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{{Infobox film|name=Justice League: Infinite|image=Justice League Infinite Poster.png|caption=Theatrical release poster|director=Alex Garland|writer={{Plainlist|
{{Infobox film
* Jonathan Nolan
| name           = Justice League: Infinite
* Christina Hodson
| image         = Justice League Infinite Poster.png
* Eric Heisserer
| caption       = Theatrical release poster
* Noah Hawley
| director       = [[Alex Garland]]
* Tom King
| writer         = {{Plainlist|
}}|producer=Freddie Goodwin, Marcus V. Lane|starring={{Plainlist|
* [[Jonathan Nolan]]
* [[Christina Hodson]]
* [[Eric Heisserer]]
* [[Noah Hawley]]
* [[Tom King]]
}}
| producer       = Freddie Goodwin<br>Marcus V. Lane
| starring       = {{Plainlist|
* [[David Corenswet]]
* [[David Corenswet]]
* [[Luke Evans]]
* [[Luke Evans]]
Line 28: Line 35:
* [[Alex Wolff]]
* [[Alex Wolff]]
* [[Chukwudi Iwuji]]
* [[Chukwudi Iwuji]]
}}|music=|cinematography=|editing=|studio=DC Studios|distributor=Warner Bros. Pictures|released={{Film date|2032|07|17}}|country=United States|language=English|budget=$275 million}}
}}
| music         = TBA
| cinematography = TBA
| editing       = TBA
| studio         = [[DC Studios]]
| distributor   = [[Warner Bros. Pictures]]
| released       = {{Film date|2032|07|17}}
| country       = United States
| language       = English
| budget         = $275 million
| gross          = $TBA
}}


'''''Justice League: Infinite''''' is an upcoming American [[superhero film]] based on the [[DC Comics]] superhero team the [[Justice League]]. Produced by [[DC Studios]] and distributed by [[Warner Bros. Pictures]], it is the seventh installment in the [[DC Cinematic Universe]] (DCCU), and the concluding chapter of the franchise’s first saga, ''Chapter One: Crisis''. The film is directed by [[Alex Garland]] from a screenplay written by [[Jonathan Nolan]], [[Christina Hodson]], [[Eric Heisserer]], [[Noah Hawley]], and [[Tom King]].
'''''Justice League: Infinite''''' is a 2032 American [[superhero film]] based on the [[DC Comics]] superhero team the [[Justice League]]. Produced by [[DC Studios]] and distributed by [[Warner Bros. Pictures]], it is the eighth installment in the [[DC Cinematic Universe]] (DCCU), and serves as the concluding chapter of the franchise’s first saga, ''Chapter One: Crisis''. The film is directed by [[Alex Garland]] from a screenplay written by [[Jonathan Nolan]], [[Christina Hodson]], [[Eric Heisserer]], [[Noah Hawley]], and [[Tom King]]. The ensemble cast includes [[David Corenswet]], [[Luke Evans]], [[Ana de Armas]], [[Aldis Hodge]], [[Callum Turner]], [[Rachel Brosnahan]], [[Giancarlo Esposito]], and [[Mahershala Ali]].


Serving as a direct sequel to ''[[Justice League: Crisis of the Multiverse]]'' (2031), the film is expected to feature a multiversal-scale conflict that brings together heroes from across time, worlds, and realities. The League must face a cosmic-level threat that challenges their very identity and role in an evolving multiverse.
A direct sequel to ''[[Justice League: Crisis of the Multiverse]]'' (2031), the film follows the Justice League as they confront a full-scale multiversal collapse orchestrated by the Anti-Monitor. With reality unraveling and cosmic order breaking down, Earth's greatest heroes must unite across dimensions to protect the future of existence itself.


''Justice League: Infinite'' is scheduled to be released in the United States on July 17, 2032, as the final entry in the DCCU’s Chapter One: ''Crisis''.
''Justice League: Infinite'' was released in the United States on July 17, 2032, as the final entry in the DCCU’s ''Chapter One: Crisis''. The film received widespread critical acclaim, with praise directed at Garland’s direction, the film’s emotional depth, visual spectacle, and its ambitious multiverse narrative. Critics highlighted its ensemble performances and thematic conclusion to the DCCU’s first saga. The film grossed $1.41 billion worldwide against a budget of $275 million, becoming the highest-grossing entry in the franchise and one of the most successful superhero films of the 2030s.
 
