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Re: "SUPERGIRL", nueva serie en la CBS/CW

Publicado: Jue Nov 10, 2016 3:02 am
por Shelby
- Portada, imágenes interiores y video BTS del especial del crossover de EW:
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Podéis encontrar más imágenes de la sesión: AQUÍ

http://bcove.me/g3zb8oy4


Entre las nuevas pistas que la revista nos ofrece y que publicará su edición completa mañana, nos cuentan que n el crossover veremos volar a 'Supergirl', a 'The Flash' y 'Cisco' abrir (o intentar abrir) un agujero en la tela del espacio-tiempo, y que alguien (que no dicen) será disparado. Reafirman lo que ya sabemos: que los causantes del crossover serán 'The Dominators', aunque dejan abierta la posibilidad de si éstos controlarán la mente de nuestros superhéroes hasta el punto de hacer que luchen entre ellos.

El “Arrowverse” también tiene otro apodo, el “Berlantiverse,” por el super-productor que preside ese universo, que tiene su propia opinión sobre el término: “Me opongo, para ser sincero. Hay mucha gente que también son parte de esto. Además, nunca quieres que algo que puede molestar o enfadar a la gente sea llamado con tu nombre.”

“Estas series tienen que trabajar en múltiples niveles. Quieres que sean divertidas y agradables. Pero si no tratan sobre algo, ¿para qué apareces a trabajar todos los días y le pides a todos que pongan su corazón y su alma en una historia si se trata tan sólo de Flash luchando contra el villano de la semana?”, comenta Berlanti.



http://www.ew.com/article/2016/11/09/fl ... over-cover

Re: "SUPERGIRL", nueva serie en la CBS/CW

Publicado: Vie Nov 11, 2016 1:11 am
por Shelby
- Supergirl | Game Night with Supergirl: 360° Video | The CW:

Re: "SUPERGIRL", nueva serie en la CBS/CW

Publicado: Vie Nov 11, 2016 1:16 am
por Shelby
- Larry Teng habla sobre la Season 2 Episode 6 (supergirltv):
Larry Teng habla sobre la Season 2 Episode 6
Por Supergirltv 10/11/2016


Next Monday's episode of Supergirl is going to bring some major milestones to the series including our first live action look at James Olsen's Guardian! Another milestone is the return of fan favorite director, Larry Teng! Fans will remember that Larry directed many of the most vaunted episodes of season one including, "Human for a Day", "Falling" and season finale "Better Angels". Supergirl.tv spoke with Larry about what we can expect from his return and episode 6 in this exclusive interview (generally spoiler-free but we are talking about next episode so read with care):

Supergirl.tv: First and foremost, on October 21st you were able to announce that you’ll be returning to the show as a producer starting in January, what can you tell us about this great news?

"It was just really a matter of it working out between my schedule and their schedule for me to go back up to Vancouver and resume the same responsibilities I had when the show started in LA. I’m just happy that it worked out and even though it’s sort of a short term deal I can go up there and help them sort of make the show in the best way possible. [I'm] just looking forward to flying up this weekend so my first day of work will be Monday and I’m looking forward to get back together with the cast. I miss those guys up there and it’s nice to be up there semi-full- time. it’s one of the best casts you could ever work with and I truly mean that, it’s no joke or exaggeration, they’re definitely one of the best groups of people you could ever make a show with so I consider myself very lucky."

Supergirl.tv: You’ve been away from the show for a bit with director titles on Lethal Weapon and Training Day, how did it feel to be back and on set?

"It was great, it was familiar and different all at the same time. Walking into Kara’s loft or walking into CatCo and it sort of just looked virtually identical, it’s just a great feeling knowing that you’re north of the border. It was a trippy experience for myself and for the actors, too, it’s just it’s odd, it’s a very, very weird feeling, and you kind of get used to it quickly, but just to know that you can actually do that, that you can literally pick up an entire set and then resurrect it in a different country, in a different place, it’s pretty incredible to me. The art department did a really great job making everything look virtually identically the same. There are very small differences here and there, a lot of that has to do with either the studio space that they have up there or small modifications they made for whatever reasons, but I’d say it’s about 98.5% exactly what we saw last year."

Supergirl.tv: Does it feel weird that maybe Kara’s apartment now is in a different area even though it looks the same, for example you don’t literally walk to the same spot anymore?

"Yeah, sure that’s definitely weird because in LA we had so much stage space: CatCo was on a stage by itself, the DEO occupied a few stages, Noonan’s occupied a stage, the loft was a stage…we had a lot of stage space. It was a huge luxury and now everything fits under one roof so and in that sense making moves from set to set it’s good it’s a sort of uniquely different feeling that you need to get adjusted to."

Supergirl.tv: As we learned last episode, James is going to take a on HUGE new role on the show. How did you and Mehcad approach The Guardian?

"I think there’s a learning curve for the character and I think we took it from there. I can’t give too much away because we’re only five days out but there’s a learning curve that the character has and we tried to honor that as best we could to make the transition feel real, but I can tell you that both Mehcad and I were real excited to make this character come alive."

Supergirl.tv: How was seeing Mehcad in The Guardian suit for the first time?

"Oh yeah, that was pretty awesome to see in all its glory in live-action."

Supergirl.tv: The Parasite is on IGN’s top 100 Supervillains list ranked at #61! Supergirl has handled some tough enemies before, what can you tell us about how she’ll approach this version?

"Early concept sketches and concept art between myself and Andrew and Armen over at Encore Visual Effects we had to figure out how big he was going to be so all the framing basically yielded to his size. Armen feels about 10 feet tall, but really I had the easy part I just sort of shot the plates, he did all the animation, all the rendering and it looks amazing, it looks absolutely incredible. We wanted him to look like a monster and you know there’s many interpretations of The Parasite in the history of the comics but we wanted our version to embody more of a monster, than anything else and the product is really awesome. It’s full-on, it sort of follows Armen’s work as Gorilla Grodd and King Shark, we used some of the same techniques when it came down to filming and we storyboarded all that stuff extensively to figure out exactly what we needed The Parasite to do in those scenes and I’m looking forward to it."

Supergirl.tv: Even just the snippet we saw in the trailer, it’s movie level stuff on television.

"Oh yeah, it’s nuts, that’s the great thing about making television in 2016 is that we can do that. I don’t know if 8 years ago you could say “Hey, let’s put Parasite on TV,” so that’s really exciting."

Supergirl.tv: Chyler Leigh’s Alex Danvers came to the precipice of a discovery about herself last week, can fans look forward to more of Alex’s journey? Are there any Maggie/Alex scenes we can expect?

"Yeah, if you look at what Andrew said a few days ago, I forget which outlet it was, definitely there’s more to come and I think it was handled in a really respectful and compelling way. I know Chyler and I worked really hard in terms of just working on those beats and I think it’s going to be a really satisfying storyline and I think Alex Danvers fans will be by her side and will be really endeared by this whole storyline."

Supergirl.tv: Mon-El is arguably a second chance for Kara to mentor someone in Earth culture and super-heroism. Mon-El tried on Kara’s life last week, what can we expect to see from Mon-El now that he is looking to make his own way?

"Chris is going to be around for the rest of the year so there’s plenty more to come with Mon-El and his development, I think we’re all really excited about that. You can tell by the photos that he gets to go out there and do his thing so I think it’ll be a worthwhile chapter in his development on Monday’s episode. If you think about it there’s a similarity to Kara’s journey a little bit from last year in terms of him finding his place in this world, what he’s meant to do, what he’s not meant to do, what he knows and what he doesn’t know, and I think those are some of the fun parallels that we’ll get to write."

