fbpx
Wikipedia

Absolute Justice

"Absolute Justice" is the eleventh episode of the ninth season of the CW series Smallville, and the 185th episode of the overall series. The episode originally aired on February 5, 2010 in the United States, and was initially slated to be two individual episodes before it was ultimately turned into a two-hour, single episode. Glen Winter directed the first half of "Absolute Justice", which was originally known as "Society". Tom Welling directed the second half, which was called "Legends". Comic book author Geoff Johns, who first wrote the season eight episode "Legion", wrote both hours of "Absolute Justice".

"Absolute Justice"
Smallville episode
Official Poster
Episode no.Season 9
Episode 11
Directed by
Written byGeoff Johns
Production code3X5261/3X5262
Original air dateFebruary 5, 2010 (2010-02-05)
Running time84 minutes
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
← Previous
"Disciple"
Next →
"Warrior"
Smallville (season 9)
List of episodes

In the episode's narrative, Clark Kent (Welling), Chloe Sullivan (Allison Mack), Oliver Queen/Green Arrow (Justin Hartley) and John Jones (Phil Morris) meet a team of superheroes, called the Justice Society of America, who operated during the 1970s. The Justice Society is being hunted by an assassin known as Icicle (Wesley MacInnes). Icicle was recruited by the organization Checkmate, which is being headed by Agent Amanda Waller (Pam Grier). Clark, Chloe, Oliver and John team up with the Justice Society members to battle Icicle.

The introduction of the Justice Society was developed to be relevant to the series, primarily being used to teach the new generation of superheroes—Clark, Oliver, and the rest of the team—a lesson about family and leadership. Johns modeled his vision of the Justice Society after the film Watchmen, where a group of superheroes come out of retirement. Johns also included references to other Justice Society members throughout the episode. "Absolute Justice" is Smallville's highest-rated episode for season nine in total viewers, adults 18–49, and men 18–49. The episode received generally mixed reviews from critics; while praise was given to the guest characters' back stories, criticism was dealt for what was perceived as a poor choice of a villain.

Plot Edit

As Chloe Sullivan tries to get in touch with Clark Kent, she finds herself cornered in an alleyway by a man named Sylvester Pemberton, who is wielding a staff that has the ability to control light. As Sylvester attempts to inform Chloe that he is a friend, an assassin known as Icicle attacks and Sylvester is ultimately killed. Chloe and Clark go to the hospital to investigate the truth behind Sylvester, which ultimately leads them to the Daily Planet archive room. There, Clark and Chloe discover documents and an old 16 mm film that identifies Sylvester as part of a team of "criminals", which includes: Carter Hall, Kent Nelson, Jay Garrick, Alan Scott, Ted Grant, Abigail Hunkel, Wesley Dodds, and Al Pratt. In the documentary footage, Sylvester and the rest of his team are systematically arrested. Because of allegations of jury tampering, falsified evidence, and lack of connection, all of the individuals are released.

While Clark and Chloe are looking into the criminal group, Icicle tracks down and kills Wesley Dodds following Dodds' dream about him; Clark later finds Dodds' body. Following Dodds' death, Clark tracks down Carter Hall, believing him to be Icicle's next target. Clark finds Hall at a museum; he also finds Kent Nelson, who is mumbling incoherently to himself and clutching onto a small bag. Using his X-ray vision, Clark sees a helmet inside the bag, which turns on its own and looks back at Clark. Having enough of Clark's questions, Carter sends Clark on his way.

Meanwhile, Chloe sends Oliver Queen after Sylvester's staff. Unfortunately, high school sophomore Courtney Whitmore has already taken the staff. Before Oliver can get the staff from her, Kent shows up and uses the staff to teleport both him and Courtney back to the museum. Here, it is revealed that Sylvester's team was actually a group of superheroes led by Carter Hall, who went by the codename "Hawkman". The group called themselves the "Justice Society of America". Courtney, who was Sylvester's protégé, Kent and Carter band together to find Sylvester's killer. As such, Kent places the Helmet of Nabu back on and transforms into "Doctor Fate".

After investigating Dodds and Pemberton's deaths, Clark and Chloe believe they have located the killer at the psychiatric ward of Metropolis General Hospital. When they arrive, they find the individual, Joar Mahkent, in a vegetative state and Doctor Fate reading his mind. Doctor Fate then sees Clark's fate and teleports Clark and himself to the museum. Meanwhile, the real assassin is revealed to be Joar's son, who is killing the Justice Society members for putting his father in that vegetative state decades earlier. Hired by an organization known as Checkmate, and instructed by Agent Amanda Waller, Icicle sets his sights on Courtney. Oliver tracks down Courtney—who calls herself "Stargirl"—and realizes that she is setting herself up as bait to lure Icicle out. Icicle arrives, but Oliver interrupts Courtney's plan. As a result, Hawkman grabs Oliver, throws him through the Watchtower window, and then threatens to do worse if Oliver interferes again.

