"LEGENDS OF TOMORROW" (SPINOFF DE "ARROW"/"FLASH")

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Re: "LEGENDS OF TOMORROW" (SPINOFF DE "ARROW"/"FLASH")

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- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.11 "The Magnificent Eight" Promo | The CW:


- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.11 "The Magnificent Eight" Extended Promo | The CW:

- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.11 "The Magnificent Eight" Producers Preview | The CW:
https://amp.twimg.com/v/44196a64-b1b2-4 ... cfce940869


- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.11 "The Magnificent Eight" Clip #1 | TVLine:

http://tvline.com/2016/04/14/legends-of ... jonah-hex/


- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.11 "The Magnificent Eight" Clip #2 | Comicbook:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A5VlFJpUNKY


- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.11 "The Magnificent Eight" Clip #3 | The CW:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WmTOQR_AKD8


Imagen Imagen
¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!

Shelby
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Re: "LEGENDS OF TOMORROW" (SPINOFF DE "ARROW"/"FLASH")

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- Stills del 1.11 "The Magnificent Eight":

Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen


Imagen Imagen
¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!

Shelby
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Re: "LEGENDS OF TOMORROW" (SPINOFF DE "ARROW"/"FLASH")

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- Jonathon Schaech sobre el Jonah Hex de "Legends of Tomorrow", la interpretación de Brolin y un potencial regreso (comicbook):
Jonathon Schaech sobre el Jonah Hex de "Legends of Tomorrow", la interpretación de Brolin y un potencial regreso
Por Russ Burlingame 13/04/2016


On this week's episode of DC's Legends of Tomorrow, the team will spend their first significant amount of time outside of the post-Industrial era when it heads to the Old West.

As you might expect in a DC Comics adaptation, one of the first people they'll encounter there is Jonah Hex, played by Jonathon Schaech. DC's most iconic Western antihero, Hex has already had a much-maligned feature film based on his adventures -- and now we're going to find out that he's got a relationship with Rip Hunter, the inventor of the Time Sphere and leader of the Legends of Tomorrow.

ComicBook.com had a chanceto speak with Schaech about the episode, his hopes for Jonah's future (past?), and more.

DC's Legends of Tomorrow airs on Thursdays at 8 p.m. ET/PT on The CW. Schaech joins the show as Jonah Hex tomorrow night.

First things first, I guess. Did you have any background with this character? Did you know who he was before taking on the role?

I remember the movie, but my father was a Baltimore city police officer and was kind of a gunslinger himself. When I was growing up, he had given me two comic books. I can't remember the exact titles of them. I have some here. They're called The Weird Western Tales, DC's first line of western-type tales. I read Jonah Hex as I was growing up. I remember Jonah Hex distinctively.

I didn't have his action figure back then. Same thing with Sgt. Rock. He was part of that war stories or...they'd tell the tales. It was Jonah Hex but it was really about Westerns and war. My father got those kind of comic book stories for me as a boy so I still have them.

When that was going down, I got really excited. I read the breakdown to see what they wanted to do with him. Every time I saw Clint Eastwood in a western, he always reminded me of Jonah Hex, because he has that dry sense of humor and he kind of comes off the side of his mouth. Obviously Jonah has this scar of the demon, but there was a sense of humor that when I read the screenplay that I thought, "Man, that's Jonah. This is how he would be with this situation."

You mention the movie. Did you re-watch that film? Is there anything you could take away from that? I know not very many people loved it, but Brolin's a good actor.

He's a great actor. What I did was, I kind of had an idea and I looked at all the ways the character would speak in the comic books and the way they wrote him. They were pretty much very similar, you know with the twang, almost like there was a twang to him but not so hard-core. He doesn't say y'all and hold words like this for a really long time. He just talks with a pacing.

I did watch clips of Brolin to see how he did that. Also just for the effect, not that I'm a special effects artist, but when I got set in the chair I wanted to make sure that we had a unique take on it. Also to take that I kind of remember most true from when I grew up.

They were just fantastic. They had it down. Everyone was very excited on the team up there in Vancouver. They were so ready to go to make Jonah Hex something special.

Now I've got to ask, because when I was a kid, Jonah was, let's say a little unusual. There was a period in time where he traveled to the future and was a lawman on a weird, dystopian, apocalyptic world. Coming into this, has your Jonah ever time traveled before?

Yes. In the story he revealed that he understands time travel. That's all storyline. [Jonah and Rip] know each other. There's something that they have to resolve from the past. If Rip was there, he understands time travel a little bit. Jonah Hex does.

One of the things that I think really is interesting about Jonah as a character is that he's so incredibly adaptable that even when he's getting hit with these things for the first time he's just kind of like, "Well that's weird as hell. Moving on now."

Yeah. Yeah. That's the way I felt that he kind of was entertained by the whole notion of what these guys are coming from. When they would pull out the stuff that they had seen in previous episodes, Jonah's probably seeing it for the first time, he's kind of like, "Oh wow, let me try that out. Let's see what that does. That's fun."

"You think you're that tough, huh? Let's see how that plays out."

You mentioned humor. I think it's interesting, one of the things that whenever I mention Jonah Hex to hard-core comic book people, everybody loves his appearance on Justice League Unlimited, when he gets pulled into some big battle. Again, it kind of played on this idea that he time traveled before because somebody comes up to him with some big ass high-tech laser gun or something and he goes, "Nah, those things jam up all the time."

Yeah. The humor is very dry. His knowledge, beyond his years. It's almost like he's dealing with a bunch of youngsters. He's, you know, Jonah's pissed off all the time, but more than that he's just kind of grumpy. You know?

It's a bad word, grumpy, but he's just pissed. He looks like he's pissed, at least.

Now, other than Rip, is there somebody who you had a lot of fun, or you really liked the relationship of Jonah bouncing off somebody on the team?

Oh yeah. The Atom. Brandon's character. They just, his innocence, it was just perfect, fitting with Jonah. Here's this wisely, grisly character in Jonah Hex and then this, I hate to say it, but this Clark Kent-ish naivety.

It just played off each other very, very well. I had a lot of fun just playing off of his innocence. Those two are fun to watch. I can't wait to see that play out because I haven't seen that part.

Right. If given a chance, would you like to explore Jonah in more depth? If they come back in Season 2 and they're like, "Okay we want to do this crazy thing," are you all on board?

Yeah, absolutely. I want to explore Jonah as deep as they want to go. Someone had asked me if there's any back story behind the market theme and all that. There isn't, and he is such a complex character. In today's world of anti-heroes, where Dexter becomes the hero, he needs to be displayed that way. I think all of us are really interested more about the problems that these characters have. That's why we relate to superheroes and to comic books, because they're flawed. Just like we are.

