Tag: Black Lightning

  • ‘Crisis on Infinite Earths’ and  the success of DC on TV

    ‘Crisis on Infinite Earths’ and the success of DC on TV

    In less than 8 years, a scrappy collection of TV shows has birthed heroes, introduced a Multiverse and perfectly captured the spirit of comic books. (NB: Spoilers ahead).

    Since the debut of Arrow in 2012, a series based on DC Comics’ Green Arrow character, the CW has done more to create a cohesive universe on TV than the almost $1 billion budget of the combined DC Extended Universe at the cinema. CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS is the culmination of that effort.

    Today, a “Crisis” in comic book terms indicates a monumental shift in the way we look at things, restructuring history and aligning the pieces so that they fit a new normal. You can almost set your watch by the the number of times comics published use the gimmick to sell books. Yet when the 12-part Crisis on Infinite Earths comic debuted in 1985, its primary function was an unprecedented hard reboot of the entire 50 years of the publisher’s comic book continuity.

    Crisis on Infinite Earths

    Similarly, the TV version – which played out over a 5-part crossover across Supergirl, Batwoman, The Flash, Arrow, and Legends of Tomorrow – was more than just another annual crossover. It was the culmination of the 460-plus episodes that got us there, and the half-century of TV shows that preceded and informed it.

    Worlds will live

    After teasing a “Crisis” for several years across the various shows, especially in The Flash and Arrow, the basic plot sees the enigmatic Monitor (professional slamball player LaMonica Garrett) gathering Green Arrow, the Flash, Supergirl, Batwoman, Sara Lance, Ray Palmer, and several “Paragons” from the multiverse to stop the Anti-Monitor from unmaking all of reality.

    What CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS lacks in budget it makes up for in sheer fan service and ambition. When you consider that Arrow began doing Batman storylines and a strict ‘no capes’ policy, the fact that we have cameos and interactions with Batman ’66, SmallvilleThe Flash (1990), Lucifer, TitansBirds of Prey (2002), Black Lightning, Batman: The Animated Series’ Kevin Conroy, Brandon Routh’s Superman and (most surprisingly) Ezra Miller’s cinematic Flash is an amazing tribute to the size of this universe. Indeed, the latter was the first overt connection between the films and TV shows being in the same multiverse.

    Like last year’s Avengers: Endgame, it’s a payoff for sitting through (let’s face it) some occasionally forgettable television. The adherence to US TV’s 20-plus episode model means that large slabs of most seasons are filled with throwaway storylines and the endless angst of the CW model. Which is to say they are exactly like serialised comics of a certain era, albeit with a far bigger focus on romance than heroics. If anything, CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS demonstrates what happens when those characters are focused on a singular high-stakes narrative.

    …worlds will die

    Moving Target: The History and Evolution of Green Arrow
    Missing Ollie already? Read about his complete history in my book Moving Target: The History and Evolution of Green Arrow. BUY IT NOW!

    After carefully introducing the notion of a multiverse in The Flash several seasons ago, the 5-parter begins with the deaths of several major worlds. The first to fall was Earth-2, but others followed in quick succession.

    Perhaps the biggest twist came early in the series with the death of Oliver Queen, the first of the universe’s heroes, and his later resurrection as the Spectre. It’s a storyline that combines aspects of Green Arrow’s history with Green Lantern comic book arcs like Emerald Twilight and Day of Vengeance, but ultimately ends with a godlike Ollie in a showdown with the Anti-Monitor where he dies. Again.

    For someone who has spent what feels like half a lifetime researching and writing about Green Arrow, this was a majorly emotional arc for me. It’s not just the end of a character but the end of an era. Most fans get a movie or two if they are lucky, but to have eight seasons of your favourite character play out on screen – and get to see him ascend to a deity in the multiverse – is a rare treat. While I wasn’t always happy with the direction the show took, especially the mismanagement of the Black Canary over the years, I can’t imagine a more perfect exit for my favourite character.