Meanwhile, Checkmate sends Lois Lane an anonymous package that provides her with the truth about the Justice Society. Clark awakens at the museum, where Doctor Fate informs Clark that his fate is to lead a new generation of superheroes, and that he will one day conquer his greatest enemy, Lex Luthor. Oliver and John Jones show up at the museum to rescue Clark, unaware that Hawkman, Doctor Fate, and Stargirl are actually heroes. Banding together, the group splits up into pairs to locate Icicle. While on patrol, Doctor Fate and John Jones are attacked by Icicle. Before Doctor Fate is killed, he uses his abilities to restore John's Martian powers. While John lies unconscious, Icicle steals Doctor Fate's helmet and acquires the powers that go with it.

Clark and the others regroup at Watchtower, where Icicle arrives to kill the rest of the Justice Society and avenge his father. At first, Clark, Hawkman, Stargirl, and Green Arrow have trouble taking down Icicle and his new abilities. When John arrives, the group is finally able to defeat Icicle. Afterward, Carter tells Clark that he and Courtney have located the surviving members of the Justice Society, their children, and their protégés in order to build a new team of superheroes for today's generation. Back at the Daily Planet after having been visited by Agent Waller, Lois publishes her article on the Justice Society, revealing them to be a team of superheroes who were lambasted by the government, and falsely imprisoned. Icicle is transported back to Checkmate. With Icicle in a heated cage, Agent Waller subsequently kills him after informing Icicle that he was a part of the new Suicide Squad. Afterward, Tess Mercer is revealed to be an agent of Checkmate.

Production Edit

Development Edit

The idea of introducing the Justice Society of America was first made public at the 2009 Comic Con, where producers announced that comic book author Geoff Johns would write the episode. Johns had previously introduced the Legion of Super-Heroes in the season eight episode "Legion".[1] As Johns worked on the script for the Justice Society episode, which was titled "Society", it was decided that in order to do the characters justice, the decision was made to extend the story into two separate episodes, with the second episode titled "Legends". Executive producer Kelly Souders explained that "there were so many characters and so much great story that people would've been robbed of some great moments if we kept it to just one hour".[2] According to executive producer Brian Peterson, he and Johns realized there was so much material for one episode that they decided to make it into two. Peterson describes the episodes as a "mini-movie", and referred to it as one of the most exciting things they have done on Smallville in nine years.[3]

Ultimately, the idea of two separate episodes was scrapped in favor of combining them into a single show. The CW then marketed the episode as a two-hour television movie titled, Smallville: Absolute Justice.[4] Following the episode's airing, the Smallville writers announced on their Twitter page that they still consider "Absolute Justice" to be two separately produced episodes, but was aired and packaged on the season nine DVD as a single episode.[5][6] For the Complete Series DVD package released in November 2011, Warner Bros. Home Video acknowledged the two separate episodes in their official count of 218 episodes.[7] When the show was released on the Hulu streaming service in October 2016, the episodes were split in two, labelled "Absolute Justice, Part 1 - Society" and "Absolute Justice, Part 2 - Legends", with both being recognized as episode eleven of season nine.[8]

Michael Shanks, Brent Stait and Brittney Irvin were cast as the Justice Society members Carter Hall/Hawkman, Kent Nelson/Doctor Fate, and Courtney Whitmore/Stargirl, respectively.[9] Shanks took the role because he did not think he would get many opportunities to play a superhero in the future.[10] Pam Grier appeared as Amanda Waller, a character from DC Comics, in "Absolute Justice", and she also appeared in "multiple episodes".[11] Phil Morris was also brought back as John Jones, a recurring character Morris has appeared as since season six.[2]

Writing Edit

 
Comic book writer Geoff Johns wrote the script for the episode. Johns previously wrote the season eight episode "Legion".

As the script for "Absolute Justice" was developed by Geoff Johns, executive producer Brian Peterson explained that he wanted the entrance for the Justice Society to be relevant to the series. Peterson felt that the Justice Society should teach the new generation of heroes—Clark, Oliver, and the rest of the team—a lesson about family and leadership.[3] Peterson also stated that the mid-season episode "Disciple" was written so that it could set the table for "Absolute Justice", and reveal that the show's heroes are not coalescing the way they need to be.[12] Geoff Johns described his version of the Justice Society to be similar to the heroes of the film Watchmen, who "come out of retirement to give 'the screwed-up guys of the next generation a needed smack down'".[13]

When it came time to translate the comic book Justice Society members into live-action characters, Johns said that he tried to keep everyone exactly the same. Johns noted that Hawkman and Stargirl are virtual duplicates of their comic book counterparts, but that Doctor Fate "took on a life of his own" when Johns was writing him. According to Johns, Kent Nelson is portrayed as being in a "different place and head space than he is in the comics". Regardless of any differences between where the characters are in their respective lives, Johns stated that they both still "embody the same values and traits". Johns also noted that he almost did not use the character of Doctor Fate. While he was developing the initial concept for the story, and meeting with executive producers Peterson and Souders, there were no restrictions on the characters he could use. The idea of using Wildcat or Jay Garrick was floated around, but Johns believed he had a unique approach to the Doctor Fate character. He also believed that Doctor Fate fit into the storyline better than Wildcat or Jay Garrick.[14]