The mutant is kind of mutated in some way or another and we all have our own sense of identity, and that's how we can relate with these guys. Jonah has a lot of complexity and I know a lot of people out there ... I haven't met anybody that's not interesting in this world.

Obviously as soon as people saw the wanted poster in the pilot they started to speculate about seeing Jonah. Now that we know he and Rip have a relationship, is there a backstory to why that poster is actually hanging up in the time lab?

It's just like the comic books. He was a lawman-outlaw. In some places he was absolutely wanted. In other places he was the guy getting the bad guys and bringing them in. He was always...God, this guy was always blamed for things that he didn't do. You know?

It's funny because I feel like Jonah Hex has an element of that...it's like he's mean and ugly so he's guilty. You got to see a lot of those stories in the early days where it was like he was redeeming himself for something or another.

Yeah constantly. Yep. He did that for others too. He always stood up for the people that needed somebody that was tough enough to stand up for them. He would be that guy. To his detriment sometimes.

You personally, as Jonathon, do you have any favorite westerns that you kind of re-watched to kind of get yourself in the head space for this?

I watched The Unforgiven.

For me that's note perfect for Jonah because he had that same kind of sense of exasperation, I think, that Clint Eastwood had. In The Unforgiven it wasn't anger. It was mostly just like, "Jesus, we're doing this again?"

Exactly. Yeah so so I would just bark at them. He's probably going, "ahh, you idiot."


http://comicbook.com/dc/2016/04/13/jona ... ins-perfo/

- Johnathon Schaech planta cara como Jonah Hex para DC's Legends of Tomorrow (TVInsider):
Johnathon Schaech planta cara como Jonah Hex para DC's Legends of Tomorrow
Por Damian Holbrook 13 Abril, 2016 2:30 pm


Yee haw! DC’s Legends of Tomorrow is heading to the Wild West this week and if you know anything about DC Comics, you know that Jonah Hex is the scarred face of the frontier. Surly, stoic and suffering no fools, the cowboy first rode onto the pages in late 1971 and has been all over the DC universe since. Now, he's mixing it up with our time-traveling team in the form of Johnathon Schaech (recently seen on Blue Bloods and Quantico), who clearly had the time of his life saddling up for the iconic role.

So what is the version of Jonah Hex like?
It’s the version from the comic-book world. He definitely has this worldliness and understanding of time travel, he’s been through [it] over and over again. He’s a little put off by these innocents that come into this world but he has a history with Rip (Arthur Darvill).

Have these guys traveled through time together?
You know, I don’t know for certain but it’s clear in the storytelling they have a past. I don’t know if … He hasn’t been in the Waverider before but that might be a new ship. Jonah’s world’s been jumbled up because of it in a big way.

So is Rip somebody that he’s happy to see again?
They’re friends! He definitely respects Rip, he’s got a real true understanding of who Rip is and that’s why when they start to get into what happened [between them] in the past, Jonah really wants Rip to be a man and tell him what he already knows.

And what does the team bring to this town? They are clearly not of this era, so how much trouble do they cause when they show up?
Oh, it’s just like great fish-out-of-water story, like "What are you idiots doing here?" They try to fit in and it’s just so clear that they’re not from that world and we have a lot of fun with that.

And Brandon Routh ends up dressed as the sheriff?
Yup. I saw in the trailer that Ray calls himself John Wayne so I could tell you that … He just comes up with the name John Wayne, not that Jonah Hex knows who John Wayne is. [Laughs] Ray is the one I had the most fun with. He comes across so innocent and so naïve but so good, you know such a goody-two-shoes is the word and Jonah’s like "What? You’re going to get yourself killed!"

It looks like you guys filmed a lot of this episode outside in a very muddy set.
Oh my God, it was flooding when we were there. Literally! My twitter is @johnschaech, look at the pictures from around the dates that we filmed and you see the floodwaters. I mean, there’s a river behind this western town that we filmed in and I was just watching it rise up because it was raining so damn hard!

Where was this, like out in the middle of Vancouver?
It was the outskirts of Vancouver. There’s a Western town out there that was obviously built for some series, I don’t know which one it was. But you had the sheriff’s station, it had the church, it had the saloon, it had you know where you would get your horse taken care of.

That’s kind of awesome that it just exists up there and you guys could go and play on it.
Yes, it was, it was really cool. The only problem was it was right near this river that was also flooding! [Laughs]

I imagine there was probably a heavy amount of stunts involved since the Wild West was never just folks sitting around talking.
That’s what it comes down to, the team is pushed to having to do those physical tasks that you would see in a Western movie. You have to use your hands, you have to use your sidearm and you have to use a horse. The good thing about playing Jonah Hex, I say that humbly, is that I can jump on a horse and do pretty much anything. I just did a Western called Texas Riding so I was really ready.

Did they hook you up with any Jonah Hex books from the DC Comics archives so you could study up on him?
They didn’t, but I had some of them from when I was a boy. I did a great deal of research online and then I got some comic books for the flight up to Vancouver because when I looked around I was like "Wow this guy has so many different lives." He’s been a bounty hunter, a time traveler, time-traveling bounty hunter, he’s fought Batman, Superman… he’s just had a whole life. I wanted to do as much research as I possibly could to play this character to the best, fullest and truest.

I think lot of people assume that he’s actually a bad guy.
He looks mean, he looks like the bad guy. Today there’s all the antiheroes that are bad guys that do good things. Like Dexter is the perfect example of the antihero. So Jonah Hex, in some places, is the outlaw. Sometimes for no reason, just because he was in the wrong place at the wrong time. It seemed like any family that he ever got in the comic-book world, any love that he ever achieved, was always taken away from him. Some places he was the sheriff, he was the law man, he was a bounty hunter that could do right. He’s kind of taken an oath to always protect the innocents if they needed protecting.

And of course, there is his look. How was that whole experience with the prosthetics?
I was frightened when I first went up there because I thought they were going to put me in a full head cast and you know, you have to breath through a straw through you nose and I don’t know if my sinuses will work. So here I am, a grown man and I’m going to start to cry, but they were great. They got me in and out of the face cast and we just went to town, going back and forth with Marc [Guggenheim, executive producer] about the final look of him and it’s great. We took a lot of time to make sure this was a very unique Jonah that was true to the character of the past. Like I said, I grew up understanding Jonah Hex in a certain way and I think we really got that across.

DC’s Legends of Tomorrow, Thursdays, 8/7c, The CW.


http://www.tvinsider.com/article/85241/ ... uest-star/?

- Estrella de 'Legends of Tomorrow' se abre sobr el "largo viaje" de llevar a Jonah Hex a la vida (THR):
Estrella de 'Legends of Tomorrow' se abre sobr el "largo viaje" de llevar a Jonah Hex a la vida
Por Sydney Bucksbaum 14 Abril, 2016 9:00am PT



Johnathon Schaech has been preparing to take on the role of Jonah Hex on Legends of Tomorrow for almost his entire life.