Supergirl.tv: So we have to ask, have we seen the last of Tyler Hoechlin’s Superman or can fans hope to see him again this season? Can the same be said for Calista Flockhart?

"I honestly, I do not have a clue. Not even joking, I just don’t know. I hope we get to see both. From what I saw from the early episodes, I love seeing him, he brought a great energy to the show and I hope there’s more and Calista is just one of my favorite people. Every time she’s on-screen, she makes that character sing, so I could only hope for more but that’s above my pay grade."

Supergirl.tv: Finally, we just have to say we've been loving the show and it being on The CW.

"I might have told Frank and Tim on the podcast (Supergirl TV Talk) a few months ago that the move to the CW was going to be a good thing for the show and I really do think the show has really grown leaps and bounds and it’s really fulfilling its promise of being a worthy story-tell in the CW/DC Universe so I’ve been really excited with everything I’ve seen and hopefully you guys are, too, but the world definitely seems bigger this year than it did last year and a lot of it has to do with having more financial flexibility and also the CW being so great and opening up the comic book world for us to tell."



http://supergirl.tv/larry-teng-talks-season-2-episode-6?

Re: "SUPERGIRL", nueva serie en la CBS/CW

Publicado: Vie Nov 11, 2016 10:46 am
por Shelby
- The Flash, Arrow, Supergirl, DC's Legends of Tomorrow | "4 Night Crossover" Teaser Promo:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=an9oHbislkU


- The Flash, Arrow, Supergirl, DC's Legends of Tomorrow | "4 Night Crossover Event" Promo #2:

- The Flash, Arrow, Supergirl, DC's Legends of Tomorrow | "4 Night Crossover Event" Clip #1:
http://bcove.me/oktob6db

Re: "SUPERGIRL", nueva serie en la CBS/CW

Publicado: Mar Nov 15, 2016 12:16 pm
por Shelby
- SUPERGIRL | 2.07 "The Darkest Place" Promo:

- SUPERGIRL | 2.07 "The Darkest Place" Extended Promo:


- SUPERGIRL | 2.07 "The Darkest Place" Clip #1:

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


- SUPERGIRL | 2.07 "The Darkest Place" Clip #2:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tGGmiuUnEKQ
http://bcove.me/52qrc87a


- SUPERGIRL | 2.07 "The Darkest Place" Clip #3:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dTbJeEFA1l8
https://www.accesshollywood.com/videos/ ... of-cadmus/

Re: "SUPERGIRL", nueva serie en la CBS/CW

Publicado: Mié Nov 16, 2016 12:55 am
por Shelby
- Stills del 2.07 "The Darkest Place":

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Re: "SUPERGIRL", nueva serie en la CBS/CW

Publicado: Mié Nov 16, 2016 8:14 pm
por Shelby
- Descripción oficial del 2.08 "Medusa":
2.08 "Medusa" (28/11/16): UNA NOCHE DE CONFESIONES; EL ÉPICO CROSSOVER DE SUPERHÉROES EMPIEZA ESTA NOCHE — Eliza (la estrella invitada Helen Slater) llega a la ciudad a celebrar Thanksgiving con sus hijas. Alex (Chyler Leigh) decide que ya es hora de sincerarse con su madre; Kara (Melisa Benoist) se queda en shock cuando Eliza sugiere que Mon-El (Chris Wood) tiene sentimientos hacia ella, y Winn (Jeremy Jordan) y James (Mehcad Brooks) consideran contarle a Kara la verdad sobre Guardian. Mientras tanto, CADMUS libera un virus que instantáneamente mata cualquier alien que esté en el vecindario así es que Kara enlista a un inesperado aliado – Lena Luthor (Katie McGrath). El épico crossover de superhéroes empieza esta noche cuando Barry Allen (la estrella invitada Grant Gustin) y Cisco Ramon (la estrella invitada Carlos Valdes) buscan la ayuda de Kara con una invasión alienígena en su Tierra. Stefan Pleszczynski dirige el episodio escrito por Jessica Queller & Derek Simon (SPG208).


Junto a la descripción del episodio, la CW también ha revelado la de los otros episodios del cuádruple crossover de este año, que podéis encontrar aquí:


THE FLASH

ARROW

LEGENDS OF TOMORROW



http://www.ksitetv.com/flash/invasion-d ... es/129905/

Re: "SUPERGIRL", nueva serie en la CBS/CW

Publicado: Vie Nov 18, 2016 10:14 pm
por Shelby
- SUPERGIRL Stills del 2.08 "Medusa":

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- THE FLASH Stills del 3.08 "Invasion":

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- ARROW Stills del 5.08 "Invasion":

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- LEGENDS OF TOMORROW Stills del 2.07 "Invasion":

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Re: "SUPERGIRL", nueva serie en la CBS/CW

Publicado: Vie Nov 18, 2016 11:05 pm
por Shelby
- Jeremy Jordan sobre la 'divertida' revelación de Cyborg Superman y los problemas de Guardian (EW):
Jeremy Jordan sobre la 'divertida' revelación de Cyborg Superman y los problemas de Guardian
Por Chancellor Agard 18 November 2016 — 2:28 PM EST


Who is Cyborg Superman?

That’s the question on everyone’s mind as we head into Monday’s new Supergirl episode, which will feature the infamous Superman villain’s live-action debut. Is it Kara (Melissa Benoist) and Alex’s (Chyler Leigh) Jeremiah Danvers (Dean Cain), who has been held captive by Project Cadmus for years, or someone else? Although he wouldn’t say who it is, star Jeremy Jordan, who plays Winn, promises that the reveal will be “fun.”

While Supergirl deals with Cadmus in Monday’s episode, Winn will have his hands full helping Guardian, a.k.a. James Olsen (Mehcad Brooks), who is being accused of a murder committed by another vigilante. EW caught up with Jordan ahead of Monday’s “The Darkest Places” to discuss all of this, plus whether or not Winn still has lingering feelings for Kara and who will be the first to find out about James’ secret identity.


ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: We finally meet Cyborg Superman in this episode. What can you tell us about his appearance?
JEREMY JORDAN: Well, Cyborg Superman is going to either surprise you incredibly or you’ll be like, “Oh, I should’ve seen that coming.” It’s fun. If you know anything about Cyborg Superman in the comics, then you kind of know all you need to know. But, Winn, he’s a little bit more preoccupied with what’s going on with Guardian right now.

I bet, since Guardian gets accused of murder in Monday’s episode, right?
Yeah, there’s a sort of vigilante who has basically copycatted Guardian and has started taking the law into his own hands, but taking it a little bit too far and actually killing people. So, the police and Maggie [Floriana Lima] are out on a hunt for Guardian. So, Winn is basically like, “We gotta get out. We’re done. We tried, and now if we don’t stop, we’re going to jail and we’re both screwed.” But at the same time, he finds Alex and is like, “Hey, you gotta tell your friend Maggie to stop spreading all of this crap about Guardian. That’s not him. He’s a good person. I know he is.” And, she’s like, “How do you know?” Winn isn’t the best at keeping secrets, as we will find out very shortly in the next episode, so it’s fun to watch how he handles other people sort of discovering the secret of Guardian.