Johns chose to write in as much detail as possible, because he wanted to create a full sense of history for the characters. This included specific paintings, cards, tables, and how their costumes appeared. Johns also included mentionings of former members and relatives of the current members. According to the writer, the executive producers embraced his ideas completely. In addition, Johns researched where the Smallville writers had taken the show since the last time he wrote an episode, although he acknowledged that he did not have the plan to incorporate the primary storyline of season nine. Johns' initial script pushed the production budget to the max. According to Johns: "By turning the story into two episodes, it not only allowed the story to get bigger, but it allowed our budget to become bigger".[15]

Character designs Edit

Michael Shanks wears the traditional Hawkman uniform, complete with strap-on wings and Hawkman's mace. He spent time practicing his wire work for the flying scenes that he would have to film while in full costume. One difference in the costume is the inclusion of a chest plate. According to Shanks, the costume designers added a chest plate to assist the flying harness they created. The chest plate and Hawkman's helmet were given a bronze color, as opposed to the more traditional "yellow/gold" color. Shanks, who is accustomed to the chaos of a weekly television series, was surprised to find so much attention paid to a guest starring role. Shanks said producer James Marshall respected and took into consideration some of his artistic input. He also said that his character's return for future episodes was a "strong possibility".[16] According to Johns: "Their costumes work because the Justice Society members were from the generation before Clark and his allies".[15]

Reception Edit

Nielsen Ratings for "Absolute Justice" came in at approximately 2.77 million viewers, which is Smallville's highest-rated episode for season nine in total viewers, adults 18–49, and men 18–49,[17] a 7% increase from the season nine premiere, which had 2.58 million viewers.[18][19]

 
Tom Welling directed the second hour of the episode.

Reviews for the episode were generally mixed. Carlos Delgado of IFMagazine gave the episode a B+, stating that "'Absolute Justice' was ambitious. A two hour defibrillation trying to restore a pulse to a show that had been relegated to the Friday night death slot. It takes guts to air something that could so easily make or break a season. Two hours of garbage, the show is done. Two hours of comic book bliss, well, let's just say contracts might be written up that very night to secure the next phase of the Man of Steel's odyssey. Yes, it was that big". He said that Icicle was a weak antagonist but mentioned that "Absolute Justice" was a success.[20] Anthony Ocasio from ScreenRant went as far as deeming "Absolute Justice" one of the best episodes of Smallville in its nine years of being on the air, writing that "it was wonderful to see that guest characters could be on Smallville with a backstory that's more than the normal "guess who just happened to come to Metropolis". He voiced his opinion against the antagonist, Icicle, and called the actor who portrayed the character "poor", and stated he "got goose bumps", regarding his fate at the hands of Clark Kent.[21]

Reviewer Graeme McMillan praised Tom Welling's directing, while calling Clark the character who was the least fun of the episode; he praised writer Geoff Johns, saying that "there was a sense of scale and history to the episode that the series doesn't usually manage". When talking about the Justice Society, he said: "They brought with them — or, more likely, Geoff Johns did — a banter and wit that the show often lacks, and also a speed and lightness that worked better than the show's usual po-faced drama.... the show just seemed better than usual". He concluded his review by saying that even though the special effects were disappointing, the episode was fun.[22] Ken Tucker from Entertainment Weekly said the first hour of the episode contained the "stand-out visual sequence" and thought the second hour was "more lumbering", with the big fight sequence toward the end "unsatisfying". Tucker wrote: "For viewers who only know the Superman/boy mythos according to Smallville, it must have seemed strange to have most of the series' ongoing subplots put in storage for this week's two-hour edition. Then again, since the villain of this piece was a faux-hawked foe called the Icicle, frozen plotlines were inevitable".[23] Reviewer Blair Marnell said: "For longtime comic fans, catching all of the comic references was part of the fun, including Radu's Cafe from "Green Lantern", the "Trouble Alert" from the classic Super Friends animated series, and Pemberton's "Star-Rocket Racer", which also served as the home for the fallen hero". He said the episode approached an "epic scale not seen in the series for a long time" and criticized the "raspy voice" of "Hawkman". In concluding the review, he wrote that he enjoyed slight nods to the comics and thought the episode could have been told in one hour.[24] Reviewer Chris Carabott praised "Absolute Justice", saying that it brings various members of the Justice Society of America to life on the small screen and it does it brilliantly. He applauded writer Geoff Johns, saying he "outdoes himself with a story that pays homage to the early days of some of DC's finest". While stating disapproval among the costumes, he said Doctor Fate's "gold helmet contrasted by the dark blue of the costume looked fantastic in HD". He also called the episode "a great achievement" and said it is "fun to watch for both long time DC Comics fans and Smallville fans".[25]

