Stories by @go77e
10 stories

Justice League vs Teen Titans (live action)
In this animated feature directed by Sam Liu, the Justice League faces a formidable new threat that forces them to enlist the help of the Teen Titans. The plot centers around the internal and external conflicts that arise as the two superhero teams must learn to work together to combat a powerful demonic force. Featuring the voices of Rosario Dawson, Jerry O’Connell, and Taissa Farmiga, the film delves into themes of teamwork, trust, and the complexities of heroism. For those interested, the movie can be viewed on Soap2day for free.

Batman: Bad Blood (live action)
*rewritten for live action* Following Bruce Wayne’s mysterious disappearance, Gotham descends into chaos. A high-level arms deal explodes mid-raid, seemingly claiming Batman’s life. With no body recovered, questions swirl: is the Bat dead, captured, or in hiding? In his absence, Gotham fractures. Nightwing returns to wear the cowl temporarily, reluctantly guiding a crumbling network of vigilantes — including the impulsive Damian (Robin), a grieving Alfred, and a new wildcard: Kate Kane, a cynical ex-soldier with a mysterious vendetta, who emerges as Batwoman. Meanwhile, Luke Fox, son of WayneTech’s Lucius Fox, investigates tech thefts tied to experimental combat suits. He’s pulled into the fight and eventually becomes Batwing, balancing loyalty to his father’s legacy with newfound purpose. The chaos is orchestrated by Talia al Ghul, now leading the League of Shadows with renewed zeal. Still reeling from Damian’s rejection in Batman vs. Robin, she sets out to rebuild the world in Ra’s al Ghul’s image — and reclaim her son. She unleashes her "new son": the monstrous Heretic, a mutated, adult clone of Damian, devoid of conscience but embedded with fragments of Bruce’s memories. Talia’s forces — including mercenaries like Firefly, Hellhound, and the brutal Electrocutioner — strike Gotham’s infrastructure, abducting scientists, and hijacking Wayne Enterprises’ stealth tech to arm Heretic’s rise. Gotham is not just a battleground — it's a testbed for a global League resurgence. As tensions rise, Black Mask takes advantage of Batman’s absence, pulling together rogue factions to claim Gotham’s underworld. Infiltrating his empire is Kate Kane’s personal mission — tied to the long-buried murder of her twin sister, Elizabeth, in a Black Mask–backed League operation. When Batman is eventually found alive — broken, drugged, and being psychologically dismantled by Talia — the truth comes out: he allowed himself to be taken, hoping to infiltrate the League and end things from within. But Talia’s plan has evolved — she no longer wants Bruce back. She wants to erase him. In a final confrontation at an abandoned WayneTech facility turned cloning lab, the Bat-family unites. Batwoman and Nightwing battle Heretic. Robin faces his clone, forced to accept the horror of what he could become. Batwing neutralizes the stolen tech. And Bruce confronts Talia, not with rage — but with regret, forcing her to reckon with what they’ve both done to their son. Talia escapes, wounded and more dangerous than ever. Heretic dies by Damian’s hand — not in anger, but mercy. The film ends with Gotham on the mend. Bruce begins trusting others more. Kate becomes a full-time protector. Damian finally feels like a Robin, not a weapon. And the Bat-Family — fractured, but finally forged — stands together.

Justice League: Gods and Monsters (live action version)
(rewritten for live action* In an alternate Earth, a darker Justice League struggles with internal conflicts and moral ambiguity. Superman, Hernan Guerrero—the ruthless son of General Zod—wields immense power with little patience for compromise. Wonder Woman, Bekka, balances her New God heritage with the harsh realities of the surface world. Batman operates from the shadows, unafraid to blur ethical lines to achieve justice. The true threat arises from Dr. Will Magnus, a once-brilliant scientist whose obsession with enhancing humanity leads him to dangerous and unethical experiments. As Magnus’s creations wreak havoc, the League must unite despite their differences to stop him. Lex Luthor, positioned as an uneasy anti-hero, uses his vast resources and ruthless pragmatism to counter Magnus’s threat, though his motives remain complex and ambiguous. Supporting allies including Lois Lane and John Henry Irons aid the League’s efforts to prevent catastrophe. The story culminates in a battle not just for survival, but for the future of humanity—forcing heroes and anti-heroes alike to confront the limits of their power and ideals.