"I remember that first take when he just came alive, and I became a little seven-year-old boy again," Schaech tells The Hollywood Reporter. "That's when I read my first Jonah Hex comic books. That was the most exciting thing. Here I am, I've been an actor for 25 years, and now I get to play something that I grew up on."

While there have been many different incarnations of DC Comics' infamous Western antihero, Schaech was at first only familiar with earlier versions.

"Here's the truth: I knew the old Jonah Hex," Schaech says. "He's had many lives afterwards, I've learned. I started reading all of them again and it's crazy that this character can stay true in so many different areas. He's a time traveler, he's a bounty hunter, he's a bounty hunter while he time-travels, he interacts with some of the greatest DC characters we know. He's come across Superman, Batman. The comic books I read were when he was just in the Western world. There were no other outside elements. He was an antihero and if you looked at it a certain way he always seemed like the bad guy, but he was actually the good guy."

But when it came to bringing Jonah Hex to life on The CW's time-traveling superhero series, it was one thing to act as Jonah and another to look like him, massive facial scar and all.

"It was a long journey discovering what our Jonah Hex was going to look like," Schaech says. "It ended up so beautifully done. And then every day, I had to sit through two hours of prosthetic makeup before anyone else got to set. I can't wait to see how it all turned out and how it comes across. We took our time every day to make sure we got it right."

Schaech spoke with The Hollywood Reporter about what this version of Jonah Hex is going to look like, if he'll be a hero or villain on the show and more.

Before shooting began, what kind of conversations did you have with the producers to discuss how you were going to play Jonah Hex?

I work best with a collaborative process, and that goes all the way back to my first experiences acting back in my Tom Hanks days, creating Jimmy Mattingly of the Wonders [in That Thing You Do!]. Always asking questions, working with everyone around you. I knew the Jonah Hex of old, so are we going to add in a Confederate hat or is that too scary nowadays? But we stayed true to the comic, and he has a great wit and humor and sass that I read throughout the comics. He is just sassy, which is the word that [showrunner] Marc [Guggenheim] used. He just has this presence and he lets these guys get to the point of getting their hand caught in a mouse trap and then he pulls them out just in time. He's kind of like my father. (Laughs.)

In the comics, Jonah Hex is famous for being an antihero. Most of the time he lives by his own moral code, but in two famous comic books, he actually killed both Superman and Batman. So will your version veer more towards being a hero or a villain?

You know, when he killed Batman and Superman, he thought he was doing the right thing. Most villains think they're doing the right thing, and so it's easy to be called a villain. And when you are so in love with characters like Superman or Batman, you always thing that anyone going against them is a bad guy. It's not necessarily true. Both Superman and Batman have gone to the dark side. But he is the only one to have ever killed both of them!

That does make him the most formidable character in the DC Comics world.

I know! Make sure everyone knows that. (Laughs.) I don't want to say that because I feel like I'm not humble. But come on, he killed Superman and Batman! That's a big deal. He figured out how to put [Kryptonite] inside bullets. He's very smart, Jonah Hex. He's clever, like a MacGyver. But he always does the right thing, whether you agree with him or not.

In the comics, Jonah is shaped by his past abuse at the hands of his father. Are we going to see any flashbacks to his dark past on Legends, or will he have a different origin story?

You know what? Right now we don't go into his origin. But for me, when I played him, I had all that wisdom and all that pain inside of him. I didn't get to play him as a boy, but I did play him as a grizzled older man, and that's where he came from. He has this brutal past, but he rose above all of it. He's died many times and risen back up. He's almost immortal.

Jonah doesn't have any supernatural abilities in the comics, but the live-action movie starring Josh Brolin gave Jonah the ability to raise the dead. Will you have any special powers or abilities on Legends, or will Jonah just be a talented gunslinger?

I can't speak for what they're going to do. I can only say what they did for this episode. He doesn't have any special powers. But being raised by Apaches, he definitely has the connection to the spirit. He has a greater understanding of the universe and how it all plays out. It's not like he sits there and meditates but he understands that life is meant to be lived and you go through the things you go through for a purpose.

As of now, you're only scheduled for this one episode, but are you interested in returning next season? If so, would you be interested in joining the team as a series regular?

That is something I would absolutely adore. I would love to keep exploring Jonah Hex with the other characters. The way they presented him in this episode, he has a relationship with each one of them. It was fantastic. He had a deal with every one of them in one way or another. And he's just so unique and clearly identifiable as Jonah Hex, not just in his look but also in his attitude.


http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-f ... hex-882761?

- El Johan Hex de Schaech les enseña a "DC's Legends of Tomorrow" sobre la justicia del Oeste (cbr):
El Johan Hex de Schaech les enseña a "DC's Legends of Tomorrow" sobre la justicia del Oeste
Por Bryan Cairns, 14 Abril 2016


Western characters don't get more iconic than DC's Jonah Hex. With a penchant for danger and an unforgettable, scarred face, the anti-hero has been a comic book staple since the early 1970s. After a maligned film adaptation in 2010 that featured Josh Brolin in the title role, Hex is being revived in live-action again, this time on television in The CW's "DC's Legends of Tomorrow."

As the Legends travel back in time to the Old West amid wagons, shootouts and saloon brawls, they'll also encounter Jonah Hex. Played by Johnathon Schaech, who most recently starred in History's "Texas Rising" miniseries set in the 1830s, Hex tries to teach Rip Hunter's team of renegades what it means to be heroes to save a local town from a gang of outlaws -- if they don't get killed first.

Ahead of tonight's all-new episode, "The Magnificent Eight," Schaech spoke with CBR News about inhabiting the iconic role, Brolin's take on the character in the "Jonah Hex" movie, how "Texas Rising" helped prepare him for this role and whipping DC's other TV heroes into shape.

Story continues below

CBR News: What did you know about Jonah Hex before landing the role? Had you seen the Josh Brolin film?

Johnathon Schaech: I had seen the Josh Brolin movie. I remember when it came out. I was, first of all, I was pissed off I didn't get to play him. But Josh Brolin was doing incredibly well. I would go neck-to-neck with Josh with a lot of the films we would audition for. So when he got to play Jonah Hex I was like, "Great choice. Here's a comic book character that can really come to life on the big screen." It didn't work out for one reason or another, and I'm not the person to say why it didn't come across that well.

I grew up with Jonah Hex. My father gave me the "Jonah Hex" comic books. He gave me "Sgt. Rock" comic books and "Weird Western Tales." My father loved them. He was a police officer and came from the same kind of scenarios, where the good guy had to fight the bad guy and rise above. That was my father's world.

In what way did the "Texas Rising" miniseries you starred in help you understand Jonah Hex and his environment better?