Author Joe Oesterle said that it is odd how in a major city like Metropolis, main characters are the only ones out on the streets. He expressed disappointment with the Sandman's death: "I'd have liked to see some old school Sandman roughhouse, and I felt cheated when a...Golden Age legend like Sandman goes to his eternal rest without so much as a single blast from his gas gun. I suppose the argument could be made to say that's how formidable Icicle Jr. was, or how rusty Sandman was, but I'm not buying that. Sandman deserved to go down fighting, not frozen solid while frozen in hesitation". While criticizing the episode, he compared the episode to the Watchmen film and disapproved of the "Batman" voice the Hawkman had. He also said that there should have been more John Jones and less Lois Lane. While praising the episode, he approved of Amanda Waller and said that Tess Mercer became a lethal hand-to-hand combatant. He concluded by saying that the episode did not live up to its hype and thought the episode before it, "Disciple", was "Grade A entertainment" in comparison.[26] One reviewer praised the show by saying Smallville is "quietly having its best season in at least 5 years". He said the show currently does not resemble its former self and plays more like a graphic novel. He called Hawkman "excellent" but also disapproved of the "Christian Bale"-Batman voice; he called Doctor Fate "awesome".[27]

Brad Trechak from TVSquad had a negative review: "Admittedly, the episode was kind of light on story and ended up having major plot-holes, the least of which being how exactly "Hawkman"'s helmet stayed on". He compared the episode to the Watchmen movie and asked why the Justice Society were scared of Icicle, and thought that the show creators could have used Vandal Savage or another menacing villain. He compared Dr. Fate's death with possible foreshadowing of the early death of Chloe. He ended by stating: "The episode didn't quite live up to the hype, but it was close enough".[28]

References Edit

  1. ^ "Smallville at Comic-Con: Look, Up on the Screen, It's... !". TV Guide. July 26, 2009. from the original on March 18, 2010. Retrieved February 18, 2010.
  2. ^ a b . Entertainment Weekly. October 26, 2009. Archived from the original on October 30, 2009. Retrieved February 17, 2010.
  3. ^ a b . TV Guide. November 20, 2009. Archived from the original on February 11, 2010. Retrieved February 17, 2010.
  4. ^ . Entertainment Weekly. November 17, 2009. Archived from the original on November 19, 2009. Retrieved February 17, 2010.
  5. ^ David Lambert (June 17, 2010). . TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on June 19, 2010. Retrieved June 17, 2010.
  6. ^ "Smallville writers respond". Twitter. February 19, 2010. Retrieved March 9, 2010.
  7. ^ "Smallville: The Complete Series". WarnerBros.com. Retrieved October 2, 2016.
  8. ^ "Watch Smallville Online - Streaming at Hulu". Hulu.com. Retrieved October 2, 2016.
  9. ^ "Shanks, Stait headed for Smallville". www.gateworld.net. October 19, 2009. Retrieved February 20, 2010.
  10. ^ "Michael Shanks 'likes Watchmen comparison'". Digital Spy. February 5, 2010. from the original on February 9, 2010. Retrieved February 17, 2010.
  11. ^ . ew.com. November 9, 2009. Archived from the original on November 13, 2009. Retrieved February 20, 2010.
  12. ^ . FanCast. January 29, 2010. Archived from the original on February 2, 2010. Retrieved February 17, 2010.
  13. ^ William Keck (August 31, 2009). . TV Guide. Archived from the original on September 3, 2009. Retrieved September 6, 2009.
  14. ^ "KryptonSite Interview: Geoff Johns Talks Absolute Justice!". KryptonSite. February 5, 2010. from the original on February 7, 2010. Retrieved February 17, 2010.
  15. ^ a b "Geoff Johns On "Absolute Justice"". Comic Book Resources. February 5, 2010. Retrieved February 17, 2010.
  16. ^ "Michael Shanks on Smallville and Hawkman!". Huffington Post. October 30, 2009. from the original on November 2, 2009. Retrieved October 30, 2009.
  17. ^ Robert Seidman. . TV By the Numbers. Archived from the original on October 10, 2012. Retrieved February 16, 2010.
  18. ^ Bill Gorman (October 12, 2009). . TVByTheNumbers.com. Archived from the original on 15 October 2009. Retrieved October 20, 2009.
  19. ^ [(Final value - initial value)/initial value] * 100 = Percent difference
  20. ^ . IFMagazine. February 6, 2010. Archived from the original on February 9, 2010. Retrieved February 16, 2010.
  21. ^ "Smallville: 'Absolute Justice' Review & Discussion". ScreenRant. February 5, 2010. from the original on February 10, 2010. Retrieved February 16, 2010.
  22. ^ "Absolute Justice Entertains Absolutely... Well, Almost". io9. February 6, 2010. from the original on February 9, 2010. Retrieved February 16, 2010.
  23. ^ Ken Tucker (February 6, 2010). "'Smallville: Absolute Justice': Clunky, or funky fun?". Entertainment Weekly. from the original on February 8, 2010. Retrieved February 6, 2010.
  24. ^ "'Smallville: Absolute Justice' Review". SplashPage.MTV. February 6, 2010. from the original on February 9, 2010. Retrieved February 16, 2010.
  25. ^ "Smallville: "Absolute Justice" Review". IGN. February 7, 2010. from the original on February 11, 2010. Retrieved February 16, 2010.
  26. ^ . Mania.com. February 7, 2010. Archived from the original on February 12, 2010. Retrieved February 16, 2010.
  27. ^ "TV Review: Smallville: Absolute Justice + Midseason Review and Recap". NerdSociety. February 6, 2010. Retrieved February 16, 2010.
  28. ^ "Review: 'Smallville' - 'Absolute Justice'". TVSquad. February 6, 2010. from the original on February 12, 2010. Retrieved February 16, 2010.

