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Crisis on Infinite Earths

Opinion: It’s Okay If Tom Welling Doesn’t Put On The Superman Suit

KryptonSite’s Craig Byrne offers thoughts on whether or not Tom Welling should wear the Superman suit in Crisis on Infinite Earths.

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When the WB-CW television series Smallville ended in May 2011, I admit I was not secretive about my annoyance and disappointment that at series’ end we did not see Tom Welling fully suited up as Superman. It seemed like ten years were leading to that moment, and then we got… a tiny computer generated Man of Steel seen from far away at best. We did get a shirt rip, but I wanted more.

“The show was never about Superman. It was about Clark Kent,” several people involved with the show, including Tom Welling, said at the time and in the years to follow. I was still disappointed. Of course it was about Superman, I thought. I mean, Booster Gold himself talked in “Booster” about what a big deal it had been to see Superman revealed.

If Smallville had ended at five (or seven) seasons as show creators Alfred Gough and Miles Millar had intended, I would have understood. Definitely in those early days, the show was about Clark Kent in his formative years, and if the last shot had been something like the first formation of the Fortress of Solitude, Clark’s future would be left to our imaginations. As far as I know, Gough and Millar have never explicitly revealed their original planned ending for Smallville though I would be really curious about it. But I digress. The fact of the matter is, by Season 10 we would have seen the “S.” We had met characters like Hawkman, Booster Gold, Slade Wilson and Dr. Fate, for crying out loud. Anything less than the full-on “S” would be anticlimactic.

Flash forward eight years. 2019.

We live in a world where old characters we enjoyed like Kimmy Gibbler and even the Buchmans of Mad About You come back to TV. Comic book movies and TV are “hot” and The CW — the network that shuffled Smallville to Fridays to try to kill it, yet it still was among their highest-rated shows — now relies on DC Comics TV for their bread and butter. There are currently six DC shows on the network, with possibly more to come in the future. And with so many shows, comes this year’s big crossover, Crisis on Infinite Earths. And somewhere along the line, it was decided that one of those “infinite Earths” is the world of Smallville, and Tom Welling and Erica Durance are back.

Beyond the excitement of the fandom — and I’m right there with you — the biggest question asked was “will Tom Welling finally wear the suit?” After all, we were denied that in episode 218 of his 218-episode long series. And my response to that question may be surprising… because…

I hope not.

While it might be exciting to finally see a Tom Welling Clark suited up as Superman in live-action (we did get it in Bryan Q. Miller’s Smallville Season 11 comic books at least), it also might betray what Smallville ultimately was. We watched for 218 episodes hoping for something, and it might be a bit of a cheat to see it happening on a series that is not even his own. Also, if Smallville taught us anything, it was that Clark Kent didn’t need a traditional Superman costume to do good in the world.

There is also the really fascinating notion that Welling’s appearance, as with Erica Durance’s, is a post-script in which we revisit a world with some old friends. Tom might not have even filmed a lot. It’s possible Erica might have only done the Smallville scene in addition to potentially appearing as her Supergirl character of Alura. Wouldn’t it betray the notion and the vibe of what Smallville was if this was about him as Superman, and not the farm boy who has now done some good as a man? If Smallville was Before Superman, could this be… After Superman? After all, those gloves in the official photos make it look like he might be powerless.

I don’t always get what I want. If I did, someone would have convinced Tom to put on the suit back in 2011 and Michael Rosenbaum would have been in Crisis on Infinite Earths. It would be Tom Welling and Erica Durance starring in Superman & Lois, where literally the son would become the father, and the father, the son. I’m very happy and excited to see my Smallville favorites in Crisis, and even a little bit of time with them is enough for me. But as for the costume? If it doesn’t happen, I’m good, especially if we find out that “no suit” is what got Tom Welling to come back in the first place…. without Tom, Crisis would feel incomplete, and I’m so grateful that Welling was willing to return. If he wears the suit? I won’t be sad — I’d probably be very excited — but I will be surprised. We’ll see what ultimately happens.

Crisis on Infinite Earths begins Sunday, December 8 on The CW.

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1 Comment

1 Comment

  1. Jerald McClain

    October 19, 2020 at 2:03 pm

    We got to see Bruce Wayne suit up as Batman at the end of Gotham after a mere five seasons compared to Smallville’s 10 year run. Tom “No Tights, No Flights” Welling will never be in the same realm as Henry Cavill, Dean Cain and will never come close to Christopher Reeve. He’s “Clark Kent.” That’s it.

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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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