It's all about the horse. For "Legends, they offered me some riding lessons and I was like, "What do you need me to do? I can do pretty much anything on a horse." On "Texas Rising," I was the head of the cavalry. I was on a horse for four months in Mexico. With the amount of time I rode on a horse in "Texas Rising," with all the stunt work and charges, I was so accustomed to it.

The first time they put me on a horse, it was a Quarter Horse, which is the kind of horse a cowboy would ride. You don't need to do anything with the horse. They would call "Action" and the horse would hit his mark better than I could. So, just being comfortable on a horse and being comfortable with my guns helped. I would have liked if they let me do more on "Legends" because I can do a lot.

What is "Legends of Tomorrow's" take on Jonah Hex like? I understand he has some kind of past with Arthur Darvill's Rip Hunter?

Well, that's really what this story is about. Rip goes back to the Western time because of something he hadn't resolved yet with Jonah. My take on the whole thing is Rip has this group that he has to get ready to face this incredible enemy. Rip brings all of these characters to Jonah and they are the Legends of Tomorrow. They have to learn to be heroes and Jonah is a legend of the past. He is a true hero and a heroic legend, rising up and facing the enemy. He's almost a little bit of a coach. He teaches them how to do it, how to get in trouble and then how to get themselves out of it.

Going with that analogy, which hero is the worst student?

The most fun is definitely the Atom [Brandon Routh]. Jonah gets a kick out of the innocence he displays. What do you say when the Atom references John Wayne like in the trailer? I'm like, "Who is this guy?" Jonah says with a snarl, "Whatever."

With these characters coming from the future, how much of a "fish out of water" element is there? How does Jonah help them fit into this new environment?

That's the thing. Jonah lets them fall into it and let them rise up to what he's accustomed to. He had to deal with all of them and he lets them get in a situation they need to get out of. He's sort of like the father figure in the background. He takes them so far so that they can learn.

These legends possess superhuman abilities and high-tech weapons. What makes Jonah Hex formidable in his own right?

Jonah Hex has this unrelenting will to fight. Jonah never gives up. You read the comics and he gets shot at, but he just rolls his body backward, so the bullet won't go through him. Or, he moves sideways and just gets nicked instead of hitting a main artery. It's like he's doing Krav Maga. These heroes are learning to become formidable, but they have a ways to go before they can stand up to this enemy that's coming.

Jonah Hex's appearance is unmistakable. What kind of makeup and prosthetics routine did you endure?

They took one day to figure out his costume and the Mark of the Demon. They put me in in a mold. I had to do a face casting and then we started to go from there. I had a full beard when I went up to Vancouver. Then, we started trimming the beard so it would blend. The beautiful thing with the prosthetic was this mark wouldn't allow the growth of any hair. It just made him look more real to have a little bit of facial hair there. Every day it was pretty much two hours in the chair. I certainly did my Ron Perlman time.

How does "The Magnificent Eight" stand out from the Legends' other time-hopping adventures this season?

It has Jonah Hex in it, number one. It's set in a Western world. It deals with the show's mythology a little bit deeper. The writers really have a great grasp on how these legends play out. I'm so into this episode that I can't judge it from the other ones. It clearly states what a hero is and what you have to do to be a hero. It definitely defines what it means to be a legend.


http://www.comicbookresources.com/artic ... w-old-west

- Johnathan Schaech trae a Jonah Hex a DC's Legends of Tomorrow (DCComics):
Johnathan Schaech trae a Jonah Hex a DC's Legends of Tomorrow
Por Tim Beedle Thursday, 14 Abril, 2016


The show may be called DC’s Legends of Tomorrow, but tonight’s episode introduces one from the past—the badly scarred bounty hunter known as Jonah Hex. Played to two-fisted perfection by actor Johnathan Schaech, Hex helps the crew of the Waverider deal with a sticky situation, while also imparting some surprisingly important information. (No, it’s not to remember to keep their powder dry.)

We recently had a chance to talk with Schaech about the episode, and were pleased to learn that not only is he a big comic book fan, but he grew up reading Hex’s classic adventures. Did this help him bring Hex to life onscreen? Which of the Legends would Schaech want backing him up in a barroom brawl? And might we be seeing Hex again in the future? Let’s rustle up some answers!

So how does Jonah Hex find himself getting mixed up with the crew of the Waverider?

They come to him. There’s something that is unresolved between Jonah and Rip. I think Rip actually goes there to resolve that, whether he means to or not. During the process, the whole group of heroes learn something that they didn’t know before—something that only Jonah Hex could teach them.

So it sounds like this version of Jonah Hex knows a little bit about time travel…

Yes, he knows a thing or two about time travel. If you know the comic books, you know he’s actually time traveled a bit himself.

It sounds like you were pretty familiar with Jonah Hex before you were cast in the role.

I grew up reading Jonah Hex comic books. It was one of the comic books my father gave me as I was growing up. Weird Western Tales, Weird War Tales with Sgt Rock—my father loved all that stuff. He gave me the comic books and I still have them. I knew that Jonah Hex, and he never really ventured into the world of Superman or Batman. But then when I started to study this character, I could see that he’s just this unique, very identifiable, conflicted anti-hero that put into any situation, deals with things very much the same way. He has this code of morality that was constructed by his journey and his painful past. He fits in anywhere because he’s that anti-hero. You look at him and you think he’s a bad guy, but he really turns out to be a good guy.

But not a traditional “good guy.” How would you describe him? You’re calling him an anti-hero rather than a hero. Is that how you see him?

Yeah, I think he’s an anti-hero. Dexter is a typical anti-hero. He’s a serial killer, but he does the right thing by killing all of these other serial killers. Jonah Hex is very similar. He does bad things, but he does them in keeping with his own moral credence to always protect the innocent and people who can’t protect themselves. I think that stuck all the way through. Even when he was seemingly the bad guy opposite some of our best super heroes, he’s really just being him.

This episode seems to have some fun paying tribute to classic Western movies, starting with the title: “The Magnificent Eight.” Is there one tribute that you particularly enjoyed? Or maybe something the fans should be keeping an eye out for?

There are so many different layers to that. The first time you see Jonah it’s in this big brawl like they’d have in the Old West. It’s something that I don’t think the Legends are accustomed to doing. From there, the stakes get raised and raised and raised. In the Western world, you lived or you died by the guns on your side.

Jonah Hex is typically something of a lone wolf, but are there any members of the Waverider crew that he seems to connect with?

He has a certain respect and understanding for all of them because they’re all so different and unique. He’s intrigued by all of them, but he really has a relationship with Ray. That one’s probably the most interesting because Ray comes off like a goody-two-shoes who can do no wrong, and Hex just knows everything is going to fall apart at any moment. He has a lot of fun just watching this guy get himself more and more in the hole. [laughs]

They’re such different characters! I can’t imagine one who’s more of an opposite to Jonah Hex than Ray Palmer.