External links Edit

  • "Absolute Justice" at IMDb

absolute, justice, this, article, about, smallville, episode, issue, graphic, novel, justice, comics, motto, marines, manga, series, piece, eleventh, episode, ninth, season, series, smallville, 185th, episode, overall, series, episode, originally, aired, febru. This article is about the Smallville TV episode For the 12 issue graphic novel see Justice DC Comics For motto of the marines in the manga series see One Piece Absolute Justice is the eleventh episode of the ninth season of the CW series Smallville and the 185th episode of the overall series The episode originally aired on February 5 2010 in the United States and was initially slated to be two individual episodes before it was ultimately turned into a two hour single episode Glen Winter directed the first half of Absolute Justice which was originally known as Society Tom Welling directed the second half which was called Legends Comic book author Geoff Johns who first wrote the season eight episode Legion wrote both hours of Absolute Justice Absolute Justice Smallville episodeOfficial PosterEpisode no Season 9Episode 11Directed byGlen Winter Tom WellingWritten byGeoff JohnsProduction code3X5261 3X5262Original air dateFebruary 5 2010 2010 02 05 Running time84 minutesGuest appearancesPam Grier as Amanda Waller Phil Morris as John Jones Alessandro Juliani as Dr Emil Hamilton Michael Shanks as Carter Hall Hawkman Brent Stait as Kent Nelson Doctor Fate Britt Irvin as Courtney Whitmore Stargirl Wesley MacInnes as Icicle Jim Shield as Sylvester Pemberton Star Spangled KidEpisode chronology Previous Disciple Next Warrior Smallville season 9 List of episodesIn the episode s narrative Clark Kent Welling Chloe Sullivan Allison Mack Oliver Queen Green Arrow Justin Hartley and John Jones Phil Morris meet a team of superheroes called the Justice Society of America who operated during the 1970s The Justice Society is being hunted by an assassin known as Icicle Wesley MacInnes Icicle was recruited by the organization Checkmate which is being headed by Agent Amanda Waller Pam Grier Clark Chloe Oliver and John team up with the Justice Society members to battle Icicle The introduction of the Justice Society was developed to be relevant to the series primarily being used to teach the new generation of superheroes Clark Oliver and the rest of the team a lesson about family and leadership Johns modeled his vision of the Justice Society after the film Watchmen where a group of superheroes come out of retirement Johns also included references to other Justice Society members throughout the episode Absolute Justice is Smallville s highest rated episode for season nine in total viewers adults 18 49 and men 18 49 The episode received generally mixed reviews from critics while praise was given to the guest characters back stories criticism was dealt for what was perceived as a poor choice of a villain Contents 1 Plot 2 Production 2 1 Development 2 2 Writing 2 3 Character designs 3 Reception 4 References 5 External linksPlot EditAs Chloe Sullivan tries to get in touch with Clark Kent she finds herself cornered in an alleyway by a man named Sylvester Pemberton who is wielding a staff that has the ability to control light As Sylvester attempts to inform Chloe that he is a friend an assassin known as Icicle attacks and Sylvester is ultimately killed Chloe and Clark go to the hospital to investigate the truth behind Sylvester which ultimately leads them to the Daily Planet archive room There Clark and Chloe discover documents and an old 16 mm film that identifies Sylvester as part of a team of criminals which includes Carter Hall Kent Nelson Jay Garrick Alan Scott Ted Grant Abigail Hunkel Wesley Dodds and Al Pratt In the documentary footage Sylvester and the rest of his team are systematically arrested Because of allegations of jury tampering falsified evidence and lack of connection all of the individuals are released While Clark and Chloe are looking into the criminal group Icicle tracks down and kills Wesley Dodds following Dodds dream about him Clark later finds Dodds body Following Dodds death Clark tracks down Carter Hall believing him to be Icicle s next target Clark finds Hall at a museum he also finds Kent Nelson who is mumbling incoherently to himself and clutching onto a small bag Using his X ray vision Clark sees a helmet inside the bag which turns on its own and looks back at Clark Having enough of Clark s questions Carter sends Clark on his way Meanwhile Chloe sends Oliver Queen after Sylvester s staff Unfortunately high school sophomore Courtney Whitmore has already taken the staff Before Oliver can get the staff from her Kent shows up and uses the staff to teleport both him and Courtney back to the museum Here it is revealed that Sylvester s team was actually a group of superheroes led by Carter Hall who went by the codename Hawkman The group called themselves the Justice Society of America Courtney who was Sylvester s protege Kent and Carter band together to find Sylvester s killer As such Kent places the Helmet of Nabu back on and transforms into Doctor Fate After investigating Dodds and Pemberton s deaths Clark and Chloe believe they have located the killer at the psychiatric ward of Metropolis General Hospital When they arrive they find the individual Joar Mahkent in a vegetative state and Doctor Fate reading his mind Doctor Fate then sees Clark s fate and teleports Clark and himself to the museum Meanwhile the real assassin is revealed to be Joar s son who is killing the Justice Society members for putting his father in that vegetative state decades earlier Hired by an organization known as Checkmate and instructed by Agent Amanda Waller Icicle sets his sights on Courtney Oliver tracks down Courtney who calls herself Stargirl and realizes that she is setting herself up as bait to lure Icicle out Icicle arrives but Oliver interrupts Courtney s plan As a result