Stories by @isaacreeves2024
139 stories

Justice League: Legion Of Doom (2032)
Following a series of terrifying, shared nightmares detailing the literal end of the world, Earth's greatest villains reach a chilling realization: the Justice League's reactive heroism will eventually fail, leaving humanity to perish. Orchestrated by Lex Luthor and Brainiac, the world's most dangerous minds unite to form the Legion of Doom. Operating from a cloaked, swamp-bound fortress, their goal is unexpected. They intend to save the world, but they will do it by destroying the Justice League. The Legion launches a global public relations campaign, using Brainiac's advanced technology and Sinestro's constructs to aid the world. As public adoration shifts completely toward the villains, the Justice League is cast as an obsolete, elitist group of gods who choose to police humanity rather than aid it. With the League's reputation fractured, Luthor executes the second phase of his plan: surgical, deeply personal strikes. Having meticulously analyzed the heroes' weaknesses, the Legion strikes simultaneously. Gorilla Grodd mentally dismantles the Flash, Cheetah ambushes Wonder Woman with ancient curses, Sinestro attacks Green Lantern, and a calculated alliance traps Superman under the debilitating effects of red sun radiation. As the heroes fall one by one, Batman escapes the initial purge. He must rally the scattered survivors of the League to expose the dark truth behind the Legion's altruism: Brainiac and Luthor are using global goodwill to micro-engineer a hive-mind network that will strip humanity of free will entirely. The Justice League must wage an all-out war against their mirror images to reclaim the trust of a world that has willfully chosen to embrace its monsters.

The Flash: Legacy (2031)
The film opens mid-action as Barry and Wally dismantle a coordinated Rogues breakout. Their seamless teamwork is shattered when Gorilla Grodd unleashes a telepathic pulse, blacking out Central City and invading with an armored vanguard to establish an overnight regime. During a direct counter-assault, Grodd exploits Barry’s predictable, tactical running style, hijacking his mind mid-run to severely injure and capture him. Wally barely escapes, rescuing Iris West from mind-controlled mobs. With Barry held hostage in City Hall, Wally faces immense pressure. He attempts a rescue using Barry's classic stealth tactics, but Grodd’s telepathic static overwhelms him, feeding on Wally's deepest insecurity: that he is just a cheap copy of his mentor. Iris helps Wally see the flaw in his approach. Grodd can predict Barry because Barry runs like a chess player, but Wally is instinctual and improvisational. To beat a psychic, Wally must move faster than thought itself. Wally launches a solo assault on Grodd’s stronghold, using localized slipstreams to gently clear away mind-controlled citizens before they can register his presence. Face-to-face with Grodd, Wally fights through crushing psychic illusions of failure. By fully tapping into the Speed Force, he accelerates until his brain waves are completely undetectable to Grodd's telepathy, becoming a blur of unpredictable energy. Wally frees Barry, and together they execute a spectacular high-speed takedown, with Wally delivering the definitive final blow. In the aftermath, as Grodd is escorted away, a bruised but proud Barry watches the crowd cheer for Wally. Realizing Central City doesn't just have a backup Flash, but a hero who has evolved what it means to use the Speed Force, Barry officially hands the mantle over to Wally.

Batman: Under The Red Hood (2031)
Picking up right after the fractured events of the first film 3 years ago, Bruce has mended ties with his young, hot-tempered second Robin, Jason Todd. Together, they try to restore order to a chaotic Gotham. However, the Joker escapes Arkham with a singular, sadistic goal: to completely break the Dark Knight by targeting his partner. Ignoring Batman’s strict tactical orders, an impulsive Jason tracks the Joker to an abandoned chemical warehouse alone. Batman arrives just minutes too late. The warehouse explodes, and Bruce is left pulling Jason's lifeless body from the rubble. The tragedy completely shatters Batman, driving him into a dark, reclusive isolation. Three years later (in the present, 2031), a ruthless new vigilante called the Red Hood violently seizes control of Gotham's drug syndicates. He gives the mobs a simple choice: stop or die. When Batman intervenes, he discovers this new killer fights with an identical, brutal mirror of his own martial arts style. The mystery unravels during a rooftop confrontation when Red Hood removes his mask, revealing a resurrected, scarred Jason Todd. Saved and altered by the Lazarus Pit, Jason isn't back to be rescued, he's back for vengeance. He condemns Batman’s moral code as a failure, pointing out that the Joker is still alive and terrorizing Gotham while he lay in a grave. The film culminates in a tense, three-way psychological showdown. Jason kidnaps the Joker, forcing Batman into a devastating ultimatum: Bruce must either break his one rule and execute the Joker himself, or Jason will do it, permanently destroying the legacy of the Batman.