I can’t wait to see how they come across. The way they were written is exactly what you just described. They shouldn’t even be in the same room! What are they doing together? We had to deal with one another in that fashion.

With the others, he has a certain respect for them and he’s just kind of guiding them along through this world that he’s in. But it’s also defining how to rise up and be a hero—to be a Legend.

Did you have to practice your quick drawing for the episode? How fast on the draw are you?

The very first character I ever played was Nevada Cooper on Brisco County, Jr with Bruce Campbell. That was the first role I ever played—a cowboy. I’ve played cowboys throughout my career. I was in Texas Rising. So the quick draw was something that I did back then. Over the years, I’ve definitely lost some skill. [laughs]

You’ll see, though. I pull it off.

If you were ever in an old fashioned, Western saloon fight, which of the Legends heroes would you most want to have on your side?

Firestorm.

That would settle things pretty definitively!

Yeah, he kicks ass!

Finally, do you think we’ll be seeing Jonah Hex again someday?

I think you’re going to see Jonah Hex. We need to get into some more of the story, but I think he fits into the world really well.

Having a past and such a history [allows him to] really help the Legends become Legends. I think Jonah makes the team more formidable. I think they need that guy.

http://www.dccomics.com/blog/2016/04/14 ... f-tomorrow


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- Stills del 1.12 "Last Refuge":

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- 'Jonah Hex' Concept-Art by Andy Poon:

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https://twitter.com/mguggenheim/status/ ... 0368753664


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- Johnathon Schaech talks 'Jonah Hex' on Facebook (14-04-16):

https://www.facebook.com/johnathon.scha ... =2&theater



- Johnathon Schaech habla sobre su debut como 'Jonah Hex' en LEGENDS OF TOMORROW (CBM):
Johnathon Schaech habla sobre su debut como 'Jonah Hex' en LEGENDS OF TOMORROW
Por Mark Cassidy 14 Abril 2016


Fans of Showtime's Ray Donovan will know Johnathon Schaech from his turn as the unfortunate Sean Walker in season 1, but he's also starred in numerous other TV series and movies over the years - including Tom Hanks' directorial debut, That Thing You Do.

Tonight Johnathon makes his first appearance as Jonah Hex on Legends of Tomorrow, and he was kind enough to take the time to chat to us about his passion for Hex, possible future plans for the character, and much more.

CBM: Tell us a little about how you wound up nabbing the role of Jonah Hex, and were you aware of the character beforehand?

JS: Yes, I grew up reading Jonah hex westerns and Sgt. Rock war comics. I auditioned and won the role, the description I was given read: "Late 30s-50s. A true legend of the Old West, a morally ambiguous gunslinger with a penchant for danger. Surprisingly, he knows a thing or two about time travel and the future."

CBM: The character as he's written in the source material is a pretty complex individual. He's a good guy, for the most part, but there's definitely some shades of grey there too. Did you try to being any of that to this depiction of Hex, or did they have a very set idea of what they wanted him to be already?

JS: They wanted The Hex I grew up with. The one I read. Tough, pissed, dark with a sense of humor. A Quick draw with a good heart. A conflicted soul who has a personal oath to protect the innocent. Everyone was excited to bring the legend of Hex to life.

CBM: Could you tell us which, if any, of the Legends of Tomorrow Hex clashes with?

JS: He has a past with Rip. It's addressed in the episode. Some unfinished personal business.

CBM: I had an idea it might be The Atom for some reason!

JS: Nah, Hex actually takes a liking to the brave Atom and is impressed with the costume.

CBM: The Jonah Hex movie wasn't a great success (to pit it mildly) but I actually though it had its moments. Did you watch it before preparing to play this role or did you think it'd be better not to?

JS: I had actually seen it already. Brolins a great actor. I looked online to see him speak, the way he looked etc - but went back to my comics to really research. One thing about working for Tom Hanks I learned to study and bring the truth. The right chords. And to try and bring the experience of the character - no matter how much time I'm given. I've been preparing to play a role like this. I had a feeling it was coming, and I'd been fighting, shooting and lifting to be ready even before the audition arrived.

CBM: We've heard rumors that there's a possibility of Hex not only appearing in more episodes of LOT, but maybe even becoming a full member of the team at some point, too. Is that something that's been discussed?

JS: Well, let's just say for now it's a guest spot - but there's major potential for a larger presence down the line!

CBM: Thanks so much Johnathon. Before you go can you tell us about any other projects that you have in the pipeline?

JS: Sure. I'm on Bluebloods and have a very good action film coming out with Dave Bautista, Christopher Meloni. Adrien Grenier, and Bruce Willis called Marauders. It's coming this August, and it's badass!


http://www.comicbookmovie.com/dc_tv/leg ... as-a137474


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- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.12 "Last Refuge" Promo | The CW:

- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.12 "Last Refuge" Extended Promo | The CW:

- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.12 "Last Refuge" Producers Preview | The CW:


- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.12 "Last Refuge" Clip #1 | The CW:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wX_erm0gGBA


- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.12 "Last Refuge" Clip #2 | The CW:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wj85nbU-IIg


- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.12 "Last Refuge" Clip #3 | The CW:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=22ewowx6u0Q


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- Descripción oficial del 1.14 “River of Time”:
1.14 “River of Time” (05/05/16): CAPTURADO – Tras numerosos intentos en muchos periodos de tiempo distintos, el equipo ha capturado con éxito a Vandal Savage (la estrella invitada Casper Crump). No obstante, However, Savage le dice a Kendra (Ciara Renée) que puede volverla a Carter (Falk Hentschel) así es que ella se debate con si debería de matarlo. Rip (Arthur Darvill) decide que entregarán a Savage a los Mestros del Tiempo lo que no le sienta bien a Snart (Wentworth Miller) y a Rory (Dominic Purcell). El dúo decide que puede que sea el momento de hacer saltar la nave y regresar a su vieja vida. Mientras tanto, se burla de Ray (Brandon Routh) acerca de su lugar en la vida de Kendra. Alice Troughton dirige el episodio escrito por Cortney Norris & Anderson Mackenzie (#114).

http://www.comicbookresources.com/artic ... w-synopsis


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Re: "LEGENDS OF TOMORROW" (SPINOFF DE "ARROW"/"FLASH")

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- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.13 "Leviathan" Promo | The CW:

- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.13 "Leviathan" Extended Promo | The CW:

- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.13 "Leviathan" Producers Preview | The CW:


- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.13 "Leviathan" Clip #1 | The CW:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Q4N4qpA6A0


- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.13 "Leviathan" Clip #2 | zap2it:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B-uyIFJxnIY
http://zap2it.com/2016/04/legends-of-to ... ddVcRcIgAj


