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Crisis on Infinite Earths

Tom Welling Returns As Smallville’s Clark Kent In Crisis On Infinite Earths

Tom Welling is returning as Smallville’s Clark Kent in the Crisis on Infinite Earths crossover.

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The Crisis on  Infinite Earths news that we have wanted ever since the crossover was announced is actually happening: Tom Welling is returning to reprise his role as Clark Kent, to reveal whatever happened to his character in the years since Smallville ended in 2011!

The crossover begins in December on The CW and will happen through five series on the network: Arrow, The Flash, Supergirl, DC’s Legends of Tomorrow, and Batwoman.

“For eight years, Arrow has stood on the shoulders of Smallville,” Executive Producer Marc Guggenheim said in a statement. “Simply put, there would be no Arrow, and no Arrowverse, without it. So when we first started talking about Crisis on Infinite Earths, our first, second and third priorities were getting Tom to reprise his iconic role as Clark Kent. To say that we’re thrilled would be a Superman-sized understatement.”

Tom played Clark Kent for ten years in what was the longest-running comic book superhero show in TV history to this point. Developed by Alfred Gough and Miles Millar, the show had a “no flights, no tights” philosophy and told the tale of Superman before he was Superman. Along the way, he met such memorable characters as Lex Luthor (Michael Rosenbaum), Lois Lane (Erica Durance), Lana Lang (Kristin Kreuk), and even an early form of the Justice League. And now for the big question: Will he wear the costume, which is something we were denied on the series, or will this Clark encounter happen in a different capacity?

Either way, we can’t wait for December. Often times in the past, when a Superman franchise is over, the notion of an actor playing their original character was unheard of. Kirk Alyn played Lois Lane’s dad. Christopher Reeve was Dr. Virgil Swann. Dean Cain was Vandal Savage… er, Curtis Knox. But when the news broke a few months ago that Brandon Routh would be reprising his role from Superman Returns, we all developed “S”…. we mean, we all developed “hope.”

Talk about this news on our forum – yes, it still exists!

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3 Comments

3 Comments

  1. Vantheman77

    September 19, 2019 at 2:20 pm

    We’ll see if his Clark will wear the suit.

    I hope he wears the New 52 version with the Superman t-shirt, jeans, and little cape.

  2. Lionel Luthor's Hair

    September 20, 2019 at 1:14 am

    They should bring back Michael Rosenbaum, the two SUPERBOYS from the 1980s series, Stacey Haiduk, Dean Cain, Justin Hartley in his guise of Green Arrow and Aquaman.

  3. Lurker for years

    September 25, 2019 at 3:10 pm

    Thank you Craig for you dedication.

    finally! no April fools joke, it finally real

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Crisis on Infinite Earths

Marc Guggenheim on Why We Didn’t See Smallville’s Fate in Crisis on Infinite Earths

Arrowverse showrunner Marc Guggenheim discusses why we didn’t see confirmation of Smallville’s survival at the end of Crisis on Infinite Earths.

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In late 2019, Smallville returned for one scene only in The CW’s multi-show Crisis on Infinite Earths crossover, as Tom Welling and Erica Durance reprised their roles as Clark Kent and Lois Lane in an episode of Batwoman. The scene took place on “Earth-167” and was written by Smallville veterans Don Whitehead and Holly Henderson, but many fans were left wondering why we didn’t get to see that the characters from Smallville were restored at the end of the crossover, where we learned that other Earths such as the ones occupied by Swamp Thing, the Titans, and Brandon Routh’s Superman had been brought back into the multiverse by Stephen Amell’s Spectre.

Andy Behbakht of Multiverse of Color had Arrowverse showrunner Marc Guggenheim on his Showrunner Whisperer podcast which dropped part 1 today, and he addressed the omission.

“Why didn’t we have Smallville? I’ll be honest with you. I think it was two reasons,” Guggenheim responded. “Number one, it never occurred to me until I got the question on Twitter that people think we did blow up the Smallville universe. So part of it was that, and part of it was, we’d obviously seen Clark and Lois in episode two. For the most part, the ‘going around the horn’ [closing sequence] was to see all the universes and all the characters that we didn’t get to see,” he continued.

