Festivus comments
It's still the Festivus season - still time to post your comments on the Airing of Grievances, the Festivus Miracles, and the Feats of Strength a couple of posts down.
The main communication device of the Legion of Super-Heroes
It's still the Festivus season - still time to post your comments on the Airing of Grievances, the Festivus Miracles, and the Feats of Strength a couple of posts down.
Newsarama has a sneak peek - the first 5 pages - of LSH v5 #37. I don't know about your area, but new issues here don't come in until Friday. Remember, this issue has a 2-part cover that makes a big image by Manapul/Livesay. (Back in the olden days, it would have been a fold-out or wraparound cover, now we have to buy two copies.)
Posted by Michael at 12/23/2007 06:01:00 PM 7 Omnicomments
Tags: Jim Shooter, LSH v5, preview, Threeboot
Someone apparently in the know updated the Legion cartoon's Wikipedia page with the titles for the final five episodes to be shown some time next season:
The newest Legion TPB, An Eye for an Eye (Amazon link), came out this week, and most interestingly it reprinted a classic Levitz/Giffen pre-Crisis story arc: the first six issues of v3 from 1984, featuring the Legion vs the LSV and the fight to the death between Queen Projectra, Karate Kid, and Nemesis Kid. Yay DC for promoting the pre-Crisis Legion!
I guess that's as good a choice as any to start with, considering that Karate Kid is (allegedly) co-starring in "Countdown" right now (though we still don't know what's up with Sensor Girl, Karate Kid being alive, and Triplicate Girl/Una's recent behavior). The Great Darkness Saga can be brought back in print, and the stories from the start of the Levitz/Giffen period could fill one trade that goes up to the GDS.
It was weird, though, seeing the cover showing the original art with modern coloring technology (below right); back then, it was the standard four colors plus a special additional "fifth color" of silver (below left).
Posted by Michael at 12/22/2007 03:01:00 AM 0 Omnicomments
Tags: Keith Giffen, Paul Levitz, Pre-Zero Hour Legion, reprint HC/TPB
This Sunday is December 23, and you know what that means... it's Festivus time!
Festivus, which originated on an episode of "Seinfeld" in 1997, is a non-denominational holiday celebrated on Dec. 23 (or sometimes earlier, to avoid the Christmas rush). Instead of a tree, a simple unadorned aluminum pole is displayed, in opposition to the highly decorated Christmas trees. Two of the main elements of the holiday that involve people are the annual Airing of Grievances and the Feats of Strength. There are Festivus Miracles too, but they're not officially required.
So to celebrate, here are my list of Legion grievances. Please add your own in the comments, but remember they only can cover calendar year 2007 (so no whining about anything that happened last year). In no particular order:
Via Newsarama, Keith Giffen talks about things he'll be working on at DC with his exclusive contract, one of which is a DC/Wildstorm crossover:
KG: I don't know when the book's coming out. I don't know what the schedule is. I will tell you it's not one of those "ten years ago" kind of books. It takes place in the Wildstorm present. And it does involve quite a few DC heroes.
NRAMA: Such as...?
KG: Well, let's see. It might be of interest to a small group of fans out there that, in this Wildstorm/DC crossover, I will – probably for the final time for the foreseeable future – be returning to the Legion of Super-Heroes.
NRAMA: Wait, so you'll be writing the Legion of Super-Heroes as part of this crossover?
KG: Yeah.
NRAMA: There are definitely fans would be interested in that, although how they show up is going to be the real item of interest. Any other characters that you want to tell us are going to appear in the crossover?
KG: At this point, not really. There are some that are kind of obvious. If you think about it, it's not hard to figure out who would show up in a crossover. You're not going to do a crossover without the big guns. You know Superman's going to be there, but it's the way Superman is there and the approach that is used to him that is going to make this stand out from other crossovers.
NRAMA: OK, and what is this tease bout a "war for control of Hell?"