Hawkman grabs Oliver throws him through the Watchtower window and then threatens to do worse if Oliver interferes again Meanwhile Checkmate sends Lois Lane an anonymous package that provides her with the truth about the Justice Society Clark awakens at the museum where Doctor Fate informs Clark that his fate is to lead a new generation of superheroes and that he will one day conquer his greatest enemy Lex Luthor Oliver and John Jones show up at the museum to rescue Clark unaware that Hawkman Doctor Fate and Stargirl are actually heroes Banding together the group splits up into pairs to locate Icicle While on patrol Doctor Fate and John Jones are attacked by Icicle Before Doctor Fate is killed he uses his abilities to restore John s Martian powers While John lies unconscious Icicle steals Doctor Fate s helmet and acquires the powers that go with it Clark and the others regroup at Watchtower where Icicle arrives to kill the rest of the Justice Society and avenge his father At first Clark Hawkman Stargirl and Green Arrow have trouble taking down Icicle and his new abilities When John arrives the group is finally able to defeat Icicle Afterward Carter tells Clark that he and Courtney have located the surviving members of the Justice Society their children and their proteges in order to build a new team of superheroes for today s generation Back at the Daily Planet after having been visited by Agent Waller Lois publishes her article on the Justice Society revealing them to be a team of superheroes who were lambasted by the government and falsely imprisoned Icicle is transported back to Checkmate With Icicle in a heated cage Agent Waller subsequently kills him after informing Icicle that he was a part of the new Suicide Squad Afterward Tess Mercer is revealed to be an agent of Checkmate Production EditDevelopment Edit The idea of introducing the Justice Society of America was first made public at the 2009 Comic Con where producers announced that comic book author Geoff Johns would write the episode Johns had previously introduced the Legion of Super Heroes in the season eight episode Legion 1 As Johns worked on the script for the Justice Society episode which was titled Society it was decided that in order to do the characters justice the decision was made to extend the story into two separate episodes with the second episode titled Legends Executive producer Kelly Souders explained that there were so many characters and so much great story that people would ve been robbed of some great moments if we kept it to just one hour 2 According to executive producer Brian Peterson he and Johns realized there was so much material for one episode that they decided to make it into two Peterson describes the episodes as a mini movie and referred to it as one of the most exciting things they have done on Smallville in nine years 3 Ultimately the idea of two separate episodes was scrapped in favor of combining them into a single show The CW then marketed the episode as a two hour television movie titled Smallville Absolute Justice 4 Following the episode s airing the Smallville writers announced on their Twitter page that they still consider Absolute Justice to be two separately produced episodes but was aired and packaged on the season nine DVD as a single episode 5 6 For the Complete Series DVD package released in November 2011 Warner Bros Home Video acknowledged the two separate episodes in their official count of 218 episodes 7 When the show was released on the Hulu streaming service in October 2016 the episodes were split in two labelled Absolute Justice Part 1 Society and Absolute Justice Part 2 Legends with both being recognized as episode eleven of season nine 8 Michael Shanks Brent Stait and Brittney Irvin were cast as the Justice Society members Carter Hall Hawkman Kent Nelson Doctor Fate and Courtney Whitmore Stargirl respectively 9 Shanks took the role because he did not think he would get many opportunities to play a superhero in the future 10 Pam Grier appeared as Amanda Waller a character from DC Comics in Absolute Justice and she also appeared in multiple episodes 11 Phil Morris was also brought back as John Jones a recurring character Morris has appeared as since season six 2 Writing Edit nbsp Comic book writer Geoff Johns wrote the script for the episode Johns previously wrote the season eight episode Legion As the script for Absolute Justice was developed by Geoff Johns executive producer Brian Peterson explained that he wanted the entrance for the Justice Society to be relevant to the series Peterson felt that the Justice Society should teach the new generation of heroes Clark Oliver and the rest of the team a lesson about family and leadership 3 Peterson also stated that the mid season episode Disciple was written so that it could set the table for Absolute Justice and reveal that the show s heroes are not coalescing the way they need to be 12 Geoff Johns described his version of the Justice Society to be similar to the heroes of the film Watchmen who come out of retirement to give the screwed up guys of the next generation a needed smack down 13 When it came time to translate the comic book Justice Society members into live action characters Johns said that he tried to keep everyone exactly the same Johns noted that Hawkman and Stargirl are virtual duplicates of their comic book counterparts but that Doctor Fate took on a life of his own when Johns was writing him According to Johns Kent Nelson is portrayed as being in a different place and head space than he is in the comics Regardless of any differences between where the characters are in their respective lives Johns stated that they both still embody the same values and traits Johns also noted that he almost did not use the character of Doctor Fate While he was developing the initial concept for the story and meeting with executive producers Peterson and Souders there were no restrictions on the characters