DC Super Hero Girls Torrent

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DC Super Hero Girls is an American animated superhero television series created and developed by Lauren Faust and produced by Warner Bros. Animation and DC Entertainment for Cartoon Network. Based on the web series and franchise of the same name, the series premiered on March 8, 2019, with a one-hour special.[1][2][3]

The show focuses on six female teenage superheroes with secret identities: Diana Prince / Wonder Woman (voiced by Grey Griffin); Barbara "Babs" Gordon / Batgirl (voiced by Tara Strong); Kara Danvers / Supergirl (voiced by Nicole Sullivan); Zee Zatara / Zatanna (voiced by Kari Wahlgren), Jessica Cruz / Green Lantern (voiced by Myrna Velasco); and Karen Beecher / Bumblebee (voiced by Kimberly Brooks). The six girls meet at Metropolis High School and form a superhero team dubbed the "Super Hero Girls".

DC Super Hero Girls Torrent


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The show tells the coming-of-age stories of the Super Hero Girls, dealing with their choices and decisions regarding their superhero identities and their secret identities.[4] The show focuses on physical comedy, emotional storylines, and a large gallery of villains.[5]

Lauren Faust was approached by Warner Bros. to create and develop DC Super Hero Girls into a television series, after previously working on Super Best Friends Forever.[4] The television iteration of the web series DC Super Hero Girls was announced in May 2017. Tara Strong and Nicole Sullivan reprise their roles as Batgirl and Supergirl respectively from Super Best Friends Forever, while Grey Griffin, who previously voiced Wonder Girl (Donna Troy) from the DC Nation Shorts, reprises her role as Wonder Woman from the web series.[10] A year later, a poster showing the first look of the main characters was released.[1] The series is animated by the Canadian studio Jam Filled Entertainment and Hasbro's Boulder Media from Ireland.

The writers chose to model each character and their personalities after a teenager archetype, while also drawing inspiration for several characters on their incarnations from the Silver Age of Comic Books. However, for the more modern Jessica Cruz, the writers heavily altered her characterization due to her original backstory contrasting heavily with the series' lighthearted tone.[11]

Several writers for this series had previously worked on My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic, another show created and developed by Faust. Also, her series is the second collaboration of Tara Strong and John de Lancie, who respectively voiced Twilight Sparkle and Discord on Friendship Is Magic.

Natalie Wetzig, a director on DC Super Hero Girls, referred to the second season of the show in an interview at the 2020 Annie Awards,[12] but later clarified on the second half of season 1.[13] Co-executive producer Amanda Rynda said the crew is "introducing lots of new villains and pushing the needle on new storylines" for season 2.[5]

The series received generally mixed to positive reviews from critics. Emily Ashby of Common Sense Media described the series as fast-paced, focusing on teen heroes who use teamwork, and noted that strong messages about "girl power and the value of friendship" within the series.[18]

Barbara Kathleen "Babs" Gordon (also known as Batgirl) is one of the main characters in the second generation of the DC Super Hero Girls franchise. She is a member of the Super Hero Girls, the daughter of Commissioner Gordon and a student at Metropolis High School.

Barbara and her father move from Gotham City to Metropolis and Babs gets to study at Metropolis High School (which she was enrolled). Her dad gives a homeroom number to her and drives to work. Babs then suspects some of the girls who seem to have superpowers. She enters the school with her schedule on it. At lunch, Babs starts throwing food at Kara, which she was mistaken that Karen was the one who threw food at her. She then throws back to her, in which Jess blocks her by using a food tray but the food hits Zee's hair. After that, Babs declared a food fight and Mr. Chapin interrupted, causing the 5 to go to detention on their first day. Moments later Wonder Woman, who cut class, entered the room. Babs then confirms her suspicions and Diana was impressed since she has never seen anyone other than her be eager in saving the world of man. All of the girls then agreed that they will become Super Heroes and Diana agrees to take lessons in becoming a normal teenager.

Batgirl is the comic relief out of all of her friends. She is known to be bubbly, cheerful, confident, fun-loving, funny, ambitious, and downright optimistic. She is the one who wants everyone to get along and is often seen as the "cheerleader" in the group because of her contagious enthusiasm and zest for life. However, she is a fangirl and her determination makes her destined to be Batman's future sidekick. She is also a creative problem solver and will use her creativity and her surprisingly analytical thinking to stop the bad guys and be the glue in her friendships.