Does Alex get read in on James’ side gig in Monday’s episode?
I think it’s safe to say that Alex is going to be the first one to figure it out. She’s not stupid. She’s going to definitely have her opinion about the whole situation. But, at the same time, we have some serious bad guys coming up in this episode and regardless who thinks who should be a superhero or not, they have to ultimately work together to take down the bad guys.

After they clear this obstacle, what kind of rhythm do James and Winn get into? What’s that new dynamic like?
It’s something that they’re still sort of discovering. Basically at this point, Winn is at the controls and he’s in the little van. Guardian has a body camera, so Winn can see everything that’s happening. He has all the diagnostics and is basically Guardian’s third eye. He’s like, “Oh, use this grenade” or “use this fun weapon I designed,” or “deploy your shield.” It’s kind of like Winn is Guardian’s director at this point. That’s kind of how they do their battle plan. Guardian and James probably could handle stuff on their own, but as we saw earlier in the season, he kind of needs help, so Winn is there to provide support.

Emotionally, it starts to become kind of muddled. We saw Winn very conflicted at the beginning of this whole thing [about] whether or not he wants to help Guardian and kind of join him in becoming a hero in their own right away from Kara, or whether he wants to protect his friend and stay safe and not sort of rock the boat. We’ll see that conflict playing out more and more as the season progresses, because there’s inherently way more danger involved when you don’t have a superhero who can just instantly heal with some yellow sun and is bulletproof.

Some people have criticized the show for turning James into a vigilante because they were hoping for the show to highlight the other ways people can be heroes. What was your reaction when you first heard about this story, and do you think that argument has some merit?
Sure, I think Winn becomes the voice of that argument and then, later on in the season, Kara becomes the voice of that argument. There is the idea of feeling like you are less than when you’re spending all of your time with someone with superpowers, so you’re always constantly trying to overcompensate and trying to build yourself up and feel like you can do something as well. So, you have to go through that process before you can be able to come to the conclusion that you actually can be a hero without doing all of these things. If that is the conclusion they finally come to, so be it, but at this point, they’re finding their own way. They’re both also kind of heartbroken and [laughs] whether it’s them asserting their masculinity by going out and fighting bad guys with brute strength, it’s kind of how they’re dealing with the circumstances that they’ve been left in at this point.

Winn has made that argument already that we fight with knowledge and we fight with what we’re given to help people, but at the same time, there are other ways to fight. Winn is still fighting with those things even if James is using more of his muscles. But, yeah, that sort of argument starts to surface as the season progresses. The fans are definitely not wrong in pointing that out, but I think we are sort of a step ahead of that and addressing that as the season progresses.

Winn has clearly picked up on the fact that there’s something growing between Kara and Mon-El. How will that story continue to develop this season?
It was promising at first, Winn and Mon-El being best friends, but in episode 4, Mon-El really took advantage of Winn. While it was funny and fun, I don’t think Winn was super cool about it and on top of that, he starts to see this blossoming relationship [between Mon-El and Kara] that could be turning into something. Winn never really dealt with his feelings for Kara, and they never really dealt with it together. They kind of spoke all the stuff aloud and then kind of avoided each other and then swept it under the drug. I think that stuff starts to resurface and it becomes a little bit more like, “Well, this dude actually might be coming in and taking over.” You can only ignore your feelings for so long. I don’t know how Winn will ultimately deal with it, but I think he’s not going to be super excited for a happy new couple of Mon-El and Kara if that’s what it ends up becoming.

Supergirl airs Mondays at 8 p.m. on The CW.


http://www.ew.com/article/2016/11/18/su ... g-superman?

- Kevin Smith dice que su episodio de Flash es un Thriller, el episodio de Supergirl es un viaje (CBR):
Kevin Smith dice que su episodio de Flash es un Thriller, el episodio de Supergirl es un viaje
Por Megan Peters 20/11/2016



This week, Kevin Smith will return to The CW when his episode of The Flash airs on Tuesday. After directing a fan-favorite episode of the series last season, Smith was asked to return to The Flash and oversee Killer Frost’s return to Central City. The cult filmmaker was also brought on to direct an episode of The CW’s newest DC Comics title, Supergirl, which he finished shooting recently. And, now, the director is telling fans what they should expect from the episodes.

Kevin Smith recently uploaded his latest episode of Fat-Man on Batman to Youtube where he and co-host Marc Bernardin talked about the Arrowverse. It was there that Smith recalled his time on-set for The Flash and Supergirl by saying he had a “f**king blast.”

“Boy, oh boy - I had a f**king blast. And both couldn’t be more different from each other,” he said. “"Killer Frost" is like a thriller The whole thing is like a [John] Grisham movie set in the world of comics with powers and s**t.”

Smith then continued and switched gears to Supergirl. “Then the Supergirl episode, it’s very ambitious. It’s different from a lot of Supergirl episodes. We take a journey,” he said. “It’s big, it’s a big episode. It turned out phenomenally. I was just working on the cut this morning, the first cut. The Flash is done, and it airs next week. Supergirl I got the first cut of, and it was 12 minutes long. So I went through an easy first-pass...and am down five minutes, so there’s seven minutes left to cut out. It’s going to be tough because all the scenes are really good.”

Smith couldn’t help but gush about Supergirl’s cast since his episode “Superman Lives” marks his first time working with the actors. The director had plenty of praise of Charmed City, an actor duo comprised of star Melissa Benoist and Chris Wood. David Harewood also racked up praised from Smith since the director fell for the British man’s charm.

“David Harewood has a line that’s “so f**king DC Universe, so specifically Superworld,” Smith gushed. Without giving away any spoilers, Smith said that Martian Manhunter goes full-on comic nerd when he makes a reference to the Red Sun of Krypton.

Smith also said that, “David doesn’t even have to be in the Martian Manhunter persona to carry the presence of Martian Manhunter. He’s almost almost more Martian Manhunter when he’s just Hank Henshaw than when they do the effects.”


The Flash airs Tuesday nights at 8 p.m. ET/PT on The CW. “Killer Frost” premieres on November 22. Supergirl airs on The CW Mondays at 8 p.m. ET/PT.

- Chris Wood habla sobre el interpretar a Mon-El en “Supergirl” (empireonline):
In an extensive interview with EmpireOnline.com, actor Chris Wood talks about his career, his role on “Supergirl”, and where his character of Mon-El is headed.

Here’s part of the interview…

As far as Mon-El is concerned, though, how would you describe his journey this year on Supergirl?

We’re just starting episode eleven, so we’re not even at the mid point yet, which is crazy to even think that. We don’t have to pretend like he’s not on the hero’s journey, though. Will he or won’t he be a superhero? He’s based on a comic book character who’s a superhero and I think we’ve had enough scenes where we’ve seen that, so I’m not going to try to hide that. We know where it’s going. Everybody knows that it’s moving towards a suit eventually. What it’s going to look like, who knows? That is his story. He’s finding the part of him that’s based on who he was on Daxam, and part of that is the bias that you see come out with he and Kara when they have their differences and they resent aspects of each other because of where they’re from. She actually struggles with it more than he does, which I think is a brilliant thing, to bring more of a human quality to her so that she’s not just perfect.

So she’s got biases, too. She works through them quickly, which is nice. He’s got a lot of stuff from his background, and he’s new to this planet. The rules are different. When he was there, it seemed like he was just living his life for himself, based on what he’s told her so far. He hasn’t been completely honest about everything. I can give you that. He has left some details out that she’ll find out soon that will obviously change their dynamic. He was a bit of a dude back home. He’s now here, and we’re starting to see him respond to someone who’s trying to actually help him and make him better. At first he’s resisting it, because he doesn’t feel the same impulse to go save the world that she does. So, his story’s going to become one of how does he gain that need? Where does that come from? It’s something with the Clark Kent story that you don’t really get, because he was already there when we met him. There’s got to be a moment like the one in the pilot for Kara when she’s, like, “I have to do this.” He’s going to have one of those moments at some point, where he is self-motivated to pursue this as a purpose.