    …and nothing will ever be the same

    There’s a lot of questions left at the end of the series. In some ways, the Legends of Tomorrow finale was something of a misguided anti-climax, pitting the survivors against a giant Beebo and having a small-scale face-off with the Anti-Monitor. Again.

    Yet the net result was a massive one: the complete restructuring of the DC television multiverse. The big CW shows – Supergirl, Batwoman, The Flash, Legends of Tomorrow, Black Lightning and the soon-to-depart Arrow are now on the same Earth (called ‘Earth-Prime’), as will be the upcoming Superman & Lois, a show that takes a leaf out of DC Rebirth comics and focuses on Kal-El and Lois raising their children. The new Hall of Justice style clubhouse (pictured below) will certainly make future crossovers easier!

    What about the series threads left hanging? With an apparently good Lex Luthor (Jon Cryer), where does that leave the Supergirl arc that was hanging pre-Crisis? The Evil Lena storyline was a stretch, but using Crisis to absolve its sins feels a bit cheap. Plus, where will the anti-meta sentiment (in Black Lightning and to a lesser extent Supergirl) stand following the apparent widespread acceptance of the Age of Heroes on the new Earth-Prime? From the trailers of the forthcoming series, this will be one of the big arcs going forward.

    Wither Psycho Pirate?

    One of the other threads that the series never followed through with was Psycho Pirate, last seen in prison at the end of the previous crossover, Elseworlds. Despite his integral role in the original comic, the character was completely absent from the series. “When we’re finding ourselves forcing moments just to be faithful to the comic,” explain producer Marc Guggenheim to Entertainment Weekly, “that stuff is usually the first kind of moments to go, actually, much to chagrin of my Twitter feed.”

    Nevertheless, the final reel left us with more hints of coming attractions and a much tighter multiverse. References to the now defunct Swamp Thing, the Richard Donner/Routh Superman, Doom Patrol, Stargirl, Green Lantern (coming to HBO Max) and more peppered the finale. There was no overt mention of the rumoured Green Arrow and the Canaries series, which gets a backdoor pilot in the final episodes of Arrow, but there was a nod to Gleek: the space monkey from Superfriends!

    So, while the giddy thrill of seeing the Justice League in the making, as six heroes sit around a table – in a proto-Hall of Justice, complete with an empty chair for Ollie (*sniff*) – the things I look forward to the most are going to be those small moments. After all, the finale took the time to show Kara, Kate and Alex hanging out and watching TV. In fact, there’s a spin-off show right there: Super Gogglebox. I’ll just wait for the phone call, Mr. Berlanti.

  • CW reveals fall 2018 premiere dates for superhero shows

    CW reveals fall 2018 premiere dates for superhero shows

    The CW superhero shows may have all just wrapped up for the season, but they won’t keep up waiting too long to resolve those cliffhangers.  ARROW, THE FLASHSUPERGIRL, and DC’S LEGENDS OF TOMORROW will all return in October as the network announces its fall schedule.

    As previously posted, SUPERGIRL and ARROW will move nights to Sunday and Monday respectively.

    It’s going to be a fun year, with the next crossover set in Gotham City. It will also introduce a new character to the universe: Batwoman. If last year’s “Crisis on Earth-X” is any indication, it will be a little bit epic.

    Check out the new dates below. While yet to be confirmed, Fox8 have been fast-tracking all of these shows day-and-date in Australia. The unconnected BLACK LIGHTNING will also return on Tuesdays. Netflix has the Australian broadcast rights to that show.

    TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9
    8:00-9:00 PM THE FLASH (Season 5 Premiere)
    9:00-10:00 PM BLACK LIGHTNING (Season 2 Premiere)

    SUNDAY, OCTOBER 14
    8:00-9:00 PM SUPERGIRL (Season 4 Premiere)

    MONDAY, OCTOBER 15
    8:00-9:00 PM ARROW (Season 7 Premiere)

    MONDAY, OCTOBER 22
    8:00-9:00 PM ARROW (New Episode)
    9:00-10:00 PM DC’S LEGENDS OF TOMORROW (Season 4 Premiere)

  • CW’s ‘Black Lightning’ trailer arrives

    CW’s ‘Black Lightning’ trailer arrives

    Following the announcement of a full season order for BLACK LIGHTNING, the CW network has released the first full trailer for the upcoming show. 