Nightwing (2031)
In the neon-drenched shadows of Blüdhaven, Dick Grayson finds himself ensnared in a lethal game of heritage and horror as the fractured remnants of the Court of Owls rally behind a terrifyingly familiar face: William Cobb, the legendary Talon and Nightwing’s own great-grandfather. Refusing to let the Court’s legacy die, Cobb launches a brutal, calculated assault on Dick’s city, orchestrating a wave of high-profile assassinations designed to plunge Blüdhaven into absolute chaos and break Nightwing’s spirit. As the sky bleeds police sirens and smoke, Dick is forced to push his acrobatic prowess and tactical brilliance to their absolute limits, swinging through a gauntlet of lethal traps and brainwashed sleeper agents. The conflict becomes deeply personal, a psychological and physical war of attrition where Cobb taunts Dick with the destiny he escaped, trying to prove that the blood of the killer still flows in his veins. From the dripping, subterranean catacombs beneath the city to the rain-slicked gargoyles of its highest skyscrapers, Nightwing wages a lonely war against a shadow empire, trading bone-shattering blows and fierce philosophical barbs with his immortal ancestor. To save his city and permanently sever the strings of the Court, Dick must not only outmaneuver Cobb's centuries of deadly combat experience but also conquer the dark doubts whispering in his own mind, ultimately proving that heroes are defined by their choices, not their lineage, in a breathless, high-stakes climax that alters the destiny of Blüdhaven forever.

Green Lantern Corps (2030)
Mongul’s devastating attack leaves Coast City a smoking crater. Returning to Earth, Hal Jordan suffers a massive psychological break. Driven mad by grief, he uses his ring to recreate the city and its millions of inhabitants. When the Guardians of the Universe harshly sanction him for using Oan energy for personal gain, Hal snaps. He sets a direct course for Oa to seize the Central Power Battery. John Stewart and Guy Gardner try to intercept him but underestimate Hal’s raw willpower and growing darkness. Along the way, Hal ruthlessly strips fellow Lanterns of their rings, leaving them stranded in the void of space. Arriving on Oa, Hal kills Sinestro (freed by the Guardians as a desperate last resort) and steps into the Central Power Battery. He emerges not as a Green Lantern, but as Parallax, clad in armor of pure yellow fear energy. The Central Battery is shattered; the Corps goes dark. A dying Guardian, Ganthet, finds Kyle Rayner, a freelance graphic artist with no military background, in a dark alley and thrusts the ring upon him. John and Guy find Kyle; John wants to train him tactically, while Guy thinks he's a joke. Parallax returns to Earth, intending to siphon the planet’s core energy to trigger a localized big bang, reset time, and "fix" his mistakes. The finale is a grueling battle in the ruins of Coast City. John coordinates the planetary defense while Guy utilizes an unstable, rogue alien weapon to match Hal's power. Kyle is forced to step up. Because his ring was forged differently, it isn't vulnerable to the yellow fear impurity. Kyle’s artistic, unpredictable constructs shatter Parallax’s armor, giving John a window to appeal to the real Hal Jordan buried deep inside. Hal temporarily regains control, realizes the horror he has wrought, and flies into the sun to reignite Earth's solar system and banish Parallax. His sacrifice leaves a fractured universe with only three Earth Lanterns to rebuild the light.

