn't really there). I only started reading Superman when Jeph Loeb was writing it (issue #180 had Supes going against Dracula and it had a lot of Buffy references), and I picked up the other titles beginning with the "Godfall" arc, so I'm not well-versed in Super-history. I haven't felt lost in any of the stories since I've been reading the titles on a regular basis.