Batman: Under The Red Hood (Live Action 2010)
*rewritten for live action* Years ago, Jason Todd, Bruce Wayne’s second Robin, was brutally murdered by the Joker—a loss that shattered Bruce emotionally and fractured Gotham’s fragile peace. Now, the city is descending into chaos. A mysterious and ruthless new vigilante calling himself the Red Hood violently dismantles organized crime’s infrastructure, targeting drug lords, arms dealers, and corrupt officials. His methods are deadly and unrelenting, blurring the line between hero and executioner. Batman (Jon Hamm) returns to a city he barely recognizes, struggling to stop the escalating violence without crossing his own moral line. His new Robin, Tim Drake (Anton Yelchin), is eager but inexperienced, caught in the shadow of the Red Hood’s brutal efficiency. The criminal underworld—led by the ruthless Black Mask—is desperate to maintain control. Black Mask’s top enforcers, Bulk (Amaury Nolasco) and Baton (Jon Bernthal), are tasked with eliminating the Red Hood by any means necessary. They enlist the aid of the enigmatic arms dealer Ms. Li (Daniela Melchior), whose shadowy network supplies weapons and tech. As Batman investigates, he uncovers evidence linking the Red Hood’s arsenal to illegal shipments controlled by Ms. Li and her mysterious associates, including the deadly Fearsome Hand—a covert martial arts syndicate led by a merciless assassin (Byung-hun Lee). Further complicating matters, the sinister scientist Edward Nygma (Paul Bettany) emerges with cryptic clues and riddles that hint at a larger conspiracy. Batman’s investigation leads him to Tyler Bramford (Ben Foster), a brutal mercenary who reveals that Jason Todd survived the Joker’s attack but was left broken and brutalized. With Jason’s life saved through a combination of clandestine medical intervention and dark training—guided by the League of Assassins’ enforcer Ubu (Tamer Hassan)—he has returned as the Red Hood, consumed by vengeance and rejection of Batman’s no-kill code. The stakes escalate when Amazo—a terrifying, near-indestructible android weapon developed in secret by Ms. Li’s contacts—is unleashed on Gotham’s streets. This new threat forces Batman, Red Hood, and Robin into an uneasy alliance. Together, they must stop Amazo’s rampage before the city burns. In a harrowing climax, Batman confronts Jason. The Red Hood demands that Bruce choose between killing the Joker or letting Jason take justice into his own hands. Batman refuses to kill, but Jason’s rage explodes into a brutal fight, pushing them both to their limits. The film ends with Jason disappearing into the shadows, a broken but unyielding antihero, while Batman and Robin prepare for the new, darker Gotham ahead.

Batman: Mask of the Phantasm (1993 Live Action)
*rewritten for live action* In a Gotham gripped by crime and political maneuvering, high-profile mobsters are being murdered — each found at the scene of their death muttering the same thing: "It was the Batman." The killings begin with Chuckie Sol, a flashy crime lord ambushed in his garage by a ghostly, masked figure. Then Buzz Bronski, a thuggish enforcer, is dragged to his grave — literally — during a funeral. Fear ripples through Gotham’s old mob circles, especially among those once involved in a mysterious disappearance from years prior. Gotham’s press, led by ambitious city councilman Arthur Reeves, quickly blames Batman. As public opinion turns, Bruce Wayne is forced to reevaluate both his public image and his mission. Amid this storm, Andrea Beaumont returns to Gotham. Her arrival stirs up buried memories in Bruce: a time before the cowl, when love nearly pulled him away from vengeance. Flashbacks reveal their near-engagement — and her sudden, unexplained departure — which shattered Bruce and helped solidify his path as Batman. As Bruce investigates, he discovers the murdered gangsters — Sol, Bronski, and the now-terrified Salvatore Valestra — were all connected to Andrea’s father, Carl Beaumont, a financial adviser who vanished after embezzling from them. Desperate for protection, Valestra turns to a terrifying wildcard: the Joker, now living in isolation, his history as a former hitman for the mob buried under madness. When Valestra winds up dead with a smile carved across his face, Bruce begins to suspect Joker may be behind the original crime — but not these new murders. Eventually, Batman uncovers the truth: Andrea is the masked killer — the Phantasm — seeking revenge for her father’s murder, orchestrated years ago by the same mobsters she’s now hunting. Her vendetta spirals toward Gotham’s industrial district, where the Joker now resides in the ruins of the World’s Fair — a decaying monument to lost dreams that Andrea and Bruce once visited together. In a final confrontation, Andrea faces Joker, who gleefully admits to executing her father. She nearly kills him, but Batman intervenes — not to save Joker, but to stop Andrea from crossing the line he walks every night. She vanishes with Joker in an explosion, leaving behind only a locket and the final traces of a love that couldn’t survive the city. The film ends with Bruce, alone in the Batcave, silently reflecting. Alfred asks if he’s alright. Bruce doesn’t respond. In the distance, the Bat-Signal lights the sky — and Batman answers it.