he could use The idea of using Wildcat or Jay Garrick was floated around but Johns believed he had a unique approach to the Doctor Fate character He also believed that Doctor Fate fit into the storyline better than Wildcat or Jay Garrick 14 Johns chose to write in as much detail as possible because he wanted to create a full sense of history for the characters This included specific paintings cards tables and how their costumes appeared Johns also included mentionings of former members and relatives of the current members According to the writer the executive producers embraced his ideas completely In addition Johns researched where the Smallville writers had taken the show since the last time he wrote an episode although he acknowledged that he did not have the plan to incorporate the primary storyline of season nine Johns initial script pushed the production budget to the max According to Johns By turning the story into two episodes it not only allowed the story to get bigger but it allowed our budget to become bigger 15 Character designs Edit Michael Shanks wears the traditional Hawkman uniform complete with strap on wings and Hawkman s mace He spent time practicing his wire work for the flying scenes that he would have to film while in full costume One difference in the costume is the inclusion of a chest plate According to Shanks the costume designers added a chest plate to assist the flying harness they created The chest plate and Hawkman s helmet were given a bronze color as opposed to the more traditional yellow gold color Shanks who is accustomed to the chaos of a weekly television series was surprised to find so much attention paid to a guest starring role Shanks said producer James Marshall respected and took into consideration some of his artistic input He also said that his character s return for future episodes was a strong possibility 16 According to Johns Their costumes work because the Justice Society members were from the generation before Clark and his allies 15 Reception EditNielsen Ratings for Absolute Justice came in at approximately 2 77 million viewers which is Smallville s highest rated episode for season nine in total viewers adults 18 49 and men 18 49 17 a 7 increase from the season nine premiere which had 2 58 million viewers 18 19 nbsp Tom Welling directed the second hour of the episode Reviews for the episode were generally mixed Carlos Delgado of IFMagazine gave the episode a B stating that Absolute Justice was ambitious A two hour defibrillation trying to restore a pulse to a show that had been relegated to the Friday night death slot It takes guts to air something that could so easily make or break a season Two hours of garbage the show is done Two hours of comic book bliss well let s just say contracts might be written up that very night to secure the next phase of the Man of Steel s odyssey Yes it was that big He said that Icicle was a weak antagonist but mentioned that Absolute Justice was a success 20 Anthony Ocasio from ScreenRant went as far as deeming Absolute Justice one of the best episodes of Smallville in its nine years of being on the air writing that it was wonderful to see that guest characters could be on Smallville with a backstory that s more than the normal guess who just happened to come to Metropolis He voiced his opinion against the antagonist Icicle and called the actor who portrayed the character poor and stated he got goose bumps regarding his fate at the hands of Clark Kent 21 Reviewer Graeme McMillan praised Tom Welling s directing while calling Clark the character who was the least fun of the episode he praised writer Geoff Johns saying that there was a sense of scale and history to the episode that the series doesn t usually manage When talking about the Justice Society he said They brought with them or more likely Geoff Johns did a banter and wit that the show often lacks and also a speed and lightness that worked better than the show s usual po faced drama the show just seemed better than usual He concluded his review by saying that even though the special effects were disappointing the episode was fun 22 Ken Tucker from Entertainment Weekly said the first hour of the episode contained the stand out visual sequence and thought the second hour was more lumbering with the big fight sequence toward the end unsatisfying Tucker wrote For viewers who only know the Superman boy mythos according to Smallville it must have seemed strange to have most of the series ongoing subplots put in storage for this week s two hour edition Then again since the villain of this piece was a faux hawked foe called the Icicle frozen plotlines were inevitable 23 Reviewer Blair Marnell said For longtime comic fans catching all of the comic references was part of the fun including Radu s Cafe from Green Lantern the Trouble Alert from the classic Super Friends animated series and Pemberton s Star Rocket Racer which also served as the home for the fallen hero He said the episode approached an epic scale not seen in the series for a long time and criticized the raspy voice of Hawkman In concluding the review he wrote that he enjoyed slight nods to the comics and thought the episode could have been told in one hour 24 Reviewer Chris Carabott praised Absolute Justice saying that it brings various members of the Justice Society of America to life on the small screen and it does it brilliantly He applauded writer Geoff Johns saying he outdoes himself with a story that pays homage to the early days of some of DC s finest While stating disapproval among the costumes he said Doctor Fate s gold helmet contrasted by the dark blue of the costume looked fantastic in HD He also called the episode a great achievement and said it is fun to watch for both long time DC Comics fans and Smallville fans 25 Author Joe Oesterle said that it is odd how in a major city like Metropolis main characters are the only ones out on the streets He expressed