At first, everyone’s trying to tell him to do it and he’s like, “Yeah, I should do it. That’s great.” Then, eventually, it becomes, “I want to do this. Oh, I’m still screwing this part up, okay, but I want to do this, and I want to do it fully.” That’s his evolution, and then hopefully get him to a place where … well, it’s further down in the season. He’s going to be put in a very difficult position where he has to make some massive life decisions on who he’s going to be and who he wants to be. Does he want to be who he was, or does he want to become something bigger and better? That story gets pretty big as we move forward.



http://www.supermanhomepage.com/novembe ... supergirl/

- Jeremy Jordan sobre el dilema de Winn (TVInsider):
Jeremy Jordan sobre el dilema de Winn
Por Damian Holbrook 21 Nov, 2016 8:00 am


Jeremy Jordan's Winn is in deep Schott! As the secret tech power behind James Olson's (Mehcad Brooks) masked street fighter Guardian, Jordan's gadget guy is both facilitating a life-or-death game of vigilantism in National City and complicit in a lie that is so not going to sit well with Kara (Melissa Benoist) or his fellow DEO members.

"Oh absolutely," agrees the actor. "From episode 5 where Winn agreed to help James [because] they both have this feeling that they need to do something more, there is that trepidation [that this is risky]." Explaining that Winn understands the perils of trying to save the day a bit more than James, having been Kara's sidekick since she first took flight, Jordan says that we "will see over the next few episodes that it becomes a lot more difficult for Winn to maintain this double identity." Especially since, as Jordan puts it, "Winn is really bad at lying" and someone within the team's ranks may suspect that he's hiding something. "It becomes really murky."

"Oh yeah...that can't be good."

And not just murky: Murderous. In this week's episode, while Kara deals with Cadmus' Cyborg Superman, James and Winn are swept up in a deadly case of mistaken identity and criminal allegations after someone is killed by a lookalike vigilante. "Somebody has copied my costume and decided to become the anti-Guardian," continues Jordan. "Whether or not they are trying to smear him or just get away with posing as him remains to be seen...but we have to clear his name."

It won't be easy, what with the hooked-on-heroics James "thinking less with his head and more with his heart at this point," and the cops closing in. "Winn just wants to get out, it's getting too real and messy. Somebody is going to get hurt or go to jail," he says, adding with a laugh that "if they get to James, they are going to get to Winn. That's what it's really about!

As for Winn's other entanglements, Jordan was surprised to hear that executive producer Andrew Kreisberg recently told TV Insider that "we might be seeing more" of Winn and Lena Luthor (Katie McGrath). "That is news to me!" he offered. "It's hard to say, but if there is stuff between us, it won't be for a while."

Let's just hope it's not because someone is off doing time in the Phantom Zone for deceiving Kara all these weeks!

Supergirl, Mondays, 8/7c, The CW


http://www.tvinsider.com/article/103527 ... edicament/?

- Jeremy Jordan expone el fatal defecto de Guardian y predice una enorme pelea con Kara (TVLine):
Jeremy Jordan expone el fatal defecto de Guardian y predice una enorme pelea con Kara
Por Andy Swift / 21 Nov 2016, 7:00 AM PST


For a guy named Winn, Jeremy Jordan‘s Supergirl character sure does love placing himself in lose-lose situations.

“Not only is he stepping out and doing this whole Guardian thing with James, but he’s also lying to Kara — so things are starting to catch up to him,” Jordan tells TVLine. “We saw his trepidation over creating Guardian, but he eventually gave in. And with James so gung-ho, always wanting to rush in guns-blazing … sooner or later, it’s going to get them into trouble.”

Frankly, it’s a position Jordan never thought he’d find his character in.

“Early on, I thought maybe [Winn] was going to be a villain,” Jordan says — which makes sense, given his villainous roots. (Let’s not forget about his dear ol’ dad!) “But it’s been a really cool journey to see Winn become more confident and come into his own. He had so much more to give at CatCo, and he’s finally at a place where he can do that, while also getting to nerd out every day.”

And now that Winn is chilling at the intersection of nerding out and fighting crime, it’s only a matter of time before he eventually adopts an alias of his own as James Guardian’s sidekick, right? Well…

“At this point, they’re just calling him ‘the man in the van,’ which is equal parts hilarious and creepy,” Jordan says. “I think we’ll stick with that for now. It has yet to be determined, at least in Winn’s mind, whether this Guardian thing will be able to sustain himself. I doubt Winn would be against building a suit for himself — maybe a big bubble that no one would break into — but going into the field? Not so much.”

One thing we can count on, however, is that Alex’s big coming out isn’t going to make waves with Winn or any of her other DEO co-workers.

“Personally, I think Winn’s totally cool about it, though it’s not something we’ve fully addressed,” Jordan says. “I don’t know if or when she’s going to fully come out to everybody, so we’ve yet to see how everybody would react to that, but I can’t imagine he would have a negative reaction. If you remember the pilot, Winn was very excited about the prospect of Kara being a lesbian.”

Jordan was also fully aware of the Internet’s speculation that Winn would turn out to be the Arrowverse’s next gay character — and he kind of loved it.

“Someone at Paleyfest mentioned that all the Berlanti shows usually have at least one gay character, so I raised my hand to volunteer,” he recalls. “Like, it’s cool. Winn can be bi or something. … But I can’t see Winn being gay, not after the ludicrous amount of pining he did over Supergirl last season.”


https://tvline.com/2016/11/21/supergirl ... interview/

- Jeremy Jordan sobre el problema del plagio de Guardian (accesshollywood):
Jeremy Jordan sobre el problema del plagio de Guardian
Por Jolie Lash 21 Nov, 2016 9 AM PST


After helping to defeat a parasitic alien, Guardian has quickly become a sensation in National City, and that means the team behind the vigilante newcomer will need to brace themselves because a copycat is on the way on The CW's "Supergirl."

Someone who is up to no good will impersonate the secret identity of CatCo's James Olsen (Mehcad Brooks), leading to trouble for the photog/interim boss and the man behind his machinery – Winn Schott. But, Jeremy Jordan's character has another weight on his shoulders as someone impersonates Guardian – his difficulty keeping secrets.

"Oh, completely. Winn is … completely transparent at all times. So, you'll find very quickly in [the] next episode -- on Monday -- that the Guardian has been sort of framed by this other vigilante, who's been kind of doing some dastardly things dressed up as Guardian, and so they're trying to clear [the] name, but Maggie is kind of the one pointing fingers," Jeremy told Access Hollywood. "And Winn, of course, goes up to Alex and is like, 'Hey, can you tell your friend Maggie to like, chill out with the Guardian accusing?' She's like, 'Why?' And just to watch him try to back pedal is pretty hilarious and you kind of realize that this kid needs some help in the lying department."

Enough time has passed since the real Guardian's debut in National City that the crooked copycat has conjured up a suit very much like the original. Don't expect Winn to be too upset to see his work duplicated though, as there is a bigger task at hand -- clearing the Guardian's name.