== Plot ==
In the aftermath of the multiversal cataclysm, Earth-1 begins a fragile reconstruction. The Justice League, newly formed in response to the Crisis, struggles with global instability, rogue dimensional anomalies, and public uncertainty. Superman leads efforts to coordinate relief and secure surviving anomalies; Batman creates a covert response network with Mister Terrific and Waller’s reluctant assistance; Wonder Woman returns to Themyscira to broker a fragile alliance with displaced Amazons from other worlds. The Flash remains missing in the Speed Force, his fate unknown.
 
At the edge of known reality, the Anti-Monitor is revealed to have survived his defeat—weak, but conscious—trapped in a crumbling fragment of the antimatter universe. As he stirs, reality begins to fray again. The cosmic prison designed to contain him shows signs of decay, and the Monitor, plagued by visions of collapse, dispatches a warning to the League. Meanwhile, Pariah, a twisted being created from the remnants of fractured Earths, begins siphoning energy from collapsed timelines to restore the infinite multiverse under his control.
 
Across the globe, heroes face new threats emerging from lingering fractures: Lazarus-fused creatures terrorize South America, arcane distortions in London unleash magical dead zones, and cities flicker with echoes of alternate histories. John Stewart and Hal Jordan track disappearing Lantern outposts in deep space, only to uncover evidence of collapsing sectors and a warning etched in antimatter: “INFINITE MUST FALL.”
 
Realizing the collapse is not over but merely evolving, Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, Hawkgirl, and Mister Terrific reunite to trace the remaining disturbances. The Monitor appears to them again, desperate and unraveling, admitting that his presence—intended to preserve the Multiverse—has become an anchor for Pariah’s rebirth. At the heart of it all lies the “Infinite Gate,” a mythical convergence point hidden beyond the Source Wall where all realities once emerged.
 
The League splits into teams to protect reality’s last remaining pillars: Superman and Wonder Woman journey to the ruins of Krypton’s antimatter twin; Batman, Hawkgirl, and Mister Terrific descend into a collapsed Earth where the League were once tyrants; Green Lantern and Mera defend an oceanic nexus teeming with chronal rifts. Along the way, allies like Zatanna, Damian Wayne, Ocean Master, and Jenny Sparks lend their support, as chaos reaches critical mass.
 
Pariah reveals himself in the shattered remains of the Infinite Gate, resurrected from the ashes of Crisis and twisted by the Anti-Monitor’s void energy. He plans to remake reality in his image—one multiverse under a singular will. Empowered by stolen fragments of the Flash's Speed Force essence, Pariah breaches the Source Wall and opens a rift into the Bleed, a space between universes, letting unfiltered creation energy consume everything.
 
In a final stand, the League unites at the Infinite Gate as Pariah begins the reordering of all existence. Barry Allen returns—alive, but unstable—having merged with the Speed Force, now able to navigate all timelines simultaneously. He locates nexus points across time, allowing the League to strike in unison across multiple realities. With help from K’lia Vex, Thara, and even a redeemed Alexander Knox, they mount an all-fronts defense against Pariah and his army of echoes.
 
Superman absorbs cosmic energy to seal the Bleed from inside, nearly dying in the process. Wonder Woman wields the Lasso of Infinite Truth, binding Pariah’s fractured soul. Batman sacrifices his tether to Earth-1, trapping a corrupted version of himself in the closing rift. Barry dissipates fully into the Speed Force to push Pariah beyond the wall of creation, ending the loop—but at permanent cost.
 
With the Source Wall mended, and Pariah defeated, the multiverse stabilizes—but not without scars. The League returns to a changed Earth: many alternate realities now coexist in shadow, and new heroes begin to appear. The core League—Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Hawkgirl, Green Lantern, Mister Terrific, Aquaman—reaffirm their role as Earth’s defenders. A memorial to Barry is erected in Central City, and Amanda Waller is last seen analyzing multiversal DNA, suggesting she’s preparing for the next war.
 
In the final post-credits scene, deep in the void beyond the Source Wall, a new force awakens: the silhouette of a powerful female figure steps forward from the ashes of lost time. Her eyes burn violet. Her name—spoken only once—is “Pandora.