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- Descripción oficial del 1.15 “Destiny”:
1.15 “Destiny” (12/05/16): CAPTURADO - Estar en los alrededores de los Time Masters deja a Rip (Arthur Darvill) y Rory (Dominic Purcell) increíblemente perturbados por muy diferentes motivos. Mientras tanto, Sara (Caity Lotz) se hace con el Waverider, Kendra (Ciara Renée) se reúne con Carter (la estrella invitada Falk Hentschel) y Snart (Wentworth Miller) decide que puede ser un héroe, después de todo. Olatunde Osunsanmi dirige el episodio con historia de Marc Guggenheim y guión del trabajo & Chris Fedak (#115).

http://www.comicbookresources.com/artic ... w-synopsis


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- Stills del 1.13 "Leviathan":

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- Productor ejecutivo de "Legends of Tomorrow" adelanta el regreso de Hawkman y el fin de Vandal Savage (CBR):
Productor ejecutivo de "Legends of Tomorrow" adelanta el regreso de Hawkman y el fin de Vandal Savage
Bryan Cairns, 28 Abril 2016


SPOILER WARNING: The following interview contains major spoilers for the April 28 episode of "DC's Legends of Tomorrow."

It's do or die time for "DC's Legends of Tomorrow." In a desperate attempt to end Vandal Savage's reign of terror, the team has set a course for 2166, the year Savage is at the height of his power. When they arrive, the Legends discover a weakness they can exploit: Savage's daughter, Cassandra. However, ending the life of the immortal menace could prove more difficult than anyone imagined -- especially for Kendra.

Ahead of tonight's future-based episode, Executive Producer Phil Klemmer spoke with CBR News about the significance of Savage's bloodline, why Kendra finds herself having second thoughts about slaying her immortal foe, an amnesic Hawkman and which DC characters should appear in Season 2.

CBR News: So far, Vandal Savage has proven unstoppable, so why are the Legends heading to a point in time where he's at peak power for their latest attempt at stopping him?

Phil Klemmer: In 2166, we're basically returning to the first frames of the pilot, when we saw Savage marching over this post-apocalyptic battlefield, literally forcing the world into submission under his boot. We've simply run out of easy options of where to attack him in the timeline. Now, we're calling in a "Hail Mary play." Our Legends have removed their former selves from the timeline in the previous episode. They are looking down the barrel of being erased from history and not being known by the people they love.

The Legends are at their best when they are doing the one thing they're told that they shouldn't do. This would be attacking Savage at the height of his powers, where we don't have a means to kill him. What makes this time different is, we discover a new kind of vulnerability. It's not about the Amon Dagger -- it's more about his emotional vulnerability. What we discover is, he's made the mistake of having a daughter and very much loving her. Just as he's ready to take over the world, he's made himself vulnerable to our team by allowing himself to love another human being. That's never a good idea when your goal is world domination. Basically, our team will set out to exploit his love for his daughter by trying to turn her against him.

In what ways is Cassandra daddy's little girl? Does the apple fall far from the tree?

That's the thing with immortality -- I don't think Vandal started out as a horrible person. I feel having to live through 4000 years and witnessing the horrors that mortal humans inflicted on themselves, it's made him a pretty jaded and ruthless character. His daughter doesn't have the benefit of immortality. In fact, all she knows of the world is what Savage has decided to share with her. Her father has carefully shielded her from the realities of his ruthlessness. Like any child, she sees her father as a good man. Gradually, our team will pull Cassandra out of her cloistered existence under her father's watchful eye and give her a different vantage on history and a new way of looking at her father. He's not the benign and necessary tyrant -- he's just an immortal son of a bitch, who did horrible things to their family.

Kendra, more than most, is personally invested in taking down Savage once and for all. Does that make her more resourceful, or reckless?

Throughout this season, Kendra went from being a barista, she had powers, and as we know, she's the only one who has the capability to kill Savage. She's seen how awful a person he is. She's died by his hand hundreds of times. In this episode, she's ready to do it. It's more about the mechanics of finding one of the magical items, like the Amon Dagger, which we know has to be wielded by her. Obviously, this is not the end of the season, but the sort of sleight of hand trick that we've played is, we've given the Legends everything they need to execute the murder of an immortal. We've given them the means. We've given them the opportunity. We give them the conviction. Obviously, the series doesn't end with 113. The twist of 113 is, why doesn't Kendra do it? Why on Earth, given the chance to kill this man, who has murdered her hundreds of times, who murdered Carter -- what is the one thing that could stay her hand? That's why it's worth watching this episode, for the answer to the question.

Would it be safe to say "Leviathan" sets things into motion for the remaining episodes this season?

Absolutely. In a way, this is like the fall finale. If you were to change five seconds of 113, it could effectively be the finale. The stakes, production value, the VFX of giant robots fighting, and it's taking place at the end of the world, on the eve of Vandal's rise to power -- it's really crazy. If not for those five seconds, it could have happened differently. This season could have ended with this episode. The fun is the corner we back ourselves up into for the next three episodes, which is, "Oh, if it didn't end there, how on Earth is it going to end?"

Looking ahead, what can you tease about Hawkman's return to the show?

He's not the Hawkman we know and love. The tragedy of reincarnation is, you don't always remember who you were. The version of Carter we encounter in 2166 isn't the man who died in 1975. It's effectively an amnesia story, and a question of whether he's been screwed by Savage so completely that he can't remember his former self or former love for Kendra. It's a nature versus nurture thing. It is not unlike Savage's daughter, where you realize part of his power is to corrupt the minds of the people around him.

Will the season finale either resolve or blow open the Time Masters storyline?

The finale is the equivalent of a wrecking ball. It pretty much lays waste to all of the dramatic structure of Season 1. As we head into Season 2, all the building blocks of Season 1 will be obliterated. Effectively, 201 will be a new pilot, with new stakes and characters. It will be from the ground up. It will be a redesign of the show with, hopefully, the parts people like best.

The writers must have a wish list of DC heroes and villains for next season. Who are some of your favorites?

I can't say the wish list without announcing who is going to appear. My wish list and DC's list of people they are willing to share -- there's a tremendous overlap. It's difficult to top a villain like Vandal Savage, but I promise we will find a way to do that. The other thing we are looking to do within our team is to destabilize them, to bring aboard the Waverider the kind of characters that make it hard for them to be a team. If it's easy to be a team, it's just no fun. The Mick Rorys and Leonard Snarts, to me, that's why the show worked this year. It wasn't all a bunch of square-jawed heroes. By the end of the season, everyone will have to work together in order to vanquish Savage. Therefore, in Season 2, we have to find a way to really destabilize the team, to send them back to their dysfunction. That's when they are at their best. Not when they are Legends, but when they are losers.


http://www.comicbookresources.com/artic ... avages-end
- Phil Klemmer sobre el crossover con Arrow y los villanos de la Season 2 (IGN):
Phil Klemmer sobre el crossover con Arrow y los villanos de la Season 2
Por Terri Schwartz 27 Abril, 2016


DC's Legends of Tomorrow is getting close to the end of its Vandal Savage arc, and the team behind the show is already busy conceiving what Season 2 is going to look like.

