Justice League: Crisis On Infinite Earths Part One Rating Revealed

The animated adaptation will span three movies, which will all presumably carry a PG-13 rating.

Just days after the release of its first trailer, the animated adaptation of Justice League: Crisis on Infinite Earths - Part One has been rated PG-13 for "some violence and brief strong language" by the Motion Picture Association. Given that this is part one of a three-part animated epic, it's likely that the next to parts of Crisis will carry the same rating, putting it more or less on par with the TV-14 rating the the "Arrowverse" shows on the CW (and thus the live-action adaptation of Crisis on Infinite Earths from 2019 and 2020) carried during their time on the air.

The story of Crisis on Infinite Earths centers on The Monitor, a being of nearly infinite cosmic power, bringing the heroes of DC's multiverse together to do battle with the Anti-Monitor, a his doppelganger from the anti-matter universe. In the story, the Anti-Monitor was destroying universes, transforming them into anti-matter to expand his domain, and weakening the Monitor's power in the process. 

The original story, from 1985, created seismic changes at DC, merging the multiple Earths of the multiverse into one single, coherent (if cluttered) timeline. Timelines shifted, origins changed, and some characters ceased to exist entirely. It also led to the rise of event comics as one of the direct market's most important sales drivers.

DC has published enough sequels to Crisis on Infinite Earths in the years since that characters within the DC Universe coined a specific term for them, "Crisis Events." Those sequels include 1994's Zero Hour: A Crisis in Time, 2005's Infinite Crisis, 2008's Final Crisis, 2011's Flashpoint, and 2022's Dark Crisis on Infinite EarthsDC's television Arrowverse adapted the story into the "Crisis on Infinite Earths" event in 2019. That story spanned ArrowThe FlashSupergirlLegends of Tomorrow, and Batwoman episodes, as well as cameo appearances by Black Lightning and numerous characters from throughout DC TV history, including Tom Welling's Clark Kent, Kevin Conroy's Bruce Wayne, and more.

Since multi-part animated adaptations of both Crisis on Infinite Earths and Watchmen were announced, some fans have questioned whether these two massive stories meant DC would be putting their long-running series of animated movies on ice after 2024. If so, it would line up with the creation of James Gunn's new DC Universe, which he has promised will tie live-action movies and TV together with animation and video games into one clear universe with the same actors playing the parts across all media. Warner has yet to confirm these suspicions, though, and it's equally possible that they just felt like they really needed a guaranteed win while the live-action movies are on hiatus.

Justice League: Crisis on Infinite Earths releases in 2024. DC's newest animated movie, Justice League: Warworld, premiered at Comic-Con in July ahead of its release Digital, 4K Ultra HD, and Blu-ray.

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