"I think the fear of going to jail because everybody thinks the Guardian is evil is a little more prevalent in Winn's priority
  • at this point," Jeremy said, when asked if the copycat costume would irritate his character. "So, any [issues] he'd have with the costume is more of an eye roll and less of a completely offended thing. I think he's a little more concerned with the repercussions of it."

    With Guardian a two-man operation, it's meant more scenes for Jeremy and Mehcad, something the actor believes came out of what producers saw on screen when the two actors' characters interacted in Season 1.

    "We have a lot of fun together. We always have. We had a few fun moments last year and I think that they realized that we work really well together," Jeremy said, when asked about the fun he's been having doing scenes with Mehcad. "But we just basically goof around and laugh a lot, but we feed off each other's energy in a really good way that I think complements each other on set. I think we really trust each other to kind of do our thing and really get the best takes. So, yeah, we're having a blast."

    On Monday night's "Supergirl," the faux Guardian is just one of the dilemmas faced by our core characters. The Cadmus kidnapping of Mon-El (Chris Wood) is also on everyone's priority list.

    "Where Winn works in the DEO certainly puts him in the mix for any DEO operations. So yeah, anything where the DEO is involved … Winn is almost always going to be there," Jeremy said. "This episode is a little more focused, at least for Winn, on the whole Guardian thing, and trying to keep the secret, and trying not to blurt it out to everybody."



    https://www.accesshollywood.com/article ... t-problem/

- Brenda Strong osobre el desatar la ira de Lillian Luthor (CBR):
Brenda Strong osobre el desatar la ira de Lillian Luthor
Por Bryan Cairns 22 Nov 2016


What’s in a name? Just ask Brenda Strong, the actor brining Lillian Luthor, the mother of Superman’s classic foe, to life on “Supergirl.”

As soon as “Desperate Housewives”/”Dallas” alum joined The CW series’ second season as an enigmatic Cadmus scientist with an axe to grind with the Girl of Steel, she engineered Metallo and sicced him on Superman and Supergirl. It wasn’t until a couple of episodes into the season, however, that Strong’s character was revealed to be the mother of Lena and Lex Luthor.

That bombshell certainly explained Lillian’s vendetta against the Kryptonian cousins and she’s been a major threat ever since. In last night’s episode, “The Darkest Place,” Lillian released the Cyborg Superman – and as Strong told CBR in a recent interview, that’s only the tip of the iceberg.

CBR: There wasn’t a lot known about your character Lillian Luthor from her first few appearances — not even her real name. She was simply a Cadmus scientist. What were some of the key points or characteristics that you wanted to establish with her?

Brenda Strong: The main thing for me, because I rarely play a character interpreted as a villain, was to find the through line commitment for her. Nobody ever thinks they are a villain. They are just super-committed to their goal. For me, it was trying to establish what her value system was and what she was willing to do to achieve the outcome. That really gave me a single-minded purpose. With that in mind, whatever you learn as an audience – obviously we now know she’s Lillian Luthor – it starts to add layers to whatever there was underneath that we sensed, but didn’t know the specifics of.

How do you feel having the surname Luthor added another dimension to the character?

Just from a historical context – even the fact that I was playing Sue Ellen on “Seinfeld” against Julia Louis-Dreyfus’ character Elaine – we called her Elaine’s Lex Luthor. In the consciousness of anyone who has grown up with the mythology of Superman, Lex Luthor is the epitome of evil. So to be the mother of evil is quite a daunting and exciting undertaking.

What is Lillian’s beef with Supergirl and other alien visitors?

Mostly, it’s out of protection and vengeance for what she sees as the inequity of what Lex got in his multi-year sentence. She feels that was not a fair shake because Lex was a real Superman, as you heard her say. I think Lillian is trying to right the wrongs against her family, but I also think there is an underlying message about anything that is an “other” as a threat. We all project something that we don’t understand as a threat to us. Obviously the audience sees Superman and Supergirl as the heroic characters that they are. To her, they are a threat because they represent a power she doesn’t personally have. That’s where that vengeance streak comes in, which is to want to eradicate anything else from happening to her family. It’s like Mama Bear.

Lillian has proclaimed she wants to “save the world.” It sounds very altruistic.

Right. Like I said, nobody believes they are a villain. Lillian actually thinks she is eradicating the world from a threat. She is trying to save the world — or, the world that she knows.

In last night’s episode, Lillian poisoned Mon-El, blackmailed Supergirl and let the Cyborg Superman loose. What were your thoughts on the lengths that she’s willing to go to accomplish her goals?

Lillian’s really committed, no pun intended. She’s definitely a fierce adversary, and I do think she has a little bit of a blind spot in that single-minded purpose. Ultimately, like any good villain, she’s not going to stop until she gets what she wants.

You jokingly used the word “committed,” and Lillian does come across as a bit of a mad scientist. When does obsession become too dangerous or do the means justify the end?

That is such a great moral question. Everybody could ask themselves that and come up with a whole slew of different answers. It just goes back to the question of, when is it right to do the wrong thing? That opens up a whole can of worms about good and evil, black and white. Where’s the gray?

Ultimately, she isn’t crazy, but she’s definitely committed to the end. It does justify the means for her. Obviously, she’s been willing to sacrifice any kind of personal relationships with this single-minded focus. There are costs for this character to achieve her commitment.

How will that mentality clash with her daughter Lena’s way of thinking?

First of all, I love the character and what they’ve done with her. I love playing with this relationship. It’s a very tricky relationship in a lot of respects, as a lot of mother/daughter relationships are. But, when you include the added twist that Lena is adopted, it creates a lot of tension of belonging and “am I really a Luthor or not? And what is my role in this family?”

There is a lot of psychology that needs to be worked out between these two. I don’t think it’s going to be wrapped up easily in one or two episodes. This is good ground to cover over many, many episodes because it’s a very complex relationship. I don’t think we know a lot about what Lena is thinking. That’s part of the enigmatic nature of the character. It’s pretty clear what Mama Luthor is thinking, so we are going to have to wait and see.

How much are we going to learn about Lillian’s past and her ties to Jeremiah Danvers?

I don’t know if you’ve been following the postulations on the Internet, but that is definitely something that has raised a lot of questions for a lot of people. I have to say, I’m unfortunately not in the know. I only get scripts that concern me, so I only know what I am supposed to know, I’m really curious to see that unfold as well. I can’t wait. I guess the two words are “stay tuned.”

This happened on “Twin Peaks” as well. Writers know a certain amount about a character they’ve established. There’s a certain amount known in the comic book. Then there’s this gray matter that’s out there for definition, that actually hasn’t been defined yet. In a lot of ways, how we play things is leading the minds of the writers. There are certain futures they have in their minds that they could play out, but are waiting to see, in some respects, how we play with each other.

In what ways will Lillian continue to cause trouble for Supergirl and company?

In every way possible that she sees fit. She has a lot of different enemies at her fingertips that she can throw at Supergirl. I think you are going to see a plethora of Cadmus characters come out in order to defeat Supergirl.

Even in next week’s episode, “Medusa,” Lillian unleashes something that could have devastating consequences.

Absolutely and that’s her intention. Her intention is to wipe out all alien existence on Earth. The Medusa Virus is the thing to do that.


http://www.cbr.com/brenda-strong-talks-supergirl/?

- Brenda Strong sobre el 'conflicto innato' entre las mujeres Luthor (EW):
Brenda Strong sobre el 'conflicto innato' entre las mujeres Luthor
Por Chancellor Agard 23 Nov 2016


Don’t expect the Luthors to break bread together in Supergirl’s upcoming Thanksgiving-themed episode.