== Cast ==
== Cast ==


* David Corenswet as Clark Kent / Superman
* [[David Corenswet]] as Clark Kent / Superman
* Luke Evans as Bruce Wayne / Batman
* [[Luke Evans]] as Bruce Wayne / Batman
* Ana de Armas as Diana Prince / Wonder Woman
* [[Ana de Armas]] as Diana Prince / Wonder Woman
* Aldis Hodge as John Stewart / Green Lantern
* [[Aldis Hodge]] as John Stewart / Green Lantern
* Callum Turner as Hal Jordan / Green Lantern
* [[Callum Turner]] as Hal Jordan / Green Lantern
* Rachel Brosnahan as Lois Lane
* [[Rachel Brosnahan]] as Lois Lane
* Eiza González as Kendra Saunders / Hawkgirl
* [[Eiza González]] as Kendra Saunders / Hawkgirl
* Sterling K. Brown as Michael Holt / Mister Terrific
* [[Sterling K. Brown]] as Michael Holt / Mister Terrific
* Roman Griffin Davis as Damian Wayne / Robin
* [[Roman Griffin Davis]] as Damian Wayne / Robin
* Michelle Yeoh as Thara
* [[Michelle Yeoh]] as Thara
* Giancarlo Esposito as The Monitor
* [[Giancarlo Esposito]] as The Monitor
* Mahershala Ali as The Anti-Monitor
* [[Mahershala Ali]] as The Anti-Monitor
* Viola Davis as Amanda Waller
* [[Viola Davis]] as Amanda Waller
* Jesse Plemons as Jenny Sparks
* [[Jesse Plemons]] as Jenny Sparks
* Sam Reid as Apollo
* [[Sam Reid]] as Apollo
* Alexander Skarsgård as Arthur Curry / Aquaman
* [[Alexander Skarsgård]] as Arthur Curry / Aquaman
* Sofia Boutella as Mera
* [[Sofia Boutella]] as Mera
* Logan Lerman as Jimmy Olsen
* [[Logan Lerman]] as Jimmy Olsen
* Charles Dance as Alfred Pennyworth
* [[Charles Dance]] as Alfred Pennyworth
* Michael Kelly as General Sam Lane
* [[Michael Kelly]] as General Sam Lane
* Alex Wolff as Ronan Kells
* [[Alex Wolff]] as Ronan Kells
 
* [[Chukwudi Iwuji]] as Jor-El (AI projection)
* Chukwudi Iwuji as Jor-El (AI projection)


== Production ==
== Production ==


=== Development ===
=== Development ===
''Justice League: Infinite'' was first announced in July 2026 as the culminating event of Chapter One: ''Crisis'' in the DC Cinematic Universe. The project was envisioned as the thematic and narrative successor to ''[[Justice League: Crisis of the Multiverse]]'', continuing and expanding upon the multiverse-spanning events introduced in that film.
''Justice League: Infinite'' was first announced in July 2026 as the culminating event of Chapter One: ''Crisis'' in the DC Cinematic Universe. It was conceived as the direct sequel to ''[[Justice League: Crisis of the Multiverse]]'', expanding upon the events of that film and concluding several character arcs.


[[Alex Garland]] was confirmed as director, with the screenplay written by a team including [[Jonathan Nolan]], [[Christina Hodson]], [[Eric Heisserer]], [[Noah Hawley]], and [[Tom King]]. According to DC Studios, the film will explore the existential role of the Justice League across infinite realities and the cost of protecting a collapsing multiverse.
[[Alex Garland]] was hired to direct, with a script co-written by [[Jonathan Nolan]], [[Christina Hodson]], [[Eric Heisserer]], [[Noah Hawley]], and [[Tom King]]. The film was described as a multiversal war epic that would serve as both a finale and a philosophical exploration of identity, sacrifice, and destiny across infinite timelines.


=== Filming ===
=== Filming ===
Principal photography for ''Justice League: Infinite'' was completed prior to production on ''Justice League: Crisis of the Multiverse''. Filming wrapped ahead of schedule to accommodate post-production timelines involving extensive visual effects and multiversal design work.
Principal photography was completed before ''Crisis of the Multiverse'' began filming. Extensive use of practical effects, motion capture, and large-scale virtual environments was employed, including multiple stages at Warner Bros. Studios Leavesden. The cast filmed ensemble scenes over five months across the United Kingdom and Iceland.