The Return of Superman (2030)
The Man of Steel is dead. Metropolis is in mourning. But the world cannot stay empty for long. Almost overnight, four wildly different figures emerge, each claiming to be the true resurrection of Kal-El: The Last Son of Krypton, a ruthless vigilante who executes criminals; Superboy, a flashy, media-obsessed teenage clone; Steel, a brilliant engineer seeking to honor the hero with a suit of armor; and The Cyborg Superman, a half-man, half-machine savior who possesses Superman’s DNA and endorsement from the White House. As the world argues over who deserves the crest, a shadow falls over California. The Cyborg Superman is not a savior. He is a monster- Hank Henshaw, a former astronaut who blames Superman for his tragic past. Allied with the alien conqueror Mongul, Henshaw initiates a horrific plot. In a sudden, catastrophic strike, massive nuclear-level "Engine City" bombs detonate over Coast City, instantly vaporizing all seven million residents and leaving a massive, smoking crater where the metropolis once stood. With Coast City destroyed, Mongul and the Cyborg begin transforming the ruins into a massive, mechanized thruster designed to turn Earth into a mobile war-planet. With the global military paralyzed, the remaining pretenders to the throne must unite. Superboy, Steel, and a newly resurrected, depowered Clark Kent wearing a black recovery suit, must launch a desperate, last-stand assault against the Cyborg's heavily fortified fortress. They aren't just fighting to save the world; they are fighting to reclaim the true meaning of the crest on their chests.

The Death Of Superman (2030)
In the heart of Metropolis, Superman stands as an unbreakable symbol of hope, but his humanity is truly anchored by his love for Lois Lane. As Clark Kent, he is finally balancing his dual lives, but that fragile peace is shattered when an unstoppable force of nature breaches Earth's crust. A mindless, armored behemoth who used to be Ultraman, the clone of Superman, later dubbed Doomsday, embarks on a path of pure, senseless destruction across the American countryside. The Justice League steps forward to intercept the threat, but they are brutally and effortlessly dismantled one by one. Realizing the planetary scale of the danger, Superman flies into the fray, only to discover that this creature possesses a terrifying, boundless physical strength that rivals his own. The conflict spills into the streets of Metropolis. Unlike the calculated schemes of Lex Luthor, Doomsday cannot be reasoned with, outsmarted, or contained. It is a living engine of murder. For the first time, the world watches in horror as the Man of Steel is pushed past his absolute physical limits. He bleeds, his bones break, and his solar reserves begin to drain. As the battle reaches its desperate climax outside the Daily Planet, a battered Superman looks at Lois and realizes there is no conventional way to win. To save the city and the woman he loves, he must expend every remaining drop of his life force. With a final, catastrophic exchange of blows, Superman delivers a fatal strike to the monster, snapping its neck just as Doomsday’s jagged protrusions pierce his own chest. The beast falls silent, but the victory is hollow. Wrapped in Lois’s arms, surrounded by a grieving city, Clark Kent draws his final breath, leaving a world suddenly forced to learn how to survive without its greatest protector.

Teen Titans (2030)
Raven, a powerful empath fleeing her demonic heritage, has visions of an impending global apocalypse. She approaches the Justice League for help, but they reject her, sensing the terrifying dark magic inside her. Desperate, Raven takes matters into her own hands and begins gathering a group of extraordinary, lonely teenagers to fight the threat.The team has to stop Raven’s father, the interdimensional demon Trigon, from possessing her and invading Earth. They aren't fighting because an adult told them to; they are fighting because they are all outcasts who have finally found a place where they belong. Robin (Dick Grayson), Starfire, Raven, Beast Boy, Wonder Girl (Donna Troy), and Kid Flash (Wally West) form together to fight an unstoppable threat, Trigon.

Paradise Lost (2029)
Set on the hidden island of Themyscira, Paradise Lost begins when a faction of Amazons led by the bitter warrior Bana-Mighdall seeks greater power and influence among their people. Long-standing tensions between different Amazon tribes erupt into open conflict, throwing the peaceful paradise into chaos. As civil war spreads across the island, Wonder Woman is forced to confront divisions within her own culture. Ancient rivalries, political betrayals, and questions about leadership threaten to destroy everything the Amazons have built. The conflict attracts the attention of powerful gods and mystical forces, raising the stakes far beyond a simple struggle for power. While Queen Hippolyta tries to hold her nation together, Diana fights to prevent the Amazons from tearing themselves apart. The war tests her loyalty to her people and her belief that peace can overcome hatred. As the battle reaches its climax, devastating sacrifices are made, alliances shift, and Themyscira is forever changed.