Batman vs. Robin (Live Action Remake)
*rewritten for live action* After the events of Son of Batman, Bruce Wayne struggles to raise Damian — a child trained from birth to kill — in a world of moral restraint. Their uneasy relationship begins to fracture as a string of grisly, ritualistic child abductions grips Gotham. As Bruce investigates, he uncovers whispers of a shadow society: the Court of Owls, an ancient cabal that has manipulated Gotham’s elite from the shadows for centuries. Damian, feeling increasingly alienated and suffocated by his father’s rules, is approached by Talon, the Court’s deadly enforcer. Talon offers Damian a twisted version of family — one that embraces his violent instincts rather than suppresses them. The Court sees Damian not only as a weapon but as a potential heir to their legacy. As Bruce digs deeper, he learns that the Court was involved in the downfall of the Waynes and that their influence reaches into Gotham’s deepest institutions. At the same time, Damian is seduced by their vision of power, vengeance, and purpose — all things Bruce has denied him. This culminates in a psychological and physical confrontation: not just between Batman and Robin, but between two ideologies — legacy vs. destiny, control vs. freedom, justice vs. vengeance. In the end, Damian rejects the Court — not out of loyalty to Bruce, but because he begins to forge a third path: one that honors both who he was made to be, and who he’s choosing to become. The Court is exposed, but not destroyed, retreating back into myth. Talon is defeated but vanishes, hinting at a larger game.

Justice League: Throne of Atlantis (Live Action)
*rewritten for live action* Following the invasion of Earth in Justice League: War, the geopolitical landscape is fragile. While the Justice League remains a loose, informal alliance, tension brews beneath the ocean's surface — literally. When a U.S. submarine is mysteriously destroyed, blame quickly falls on unknown forces in the Atlantic. Military response is swift, and global fear rises about a new potential threat. Beneath the waves, the ancient kingdom of Atlantis, long hidden from the surface world, is in turmoil. With the aging Queen Atlanna attempting diplomacy, her son Orm seeks to capitalize on the chaos. Viewing surface dwellers as dangerous and unworthy of coexistence, he engineers a false-flag attack that leads to Atlanna’s assassination — a calculated move to seize the throne and justify open war against humanity. On land, a disillusioned and isolated man named Arthur Curry struggles with grief and a lifetime of not belonging. He drinks, fights, and avoids the ocean — even as something in his blood calls to it. When an Atlantean emissary reveals the truth of his lineage — that he is the half-human son of the murdered queen and rightful heir to Atlantis — Arthur is forced into a crisis of identity and responsibility. The Justice League investigates the rising oceanic attacks while trying to prevent a full-scale war. Internal divisions emerge, especially over how to handle a hidden nation that may have legitimate cause for retaliation. Meanwhile, Orm solidifies power and deploys Atlantean forces across multiple coastal cities, launching a brutal offensive with the help of Black Manta, a mercenary with his own motivations. Mera, an Atlantean warrior loyal to the queen’s original vision, confronts Arthur and tests his resolve. Though initially skeptical of his right to rule, she ultimately allies with him as he agrees to return to Atlantis — not to take power, but to stop a war. In the climactic battle, the League and Atlantean forces clash in the ruins of a submerged city and a coastal stronghold. Arthur confronts Orm in a duel for the fate of Atlantis. Though physically overmatched, Arthur triumphs not just through strength, but by embodying a new vision for Atlantean leadership: one that bridges both worlds. By the end, Arthur accepts his birthright — not out of desire for power, but duty. He is crowned King of Atlantis. The Justice League, now tested by internal disagreements and external threats, begins to realize it must become more than a reactive force: it must evolve into something permanent.

