Ken Horton In Smallville Magazine #7: Highlights!
Issue #7 of Smallville Magazine is now starting to hit newsstands. This latest issue features Tom Welling (Clark) on the cover, with a feature about Clark Kent inside.

The magazine also includes interviews with executive producers Alfred Gough & Miles Millar, executive producer Ken Horton, and now-departed Smallville writer Mark Verheiden.

Here are some things executive producer Ken Horton had to say in his interview with editor Richard Matthews. The interview touched upon many of the technical aspects of the show that we don't normally hear about.

On hits and misses:
"There are certain episodes where you swear that everything about them is great... until you try to finish them and they just don't come together. - - It's not that they're bad: you had a good script, a good director, it was shot well and the actors were good, but somehow the internal pace of the show just never got to a place of emotion. When it works, like the final episode of last year, Covenant, which had a good script and was well directed, then it's like butter - it just got better and better as we added elements to it. The visual effects complemented the story; they weren't just there as eye candy. Crusade this year was also like that. It just felt good. If the Clark element of our show lacks emotion, then it just doesn't work. Every now and again you just get one where all the elements build on each other - effects, sound, Mark Snow's score, they all back each other up. Shattered was another - it all came together, and all of the resources at our disposal enhanced each other and those are the ones where you just feel the show getting good at a certain point."

About Season 3:
"I thought last year, the whole dark Lionel side of things was some of our best work, but it was a very dangerous tunnel for this show to go down because you have to pull back. To keep the serialized arcs, the trick is that they're not separate, that they appear to be completely natural to what's happening in the episode, that you don't literally stop to do this and you don't literally stop to do that. I think one of the criticisms of the 'Freaks of the Week' is that they have a tendency to pop in and pop back out again, but what they really do is provide great eye candy that breaks up that element, otherwise it's all serial. When we're at our absolute best, the episodic event of the week actually accentuates the serial person."

His nominations for "most interesting character":
"Year one, I thought Chloe was the most interesting character because she had the hardest role to play in many ways, kind of obnoxious, pining after our guy. If you were an actor you'd go, 'Oh - how do I do this and remin likeable?' Lex is always an interesting character, but Clark has become the most interesting character for me now - Tom has stepped way, way up in his acting technique and his preparation and his understanding of who Clark is and what is expected of Clark."

About his choice of a guy for Lana:
"I never liked Adam [Knight, played by Ian Somerhalder] - they didn't have a chemistry. Jensen and Kristen appear to like each other and that's throwing a dagger right into the heard of the audience who believe that Clark and Lana should be together forever. BOOM! [But] in my heart I believe that Clark loves Lana, until he goes to college and she goes away, whatever. Some kind of separation makes his heart turn to Lois at some point. For the life of the series, from my perspective, every time he sees Lana he thinks 'I should be with her, she's what fulfills me.' Lana, on the other hand, has legitimate reasons for moving on and, much like a high school crush, 40 years later when you run into someone at the high school reunion there is still a little spark there, but that doesn't mean that that person loves who they're with now any less, so she's far freer to have her live expand. Without that gut-wrenching, 'I-can't-have-what-I-really-want' Clark becomes less sympathetic and less vulnerable. Lois will earn it over a period of time - how she works out in terms of an acceptable love triangle for the audience, you have to earn that. Going back to the pilot, the minute you met Clark and saw him meet Lana, you just went 'these people should be together, now!' You can't force that. We can write stories, try this and that and present them - until the audience accepts that Clark loves Lois and it's what is meant to be, we can claim it until we're blue in the face, the audience are the ones who validate us. I don't believe he could fall in love with Lois like that."

Stay tuned for more details from Smallville Magazine #7 over the next few days.. If you'd like a copy of Smallville Magazine, check your local newsstand or bookstore, visit http://www.titanmagazines.com, or contact Express Mags at 1-877-363-1310.

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