Mister Miracle (2029)
Scott Free is the greatest escape artist in the universe. Raised on the hellish world of Apokolips by the tyrant Darkseid, he spent his childhood enduring unimaginable cruelty before escaping to Earth and becoming the superhero known as Mister Miracle. Alongside his wife, the fierce warrior Big Barda, Scott has built a life far removed from the endless war between Apokolips and New Genesis. But when the story begins, Scott attempts something he has never done before: escaping life itself. After surviving, Scott struggles to determine what is real and what is not. As Darkseid's influence spreads across the cosmos and a devastating war erupts between the New Gods, Scott finds himself pulled back into the conflict he spent his life running from. At the same time, he tries to navigate everyday challenges with Barda; marriage, family, parenthood, and the search for happiness. As reality becomes increasingly distorted, Scott is haunted by strange visions, missing memories, and the possibility that he may be trapped in a prison far more complex than any physical cage. The question becomes whether the world's greatest escape artist can discover the truth about his existence, or whether some traps can never be escaped.

Booster Gold: Blue and Gold (2029)
After years of failed sponsorship deals and embarrassing publicity stunts, Booster Gold's career is falling apart. His best friend, Blue Beetle, convinces him to investigate a series of strange disappearances connected to stolen alien technology. The investigation uncovers a conspiracy involving the villainous organization The Reach, which plans to secretly establish a foothold on Earth. While trying to expose the threat, Booster and Ted repeatedly bungle missions, creating a reputation as incompetent heroes. As the stakes rise, the pair discover that the Reach have infiltrated governments and corporations worldwide. Nobody believes their warnings, forcing them to act alone. What begins as a comedic buddy-adventure becomes a race against an alien invasion. Ted uses his genius intellect while Booster learns that heroism isn't about attention or profit. The climax sees Blue Beetle sacrificing his technology and fortune to stop the Reach fleet from arriving. Together, Booster and Ted save the planet, though the Justice League receives most of the credit. The film ends with Booster and Ted reopening their "Heroes for Hire" business, embracing their status as Earth's most underappreciated heroes.

Wonder Woman (2028)
For centuries, Diana Prince, the legendary Wonder Woman, has protected humanity from the shadows while living between the world of man and the hidden paradise of Themyscira. When a series of ancient artifacts tied to forgotten Greek myths begin surfacing across the globe, outbreaks of violence, fear, and chaos follow in their wake. Investigating the phenomenon, Diana discovers that the powerful sorceress Circe is behind the crisis. Believing humanity has squandered the gift of free will, Circe seeks to return Earth to an age ruled by gods, monsters, and magic. As mythological creatures begin appearing across the world and entire cities are transformed into nightmare landscapes, Diana finds herself facing a threat unlike any she has encountered before. Joined by intelligence officer Steve Trevor, the young Amazon warrior Donna Troy, and the renowned magician Zatanna, Diana races to stop Circe before she awakens an ancient Titan buried long before the rise of Olympus itself. When Circe succeeds and unleashes the Titan upon the world, Diana and Zatanna lead the fight against overwhelming magical forces while Donna commands the Amazons against an army of mythological monsters. Realizing that strength alone cannot save the world, Diana inspires humanity to stand together in the face of fear, weakening the Titan's influence and turning the tide of the battle. In a climactic confrontation, Wonder Woman and Zatanna combine their powers to defeat Circe and seal away the ancient threat. Emerging from the shadows at last, Diana reveals herself to the world as a public hero and symbol of truth. As nations begin looking to her for guidance in an uncertain age, Wonder Woman steps into a new role—not just as a warrior, but as an ambassador between humanity, heroes, and the mysteries that lie beyond their world. Post-Credit Scene: Cassie Sandsmark is teased.

Superman’s Pal Jimmy Olsen (2028)
Jimmy Olsen is promoted from photographer to investigative journalist at the Daily Planet. While Clark handles world ending threats, Jimmy begins investigating strange metahuman related crimes that seem disconnected at first, but all lead back to a hidden mastermind operating in the shadows. Jimmy Olsen hears rumours of a talking, strong gorilla. He is the only one who believes the story is true. He sets out to investigate, leading him to other metahuman cameos and finding the truth.