KG: I think Didio got tired of telling me to go to hell figuratively. So he thought, well, let's actually send him down to DC Hell and let him thrash around like a mental patient. "Now when we tell him go to hell, he can't get offended!"
NRAMA: [laughs] Well, can you describe what the book is about?
KG: I can't really say too much about the book. I can tell you, it's sort of a meaty series. It's more than six issues but less than 12.
NRAMA: Is this something you're currently writing or just something off on the horizon?
KG: The first issue's in. The first issue of all these projects are in. I've actually seen some art for the first issue of the DC/Wildstorm project. But yeah, DC is actually sending me down to the DC version of Hell, and we're going to see what kind of trouble I can get into down there.
NRAMA: Back to the imprints – let’s hit the big one – the DC Universe. By and large, both the Marvel and the DC Universes have embraced event-driven storytelling. What’s your take on that, both as Publisher and a fan?
PL: The first comic I remember buying off the rack was “Crisis on Earth-1/Earth-2”…
NRAMA: [laughs] Enough said.
PL: So part of me is a sucker for them. As a reader, I think it’s great when it works. It’s a bit of a car wreck when it doesn’t. As a writer, it’s a tremendous pain in the ass. I lived through having to make some uncomfortable adjustments in Legion of Super-Heroes because of what was going on in the multiple universes as they pulled together at different times in my career. But when it works, it’s a really great trick – and we’ve had some success with it in the last couple of years. Marvel has certainly had some success with it this past year. It’s a tough trick to keep pulling off time after time, and we have an ongoing debate here about the weight of energy put into the events versus put into making the books great on a monthly basis. And really, you want to do both tricks well.
[deleted]
NRAMA: Finally – the annual personal question…when are you going to get back to writing? And no “No one wants to read anything I have to write,” or any other of your pat answers… Jim Shooter’s back on Legion, so it seems to be old home week over there…
PL: Jim just came back on Legion so he could break the record I had on Justice Society of how long a gap it was between writing the characters. [laughs]
NRAMA: and that was the only reason Jim came back?
PL: The only one. It was absolutely personal – I can’t imagine any other reason that he took it on. [chuckles]
I’m doing a short Legion story with Jim Lee for a book that Jim’s doing as a sort of “art of Jim Lee” collection that he was kind enough to ask me to work with him on. And at the moment, that’s the only piece of serious writing on the agenda. It’s very hard – we still have one kid at home; I travelled more this year than I think in any of the last decade…the more good stuff DC does, the more places I have to be at once, and the harder it is to find serious time at the keyboard.
Posted by Michael at 12/19/2007 04:48:00 PM 4 Omnicomments
Tags: interview, Keith Giffen, Paul Levitz
Time for another update on the Superboy lawsuit. Last time, back in September, we found out (via Trexfiles) that the Superman lawsuit - argued by the heirs of Jerry Siegel that the rights to Superman should revert to them - was going to be sent to trial in late January, with the Superboy lawsuit - who owns Superboy? - following in the same court shortly thereafter.
The Trexfiles has a new update with copies of a couple of the court documents. Due to a number of factors (which you can read about here, but it's eye-glazing-over stuff about financial record keeping and how the Siegels haven't been given full access to DC's books), the Superman trial (Case No. CV 04-8400) is apparently set to begin May 15, 2008 with the Superboy trial (Case No. CV 04-8776) following.
I'm sure there are some lawyers out there - what happens at each of these events?
Jury Instructions: March 31, 2008
Objections to Jury Instructions: April 7, 2008
Hearing on Motions in Limine: April 14, 2008, at 1:30 p.m.
Final Pre-Trial Conference: April 28, 2008, at 11:00 a.m.
Trial Briefs: May 5, 2008
Trial of Case No. CV 04-8400: May 13, 2008, at 9:30 a.m.