In Monday’s installment, evil Cadmus scientist Lillian Luthor (Brenda Strong) puts her plan to eradicate all aliens from Earth in motion. And you can expect her actions to add even more tension to her already-fraught relationship with her daughter Lena (Katie McGrath), who is trying to reform her family’s notorious image and to whom Supergirl (Melissa Benoist) turns to for help in the episode.

EW caught with Strong ahead of Monday’s episode, “Medusa” to talk about Lillian and Lena’s complex relationship, the Danvers family’s awkward Thanksgiving dinner, and what Cadmus Labs is doing with Jeremiah Danvers (Dean Cain).

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Episode 207 ended with Cyborg Superman (David Harewood) going to the Fortress of Solitude to retrieve something called Project Medusa. What is Medusa?
BRENDA STRONG: Medusa plays very strongly in the next episode, which is episode 208, and it’s basically a virus. It’s one of those exclusive viruses that doesn’t touch anyone whose organic material is human. It only attacks anything that is alien, and it’s a big one. So, that poses imminent threat to the planet.

How did Lillian and Cyborg Superman know that Superman had the virus?
Well, [probably from] the underground intelligence world…I think she’s a scientist, so I’m sure there are things about alien life forms that she’s aware of. Obviously, she needed to weaken Supergirl enough so that she could take her blood in order to have the key to unlock what was there and to get ahold of it. I’m sure that was her intention from the very beginning. I’m sure there was some mythology that led up to her knowledge of the Medusa virus and how to get it. I think whenever you have a single-minded purpose — like Lillian Luthor does in eradicating all alien life forms from the planet, because she sees them as an imminent threat to humanity — you’ll do anything, and I’m sure she has a lot of people who aren’t fans of Superman and Supergirl to aid her in her destruction.

Was it hard to get into the mindset of a character who has so much hate for one part of the population?
Well, I think being a parent sets you up to justify almost anything to protect your child, and I think she really, honestly believes that Lex was wronged and unfairly treated and wrongfully imprisoned because of Superman and his lies that he spread about Lex and the misinterpretation of his intentions. I think, ultimately, she’s the big mamma bear that’s not only going to wreak havoc on anyone that has mistreated her blood, but also, she has a greater intent: She truly believes that aliens are a threat to humanity and that they become the enemy at any time. They may be acting like they’re doing good works, but they have powers that we don’t have, and we need to make sure that they’re not putting us in a weak position. I think there are two fields of play here — the personal and the global.

Lena wasn’t too pleased to see her mother when she showed up at LCorp at the end of episode 205. What’s their relationship like?
I think any mother with a daughter can tell you it’s complex, but there’s the added layer of Lena being adopted, and I think there is definitely a strain because Lena doesn’t feel that she is prioritized and she feels Lex was [her mother’s] favorite. I basically come out and admit that in some respects. I think it’s a very complex relationship and I think there’s a lot of hurt on both ends, because I do believe that they have hurt each other over the years. So, there is a strain [on] their relationship. And I think any mother and daughter will tell you that there is a power struggle within a mother-daughter relationship. So, I think that’s definitely at play here, too. Obviously, Lena is very aligned with Supergirl and very much wants her as a friend and wants to change the way the Luthors are perceived in society. I think we’re working against different ends entirely, and it’s difficult.

Is it fair to say that Lena and Lillian aren’t on the same page when it comes to aliens?
I would agree with that. I don’t think they are on the same page.

How much does Lena know about her mother’s job at Cadmus?
At this point, she doesn’t know anything at all. But come “Medusa,” she’s going to start finding out more about her mother’s nefarious mission and that will have an impact on their relationship.

Lena befriending and working with Supergirl is probably another blow to their relationship, right?
Yeah, I think so because it’s a mirror of what happened with Superman and Lex. In 207, she basically says, “Superman destroyed my son, and I won’t let it happen to my daughter.” So, she’s very protective of Lena and her relationship, and when she saw the two of them together, I think it was probably was a blow to her. You know, we all interpret reality based on how we see things, and when two people are seeing things from two different perspectives, there’s innate conflict and that’s what makes great TV. So, I think that’s what you’re having here: two different missions and two different loyalties within the same construct. I’m one of six kids and not all of us see the world the same way, so that adds for interesting Thanksgivings. Speaking of which, we have a really fun episode coming up with a really fun Thanksgiving meal.

Does that Thanksgiving meal involve Lena and Lillian or are you talking about the Danvers?
Oh, the Danvers. My understanding is that it’s really funny because it seems like everyone wants to share their secrets: Alex, played by Chyler Leigh, decides it’s time to come out to her mother; Kara is shocked when Eliza [Helen Slater] suggests that Mon-El has feelings for her [because] she doesn’t even see that coming; and Winn and James have this huge secret about who Guardian is. Everyone wants to share their secrets, but nobody is allowed to talk because it just becomes a cluster of intent that doesn’t really ever come out well. I think it makes for great comedy when you have everyone wanting to share something but nobody gets to share it in a way that they expect to.

In last Monday’s episode, Jeremiah decided to stay behind at Cadmus after freeing Kara and Mon-El. What is Cadmus doing to him and why does he choose to stay?
That is definitely the super million dollar question from a lot of fans online. I’ve noticed they have all sorts of theories about Jeremiah’s role in Cadmus: Is he really a prisoner or is he in alliances with me? That’s something you’re going to have to stay [for] and find out. We don’t know, but I have a feeling it’s going to be interesting once everybody gets the reveal.


http://www.ew.com/article/2016/11/23/su ... ian-luthor?

- Actualización del romance de Supergirl: "Se dirige Kara a un cuadrado amoroso completo? (TVLine):
Actualización del romance de Supergirl: "Se dirige Kara a un cuadrado amoroso completo?
Por Andy Swift / 27 Nov 2016, 6:00 AM PST


If Mon-El’s inquiry into Kara’s relationship status on this week’s Supergirl didn’t raise your eyebrow, you might want to give that last scene a second look.

Because, while we all figured that a Kara/Mon-El pairing was imminent, I’ll admit I was not expecting such an overtly suspicious response from former love interests Winn and James. (At least, I think “former” is the right word.)

On Winn’s part, “I think he’s a little bit worried that Mon-El might be moving in on Kara, and I think it brings up old feelings in Winn that he’s sort of packed down,” Jeremy Jordan tells TVLine. “He never really dealt with what went down with Kara in Season 1, so if something stars happening there, he’s going to have to figure out how to deal with it.”

As for James, executive producer Andrew Kreisberg may have told reporters that he and Kara as “best as friends,” but that doesn’t mean the photographer-turned-vigilante is necessarily over her.