disappointment with the Sandman s death I d have liked to see some old school Sandman roughhouse and I felt cheated when a Golden Age legend like Sandman goes to his eternal rest without so much as a single blast from his gas gun I suppose the argument could be made to say that s how formidable Icicle Jr was or how rusty Sandman was but I m not buying that Sandman deserved to go down fighting not frozen solid while frozen in hesitation While criticizing the episode he compared the episode to the Watchmen film and disapproved of the Batman voice the Hawkman had He also said that there should have been more John Jones and less Lois Lane While praising the episode he approved of Amanda Waller and said that Tess Mercer became a lethal hand to hand combatant He concluded by saying that the episode did not live up to its hype and thought the episode before it Disciple was Grade A entertainment in comparison 26 One reviewer praised the show by saying Smallville is quietly having its best season in at least 5 years He said the show currently does not resemble its former self and plays more like a graphic novel He called Hawkman excellent but also disapproved of the Christian Bale Batman voice he called Doctor Fate awesome 27 Brad Trechak from TVSquad had a negative review Admittedly the episode was kind of light on story and ended up having major plot holes the least of which being how exactly Hawkman s helmet stayed on He compared the episode to the Watchmen movie and asked why the Justice Society were scared of Icicle and thought that the show creators could have used Vandal Savage or another menacing villain He compared Dr Fate s death with possible foreshadowing of the early death of Chloe He ended by stating The episode didn t quite live up to the hype but it was close enough 28 References Edit Smallville at Comic Con Look Up on the Screen It s TV Guide July 26 2009 Archived from the original on March 18 2010 Retrieved February 18 2010 a b Smallville scoop Martian Manhunter returns Entertainment Weekly October 26 2009 Archived from the original on October 30 2009 Retrieved February 17 2010 a b Smallville Producer Talks Society and Season 10 TV Guide November 20 2009 Archived from the original on February 11 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 Exclusive Smallville movie gets a title Entertainment Weekly November 17 2009 Archived from the original on November 19 2009 Retrieved February 17 2010 David Lambert June 17 2010 Final Earlier Release Date and Extras for The Complete 9th Season on DVD and Blu ray TVShowsOnDVD com Archived from the original on June 19 2010 Retrieved June 17 2010 Smallville writers respond Twitter February 19 2010 Retrieved March 9 2010 Smallville The Complete Series WarnerBros com Retrieved October 2 2016 Watch Smallville Online Streaming at Hulu Hulu com Retrieved October 2 2016 Shanks Stait headed for Smallville www gateworld net October 19 2009 Retrieved February 20 2010 Michael Shanks likes Watchmen comparison Digital Spy February 5 2010 Archived from the original on February 9 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 Exclusive Smallville lands Pam Grier ew com November 9 2009 Archived from the original on November 13 2009 Retrieved February 20 2010 Smallville Preview Archer Enemies and Justice Served FanCast January 29 2010 Archived from the original on February 2 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 William Keck August 31 2009 New Comic Book Faves Swoop Into Smallville TV Guide Archived from the original on September 3 2009 Retrieved September 6 2009 KryptonSite Interview Geoff Johns Talks Absolute Justice KryptonSite February 5 2010 Archived from the original on February 7 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 a b Geoff Johns On Absolute Justice Comic Book Resources February 5 2010 Retrieved February 17 2010 Michael Shanks on Smallville and Hawkman Huffington Post October 30 2009 Archived from the original on November 2 2009 Retrieved October 30 2009 Robert Seidman TV Ratings CBS Wins Friday Again Two New Hours of Smallville Are Better than One for CW TV By the Numbers Archived from the original on October 10 2012 Retrieved February 16 2010 Bill Gorman October 12 2009 Dollhouse Premiere 18 49 Rating Increases To A 1 5 Via DVR Hopeful or Futile TVByTheNumbers com Archived from the original on 15 October 2009 Retrieved October 20 2009 Final value initial value initial value 100 Percent difference TV Review SMALLVILLE SEASON NINE Absolute Justice IFMagazine February 6 2010 Archived from the original on February 9 2010 Retrieved February 16 2010 Smallville Absolute Justice Review amp Discussion ScreenRant February 5 2010 Archived from the original on February 10 2010 Retrieved February 16 2010 Absolute Justice Entertains Absolutely Well Almost io9 February 6 2010 Archived from the original on February 9 2010 Retrieved February 16 2010 Ken Tucker February 6 2010 Smallville Absolute Justice Clunky or funky fun Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on February 8 2010 Retrieved February 6 2010 Smallville Absolute Justice Review SplashPage MTV February 6 2010 Archived from the original on February 9 2010 Retrieved February 16 2010 Smallville Absolute Justice Review IGN February 7 2010 Archived from the original on February 11 2010 Retrieved February 16 2010 SMALLVILLE 9 11 Absolute Justice Review Mania com February 7 2010 Archived from the original on February 12 2010 Retrieved February 16 2010 TV Review Smallville Absolute Justice Midseason Review and Recap NerdSociety February 6 2010 Retrieved February 16 2010 Review Smallville Absolute Justice TVSquad February 6 2010 Archived from the original on February 12 2010 Retrieved February 16 2010 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Smallville Absolute Justice at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Absolute Justice amp oldid 1171555873, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.