Trial of Case No. CV 04-8776: Thereafter, as set by Court
The Federal law of this country allows them and has granted them the right to return the copyrights to the rightful owners during a specific window in time, because any and all contract that were signed back during the time Superman was…. would have already become public domain.
DC should not even have a Superman copyright, because the contract they originally signed only allowed a one time extension.
The family’s are simply filing the paper work to get the copyrights back, since the contracts that were originally signed have a built in, Federally mandated time limit.
This is not a ‘fight’, this is basically the same thing as you filing paperwork for money the IRS forgot to give you last year.
The only issue here, is this is the first time those parts of the ‘revised’ copyright code have been tested in court, and from the judgments handed out during these cases, you can expect US copyright law to be changed forever.
Saturn Girl, who was elected leader of the Legion, hears Brainiac 5 say this. What does she say in return?
The BEAT has a look at DC's upcoming trade paperbacks, which includes the "best of" Legion collection, now given a title: "1,050 Years of the Future". When we discussed this last month, we each came up with a list of stories we'd put in the trade. This should be on sale in time for the 50th anniversary celebration.
Well, THE LEGION OF SUPER-HEROES: 1,050 YEARS OF THE FUTURE has been announced and here's the solicitation:
THE LEGION OF SUPER-HEROES: 1,050 YEARS OF THE FUTURE TP
Writers: Otto Binder, Jerry Siegel, Edmond Hamilton, Jim Shooter, Mort Weisinger, Paul Levitz, Keith Giffen, Mark Waid, Tom McCraw, Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning
Artists: Al Plastino, Curt Swan, Stan Kaye, John Forte, George Klein, Mike Grell, Keith Giffen, Kurt Schaffenberger, Howard Bender, Dave Cockrum, Jim Sherman, Joe Staton, Stuart Immonen, Olivier Coipel and Andy Lanning
Collects ADVENTURE COMICS #247, 304, 312, 354 and 355, SUPERBOY AND THE LEGION OF SUPER-HEROES #212, THE LEGION OF SUPER-HEROES #300 and #0, LEGENDS OF THE DC UNIVERSE 80-PAGE GIANT #1 and THE LEGION #3
$19.99, 224 pages
Posted by Michael at 12/12/2007 06:24:00 PM 12 Omnicomments
Tags: Adventure Comics, anniversary, Post-Zero Hour Legion, Pre-Zero Hour Legion, reprint HC/TPB
Superboy has been summoned to appear before the Legion. They're all voting NO! But why?
No prizes for the best caption, except the adulation of your fellow readers.
When he applied, Antennae Boy told the Legion that he could pick up any radio broadcast from the past, present, or future (presumably that also includes television, satellite radio, internet audio like podcasts and streaming audio/video, etc.). Unfortunately there was also noisy feedback, so he got rejected.
What do you think Antennae Boy is picking up here?
Sometimes a cover idea is too good to waste (it's not a ripoff or a swipe, it's an homage!).
Man, you guys are tough. It's getting harder to find something that you guys don't know.
1. In this month's Action Comics 859, the Legion went into the 1000 year old Batcave looking for a Kryptonite ring. What were they looking for the last time we saw them visit the Batcave?
I was thinking of the time from the original Computo story when they went to find the Bizarro duplicating ray (like making a Bizarro Computo was a good idea?), but I forgot about the time in v4 when Tenzil led an archaeological expedition to the Batcave.
Spider Girl, Radiation Roy, and Tusker were rejected because they couldn't control their powers properly. Storm Boy used a forbidden device, Golden Boy was rejected by Dynamo Boy for economic reasons (use of his power might devalue gold), and Absorbancy Boy was rejected because his power wasn't considered useful. (Sure looked useful to me!)
Cos was joined by Bouncing Boy, Karate Kid II (Myg), Night Girl, Duo Damsel, Comet Queen, and Visi-Lad.