To preview the end of Season 1 and tease what's ahead for Legends' second season, showrunner Phil Klemmer got on the phone to talk about the return of Carter Hall, the ripple effects of Arrow's big death and what comes next after Vandal Savage. He also discussed whether big DC names like Jonah Hex and Constantine will return in Season 2, the plan for crossovers between Legends, The Flash and Arrow and whether the Waverider could ever jump dimensions.

IGN: In light of Detective Lance letting Sara know that Laurel died on Arrow, how much are you and the other producers of the other CW DC shows going to try to have big events within your TV universe impact Legends of Tomorrow, and vice versa?

Phil Klemmer: It helps to have Marc [Guggenheim] working on both shows. In Season 2, we are bringing a writer from Arrow [Keto Shimizu] and a writer from Flash [Grainne Godfree] onto our series, just so that we can make our stories work in concert. The only challenge is the logistics of a crossover. If it weren't for the fact that Grant Gustin and Stephen Amell were busy working 16 hours a day, five days a week on their own series, we would certainly find more time for the crossovers. It's definitely something that we're planning on doing next season for our show.

Bringing up Laurel's death is interesting because it doesn't require an appearance of an actor from another show. It's just a thing that happens on the other show that sort of changes the plot of one of the sister shows. Laurel's death will resonate into Season 2. It's so cool how that just enriches the world, the universe. It just makes it seem so much larger and so much more real when something that happens on Arrow can create ripples that appear on our show in a huge way. It fundamentally alters the DNA of our series. When something momentous happens in one, I think feeling the reverberations makes the universe feel coherent. It makes the universe feel big.

IGN: When you look back at Season 1 and you look at how the audience has responded to some of the new DC characters you've introduced, is there a chance of people like Constantine and Jonah Hex and other characters people have really liked coming into the show and being a part of the team, even if just for a short period of time?

Klemmer: There's a 100 percent probability, and I feel like in Season 2 we're determined to make it an even greater infusion of familiar faces and names from the DC Universe. We flirted with it and we had a version of guest stars, but as we move into Season 2, I think we're all determined to have people who are going to be integral to the season-long mythology.

IGN: Do you have any specific plans for Constantine or Jonah Hex?

Klemmer: We don't have any specific plans, but I will say we have plans for people of that sort of magnitude. Certainly characters of that magnitude -- a handful, a handful of characters that big or bigger -- will make their appearance in Season 2.

IGN: We know that Carter is coming back later this season. What can you say about Hawkman's return? Do you have any bigger plans for him in Season 2?

Klemmer: I'll slightly dodge that question by saying that the version of Carter who we encounter at the end of this season isn't necessarily the one that we remember. Because we are a time travel show and because he is a man who has the habit of reincarnating, it's not going to be like he comes back into our world and is welcomed with open arms. This is a Carter Hall with an asterisks by his name. Expect surprises when we meet him, and expect complications.

In [Thursday's] episode ["Leviathan"], instead of helping us kill Savage as he originally set out to do in the first two hours of the series, he's going to be very much responsible for us not being able to kill Savage. The next episode ["River of Time"] is our bottle episode where having failed to kill Savage we now have him as our prisoner, and it's sort of our version of Midnight Run where we're trying to transport an insane person to the Vanishing Point to face justice.

IGN: Vandal Savage's abilities make him uniquely suited to be a villain for a time travel show like Legends of Tomorrow. How do you follow up on that in Season 2? Do you try to find a new villain with similar powers, or do you come at it from a different angle when you're establishing the new threat?

Klemmer: We're coming at it from a completely different angle. We're determined to make every part of Season 2 feel like its own show. Episode 201 will very much be a new pilot with new good guys, new bad guys, new stakes, new dynamics, new goals. The team will basically have to find a new purpose. Once you save the world, what do you do then? It's sort of a question of after you've won a Super Bowl, what do you do from there? The fact that the world was in peril sort of forced our team to fall into its own dysfunctional version of lockstep.

Season 2, they're no longer going to be hunted by Time Masters. They're no longer going to be burdened with having to save the world. It's no longer going to be about saving Miranda and Jonas. The interesting thing about Season 2 is I think it's going to have a much, much different tone because our Legends are going to have a totally different purpose. They're actually going to have a totally different constitution. There will be new faces and new everything.

IGN: I'm curious about you saying "there will be new faces," because we've heard the lineup will mostly be the same. Are there going to be a good mix of new Legends brought into the show?

Klemmer: The joy of doing an ensemble show is you can change the dynamic. We never want our characters to be too comfortable or familiar with one another. I think what makes the show so fun is that they're not your usual square-jawed, straight-edge, grim and determined version of a superhero team. As we find them working very well at the end of Season 1, I think we're obliged as storytellers to come up with a reason they are not working well in Season 2. I kind of feel like that's when they're at their best.

They're the Bad News Bears. You don't want the Bad News Bears to win the championship; you want them to get runner up and tell the other team to shove the trophy where the sun don't shine. To me, why the Legends are so lovable is because they can't quite get it together. It makes them so human because they want to be heroes so badly, and yet they always fall short. That's why we're going to change up the dynamics of the team a little bit and change up the dynamics of our villains as well.

IGN: With the Multiverse becoming such a big part of the larger DC TV universe, is there a chance Legends could become a dimensions-jumping show in addition to a time travel show?

Klemmer: I think that would maybe make my head explode. I can barely deal with time travel in a single universe, so you might have to put a pin in that. [laughs]


http://www.ign.com/articles/2016/04/27/ ... 2-villains

- Productor de ‘Legends of Tomorrow’ adelanta la batalla con Vandal Savage y la Season Finale (collider):
Productor de ‘Legends of Tomorrow’ adelanta la batalla con Vandal Savage y la Season Finale
Por Christina Radish 28 Abril 2016


In the next episode of The CW series Legends of Tomorrow, called “Leviathan,” Rip Hunter (Arthur Darvill) takes the team to London in the year 2166, in an attempt to take one last shot at defeating Vandal Savage (Casper Crump), who is at the height of his power. While there, they look for a weapon that Kendra (Ciara Renée) can use to defeat Savage, but also discover that Savage has a daughter (Jessica Sipos) that just might feel differently about her father, if she were to learn the truth.

During this exclusive phone interview with Collider, executive producer Phil Klemmer talked about the team’s desperate attempt to take out Vandal Savage, how Savage’s daughter views her father, finding the humanity in these characters, why the season finale is like a remix, when Legends is at its best, and that Season 2 will be a completely new chapter in this story. Be aware that there are some spoilers.