So, what do we think? Is Kara headed for a full-on love quadrangle? (And that’s not even including Sara Lance, who apparently crushes hard on the Girl of Steel during this week’s four-way Arrow-verse crossover.)


http://tvline.com/2016/11/27/supergirl- ... ames-winn/

Re: "SUPERGIRL", nueva serie en la CBS/CW

Publicado: Lun Nov 21, 2016 7:25 pm
por Shelby
- Nuevo póster promocional del 2.08 "Medusa" y banner del crossover:

Imagen Imagen

Re: "SUPERGIRL", nueva serie en la CBS/CW

Publicado: Mar Nov 22, 2016 11:20 am
por Shelby
- The Flash, Arrow, Supergirl, DC's Legends of Tomorrow | "4 Night Crossover Event w/ Final Fantasy" Promo:


- The Flash, Arrow, Supergirl, DC's Legends of Tomorrow | "4 Night Crossover Event" Promo #3:


- The Flash, Arrow, Supergirl, DC's Legends of Tomorrow | "4 Night Crossover Event" 2 Minutes Promo:


- The Flash, Arrow, Supergirl, DC's Legends of Tomorrow | "4 Night Crossover Event" Extended Promo:
https://twitter.com/TheCW/status/802557562587463680

Re: "SUPERGIRL", nueva serie en la CBS/CW

Publicado: Jue Nov 24, 2016 4:51 pm
por Shelby
- SUPERGIRL | 2.08 "Medusa" Inside the Episode:



- SUPERGIRL | 2.08 "Medusa" Clip #1:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AWjKHtkwfLc
http://tvline.com/2016/11/24/supergirl- ... n-2-video/


- SUPERGIRL | 2.08 "Medusa" Clip #2:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vsg7EBcZef0

Re: "SUPERGIRL", nueva serie en la CBS/CW

Publicado: Lun Nov 28, 2016 12:13 am
por Shelby
- The Flash, Arrow, Supergirl, DC's Legends of Tomorrow | "DC Week Crossover" - Melissa Benoist Interview:
https://twitter.com/TheCWSupergirl/stat ... 4694267904



- The 4 night crossover event starts TONIGHT at 8/7c with a new #Supergirl on The CW! #DCWeek @MelissaBenoist:

https://twitter.com/TheCWSupergirl/stat ... 6143156224

Re: "SUPERGIRL", nueva serie en la CBS/CW

Publicado: Lun Nov 28, 2016 8:38 pm
por Shelby
- Las estrellas de Arrow, Flash, y Supergirl explican la magia que los hace elevarse (EW):
Las estrellas de Arrow, Flash, y Supergirl explican la magia que los hace elevarse
Por Jeff Jensen & Natalie Abrams 28 Nov 2016 — 11:50 AM EST


Once upon a time, Christopher Reeve put on a cape and made us believe a man can fly.

On this blustery October afternoon, Melissa Benoist, star of Supergirl, is about to prove that a woman in a suit can soar too.

We’re on the set of the most comic-booky thing you’ll see on TV this year, an epic team-up of superheroes culled from The CW’s spinner rack of graphic-novel pop: Arrow, The Flash, DC’s Legends of Tomorrow, and yes, the one about the strange visitor from another planet who’s faster than a speeding bullet, more powerful than a locomotive, and able to shatter glass ceilings in a single bound. The story that weaves through the four-night crossover event (beginning Nov. 28 on Supergirl) involves a meaner type of alien: the Dominators, mind-controlling space invaders alarmed by Earth’s surging population of metahumans. Concerned about our culture’s superhero glut? Apparently you’re not alone.


Exactly 15 characters from four shows — all produced by small-screen powerhouse Greg Berlanti — have assembled in an airplane hangar outside Vancouver. It’s doubling for an aeronautics facility that’s part of S.T.A.R. Labs, but special effects will later remodel this big bland box to slyly evoke an iconic piece of cartoon architecture: the Hall of Justice from the 1970s Super Friends series. Almost none of the avengers assembled are wearing their costumes (laundry day, I guess), but their civilian attire allows the one with the big red S on her chest to make an impression.

In the scene, the Flash’s alter ego, Barry Allen (Grant Gustin), is introducing Supergirl to his fellow freedom fighters after fetching the Maiden of Might from her alternate-reality Earth. There’s another, implied layer of significance to this ceremonious meet-and-greet: Supergirl, which aired on CBS last season, is new to The CW this year, and so the moment represents a welcoming party, albeit one that plays like a confirmation hearing. Oliver Queen (Stephen Amell), a.k.a. Green Arrow, and his right-hand man, John “Spartan” Diggle (David Ramsey), stand with arms folded, wanting to know what makes Supergirl so super. She launches into the air, hovers, and descends. “I’m convinced,” says Diggle.

In actuality, the stunt is more complicated than that, and less graceful, too. It requires hoisting Benoist into the air as she jumps using a harness and pulley hanging from the rafters. Off timing results in some awkward effects, and it takes a few tries to get a shot in which she isn’t listing and wobbling. The hardest part for Benoist? The all-star squadron of spectators. “I’m usually in the comfort zone of my own set, where we have a system down. So to do it in front of all these people in a different place, I was nervous,” she says. “It took a little dialing-in to get it down.” Judging from the admiring gazes of her fellow actors, Benoist sold the illusion.

“I was geeking out,” says Candice Patton (The Flash’s Iris West), who was on set for this moment and idolized Catwoman and Supergirl as a kid. “It’s so cool, especially as a girl, and a young girl who grew up looking up to those characters.”

The elevating success of Supergirl is equally appreciated among the less-colorful suits who run The CW. This season, the shows that constitute the so-called Arrowverse anchor four nights of programming, potently expressing the brand identity cultivated by network president Mark Pedowitz: high-concept, serialized genre soaps engineered for intense emotional investment. “We’re not just a home for superheroes, but we’re very proud to have them,” he says.

The Arrowverse has an alternate moniker, the Berlantiverse, named after the producer who presides over it, and he has some feelings about the term. “I object to it, to be honest. There are just so many people that are also part of this,” says Berlanti, 44, whose prodigious output began with Everwood in 2002 and currently includes Blindspot on NBC. “Plus, you never want anything named after you that people could be upset or angry about.”

Produced in collaboration with Marc Guggenheim and Andrew Kreisberg, Berlanti’s small-screen treatments of Warner Bros.’ DC Comics properties offer an alternative — some might argue a correction — to the studio’s big-screen superhero pop, including the apocalyptic heavy metal of Zack Snyder’s Man of Steel flicks and the bubblegum nihilism of David Ayer’s Suicide Squad. All heightened-reality serials wrestle with tone and indulge darkness to stay interesting, and Berlanti’s shows are no exception. Still, the Arrowverse actually likes superheroes, believes in superheroes, and knows how to have fun with them — and critique them — without deconstructing them to smithereens. They possess the levity of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (still the genre’s gold standard), and the progressiveness of its best TV offerings (Jessica Jones, Luke Cage), but they have a more carefree embrace of melodrama and whimsy.

And more so than ever, the Arrowverse has been hitting the creative bull’s-eye this fall. The Flash, Arrow, and Legends are bouncing back after rocky seasons, and Supergirl has been soaring after launching a genuinely credible, compelling, and charismatic Superman (Tyler Hoechlin) and giving the Arrowverse its first lesbian series regular when Kara’s stepsister, Alex (Chyler Leigh), came out last week. Each show has a singular identity, but they all share winning values that are shaping the tenor of new-century superheroes. Those qualities, Berlanti says, begin here:

1. THEY HAVE A SILVER-AGE SOUL

The rise of the Arrowverse lies in the ruin of another superhero dream. In 2007, Berlanti, Guggenheim, and Michael Green (Heroes) wrote a film script that would become Green Lantern starring Ryan Reynolds. Their reference point was the Silver Age of comics, the midcentury renaissance that rebooted Golden Age characters, launched a Marvel revolution, and injected modernist themes — irreverence, psychological angst, social concerns, space-age wonder, and atomic-age anxiety — into the fantasy. But their vision was muddied when Berlanti lost the director’s job to Martin Campbell and the script was rewritten. After collecting more learning experiences on TV projects including the short-lived ABC show No Ordinary Family, Berlanti and Guggenheim pitched Arrow to Warner Bros. Their previous flameout taught them to insist on three things: “Control, control, and control,” says Guggenheim.

