


Justice League: Crisis on Infinite Earths Part Three


Justice League: Crisis on Infinite Earths Part Three
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Watch-outs
What this film brings
Content barometer
Violence
3/5
Notable
Fear
3/5
Notable tension
Sexuality
0/5
None
Language
1/5
Mild
Narrative complexity
1/5
Accessible
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This animated superhero film has a strongly intense and apocalyptic atmosphere, with fast moving action, collapsing worlds, and repeated large scale crisis situations. The main sensitive elements are fantasy violence, fear linked to an overwhelming cosmic villain, and the destruction or loss of entire worlds and important characters, although the visuals remain stylized and not graphic. The intensity is fairly high and frequent because the story is built around constant urgency, collective danger, and heroic sacrifice, which can feel overwhelming for younger children even in animated form. For sensitive viewers, I would recommend waiting until they can handle end of the world stakes and repeated loss, then watching together so an adult can explain the story, reassure them about the fictional nature of the events, and pause if the action becomes too stressful.
Synopsis
Now fully revealed as the ultimate threat to existence, the Anti-Monitor wages an unrelenting attack on the surviving Earths that struggle for survival in a pocket universe. One by one, these worlds and all their inhabitants are vaporized! On the planets that remain, even time itself is shattered, and heroes from the past join the Justice League and their rag-tag allies against the epitome of evil. But as they make their last stand, will the sacrifice of the superheroes be enough to save us all?
Difficult scenes
Very early on, the film establishes a cosmic threat that wipes out entire worlds and shows populations trying to escape unstoppable destruction. The imagery is not bloody, but the idea of planets and their inhabitants being erased can be very unsettling for a child because the danger is vast, sudden, and presented as almost impossible to stop. There are many battles between the heroes and destructive forces within an end of the world setting. These sequences are frequent, loud, and visually dense, with characters being thrown, hit, or appearing close to death, which may overwhelm younger viewers even without graphic detail. The story repeatedly emphasizes heroic sacrifice and the possible loss of important characters or entire realities. That emotional layer may prompt sadness and questions about death, especially for children who are strongly attached to familiar superhero figures. The villain is portrayed as an almost absolute, cold, destructive entity, creating sustained tension rather than one brief scary scene. A sensitive child may be affected by the feeling of widespread helplessness, since even the heroes sometimes seem outmatched by the scale of the threat.
Where to watch
No verified platform for the US market yet. We keep this section updated as availability changes.
Availability checked on Apr 01, 2026
About this title
- Format
- Feature film
- Year
- 2024
- Runtime
- 1h 39m
- Countries
- United States of America
- Original language
- EN
- Directed by
- Jeff Wamester
- Main cast
- Jensen Ackles, Darren Criss, Corey Stoll, Gideon Adlon, Ike Amadi, Geoffrey Arend, Troy Baker, Brian Bloom, Matt Bomer, Ashly Burch
- Studios
- Warner Bros. Animation, DC
Content barometer
Violence
3/5
Notable
Fear
3/5
Notable tension
Sexuality
0/5
None
Language
1/5
Mild
Narrative complexity
1/5
Accessible
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This animated superhero film has a strongly intense and apocalyptic atmosphere, with fast moving action, collapsing worlds, and repeated large scale crisis situations. The main sensitive elements are fantasy violence, fear linked to an overwhelming cosmic villain, and the destruction or loss of entire worlds and important characters, although the visuals remain stylized and not graphic. The intensity is fairly high and frequent because the story is built around constant urgency, collective danger, and heroic sacrifice, which can feel overwhelming for younger children even in animated form. For sensitive viewers, I would recommend waiting until they can handle end of the world stakes and repeated loss, then watching together so an adult can explain the story, reassure them about the fictional nature of the events, and pause if the action becomes too stressful.
Synopsis
Now fully revealed as the ultimate threat to existence, the Anti-Monitor wages an unrelenting attack on the surviving Earths that struggle for survival in a pocket universe. One by one, these worlds and all their inhabitants are vaporized! On the planets that remain, even time itself is shattered, and heroes from the past join the Justice League and their rag-tag allies against the epitome of evil. But as they make their last stand, will the sacrifice of the superheroes be enough to save us all?
Difficult scenes
Very early on, the film establishes a cosmic threat that wipes out entire worlds and shows populations trying to escape unstoppable destruction. The imagery is not bloody, but the idea of planets and their inhabitants being erased can be very unsettling for a child because the danger is vast, sudden, and presented as almost impossible to stop. There are many battles between the heroes and destructive forces within an end of the world setting. These sequences are frequent, loud, and visually dense, with characters being thrown, hit, or appearing close to death, which may overwhelm younger viewers even without graphic detail. The story repeatedly emphasizes heroic sacrifice and the possible loss of important characters or entire realities. That emotional layer may prompt sadness and questions about death, especially for children who are strongly attached to familiar superhero figures. The villain is portrayed as an almost absolute, cold, destructive entity, creating sustained tension rather than one brief scary scene. A sensitive child may be affected by the feeling of widespread helplessness, since even the heroes sometimes seem outmatched by the scale of the threat.