Son of Batman (Live Action Version)
*rewritten for live action* Following the death of Ra’s al Ghul, the secretive and brutal League of Assassins fractures. A rogue faction, led by the mercenary Slade Wilson (Jon Bernthal), betrays the League during a precision assault on their stronghold, resulting in Ra’s’ death and the League’s destabilization. In the chaos, Talia al Ghul (Sofia Boutella) escapes with her son — Bruce Wayne’s biological child — Damian (Raphael Luce), trained from birth as an heir to the League. With the League compromised and Slade’s forces hunting them, Talia leaves Damian in Bruce Wayne’s (Richard Madden) care in Gotham — not as an act of love, but as a strategic retreat. Damian, arrogant and cold from years of conditioning, is disgusted by Gotham’s moral restraint and challenges Bruce at every turn. Meanwhile, Killer Croc (David Labrava), hired by Slade, steals a prototype mutagen from Dr. Kirk Langstrom (Rafe Spall), who has been secretly experimenting on human-animal hybrids under League coercion. The formula is revealed to be part of a broader plan: Slade is using Langstrom’s research to create an army of genetically-enhanced assassins — the Man-Bats — as tools for his own splinter League. Bruce begins to suspect deeper ties between the League, the city’s escalating violence, and his own past with Talia. His cold attempts at parenting clash with Damian’s cruelty and impulsiveness, leading to increasing tension — and concern from Alfred (Charles Dance) and Nightwing (Nicholas Galitzine), who sees echoes of Bruce’s worst traits in the boy. Driven by a need for revenge and superiority, Damian disobeys Bruce and tracks Slade’s operations across Gotham, leading to a brutal confrontation at an underground facility housing the first wave of mutates. Though he fights fiercely, Damian is nearly killed by Ubu (Tamer Hassan) before being rescued by Bruce and Nightwing — an act that plants the first seeds of emotional doubt in Damian. With intel from Francine Langstrom (Kerry Condon), Bruce discovers Slade plans to release the Man-Bats during a diplomatic gala attended by military officials (including NORAD Commander, played by Dennis Heysbert), intending to assassinate key figures and push the world into chaos — then sell the cure to the highest bidder. In the final act, Batman, Nightwing, and Damian launch an assault on Slade’s stronghold beneath Gotham’s industrial sector. Talia returns, but not to save Bruce — she wants Damian to choose: reclaim his place as heir to the League, or stand with his father. Damian chooses neither. In a brutal duel with Slade, Damian proves his strength not by killing him, but by sparing him — breaking the League’s violent code. Slade is arrested, and the mutagen neutralized by Langstrom, who chooses to destroy his research. The final fight leaves the facility in ruins and marks the true beginning of Damian’s path toward becoming Robin. Back at Wayne Manor, Bruce offers Damian a choice: return to Talia or stay and learn another way. Damian hesitates — but chooses to stay. As the camera pulls away from the manor at dusk, Damian begins training in the cave, now donning a new, darker version of the Robin suit.

Justice League: War (Live Action)
*rewritten for live action* Darkseid, the tyrannical ruler of Apokolips, launches a covert invasion of Earth using his Parademon army, aiming to conquer the planet as a stepping stone to universal domination. The invasion begins quietly, with attacks on global infrastructure and disappearances of key scientists and civilians. Bruce Wayne (Batman) investigates unusual activity in Gotham’s undercity and encounters Hal Jordan (Green Lantern), a pilot recently granted his power ring. Though distrustful of each other, they realize they face a common threat. Meanwhile, Barry Allen (Flash) experiences visions of the invasion while working at STAR Labs, but his warnings go unheeded until he is directly attacked by Parademons. Clark Kent (Superman), still struggling with his identity and humanity, intervenes during a Parademon assault in Metropolis, clashing briefly with the other heroes but quickly forming uneasy alliances. Diana (Wonder Woman), an ambassador from Themyscira living in exile, investigates ancient prophecies tied to the invasion, understanding the threat’s cosmic scale. Billy Batson (Shazam), a reluctant teen hero discovering his powers, joins the fight after his foster family is endangered. Victor Stone (Cyborg), a young scientist critically injured in a Parademon attack on STAR Labs, becomes the team’s vital link between Earth technology and Apokoliptian tech after his cybernetic transformation. As the heroes gather, they uncover Darkseid’s plan: to seize Earth’s powerful energy sources and enslave humanity using the Mother Boxes, devices capable of reshaping reality. The invasion accelerates, forcing the disparate heroes to unite and form the Justice League. The final battle unfolds in a devastated cityscape where the League, learning to trust and fight as a team, confronts Darkseid and his forces. With combined strength and strategy, they repel the invasion but at a significant cost, knowing this victory is only the beginning.

Justice League: The Flashpoint Paradox
*rewritten for live action* Barry Allen wakes in a world he doesn’t recognize. He has no powers. His mother is alive. The Justice League never existed. In this altered timeline, Thomas Wayne is Batman, a brutal vigilante shaped by Bruce’s death. Atlantis and Themyscira are at war, tearing the world apart. Slade Wilson is president of a collapsing U.S., using metahumans like Grifter and Element Woman to hold back chaos. With Thomas’s help, Barry regains his speed and memories. He realizes this world was caused by him saving his mother in the past. Now, he must undo it. They find Cyborg, a government enforcer, and break into a black site holding Kal-El, a weak, hidden Superman raised in captivity. Once exposed to sunlight, he escapes and aids them. The final war breaks out between Atlantis and Themyscira. In the chaos, Reverse-Flash (Thawne) reveals Barry's mistake — and mocks him for the destruction it caused. Thomas sacrifices himself to save Barry, asking him to fix things. Barry runs back in time and lets his mother die, resetting the timeline.