Batman: Gotham's Verdict (2028)
The fragile peace of Gotham shatters when Commissioner Gordon is shot by an unseen sniper, leaving him in a coma. Simultaneously, Vesper Fairchild’s murdered body is discovered inside Wayne Manor. Caught over his lover's corpse, Bruce Wayne is targeted by the GCPD and a fractured Bat-Family. They theorize that Bruce orchestrated the hit on Gordon to remove Gotham's top cop before executing Vesper. As a massive manhunt intensifies, Bruce rejects his civilian identity. He escapes custody to hunt the true culprit from the shadows, forced to evade his own allies who believe his grief drove him to a mad corporate cover-up. The tide turns when Gordon wakes from his coma. Though unable to identify the sniper, his testimony provides crucial clues. Tracing the unique alloy shared by the sniper bullet and the blade that killed Vesper, Batman’s investigation leads him deep into an abandoned 19th-century labyrinth hidden behind Wayne Manor's foundations. Expecting a solitary assassin, Bruce instead stumbles upon a war zone within the subterranean catacombs. Calvin Rose—an escape artist and rogue Talon breaking free from the Court of Owls—has begun dismantling the secret society from the inside, leaving neutralized guards in his wake. Recognizing a shared enemy, the fugitive Dark Knight and the rebellious Talon form an uneasy alliance. Just as they unite, they are ambushed in the Court's grand assembly hall, igniting a massive battle. At the center stands William Cobb, the Court's apex assassin, who fights with lethal precision while mocking Batman for failing Gotham. It takes the combined, synchronized efforts of Batman's tactical genius and Calvin's insider knowledge of Cobb's style to finally bring the legendary assassin down. With Cobb defeated, they secure the hard evidence needed to expose the Court of Owls to the world and definitively prove Bruce Wayne's innocence.

Man Of Tomorrow
Clark Kent is balancing a serious relationship with Lois Lane while mentoring his impulsive, traumatized cousin, Kara Zor-El. Haunted by memories of Krypton’s fall, Kara warns Clark that the "Collector of Worlds," Brainiac, is coming. After intercepting a robotic scout, the duo travels into deep space to find its origin. Lex Luthor reveals he's been building a robotic suit that was built to defeat Superman, but he decides to use it for good for now. They discover Brainiac, a hyper-intelligent cyborg who shrinks and steals one capital city from every planet before destroying the rest to ensure his data remains "unique." Inside Brainiac’s ship, Superman finds the Bottle City of Kandor. Though briefly captured, Clark and Kara escape with help from Kara's father, Zor-El, and brings the bottled city back to Earth. Brainiac follows, launching a massive assault. Despite the bravery of Earth’s heroes, Brainiac successfully shrinks and bottles Metropolis. To finish the job, he fires a missile into the Sun to trigger a supernova. Superman infiltrates the ship once more, realizing Brainiac’s weakness: he cannot process chaotic, unpredictable data. While Supergirl flies to intercept the solar missile, Superman drags Brainiac out of his sterile ship and into the "messy" biological environment of Earth. Overwhelmed by the sensory input of billions of evolving organisms, Brainiac suffers a mental breakdown and combusts. With the help of Mr. Terrific, John Stewart, Martian Manhunter, Maxima, and other heroes, they use Brainiac’s technology to restore Metropolis. Supergirl and Superman then place Kandor on a new planet, allowing Kryptonians to rebuild, followed by a montage of heroes restoring other stolen cities across the galaxy. Realizing life is too fragile to wait, Clark finally proposes to Lois. Post-credit scene: Amidst the wreckage, remnants of Brainiac’s components flicker back to life.

Clayface
Clayface is an upcoming American body horror film based on the eponymous character from DC Comics. Directed by James Watkins from a screenplay by Mike Flanagan and Hossein Amini, it will be the third film in the DC Universe (DCU). Tom Rhys Harries stars as Matt Hagen / Clayface, alongside Naomi Ackie, David Dencik, Max Minghella, and Eddie Marsan. It is produced by Matt Reeves and Lynn Harris alongside James Gunn and Peter Safran of DC Studios. Clayface is a body horror story about Matt Hagen, an up-and-coming actor whose face is disfigured by a gangster. As a last resort, Matt turns to a scientist, Dr. Caitlin Bates, who transforms his body into clay.

