Smallville:
The Visual Guide By KryptonSite Webmaster Craig Byrne!
All you need to know about the characters and situations from
Smallville's first five seasons! Click here to order your
copy and support this site!
PLEASE
DO NOT TAKE GRAPHICS, NEWS, SPOILERS, ETC. FROM KRYPTONSITE
WITHOUT FIRST ASKING
PERMISSION AND PLACING A LINK TO KRYPTONSITE.COM. OR, JUST
SEND PEOPLE OVER TO THIS SITE! THANKS!
KRYPTONSITE
COLUMNS: THE MANY FACES OF...
The
Many Faces Of... The House of Luthor Written
by Russ Dimino
Since
the very beginning, Lex Luthor has proven to be one of
Superman's most enduring foes. Though he does not have
the superhuman abilities that some of Superman's other
enemies possess, the bald billionaire has provided a constant
challenge to the man of steel through his misguided genius,
his ruthlessness, and his never-ending quest for power.
But what makes such a man? How did Lex Luthor turn out
this way? Perhaps we can learn more about him by examining
where he comes from. In this edition of "The Many
Faces Of..." we will take a look at Lex Luthor's
family tree as it's been portrayed on film and TV, and
see what other members of the Luthor clan shaped Lex into
the villain that we all know.
In
1987's "Superman IV: The Quest For Peace," Gene
Hackman's Lex Luthor was saddled with an accomplice in
the form of his nephew, Lenny Luthor. Lenny breaks "Uncle
Lex" out of prison near the start of the film, then
assists him in stealing a lock of Superman's hair from
a museum in order to create the villainous Nuclear Man.
Lex has little patience for his nephew, referring to the
lad as "the Dutch Elm disease on my family tree."
Though the movie never states specifically how the two
are related, the comic book adaptation of the film contains
a line about Lex wishing his sister had become a nun,
so apparently Lenny is intended to be the son of Lex's
sister. Speaking with an annoying valley accent, Lenny
was played by Jon Cryer, popular at the time for his role
as Duckie in the John Hughes film "Pretty in Pink."
Cryer is currently one of the stars of "Two and a
Half Men."
In
a two-part episode of the "Superboy" TV series
titled "Know Thine Enemy," Superboy is able
to live out part of Lex Luthor's childhood via a virtual
reality program. In so doing, he discovers that Lex was
raised by an abusive father, and the only person who really
cared for him was his sister, Lena. Lena is played by
Jennifer Hawkins in the flashback scenes, and as an adult
by Denise Gossett. Lex's father is played by Edgar Allan
Poe IV (apparently a descendant of the famed writer/poet),
his mother by Kathy Gustafson-Hilton.
On
"Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman,"
Lois Lane finally lands her exclusive interview with John
Shea's Lex Luthor. He reveals that his parents died when
he was in his early teens (in the pilot, Lois says he
was 14, but in "Barbarians at the Planet" Lex
himself says he was 13). Though the show does not spell
it out, the comics at the time had recently revealed that
Lex had his own parents murdered in order to collect their
life insurance. It is possible that the show intended
for their Lex to have the same backstory, but it is unclear
whether or not this is the case.
The
"Lois & Clark" Lex does have several other
branches on the family tree by way of wives and children.
Though he almost makes Lois Lane his bride at the end
of season one, they do not actually marry, as the wedding
is called off at the last second just before Lex is publicly
revealed as a criminal. In the second season premiere
"Madame Ex," we learn that Lex has an ex-wife
named Arianna Carlin. Arianna blames Lois and Superman
for Lex's apparent death (he jumped off the LexCorp building
in the previous episode), and she concocts a revenge scheme
that includes subliminal newspaper headlines, a double
of Lois, and a kryptonite bullet. Carlin is played by
Emma Samms, well known from "General Hospital"
and "Dynasty."
In
the season three episode "Virtually Destroyed,"
we learn that Lex had an illegitimate son named Jaxon
Xavier. Lex had claimed that the son and his mother died
in a car accident. A computer genius, Jaxon creates a
virtual reality world that he hopes to use to obtain Lex's
computer access codes. We also learn in this episode that,
if Lex and Lois had married and had children, their names
would have been Alexis, Roxanne, Lynx, and Clark (Lex
insisted all his children have an "x" in their
names... "Clark" was Lois's pick). The episode
ends with Jaxon trapped in the virtual world. Jaxon is
played by Andy Berman, who had played Chuck Coleman on
"The Wonder Years." He also appeared on "Blossom"
and "Wings."