Babs is a short, slim and fair-skinned teenager with rosy cheeks, bright-emerald eyes and long, hot-orange hair with a brighter-colored ombre on the bottom with highlights, usually tied back into a ponytail. She also appears to wear reddish-pink lipstick on her lips.

As a civilian, Babs wears a bright yellow-and-light violet ringer-tee under a purple hoodie-jacket with two yellow stripes on the long sleeves and bat ears attached to the hood. She also wore a set of dark purple short-shorts, white thigh-high socks with purple and yellow stripes, and a pair of yellow sneakers with white shoelaces and toes.

As Batgirl, she wears a purple bat-shaped cowl her hair sticking out of the back, and a similarly-colored bat-shaped cape with yellow inner lining. Her cape is worn over her form-fitting, dark purple Batsuit with her logo colored in yellow, which is located on the chest area. She also wore a set of yellow elbow-length gloves with spikes on them, a yellow utility belt around her waist, and yellow calf-high boots.

Since she was brought into being when she was moulded from clay on the island of Themyscira, Diana was trained to be a warrior princess. The combat training she received was constant and she had to train to be perfect, with little fun she could have, even playing with her Aunt.[1][2]

One day Diana competed in the tournament of Athena and Aphrodite, against her mother's orders and won, believing she was destine to save the world of man Diana snuck off to leave Themyscira. Upon landing in man's world she immediately encountered a boy name Steve Trevor who she immediately developed a crush on.[3]

Diana was quickly caught wandering the streets and was brought to Metropolis High School where they assumed she was a student trying to skip class. After a fight with a fellow student, Diana discovered there were more heroines attending her school. Diana and her five new friends founded a super-team that she became leader of.[4] She spent the first few months in Metroplis living in the tree tops of the cities parks until she had a chance encounter with the antiquarian Julia Kapatelis. Julia immediately recognised Diana as an Amazon and offered up her home for Diana to stay in as her own daughter was away at college. The two subsequently fostered a close relationship to one another.[5]

This character has been a member of the Justice League of America, or the Justice League in any of its various incarnations, sworn by a duty to act as guardians of America and the world by using their skills and/or superpowers to protect Earth from the clutches of both interstellar and domestic threats.
This template will categorize articles that include it into the "Justice League of America members" category.

The franchise was first announced on April 23rd, 2015, by Mattel and DC Comics who had decided to work together for this franchise. The aim they set was to get girls aged 6-12 interested in comics, and have used teenage versions of well known heroines and villainesses to accomplish that. With the announcement the seven main characters for the franchise were revealed, these being: Supergirl, Wonder Woman, Batgirl, Harley Quinn, Poison Ivy, Bumblebee, and Katana. Promotional art for the franchise was also revealed, showing the main characters. There was also a range of products announced as well including the two main toy lines of dolls and action figures, as well as TV specials and a series of shorts all of which would roll out in the fall of 2015 and into spring of 2016. The premise of the series involved teenage versions of well-known DC superheroines and villains attending Super Hero High School, a high school in Metropolis, staffed by heroic versions of other DC characters to teach them to become superheroes. The series was promoted by a webseries that ran on YouTube.

On July 7th, 2015, the franchise's official website was activated by Mattel and DC. The site showed off stats and general descriptions for the main characters. It was also revealed at San Diego comic con that Shea Fontana would be writing for the webisode series and a graphic novel that's going to be released in July of next year.

On September 30th, 2015, the site was fully updated in prep for the launch of the franchise, with games, pictures, character descriptions, toy pages, and video pages being uploaded, as well as more detailed character profiles and new characters. The next day on October 1st the first webisode was released: Welcome to Super Hero High.

When New York Comic Con hit around October 8th and 9th, a music video was released on the site, revealing the theme song for the franchise, as well as two more webisodes featuring Wonder Woman. The dolls were also first seen on October 8th, with dolls of Wonder Woman, Supergirl, Batgirl, Harley Quinn, Bumblebee and Poison Ivy being revealed for launch next spring.

Coinciding with the beginning of the second season of the web series, a television special, Super Hero High aired on April 30, 2016 on Cartoon Network, which introduced Batgirl and Supergirl into the continuity of the webseries. The continuity of the webseries was expanded on in different media; such as a direct-to-video film series that began with Hero of the Year, which followed the end of the second season, and was released on August 9, 2016. A graphic novel series also began in 2016, beginning with Finals Crisis. A series of children's novels published by Lisa Yee each focusing on the experiences of a main character as a Super Hero High student also began in 2016.

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