The following exchange appeared in the letters column of Adventure 318:
Dear Editor: As a new reader of your magazine, I would like to know more about the "Legion of Super-Pets." Could you list the various creatures who belong to this super-menagerie? - Sandy Tail, Great Neck, N.Y.
(The super-creatures include: Super-Horse, Krypto, Super-Monkey, Streaky, Proty II and, coming up soon, Super-Bird. Incidentally, how many readers would like to see "Krypto-Mouse," featured in the Hall of Fame classic story in this issue? -Ed.)
Obviously, Super-Bird never appeared, and Super-Mouse never joined the Super-Pets.
At the time, the members were Ultra Boy, Karate Kid, Spider-Girl, Inferno, and Evolvo. Later, Blastoff, Particon, Radian, and Lori Morning joined up after several original members left to join the Legion.
In Action 289, Supergirl tried to play matchmaker with Superman, so she took him to the future of the Adult Legion and tried to set him up with Saturn Woman. Unfortunately, she was already married to Lightning Man. In the story, they still have mistletoe, but the Christmas trees have planets that rotate around the tree rather than regular hanging ornaments. Here are a few pages (via scans_daily).
In LSH v4 #27, page 4, a list appeared of the subjects held by the Dominators in their chambers under Weisinger Plaza. Most of them were pre-existing characters. The thing I was looking for was that they had all been mindwiped (there were a number of characters who had not been, too). Atovlo was Holdur, Meron was Polecat, Drisden was the daughter of Charma and Grimbor, and Yardreigh was Black Mace. Others held and mindwiped included Flynt Brojj, Caress, Squire Burroughs, Myg, and Absorbancy Boy (him again?). See the full list at Doug Atkinson's v4-era FAQ.
Here are the airdates and episodes for the Legion show for the rest of Dec. 2007, via SFTV:
Dec. 01 - episode 2.08 NEW "Message in a Bottle"
Dec. 08 - episode 2.05 "The Karate Kid" (2nd airing) - last aired 10/27/07
Dec. 15 - episode 2.01 "The Man From The Edge of Tomorrow Part 1" (2nd airing) - last aired 09/22/07
Dec. 22 - episode 2.02 "The Man From The Edge of Tomorrow Part 2" (3rd airing) - last aired 10/20/07
Dec. 29 - episode 2.05 "Who Am I?" (2nd airing) - last aired 11/03/07
Previously: all the other schedules
Episode reviews:
1.01 "Man of Tomorrow" (4 airings, last 07/07/07)
1.02 "Timber Wolf" (8 airings, last 09/08/07)
1.03 "Legacy" (3 airings, last 06/09/07)
1.04 "Fear Factory" (4 airings, last 06/16/07)
1.05 "Champions" (4 airings, last 06/23/07)
1.06 "Phantoms" (4 airings, last 07/14/07)
1.07 "Child's Play" (4 airings, last 06/30/07)
1.08 "Lightning Storm" (4 airings, last 07/28/07)
1.09 "Brain Drain" (5 airings, last 09/01/07)
1.10 "The Substitutes" (4 airings, last 08/18/07)
1.11 "Chain of Command" (4 airings, last 08/25/07)
1.12 "Sundown, part 1" (3 airings, last 09/15/07)
1.13 "Sundown, part 2" (3 airings, last 09/15/07)
2.01 "Man from the Edge of Tomorrow part 1" (1 airing, last 09/22/07)
2.02 "Man from the Edge of Tomorrow part 2" (2 airings, last 10/20/07)
2.03 "Cry Wolf" (2 airings, last 11/10/07)
2.04 "Chained Lightning" (2 airing, last 11/24/07)
2.05 "The Karate Kid" (1 airing, last 10/27/07)
2.06 "Who Am I?" (1 airing, last 11/03/07)
2.07 "Unnatural Alliances" (1 airing, last 11/17/07)
Here's my updated list of heroes from the NBC show "Heroes" and how they relate to the Legionnaires (just for the hell of it), through the end of "Volume 2". New or revised entries are in bold.