In
the show's fourth season, a three-episode long story arc
expanded Lex's legacy even further. Over the course of
"Faster Than A Speeding Vixen," "Shadow
Of A Doubt," and "Voice From The Past,"
we are introduced to Leslie Luckabee, an enterprising
businessman who buys the Daily Planet. Working with a
troll-like character who goes by "Mr. Smith,"
Leslie intends to rebuild Lex's empire, steal Lois Lane
away from Clark Kent, and kill Superman. We are led to
believe that Leslie is Lex Luthor's son, but it eventually
becomes clear that it is actually "Mr. Smith"
who is, in fact, Lex Luthor Junior, and Leslie is merely
a hired actor who provides Luthor Junior with a public
face. The fact that Luthor Junior wants to marry Lois
Lane, the same woman that his father almost married, is,
admittedly, a bit disturbing. Leslie Luckabee is played
by Patrick Cassidy, who would later appear on "Smallville"
as Henry Small. Keith Brunsmann plays Mr. Smith/Lex Luthor
Junior. Brunsmann would later appear on "The X Files,"
"Charmed," and "Buffy The Vampire Slayer,"
to name a few more sci-fi shows.
The
show that has delved the deepest into Lex Luthor's familial
roots is "Smallville." Beginning with the pilot
episode in 2001, we are introduced to Lex's father, Lionel,
played by John Glover. (Though we did see Lex's father
on the "Superboy" show, the character of Lionel
originated with "Smallville," despite what we
may have led you to believe back on April Fool's Day in
2005!)
Their
initial visit to the town of Smallville in 1989 finds
Lex and Lionel in the path of the infamous meteor shower
that brings baby Kal-El to earth. The meteor exposure
causes little Lex's hair to fall out. Years later, Lionel
"exiles" his son back to that same town to manage
a failing fertilizer plant. Throughout the series, Lionel
drives his son relentlessly, giving him many tests and
trials that push him closer and closer to the edge of
sanity. In the first few seasons alone we see Lionel close
Lex's factory and fire his entire work force (in the episode
"Tempest"), plant listening devices in Lex's
office to thwart his business deals ("Insurgence"),
pretend to be blind (most of season two), force Lex to
undergo electroshock therapy ("Asylum"), and
even have sex with Lex's former girlfriend, Victoria Hardwick
("Leech"). One of their darkest moments comes
at the end of the first season, when a tornado strikes
the mansion, leaving Lionel pinned down under some wreckage
and about to be impaled. Lex is forced to decide whether
to save his father's life or let him die... ultimately,
he saves Lionel, but it is a difficult decision.
Lex's
mother, Lillian Luthor, died of a heart condition when
Lex was 13. Though she is referenced often throughout
the first two seasons of Smallville, we do not actually
see her until the third season episode "Memoria,"
in a flashback sequence. She appears again in "Lexmas,"
"Void," and "Fracture." Throughout
Lex's childhood, Lillian tries to protect her son from
Lionel's influence. In "Lexmas" and "Void,"
she appears to Lex to warn him about the path he is headed
down, trying to prevent her son's inevitable turn towards
the dark side. Lillian is played by Alisen Down, who has
also appeared on "Battlestar Galactica" and
"Robson Arms."
When
Lex was 11, Lillian became pregnant again. She gave birth
to another son, named Julian. Lillian, suffering from
a mental illness and fearing that Lionel would raise their
sons to become enemies, smothered the child to death in
his crib on the morning of his baptism. Lex took the blame
for the baby's death to protect his mother, incurring
Lionel's wrath himself. Julian was first mentioned in
the episode "Stray" in season one, but the full
story of his death was not revealed until "Memoria."
Lex
also has a half-brother, named Lucas. While Lillian was
sick, Lionel had an affair with one of her nurses, a woman
named Rachel Dunleavy. First referenced in the episode
"Lineage," Lionel claims the child died before
his first birthday. However, Lex manages to track down
the still-living Lucas in the episode "Prodigal."
Lex and Lionel then proceed to use Lucas against each
other for control of LuthorCorp. Ultimately, Lex and Lucas
turn the tables on their father, and the episode ends
with Lucas under Lex's protection, though he has not been
seen or referenced on the show since. Lucas is played
by Paul Wasilewski, who has since changed his "stage
name" to Paul Wesley. Wesley also starred in the
"Fallen" mini-series on ABC Family.
Throughout
the third season of "Smallville," one of the
ongoing subplots revolved around the true fate of Lex's
grandparents, Lachlan and Eliza Luthor, who had died in
a tenement fire in the 1970's. In a storyline that paralleled
the origins of the comic book Lex Luthor, it was revealed
that Lionel had arranged his parents' murder in order
to collect their life insurance. Lex eventually learns
of this, and helps the FBI bring his father down, sending
Lionel to jail. Lachlan appears in a flashback scene in
the episode "Relic," where he is played by Peter
Benson.
Lex
has been married three times on "Smallville."
His first marriage came in the second season episode
"Heat," in which Lex marries Desiree
Atkins, a biology teacher at Smallville High who
has the power to release love-inducing pheromones.