Supergirl: Woman Of Tomorrow
The story begins with Kara Zor-El celebrating her 21st birthday on a planet with a red sun, allowing her to finally get drunk. Her solitude is interrupted by Ruthye Marye Knol, a young alien girl from a developing world. Ruthye is on a grim quest: she is looking for a mercenary to help her track down and kill Krem of the Yellow Hills, the man who murdered her father. After Krem steals Kara’s spaceship and mortally wounds her faithful companion, Krypto the Superdog, Kara and Ruthye team up. Since they lack a ship, they travel across the galaxy via "space bus" and ancient leaps, hopping from world to world in pursuit of the villain.

Lanterns
In the shadow of a changing DC Universe, LANTERNS is a dark, prestige mystery that swaps soaring space opera for the gritty realism of a "True Detective" style thriller. The story follows Hal Jordan (Kyle Chandler), a weary, legendary Lantern who has seen the Corps fall and rise again. Haunted by the cosmic isolation reminiscent of Green Lantern: Earth One, Hal is no longer the cocky ace pilot, he is a man burdened by the weight of a ring that feels more like a shackle than a gift. When his ring suddenly deems him unworthy, he is forced to mentor the new chosen Green Lantern, John Stewart (Aaron Pierre), a disciplined former Marine and new recruit who views the ring as a tool for justice, not a source of existential dread. The duo is pulled into a chilling investigation in a remote town in the American heartland. What begins as a series of ritualistic, seemingly impossible murders soon reveals a terrifying cosmic rot. As they peel back the layers of the town's history, they find evidence of a "Sector 2814" conspiracy that predates the Corps itself. Unlike previous iterations, the rings are used sparingly. The investigation is driven by forensic grit and psychological tension, with Hal and John forced to rely on their wits when the "jewelry" fails them. The investigation takes a turn when they encounter a drifter possessing knowledge no human should have, J'onn J'onzz, the Martian Manhunter. J'onn serves as a cryptic bridge between the town’s secrets and an ancient Martian tragedy that has bled into Earth's soil. While the focus remains on the central duo, the series expands the lore with brief, impactful cameos. Expect to see Guy Gardner (Nathan Fillion) as the abrasive "bad cop" of the sector, alongside glimpses of younger recruits like the empathetic Jessica Cruz and the artistic Kyle Rayner, who represent the future of a Corps that Hal is desperately trying to protect from darkness.

Heroes For Hire Season 1
This takes place during the events of Daredevil season 2. The story kicks off when Luke and Danny Rand realize they are two sides of the same coin. Luke needs a partner who isn't a "cop," and Danny needs a way to use his skills without the baggage of his family's corporate empire. They set up shop in Manhattan, charging fees to protect the neighborhood. A mysterious man named Mr. Charles hires them to look into a special case. The series takes a dark turn towards the end. Danny contracts "Radiation Poisoning" (later revealed to be a plot by the Plantman) and becomes incredibly weakened. While Danny is recovering, an imposter/doppelgänger is killed, making it look like Luke Cage murdered his best friend. They team up and Luke Cage is cleared of the crimes he was accused of, and becomes Mayor of New York City.

Daredevil: Born Again Season 3
Matt Murdock is sent to Ryker’s Island awaiting trial for his activities as Daredevil. The prison is populated by the very criminals he put there. To survive, Matt must balance his identity as a lawyer with the brutal instincts of the "Devil of Hell's Kitchen," all while navigating a conspiracy that threatens to ignite a full-scale prison riot. Frank Castle (The Punisher) gets himself intentionally arrested and sent to Ryker’s. Frank reveals he is there to help Murdock escape during the inevitable chaos, viewing Matt as a "good man" who doesn't belong in a cage. Amidst the smoke and gunfire, Matt and the Punisher fight their way through the cell blocks. Matt has a clear shot to leave Powell behind to die but chooses to let the chaos decide his fate. It is eventually revealed that Foggy Nelson's death was faked by the Witness Protection Program to keep him safe from Matt’s enemies. With Matt in prison and his secret identity leaked, the public is convinced he is Daredevil. With Matt in prison, Elektra took up the Daredevil mantle so the city would have a replacement while he was gone. She fights Heather Glenn who is now Muse.