[Update: added Golden Boy to Bob Bishop's listing]
The main bad guy, Sylar, absorbs powers from others by an unknown means which appears to have something to do with taking their brain out of their head. One of the main good guys, Peter, absorbs powers from others just from proximity, and retains those powers (whether he realizes that he has them or not) with no ill effects to the original power holder. In the list below, Sylar's powers are marked with a #, while Peter's powers (which include all of Sylar's, since they met) are marked with a *. Sylar is currently powerless.
The main cast
*Claire Bennett (self-healing/regeneration) - ???
*Nikki/Jessica Hawkins (strength) - Superboy/Mon-el/Supergirl/Andromeda/Ultra Boy (partial)
*DL Hawkins (intangibility) - Phantom Girl
*Micah Hawkins (technopathy) - Computo
*#Isaac Mendez (precognition) - Dream Girl
*Hiro Nakamura (time/space) - Infinite Man
*Matt Parkman (telepathy) - Saturn Girl
*Nathan Petrelli (flight) - Superboy/Mon-el/Supergirl/Andromeda/Ultra Boy (partial)
Peter Petrelli (duplicate another's power after he's been nearby) - Absorbancy Boy
*Gabriel "Sylar" Gray (steal powers) - Duplicate Boy
Everyone else from the TV show
Bob Bishop (alchemy) - Element Lad, Golden Boy
Charlene "Charlie" Andrews (eidetic memory) - Brainiac 5
*Elle Bishop (electricity) - Lightning Lad, Lightning Lass
*Claude (invisibility) - Invisible Kid
*#Brian Davis (telekinesis) - Tellus
Monica Dawson (photographic reflexes) - ???
*Charles Deveaux (dreaming) - Dream Girl
Hana "Wireless" Gitelman (internet) - Computo
Meredith Gordon (pyrokinesis) - Sun Boy, Fire Lad
Alejandro Herrera (cure disease) - ???
Maya Herrera (induce disease) - Infectious Lass
Haitian (memory erase, power damper) - ???
Sanjog Iyer (can enter dreams) - Dream Girl (current series)
*Takezo Kensei/Adam Monroe (self-healing/regeneration) - ???
Daniel Linderman (healing touch) - ???
*Eden McCain (persuasion) - Universo
Maury Parkman (mental manipulation) - Saturn Girl, Universo
West Rosen (flight) - Superboy/Mon-el/Supergirl/Andromeda/Ultra Boy (partial)
*#Dale Smither (super-hearing) - Superboy/Mon-el/Supergirl/Andromeda (partial)
*Ted Sprague (radiation) - Radiation Roy
*#Zane Taylor (liquification) - Element Lad, Chameleon Chief
*Molly Walker (tracking) - Dawnstar, Shikari
Candice Wilmer (illusion) - Princess Projectra
TBD (weather control) - Storm Boy
*#TBD (cold) - Polar Boy
*#TBD (unknown) //Sylar killed 6 before we met him, but we've only seen two of those powers)
*#TBD (unknown)
*#TBD (unknown)
*#TBD (unknown)
Characters from the Graphic Novels
Au Co (plant manipulation) - Chlorophyll Kid
Evan (duplication) - Triplicate Girl
Richard Drucker (Cyberpathy) - Computo
Guillame (emotion manipulation) - ???
"Liquid Man" (self-liquification) - Chameleon Boy
Maarten (pyrokinesis) - Sun Boy, Fire Lad
Traveler (omni-lingualism) - ???
name unknown (dehydration) - ???
name unknown (electricity absorption) - Lightning Lad, Lightning Lass
name unknown (speed) - XS
name unknown (electrical manipulation) - Lightning Lad, Lightning Lass
* = power of Nathan's via proximity
# = power of Sylar's via TBD
(mostly via the Heroes entry in Wikipedia)
Over at Urban Legends Revealed last week on CBR, during a discussion of whether Paul Levitz actually used index cards to keep track of his running plotlines (no, just a scorecard), the question came up as to whether or not Keith Giffen actually quit the Legion because of his work on that huge poster. The answer, of course, is yes. Here’s what Giffen said about the poster in an issue of The Jack Kirby Collector #29 (August 2000):
What happened was I did this Legion poster, characters all over the place. And in drawing that Legion poster I totally burned myself out on the book. After the poster I just had to walk away.