    Positioned as a mid-season replacement show, it also comes hot on the heels of the surprising announcement that the show will not be a part of the Arrowverse that includes the shows Arrow, The Flash, Legends of Tomorrow, and Supergirl. “We do not aim to do a five-way crossover,” commented CW President Mark Pedowitz. “BLACK LIGHTNING, at this time, is not part of the Arrowverse. It is a separate situation. But there will be a big fourth quarter crossover with all four of the shows that are on in the fall….We’re going to have something very unique in Black Lightning.” It looks like the Multiverse is expanding.

    Jefferson Pierce (Cress Williams) is a man wrestling with a secret. Nine years ago, Pierce was gifted with the superhuman power to harness and control electricity, which he used to keep his hometown streets safe as the masked vigilante Black Lightning. However, after too many nights with his life and his family on the line, he left his Super Hero days behind. Almost a decade later, Pierce’s crime-fighting days are long behind him…or so he thought. But with crime and corruption spreading like wildfire, Black Lightning returns — to save not only his family, but also the soul of his community.

  • CW orders full season of ‘Black Lightning’

    CW orders full season of ‘Black Lightning’

    It was only a few months ago that we reported a BLACK LIGHTNING costume had been revealed. Now The CW has officially announced that they are committing to a full season of the series, making him the fifth current comic book series on the network. (Or the sixth if you count the wonderfully quirky iZombie). it stars Cress Williams (Hart of Dixie) in the title role, with actor and singer China Anne McClain as his daughter Jennifer.

    In the series, Jefferson Pierce has long since hung up his suit and secret identity as Black Lightning, but is forced to return to the life when one of his daughters becomes hell-bent on justice, while the other gets recruited by a local gang.

    Greg Berlanti, Salim Akil, Mara Brock Akil and Sarah Schechter are executive producers of BLACK LIGHTNING, from Berlanti Productions and Akil Productions in association with Warner Bros. Television. It will, of course, join existing Berlanti productions Arrow, The Flash, Legends of Tomorrow and Supergirl as part of the expanding DC TV Universe on the CW.

    Is it time for one of those series to budge, or should CW just throw in the towel and declare themselves the DC Network? 

  • First photo of Black Lightning costume

    First photo of Black Lightning costume

    DC Entertainment has released the first art from the forthcoming BLACK LIGHTNING pilot, written and directed by showrunner Salim Akil, due to debut on the CW later this year. Starring Cress Williams as Jefferson Pierce (aka Black Lightning), the new photo showcases the costume as something of a hybrid cross of the comic book and the DCTV aesthetic.

    The Black Lightning costume was designed by Laura Jean Shannon, whose film and television credits include the upcoming Jumanji sequel, The Jungle Book, Scott Pilgrim vs. The World, Blade: Trinity and Iron Man, for which she was nominated for a Costume Designers Guild Award. 

    The official synopsis for the show reads as follows:

    [stextbox id=”grey” bgcolor=”F2F2F2″ mleft=”5″ mright=”5″ image=”null”]”Jefferson Pierce made his choice: he hung up the suit and his secret identity years ago, but with one daughter hell-bent on justice and the other a star student being recruited by a local gang, he’ll be pulled back into the fight as the wanted vigilante and DC legend — Black Lightning.”[/stextbox]

    Greg Berlanti, Salim Akil, Mara Brock Akil and Sarah Schechter are executive producers of BLACK LIGHTNING, from Berlanti Productions and Akil Productions in association with Warner Bros. Television. It will, of course, join existing Berlanti productions Arrow, The Flash, Legends of Tomorrow and Supergirl as part of the expanding DC TV Universe on the CW.

    Cress Williams is Black Lightning