Imagine being attacked by a burglar at night, and then a guy dressed like Batman with the size of a Leprechaun just appears out of nowhere and beats the sh*t out of him. What a story to tell the children eh?
Getting beaten by a kid in a batman costume and the force being able to knock you out afterwards. Yeah, might have to take the meds for good reasons that day and then I'll do the usual stuff when I finished out of the prisons.
@@prep3544 The man might as well have been involved in every major conflict that happened until he started working for the Wayne’s. Even the ones before he was born because he’s Alfred.
This is an example of using ambiguous endings well. You can't tell if lil'Supes actually died and was brought back or if he was asleep the whole time. It's a cute story about being a parent and preserving innocence. Some parents want to keep it as long as possible, others see these experiences as necessary, but still are protective by helping them learn to handle it.
Who knows? The little world doesn’t seem to have the concept of death. Maybe the signs that differentiate life and death are absent too. Do the little people breathe or have pulses?
I love how offended Batman is at the little Batman, and repulsed as the little catwoman kisses him. He casually stares down gods but draws the line at this.
That brings up a good point. Did Lil Superman really die and the world just revived him because it has no concept of death or is this comic book logic where nobody really dies? I personally believe he really died but the world revived him for one of the two reasons I just mentioned.
@@nicholas-dv1mg when he was convinced Bat Mite won't agree and intrigued by Little JL handling concept of death and when they eventually came back to their world , Mxyzptlk revived Little Superman and made him sleep deeply
It's quite hilarious that they did not only infantilize the appearance of the tiny JL, but also their personality and lore, such as Batman's parents being simply mildly bullied or Black Canary, a homoerotic s*x symbol, feeling disgusted at the simply idea of kissing someone. What an amazing story 🤣🤣🤣
This story is so cute, I love it, so why in the world did Grant Morrison thpught that it was a good idea to just kill all the tiny heroes in his "Multiversity" comics ???
@@SenkingFar They were all turned into evil robots, had anti-matter bomb implanted in them, were used as a weapons to destroy large populated area or hero stronghold in kamikaze attacks. Batman was the only one who kept some of his mind and he begged a group of hero to destroy him before he could do any more damage (which they did by hanging him).
JL: guys we need someone to watch the little justice league while we fight the little villains... Superman: preferably someone who knows how to care for children... Wonder Woman: and know how to manage a lot of them... Batman: .... alright, I'll do it
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"The dc universe is widely known to be on the darker side". Man i remember when dc used to be the bright Hopeful comics and marvel was the dark and edgy one. I blame batman
That actually makes me think that maybe the little versions of everyone are unable to die in their universe. Little Superman probably did actually die after flying Doomsday into orbit, but as soon as he was brought back his universe's rules resurrected him. Maybe dying in their universe is like breaking the laws of physics in our universe, it is physically impossible.
@@jacobcox4565 Possible. Though, it may also be that Kryptonians are very hard to kill due to their advanced biology, and are sometimes still somewhat alive even when they appear dead. Like how Doomsday "killed" Superman but Clark was able to regenerate after a while. So, there may have been just enough life left in Little Supes for the rules of his universe to kick in when he got back.
@@RelativelyBest But wouldn't have Clark known that Kryptonians can still be alive even if they look dead, since he himself is a Kryptonian and has learned practically everything about his people from Jor-El's crystals?
@@jacobcox4565 Hm, good point. Of course, it might have been a creative decision by the writer. You know, would have been sort of anticlimactic for Superman to be like: "Don't worry, our little friend here is only _mostly_ dead. This happened to me once." But I guess it doesn't matter either way.
Batman must have felt so offended after hearing lil' batman's origin story. I wonder how it would feel if normal people just one day found an doppelganger that is just like a parody of their own life and is treating it as if it had the same weight as yours. Edit: holy shit I did not expect smol superman to straight up die. Edit again: nevermind I feel like an idiot.
If i recall in superman/batman #46, superman sees everyone on the jla as kids cause he was exposed to a certain type of kryptonite. Thats when I first saw the little justice league ever in comics when i was a kid
I’ve been thinking about what a crossover between the Snyderverse and the Super Friends would be like (because I spend a lot of time thinking about pointless things like that) but this is close enough.
I have a weird theory that death isn’t possible at their world maybe its like rule in it is everything is innocent which includes dying or being killed
Great recap, but you forgot the part where Joker and Lil Joker meet each other! That little moment was hilarious, and I wish we got a little follow up to that.
Just so you know, anytime i have tried to comment under your vids its like the keyboard gets disabled and i need to restart my shit to do so. Worth it. Fuck this algorithm, you will get this interaction
Got a question about this comic and issue #52: I am subscribed to DC infinite digital comics platform and read issue 52 there. It doesn’t have the ending with lil Superman waking up. It ends with lil Joker finding big Joker in Arkham. How did the original physical copy end?
The Lil' Leaguers story spans two comic book issues: Superman/Batman #51-#52. The ending with Robin covers two pages featured as a part of Superman/Batman #75 super-sized special.