3.5/5
DC’s Elseworlds have offered glimpses into versions of their characters that might have been for more than three decades. Yet, outside of the odd collecting of one-shots and their sequels or limited series receiving a trade release, many of these tales have been left to fade into obscurity. That changed in the mid to late 2010s as DC began printing collected volumes of Elseworlds tales, including this 2019 volume that represented the third set of Justice League tales.
Sort of, anyway. Only one of the releases (the two issue JLA: Created Equal from 2000) can rightfully claim to be a Justice League story. Instead, the volume focuses on characters and runs beyond Batman and Superman (who had their own respective volumes). To some extent, this volume feels like a miscellaneous volume under the Justice League umbrella. Though, to be fair, “Elseworlds Miscellaneous” doesn’t exactly have a nice ring to it.
The results are mixed but interesting. Opening the volume is the three issue Conjurers series from 1999, set in a DC universe devoid of the trinity or the JLA but where magic has trumped science. It’s a fantasy story, one that sees various DC characters in that arena come to the fore and face down a threat alongside the 1990s incarnation of the Challengers of the Unknown (here given the nicknames of their original Silver age counterparts). How you feel about the fantasy genre will likely determine how you feel about it but this one left me a bit cold.
Next up is Flashpoint. No not THAT Flashpoint from 2011 but a 1999 three issue run, set in a world in which the Barry Allen incarnation of the Flash was the first and only superhero to show up on the scene before being left paralyzed by a bullet while saving JFK’s life in Dealy Plaza. Set largely in an alternate
retro-futuristic 1999 combining elements of the Silver Age with our modern world, with Barry’s technology and the immortal Vandal Savage’s advances in health care serving as its foundation. That is until an artifact is found among the Face on Mars and the Martian pyramids at Cydonia by Barry’s nephew Wally West threatens this future. The first two issues are strong, setting up the world and blessed by Norm Breyfogle’s artwork. Sadly, it doesn’t quite stick the landing but it’s a good read even if the ending comes up short.
Lending the collection its cover is Superman and Batman: World's Funnest. As the cover and title might suggest, Mr. Mxyzptlk and Bat-Mite fight their way across the DC multiverse from the Silver Age to the DC Animated Universe and crossing over into a number of comic titles. It’s a hilarious tale that gently parodies and pays homage to much of the company’s history and features a wealth of artwork styles, sometimes by the original artists of various eras and series. To say more risks spoiling something that turned into a legitimate laugh out loud read at times. For anyone more than remotely familiar with DC’s comics, it’s an utter delight and makes the volume worth checking out on its own.
The one definitively Justice League tale here is the aforementioned Created Equal from 2000. In it, DC’s Earth at the turn of the millennium is hit by a cosmic storm wipes out every human/alien male on Earth with the exception of Superman and a power-suited Lex Luthor. There’s a weight to Fabian Nicieza’s writing, a genuine sense of both loss and hope for a better world out of the tragedy in the first half. That hope comes under threat in the second half which, despite having been published a quarter-century ago, felt oddly timely in its themes and message (not to mention offering an intriguing pre-echo of the 2025 Superman film playing in cinemas as I write this review). Though two issues, it could easily have had a third expanding the middle part of the narrative given the time jumps involved in the opening pages of the concluding installment. The result is possibly the strongest story in the entire collection, all the more ironic as it’s the one proper Justice League title here.
Rounding off the set is Green Lantern: 1001 Emerald Nights. As the title might suggest, this is a play on the 1,001 Arabian Nights that combines some of those tales with the Green Lantern and other parts of the DC mythos. Rebecca Guay’s artwork is the highlight of this one-shot, suggesting great age while also finding a nice fusing of familiar DC elements and characters into a Middle Eastern setting. The writing from Terry LaBan does little to elevate this above a mere retelling with Green Lantern elements affixed to it, which is a shame given the potential. The result remains a nice but undemanding read that is really carried by Guay’s impressive artwork more than by the story itself.
Like many a collection, this is a mixed bag. There’s some good stuff here, particularly in the middle when the two series and the utter joy that is World’s Funnest. Others will depend on how you feel about fantasy or a re-telling of familiar tales in DC clothing. Even so, there’s enough here to keep a reader of DC’s output happy for a few hours discovering what might have been Elseworlds in the multiverse.