== Release ==
== Release ==
''Justice League: Infinite'' is scheduled to be released theatrically in the United States on July 17, 2032. It will serve as the final installment in Chapter One: ''Crisis'' of the DC Cinematic Universe.
''Justice League: Infinite'' was released in theaters in the United States on July 17, 2032. It is the seventh entry in the DCCU and concludes Chapter One: ''Crisis''.


== See also ==
== See also ==
Line 80: Line 118:
* [[Justice League: Crisis of the Multiverse]]
* [[Justice League: Crisis of the Multiverse]]
* [[Superman: Legacy of Tomorrow]]
* [[Superman: Legacy of Tomorrow]]
* [[Superman: Tomorrow’s End]]
* [[The Brave and the Bold]]
* [[The Brave and the Bold]]
* [[Wonder Woman: Gods of Dust]]
* [[Wonder Woman: Gods of Dust]]
* [[Green Lantern: Dominion]]
* [[Green Lantern: Dominion]]
* [[Aquaman: Secrets of the Deep]]


{{DC Cinematic Universe}}
{{DC Cinematic Universe}}

Latest revision as of 14:11, 18 July 2025

Justice League: Infinite
Theatrical release poster
Directed byAlex Garland
Written by
Produced byFreddie Goodwin
Marcus V. Lane
Starring
CinematographyTBA
Edited byTBA
Music byTBA
Production
company
Distributed byWarner Bros. Pictures
Release date
  • July 17, 2032 (2032-07-17)
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$275 million
Box office$TBA

Justice League: Infinite is a 2032 American superhero film based on the DC Comics superhero team the Justice League. Produced by DC Studios and distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures, it is the eighth installment in the DC Cinematic Universe (DCCU), and serves as the concluding chapter of the franchise’s first saga, Chapter One: Crisis. The film is directed by Alex Garland from a screenplay written by Jonathan Nolan, Christina Hodson, Eric Heisserer, Noah Hawley, and Tom King. The ensemble cast includes David Corenswet, Luke Evans, Ana de Armas, Aldis Hodge, Callum Turner, Rachel Brosnahan, Giancarlo Esposito, and Mahershala Ali.

A direct sequel to Justice League: Crisis of the Multiverse (2031), the film follows the Justice League as they confront a full-scale multiversal collapse orchestrated by the Anti-Monitor. With reality unraveling and cosmic order breaking down, Earth's greatest heroes must unite across dimensions to protect the future of existence itself.

Justice League: Infinite was released in the United States on July 17, 2032, as the final entry in the DCCU’s Chapter One: Crisis. The film received widespread critical acclaim, with praise directed at Garland’s direction, the film’s emotional depth, visual spectacle, and its ambitious multiverse narrative. Critics highlighted its ensemble performances and thematic conclusion to the DCCU’s first saga. The film grossed $1.41 billion worldwide against a budget of $275 million, becoming the highest-grossing entry in the franchise and one of the most successful superhero films of the 2030s.

Plot[edit | edit source]

In the aftermath of the multiversal cataclysm, Earth-1 begins a fragile reconstruction. The Justice League, newly formed in response to the Crisis, struggles with global instability, rogue dimensional anomalies, and public uncertainty. Superman leads efforts to coordinate relief and secure surviving anomalies; Batman creates a covert response network with Mister Terrific and Waller’s reluctant assistance; Wonder Woman returns to Themyscira to broker a fragile alliance with displaced Amazons from other worlds. The Flash remains missing in the Speed Force, his fate unknown.

At the edge of known reality, the Anti-Monitor is revealed to have survived his defeat—weak, but conscious—trapped in a crumbling fragment of the antimatter universe. As he stirs, reality begins to fray again. The cosmic prison designed to contain him shows signs of decay, and the Monitor, plagued by visions of collapse, dispatches a warning to the League. Meanwhile, Pariah, a twisted being created from the remnants of fractured Earths, begins siphoning energy from collapsed timelines to restore the infinite multiverse under his control.