Guggenheim confirmed that if he had it to do all over again, that it would be “awesome” to have a shot of Lois and Clark on the farm kissing within that sequence. “But yeah, sorry, I dropped the ball on that,” he admitted. Additionally, under SAG rules, an actor gets paid for each episode they appear in, and Tom Welling was only contracted for the second episode. “We certainly didn’t have the money for that, but that really wasn’t a factor. It, quite frankly, just didn’t occur to me,” Marc said.

You can listen to the entire Showrunner Whisperer conversation with Marc Guggenheim here or on the YouTube embed below.

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Crisis on Infinite Earths

Smallville’s Tom Welling Discusses His Crisis on Infinite Earths Return

Tom Welling discussed his return as Smallville’s Clark Kent from Crisis on Infinite Earths at a recent TalkVille live event.

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Four years later, fans are still discussing the return of Tom Welling as Smallville’s Clark Kent in the Crisis on Infinite Earths crossover that aired on The CW, and earlier this week, Tom Welling spoke about that opportunity at a live TalkVille event held in Hollywood.

“They had asked me to kind of bring Clark into some of the other shows, and it didn’t feel right,” Tom recalled. “But when they sent me [the “Crisis” script] they were like, ‘just read it.’ It was one scene, and I read it and I was like [sigh] ‘this is a really good idea’.”

Tom talked about how the Batwoman crew wasn’t familiar with the Kent Farm location, so he was helping them at the same time. But as for playing Clark again?

“It was really fun, because I was able to kind of bring Clark back again, but a little more grown up,” he said, noting that he tried to have mannerisms like John Schneider had as Clark’s human father Jonathan Kent on Smallville, with the gloves and the way he walked. “My favorite part of the whole thing was Jon Cryer and he says ‘I’m Lex Luthor’ and I’m like ‘you’re not Lex.” That line was a lot of fun… one of the easiest lines I’ve ever said, because this is Lex Luthor,” he continued, pointing at Michael Rosenbaum on stage.

Most importantly, Welling seems happy with where the Crisis on Infinite Earths story took Clark. 

“It was really great, and I thought as a fan of Clark, this fits the tone in which would see him again,” he affirmed.

You can watch video from the event below.

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Crisis on Infinite Earths

Marc Guggenheim Answers Two Smallville-Related Crisis Questions

Arrowverse architect Marc Guggenheim has answered questions about Michael Rosenbaum and Erica Durance’s Smallville roles in Crisis on Infinite Earths.

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Arrowverse architect Marc Guggenheim has been releasing a fantastic Substack newsletter called LegalDispatch in recent months, and with this week’s edition, he answered some Smallville-related questions regarding the Crisis on Infinite Earths crossover — specifically, what Michael Rosenbaum‘s Lex would have done if he had shown up, and also, if there were more plans for Erica Durance to appear as Lois beyond her brief scene with Tom Welling.

Being transparent, Marc answered some of those questions! First, regarding what role Michael Rosenbaum’s Lex would play:

Well, here’s the thing. By the time we’d engaged with Michael about appearing in Crisis — thanks in huge part to Stephen Amell’s efforts — we’d already shot the Smallville reunion scene in Hour 2. Nevertheless, I was eager to get Michael’s Lex into the story if I could, so my brain started working on options that could be fit into the episodes that we were still shooting.

I forget the story impetus for them, but I noodled with a version where Michael’s Lex would interact with Jon Cryer’s Lex, which I think would’ve been quite entertaining had it come to pass.

Also, was there any temptation to have Erica Durance’s Lois Lane appear in more than one episode?

There was absolutely a temptation for sure. As with most things, however, we were subject to the limit of a combination of screentime, story requirements, money, shooting schedule, and the actors’ personal schedules.

You can read this week’s LegalDispatch here.

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