As The Flash is due to team up with multiple Batmen on the big screen, here's a supercut of his best bat-buddy adventures from Justice League Action, Justice League Unlimited and Batman: The Brave and the Bold.
Justice League Action is the 2016 animated TV series based on the DC Comics concept of the same name. The show was developed by Jim Krieg, Butch Lukic and Alan Burnett for Cartoon Network. It focused on the DC trinity of Wonder Woman, Superman and Batman, but featured numerous guest heroes from the DC Universe in every episode. It ran for a single season of 52 episodes and concluded in 2018.
Justice League Unlimited is the 2004 animated series that directly continued the successful Justice League show. Both are based on the DC Comics franchise of the same name.
While the original series focused on the core seven members of the Justice League (Superman, Wonder Woman, Batman, The Flash, Green Lantern, Hawkgirl and The Martian Manhunter), this new show expanded the ranks of the superhero team, with dozens of DC Universe characters appearing to support the founding team.
The series ran for three seasons on Cartoon Network and is considered the final installment of the animated universe that started with Batman: The Animated Series.
Batman: The Brave and the Bold is a 2008 animated TV series teaming Batman with one or more other characters from DC Comics each week.
Developed for Cartoon Network, the show was a pivot away from darker, serious takes on the Dark Knight detective. Instead the series provided copious humor mixed in with stories that emphasized the high-adventure to be found in superhero comics, over the more grounded stories of the films and recent animated shows. Even Batman's costume design evoked the 1960s Batman live-action show. The gave fans the loutish, barbarian-king take on Aquaman, which has become the character's signature in recent years.
Diedrich Bader voiced Batman. He was joined by a rotating cast of guest voices including John DiMaggio as Aquaman, Paul Reubens as Bat-Mite, Henry Winkler as Ambush Bug. Even Kevin Conroy and Adam West made guest appearances.
The show ran on Cartoon Network for three seasons and spawned a direct-to-video movie sequel that teamed Batman with Scooby Doo.