By putting Lex under her love spell, Desiree gets
the boy billionaire to do her bidding, which includes
tying the knot. By the episode's end, the truth
is revealed and the marriage is annulled. Desiree
is played by Krista Allen, who has since appeared
on several episodes of "What About Brian."
Lex's
second "Smallville" wife was Dr. Helen Bryce.
The two had met in Metropolis years earlier, then cross
paths again in Smallville at an anger management class.
The two slowly fall in love and then marry at the end
of the second season, but it was not meant to last...
Helen tries to kill Lex right after the wedding in a staged
plane crash. Lex, of course, survives his brush with death,
then attempts to get Helen to confess by re-enacting the
scene on another plane. Helen ends up parachuting out,
her current status is unknown. Helen is played by Emmanuelle
Vaugier, who went on to appear in "Saw II,"
"Saw IV", "Two and a Half Men," an
episode of "Supernatural," the pilot episode
of "Painkiller Jane," "CSI: NY," "One
Tree Hill" and "40 Days and 40 Nights"...
a pretty impressive resume!
Wife
number three was none other than Lana Lang, much to the
chagrin of Clark Kent. The marriage occurs in the sixth
season episode "Promise." Though she has reservations
about going to the altar, Lana is coerced by Lionel, who
threatens to kill Clark if Lana doesn't marry Lex. At
the time, Lana also believes she is pregnant with Lex's
child, though that eventually proves to be untrue (she
was apparently never pregnant after all). The season ends
with Lana faking her death to get out of the marriage.
Lana is, of course, played by Kristin Kreuk.
The
movie "Superman Returns" contains a brief reference
to Lex's father. Lex asks Kitty Kowalski what it was that
his father told him when he was young. "You're losing
your hair?" she suggests. "Before that,"
he replies. "Get out?" she asks. No, Lex explains.
"You can print money, manufacture diamonds, and people
are a dime a dozen, but they'll always need land,"
Lex says. "It's the one thing they're not making
any more of." This prompts Lex's plan to create a
new continent using a crystal from the Fortress of Solitude.
This is also a throwback to the first Superman movie,
in which Lex makes a similar reference to his father advising
him on the value of land.
In
the seventh season of "Smallville," The Daily
Planet gets a new editor, a young man named Grant Gabriel.
At the end of the episode "Blue," viewers are
teased into believing that Grant is actually Julian Luthor,
somehow still alive and all grown up. The following episode,
"Gemini," explains that Grant is not actually
Julian, but a clone that Lex created of his late brother.
When Grant learns his true origins, he turns against Lex
and becomes close with Lionel, despite Lex's warnings
to stay away from his father. Lex then hires a hitman
to kill Grant, making it look like a mugging. Grant dies
in Lionel's arms. Grant is played by Michael Cassidy,
known for his roles on "The O.C." and "Hidden
Palms."
Grant
was not Lex's first attempt at cloning Julian. A man named
Adrian Cross was an early result of Lex's "Project
Gemini" program, but the imperfect process led to
the clone aging too quickly. Lex shoots and kills Adrian
in an attempt to cover up the truth. Adrian is played
by Tim Guinee.
Over
the course of season seven, Lex learns of Lionel's involvement
in a secret society called Veritas in the 1980's, which
was preparing for the arrival of a "Traveler"
from another planet. The Traveler's arrival was the real
reason that Lex and Lionel were in Smallville the day
of the meteor shower. Furious at his father's constant
lies and deception, Lex finally reaches his breaking point.
In a final confrontation at LuthorCorp, Lex steals a locket
from his father that he believes will help him discover
the truth about the Traveler, then kills Lionel by pushing
him out the window. "I was raised in your shadow,"
Lex tells Lionel just before sending him to his fate.
"Now you're going to die in mine."
These
glimpses into Lex Luthor's backstory help create a more
complete picture of the classic villain. Lex, it seems,
is at the center of a legacy of darkness. Across most
these versions, he has struggled through a difficult childhood,
whether at the hands of a physically abusive father in
"Superboy" or the cruel manipulations of Lionel
on "Smallville." Some, like Lillian, have tried
to redeem him, and prevent the dark turn that awaits his
future, but tragedies like the death of Julian or the
betrayal of Helen Bryce seem to keep driving him further
into a downward spiral of desperation and despair. And,
as "Lois & Clark" would suggest, Lex seems
destined to pass on the legacy of evil to future generations,
with children who follow in his misguided footsteps. Just
as baby Kal-El was destined to become the world's greatest
hero and defend truth and justice as Superman, Lex Luthor
is equally unable to escape his destiny... one of evil,
greed, and the pursuit of power.
Note:
The views of Russ Dimino don't necessarily represent the
thoughts and feelings of everyone at KryptonSite.