Posted by Michael at 12/04/2007 10:40:00 PM 9 Omnicomments
Tags: fandom, Keith Giffen, Paul Levitz, poster, Pre-Zero Hour Legion, reprint HC/TPB
This month's theme: Super-Team Family! (2 quatloos to those who get the reference.)
1. In this month's Action Comics 859, the Legion went into the 1000 year old Batcave looking for a Kryptonite ring. What were they looking for the last time we saw them visit the Batcave?
2. Also in Action 859, we see that the "Justice League" of 3008 is comprised of the former Spider Girl, Golden Boy, Tusker, Absorbancy Boy, Storm Boy, and Radiation Roy - all of whom were originally seen as Legion rejects. Why were they each rejected?
3. Who were the members of Cosmic Boy's Legion of Substitute Heroes?
4. In the Legion of Super-Pets, who was Super-Bird?
5. When Livewire quit the Legion to join the Work Force, who were the members of that group?
6. 'Tis the season... Most of us are familiar with the "Christmas with the Super-Heroes" story in which the Legion journeyed to the "Christmas star". But where else have we seen a significant Christmas scene in Legion history?
7. What did the following people - Hold Atovlo, D. Spengler Bonita, Dafe Meron, Wray Muntz, Leemac Allen, Concheta Drisden, and Mick Yardreigh - have in common?
Via Millarworld, here's an interesting bit from Wizard's "Best of 2007" issue. Grant Morrison has a couple things to say about the upcoming end of his "All-Star Superman" arc.
MORRISON: ...But there will be some more after [issue 12]. We’re planning to do some All-Star specials with other artists.
WIZARD: Are the specials going to fit into the continuity of the previous 12 issues?
MORRISON: Yeah. It’ll be the world of All-Star Superman, but you might get to see what it was like in the first year of his career or an adventure with the Legion of Super-Heroes—that kind of thing. There were a bunch of stories that I had left over because I knew we were only going to do 12. I had an idea for an All-Star Superman/Batman book, and a bunch of ideas for that ended up feeding into the notion of doing these specials."
Interestingly, Warner Bros. got Corey Burton to reprise his role as Brainiac on this week's episode of the Legion, "Message in a Bottle". Burton did the voice of Brainiac for the DC Animated Universe shows such as "Superman: The Animated Series" and "Justice League". Burton's Brainiac appeared in the very first Legion episode in the DCAU, "New Kids in Town" from the Superman series (see World's Finest, Legion Wiki links).
Renowned voice actor Corey Burton reprises his celebrated role of Brainiac from "Superman: The Animated Series" in the Saturday, December 1 episode of "Legion of Super Heroes" entitled "Message in a Bottle."
Burton made his Brainiac debut in the S:TAS series premiere on September 6, 1996. More than 11 years later, Burton easily slipped back into the role.
"Brainiac is such a tasty character so effortless, so wonderfully still and quiet. It really allows me to play great subtleties. The words perform themselves with a character like that."
Burton says the voice is a bit of a homage to famous voices from the annals of science fiction.
"It's just my basic mental image of a robotic intelligence, based partly on the Hal 9000 from 2001, and the detached narration from the original Outer Limits. The voice is very arresting in its quietness that makes it that much more frightening."
To say the least, Burton was happy to reprise the role.
"I always thought Brainiac was the coolest character. He's completely detached from the violence to him, it's just a consciousness. He doesn't breathe, he doesn't struggle it's just the pure vibration of the words themselves that make his delivery so cold and emotionless."
