Superman/Batman: Apocalypse

The end is near.

7.2
20101h 19m

Batman discovers a mysterious teen-aged girl with superhuman powers and a connection to Superman. When the girl comes to the attention of Darkseid, the evil overlord of Apokolips, events take a decidedly dangerous turn.

Production

Logo for Warner Premiere
Logo for Warner Bros. Animation
Logo for DC

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Superman/Batman: Apocalypse (Trailer)

Superman/Batman: Apocalypse (Trailer)

Thumbnail for video: Supergirl CLAPPED Darkseid

Supergirl CLAPPED Darkseid

Thumbnail for video: chat is Themyscira COOKED?

chat is Themyscira COOKED?

Thumbnail for video: DC Super Scenes: Batman's Trust Issues

DC Super Scenes: Batman's Trust Issues

Thumbnail for video: DC Super Scenes: Supergirl's Sparring Match

DC Super Scenes: Supergirl's Sparring Match

Cast

Photo of Tim Daly

Tim Daly

Superman (voice)

Photo of Kevin Conroy

Kevin Conroy

Batman (voice)

Photo of Summer Glau

Summer Glau

Kara Zor-El / Supergirl (voice)

Photo of Andre Braugher

Andre Braugher

Darkseid (voice)

Photo of Susan Eisenberg

Susan Eisenberg

Wonder Woman (voice)

Photo of Julianne Grossman

Julianne Grossman

Big Barda (voice)

Photo of Ed Asner

Ed Asner

Granny Goodness (voice)

Photo of Rachel Quaintance

Rachel Quaintance

Lyla / Harbinger / Artemis (voice)

Photo of Andrea Romano

Andrea Romano

Stompa / Vicki Vale (voice)

Photo of Salli Saffioti

Salli Saffioti

Gilotina / Mad Harriet (voice)

Photo of Tara Strong

Tara Strong

Female Radio Caller #2 / Lashina (voice)

Photo of Dave B. Mitchell

Dave B. Mitchell

Bearded Longshoreman (voice)

Photo of John Cygan

John Cygan

Male Radio Caller / Gus (voice)

Photo of Jim Ward

Jim Ward

Radio DJ / Cop (voice)

Photo of Gregory Alan Williams

Gregory Alan Williams

Terrified Longshoreman (voice)

Photo of April Winchell

April Winchell

Female Radio Caller #1 / Tresha (voice)

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Reviews

R

Gimly

5/10

Pretty weird decision to make a movie with a female character in the lead, stock it chock full of female supporting roles, then title it "_Superman/Batman_", but okay. Guess I should just be glad it got made at all, especially way back in 2010. The film itself? It's alright, has that bizarre simplistic-yet-confusing combo that you'd think is such an oxymoron it'd be impossible to hit but superhero fare pretty frequently stumbles in to, but at least it's not **completely** paint by numbers.

_Final rating:★★½ - Had a lot that appealed to me, didn’t quite work as a whole._

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