Across the globe, heroes face new threats emerging from lingering fractures: Lazarus-fused creatures terrorize South America, arcane distortions in London unleash magical dead zones, and cities flicker with echoes of alternate histories. John Stewart and Hal Jordan track disappearing Lantern outposts in deep space, only to uncover evidence of collapsing sectors and a warning etched in antimatter: “INFINITE MUST FALL.”

Realizing the collapse is not over but merely evolving, Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, Hawkgirl, and Mister Terrific reunite to trace the remaining disturbances. The Monitor appears to them again, desperate and unraveling, admitting that his presence—intended to preserve the Multiverse—has become an anchor for Pariah’s rebirth. At the heart of it all lies the “Infinite Gate,” a mythical convergence point hidden beyond the Source Wall where all realities once emerged.

The League splits into teams to protect reality’s last remaining pillars: Superman and Wonder Woman journey to the ruins of Krypton’s antimatter twin; Batman, Hawkgirl, and Mister Terrific descend into a collapsed Earth where the League were once tyrants; Green Lantern and Mera defend an oceanic nexus teeming with chronal rifts. Along the way, allies like Zatanna, Damian Wayne, Ocean Master, and Jenny Sparks lend their support, as chaos reaches critical mass.

Pariah reveals himself in the shattered remains of the Infinite Gate, resurrected from the ashes of Crisis and twisted by the Anti-Monitor’s void energy. He plans to remake reality in his image—one multiverse under a singular will. Empowered by stolen fragments of the Flash's Speed Force essence, Pariah breaches the Source Wall and opens a rift into the Bleed, a space between universes, letting unfiltered creation energy consume everything.

In a final stand, the League unites at the Infinite Gate as Pariah begins the reordering of all existence. Barry Allen returns—alive, but unstable—having merged with the Speed Force, now able to navigate all timelines simultaneously. He locates nexus points across time, allowing the League to strike in unison across multiple realities. With help from K’lia Vex, Thara, and even a redeemed Alexander Knox, they mount an all-fronts defense against Pariah and his army of echoes.

Superman absorbs cosmic energy to seal the Bleed from inside, nearly dying in the process. Wonder Woman wields the Lasso of Infinite Truth, binding Pariah’s fractured soul. Batman sacrifices his tether to Earth-1, trapping a corrupted version of himself in the closing rift. Barry dissipates fully into the Speed Force to push Pariah beyond the wall of creation, ending the loop—but at permanent cost.

With the Source Wall mended, and Pariah defeated, the multiverse stabilizes—but not without scars. The League returns to a changed Earth: many alternate realities now coexist in shadow, and new heroes begin to appear. The core League—Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Hawkgirl, Green Lantern, Mister Terrific, Aquaman—reaffirm their role as Earth’s defenders. A memorial to Barry is erected in Central City, and Amanda Waller is last seen analyzing multiversal DNA, suggesting she’s preparing for the next war.

In the final post-credits scene, deep in the void beyond the Source Wall, a new force awakens: the silhouette of a powerful female figure steps forward from the ashes of lost time. Her eyes burn violet. Her name—spoken only once—is “Pandora.”

Cast[edit | edit source]

Production[edit | edit source]

Development[edit | edit source]

Justice League: Infinite was first announced in July 2026 as the culminating event of Chapter One: Crisis in the DC Cinematic Universe. It was conceived as the direct sequel to Justice League: Crisis of the Multiverse, expanding upon the events of that film and concluding several character arcs.

Alex Garland was hired to direct, with a script co-written by Jonathan Nolan, Christina Hodson, Eric Heisserer, Noah Hawley, and Tom King. The film was described as a multiversal war epic that would serve as both a finale and a philosophical exploration of identity, sacrifice, and destiny across infinite timelines.

Filming[edit | edit source]

Principal photography was completed before Crisis of the Multiverse began filming. Extensive use of practical effects, motion capture, and large-scale virtual environments was employed, including multiple stages at Warner Bros. Studios Leavesden. The cast filmed ensemble scenes over five months across the United Kingdom and Iceland.

Release[edit | edit source]

Justice League: Infinite was released in theaters in the United States on July 17, 2032. It is the seventh entry in the DCCU and concludes Chapter One: Crisis.

See also[edit | edit source]

Template:DC Cinematic Universe