In "Message in a Bottle," Superman and the Legion must venture into the legendary bottled city of Kandor in order to stop Imperiex, who seeks an advanced Kryptonian technology believed to be hidden inside. In order to help the Legion and clear his "family" name, Brainiac 5 must delve deep into his memory banks to access information from the original Brainiac.
Of the images, one important note: the image violet.jpg represents that in a tiny world that fits inside a bottle, Shrinking Violet would be a giant.
FIVE YEARS LATER (1989-1994)
• LSH: Five Years Later Omnibus vol. 1
REBOOT (1994-2004)
• LSH: The Beginning of Tomorrow
• Legionnaires Book One
• Legionnaires Book Two
• The Final Night
• The Legion by Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning Vol. 1
• Legion Lost
• The Legion by Dan Abnett and Andy Lanning Vol. 2
• Legion: Foundations
THREEBOOT (2004-2009)
• LSH vol. 1: Teenage Revolution
• LSH vol. 2: Death of a Dream
• Supergirl & The LSH vol. 3: Strange Visitor from Another Century
• Supergirl & The LSH vol. 4: Adult Education
• Supergirl & The LSH vol. 5: Dominator War
• Supergirl & The LSH vol. 6: The Quest for Cosmic Boy
• Brave and the Bold vol. 1: The Lords of Luck
• LSH vol. 7: Enemy Rising
• LSH vol. 8: Enemy Manifest
RETROBOOT (2007-2011)
• Justice League of America: The Lightning Saga
• Superman & The LSH
• Final Crisis: Legion of 3 Worlds
• LSH: The Choice
• Superboy & The LSH: The Early Years
• LSH: Consequences
• LSH: When Evil Calls
NEW 52 (2011-2015)
• LSH vol. 1: Hostile World
• Legion: Secret Origin
• Legion Lost vol. 1: Run from Tomorrow
• LSH vol. 2: The Dominators
• Legion Lost vol. 2: The Culling
• LSH vol. 3: The Fatal Five
• Justice League United vol. 2: The Infinitus Saga
REBIRTH (2019-PRESENT)
• LSH vol. 1: Millennium
• LSH vol. 2
LEGION CARTOON (2007-2009)
• LSH in the 31st Century: Tomorrow's Heroes
NON-CONTINUITY
• Superman/Batman Vol. 3: Absolute Power
MISCELLANEOUS NON-CONSECUTIVE REPRINTS
• Superboy and the LSH [Tempo]
• LSH: 1,050 Years of the Future
• LSH: The Life and Death of Ferro Lad
Animated Series on DVD/Blu-Ray
• Season 1 DVD 1
• Season 1 DVD 2
• Season 1 DVD 3
• Season 1 box set
• The Complete Second Season DVD
• The Complete Series Blu-Ray
Toys
• Legion Heroclix Starter Set (set of 7)
• DC Direct Legion Clubhouse PVC Set (set of 7)
• VS System Trading Card Game Legion booster box
Video on Demand
• Superman: The Animated Series 03x03 ("New Kids in Town")
• Justice League Unlimited 02x10 (HD) ("Far From Home")
• LSH Animated Season 1
• LSH Animated Season 1
• Smallville episode 08x11 (HD) "Legion"
• Justice League: Cosmic Clash
• Justice League vs the Fatal Five
DC Heroes RPG (Mayfair)
• Legion Sourcebook vol. I (#213)
• Legon Sourcebook vol. II: The Worlds (#216)
• Pawns of Time (#223)
• Knight to Planet 3 (#224)
• Mad Rook's Gambit (#225)
• King for All Time (#226)
• Hardware Handbook (#232)
• Atlas of the DC Universe (#247)
• Legion 2995 Sourcebook (#263)
Miscellaneous
• The Legion Companion
• Best of the Legion Outpost
• Teenagers from the Future: Essays on the LSH