Collider: In this next episode, “Leviathan,” the team is going to attempt to take on Vandal Savage at the height of his power. Since they haven’t really succeeded too well before now, how much more challenging will that make things? At this point, what will it take to finally defeat him for good?

PHIL KLEMMER: Well, yeah, they have tried to pick all the low-hanging fruit and failed, so this is a desperate attempt predicated on the fact that they’ve been removed from the timeline and can vanish from their own histories. So, it’s a Hail Mary play. But what they do realize, when they reach 2166 and find Savage at the height of his powers, is that he has slipped up. Throughout his four thousand long years of life, he’s not a man who has made a lot of personal attachment. We find out that he not only has a daughter, but he has a daughter that he loves. The whole story exists because he killed Rip’s wife and child, and sent Rip on this course of revenge and, as a corollary, on a quest to save the world.

Our way of potentially stopping Savage here is to turn his love for his daughter against him, and to use this emotionally vulnerability against a cold-hearted bastard. They’re going to try to dig out whatever humanity exists in this immortal psychopath and try to turn his daughter into a pawn that can be used on behalf of the legends. I always think it’s interesting when you realize that, despite all of the horrible things he’s done, Savage does have a heart. It’s not just about the logistics of whether Kendra gets the magical object that can kill him and can wield it, but it’s also about his emotional vulnerabilities. This episode is about both of those questions.

What can you say about what kind of person his daughter is and how much she actually knows about her father?

KLEMMER: I’ll make a comparison to the movie Room, in that she’s sort of like that kid. She wasn’t literally raised in seclusion, but any parent is protective of their child. Vandal Savage has been very selective in revealing to her the kind of man that he is. She is a little bit starry-eyed. She sees her father as perhaps Stalin’s daughter looked upon him, as like, “This is just what the Soviet Union needs, killing off those 20 million people!” He’s a great hero to her. Savage’s daughter is totally drinking the Kool-Aid and she totally believes his justifications for the misery he has inflicted on the world, as the ultimate power. She sees him as the hero. She’s watching The Vandal Savage Show. She’s not watching Legends of Tomorrow. It’s not until she meets the team and forges this, dare I say, friendship with Leonard Snart that he’s able to pull the scales from her eyes and use his own experience with an abusive father to make her realize that she’s been duped and given this distorted picture of who her father really is and why he’s done the things he’s done. The question at the end of the episode is, will she betray her father? Will she figuratively stab him in the back, so that Kendra can literally stab him in the heart?

In these later episodes, we’ve really learned a lot about these characters. Mick Rory is a very different person than we first thought, we’ve finally learned a bit about Rip Hunter’s past, and now we’re learning more about Vandal Savage. How closely has Season 1 followed the overall plan you had for these characters and have there been any major deviations, along the way?

KLEMMER: It’s like digging for gold. When you find a vein, you don’t know how deep it’s going to go. It’s an exploration, especially with our villain. You don’t know how much humanity they can carry before their villainy gets diminished, or the audience loves them more than they love your hero and they stop being the bad guy. Mick Rory is a great example because, in the early episodes, he was the guy who would crack a joke or say something inappropriate. As a writer, you get restless, and I’m sure that, as a performer, you get restless, as well. You want to know what lies beneath, why he’s saying things that are inappropriate, and why he’s such an asshole. Coming up with the pathology that underlies that, when a guy like Vandal Savage is responsible for subjugating the entire world, as writers, we’re responsible to come up with a humanity that can counter-balance something that’s not a normal human impulse. You have to justify what people do. The more outrageous people act, the more strenuous you have to be in making it seem like a human action.
legends-of-tomorrow-arthur-darvill-franz-drameh-brandon-routh-victor-garber-02

Without giving anything away, what can fans expect from the season finale? Will there be more action, will there be more heartbreak, or is there a balance of the two?

KLEMMER: The finale itself is like a remix. Since this is a time travel show and we do bounce around, we will be skipping through the time periods of previous episodes. It’s not a clips show, exactly, but we will go back to familiar places and see familiar scenarios from a different point of view. The team will triumph, in a sense, but triumph comes at a commensurate cost. We never really meant for this show to go into Season 2 with a clean reset, where it’s just, “We’re going to fight Vandal Savage, all over again. We’re going to be the exact same team that you met in the pilot.” We always wanted to make sure that this was a chapter, and that Season 2 would be a completely different chapter with new characters and new stakes. I think our characters have been irrevocably changed by their experience. By the time you get to the finale, it does have that bittersweet reminder that they can’t go home again. It’s not just that their homes are gone, but they’re different people. By stepping out of the timeline and going on this adventure, and allowing themselves to be changed by this common experience, they’re like Vietnam veterans. It’s not easy to go back to the world. So, the question of Season 2 is going to be, if they don’t belong there, where do they belong?

The first season of any show is about finding its footing and figuring out which character dynamics work the best. Looking back on this season, when do you think Legends was at its best?

KLEMMER: I don’t know. I love every episode, in a way. This show has a wild premise, but as heavy as the stakes are, I like it when the show is somehow still manages to be light on its feet. I think the dysfunction of our team is what makes it fun, funny, heartbreaking and human. I enjoy the moments that are lower stakes and that are really hijinks. That’s why the episode in the ‘50s was fun, and the Western was so much fun. I liked both of the Soviet Union episodes, too. The show is really meant to be a romp with heart. That’s where it’s at its best, and it’s where we all want the show to live next season.


http://collider.com/legends-of-tomorrow ... interview/?


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¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!

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Re: "LEGENDS OF TOMORROW" (SPINOFF DE "ARROW"/"FLASH")

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- "Suit Up with The CW" Promo | The CW:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IUBWnVVq05Q


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¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!

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Re: "LEGENDS OF TOMORROW" (SPINOFF DE "ARROW"/"FLASH")

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- Ciara Renée Facebook Chat Live (28-04-16):

https://www.facebook.com/CWLegendsofTom ... 114294473/


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¡¡¡¡AY, OMÁ QUÉ CALORES!!!! ¡Gracias por tu regalo, Nitta!

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Re: "LEGENDS OF TOMORROW" (SPINOFF DE "ARROW"/"FLASH")

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- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.14 "River of Time" Promo | The CW:

- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.14 "River of Time" Extended Promo | The CW:

- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.14 "River of Time" Producers Preview | The CW:



- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.14 "River of Time" Clip #1 | AccessHollywood:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KL6XzdQswow
http://bcove.me/uvwz6enw


- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.14 "River of Time" Clip #2 | The CW:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Do3o-cBpViY


- Legends of Tomorrow | 1.14 "River of Time" Clip #3 | The CW:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qo1NgdE8-PE


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