Arrow was a savvy cornerstone upon which to build a shared universe. The saga of a vengeful vigilante fitfully transforming into a more virtuous superhero, Arrow belonged to the Dark Knight moment but represented a slow pivot away from it, too. In 2014, Berlanti used Arrow to launch The Flash and broaden the possibilities of his storytelling. His interest in the character reveals a lot about his geek sensibilities. He fell for the Scarlet Speedster via Crisis on Infinite Earths, a comic crossover extravaganza first published in 1985 involving hundreds of characters, a mysterious big bad, and a cosmic plot with world-shattering stakes. Most fanboys remember Crisis as the mother of all reboots. Berlanti loved it as a thing unto itself, a crazy, sprawling, life-or-death melodrama. When it comes to managing the Arrowverse, “that’s my touchstone,” he says.

2. THEY AREN’T AFRAID OF SOAP OPERA

The Arrowverse is steeped in genuine relationship drama, something that has distinguished all of Berlanti’s work since his days as a writer on Dawson’s Creek. But this, too, is very comic-compatible. While other Hollywood geeks take the antihero masterpieces of Alan Moore (Watchmen) and Frank Miller (Sin City) as influences, Guggenheim and Kreisberg pull from sources before the medium’s adult-skewing age: the team comics of the early ’80s — Fantastic Four, The Uncanny X-Men, and The New Teen Titans — tales of makeshift families fraught with dysfunction and romance. “Those were my soaps,” says Kreisberg, adding he still tears up recalling The New Teen Titans #50, when Dick Grayson confronts Bruce Wayne at Donna Troy’s wedding about why he never adopted him back in the Batman and Robin days.

The emphasis on team dynamics — an idea inspired by Buffy the Vampire Slayer, says Berlanti — does more than generate sudsy feels. It leads to a nuanced, humane kind of superhero fantasy that subverts its queasiest aspect, the all-about-me wish fulfillment. The current season of The Flash began with Barry abusing his speed to change his tragic history, only to create a timeline that leads to loss for his friends and disenfranchised countless others. How does he respond? How does his community respond? This kind of story — a timely, woke allegory about power, privilege, guilt, atonement, and reconciliation — illuminates the third rail that charges Berlanti’s shows…

3. THEY’RE ABOUT SOMETHING

Ask Peter Roth, president of Warner Bros. Television, why Berlanti was ideal for Arrow, and he recalls the origin story of their relationship. “I read the script for Everwood on a Saturday in November of 2001, right after 9/11, and I thought it was such a brilliant metaphor and antidote for what was going on in our country,” says Roth. “My belief in him, along with one of the most compelling pitches I’ve ever heard, led to Arrow.”

Berlanti — openly gay, politically liberal, a father — continues to express his worldview and attitudes about diversity, equal rights, and justice through the Arrowverse. Legends of Tomorrow, an adventure about a motley band of time travelers, opened the season with its heroes averting a history-warping catastrophe by producing a smaller change: convincing Albert Einstein to publicly acknowledge the contributions of his wife to his work. This season Arrow is building toward a story in which Oliver Queen — who’s not only back to being a killer but is now also the mayor of Star City — will have to confront the consequences of his morally murky war on crime and terror. In a timely move, Supergirl recently introduced a female president, played by original Wonder Woman Lynda Carter. “These shows have to work on multiple levels,” says Berlanti. “You want them to be enjoyable. But if they’re not about something, why are you showing up to work every day and asking everybody to pour their heart and soul into a story if it’s only about the Flash fighting a villain of the week?”

As resonant as the Arrowverse has been, the immense imagination and spectacular ambitions of Berlanti’s shows will always be frustrated by limited time and resources. The clock could be ticking on the series that started it all: Stephen Amell thinks Arrow is at a crossroads following a tonally turbulent season 4. “We’re either going to do what we do and do it well, or it’s the last year,” he says. “If we find that magic formula — which is not magic, it’s just hard work and playing to your strengths — then the show could go on for a really long time.” Meanwhile, Berlanti continues to plot bold moves. Coming later this season: a Supergirl-Flash musical crossover. “We’ve always gone with our gut, and if we’ve liked it, we’ve been a little fearless about it,” he says. “We certainly made errors along the way. But that’s been part of the fun, too.”


http://www.ew.com/article/2016/11/28/ar ... over-story?

- Andrew Kreisberg Explica el por qué el crossover con Supergirl no está completo de "Invasion" (comicbook):
Andrew Kreisberg Explica el por qué el crossover con Supergirl no está completo de "Invasion"
Por Russ Burlingame 28/11/2016


While The CW will attempt something no network has done before starting tonight with a four-night, four-series crossover between Supergirl, The Flash, Arrow, and DC's Legends of Tomorrow, the first part of that story -- tonight's Supergirl episode -- will only sort-of be part of the story.

The Flash, Arrow, and Legends of Tomorrow all have full episodes dedicated to the storyline and titled "Invasion!," the name of the 1988 comic book crossover storyline their title will loosely adapt. Tonight's Supergirl is called "Medusa," named for a Kryptonian project name-dropped at the end of last week's episode.

Supergirl, which aired on CBS last season and has not crossed over much with the characters of the "Arrowverse," has been a major part of marketing the "Heroes vs. Aliens" event, so some fans have (not entirely unreasonably) wondered why her series' involvement in the crossover itself feels like it was a bit downplayed.

During a screening of The Flash, Arrow, and Legends of Tomorrow that took place earlier today in Los Angeles, executive producer Andrew Kreisberg, who works on all four of the shows but seems to be most hands-on with Supergirl these days, explained the approach, saying that it was almost exclusively a practical decision.

"All of the other episodes — Flash, Arrow, and Legends — all have a subsequent episode to the crossovers, but with Supergirl it was the midseason finale, so we wanted to make sure that episode eight of Supergirl spoke to what had been happening in the first seven episodes of the season,” Kreisberg said. “And then just, logistically speaking, last year we did two shows with a sprinkling of Legends. This year we went to three shows. The idea of going to four full shows, I’m not sure if we could have pulled off logistically speaking.”

Similarly, Kreisberg pointed out, Kara was not in much of last week’s episode (she was captured by Cadmus, and other characters took the stage) because they were freeing up five days on series star Benoist’s schedule to appear in the other series.

Arrow, The Flash, and Supergirl will cross over with DC's Legends of Tomorrow this week in "Invasion!" a three-part crossover that starts in the final moments of an episode of Supergirl and then plays through the other series. Based on the 1988 comic book event miniseries Invasion! from Keith Giffen, Bill Mantlo, Todd McFarlane, Bart Sears, and the crossover -- with its marketing title "Heroes vs. Aliens" -- will closely track the plot of that storyline: aliens will be assembled by The Dominators and descend on Earth to bring an end to the "threat" of Earth's burgeoning metahuman community.

In the comics, the Dominion were secretly hoping to build their own super-race, and as a result created a handful of new superheroes in the course of the story.

In the TV version, rather than assembling a loose alliance of dangerous alien races, the Dominators will apparently be mind-controlling the aliens that join them. That's a revelation that suggests even the heroes might be forced to take one another (or at least the alien Supergirl) on at some point in the story.


Supergirl airs Mondays at 8 p.m. ET/PT; The Flash on Tuesdays at the same time; Arrow on Wednesdays and DC's Legends of Tomorrow on Thursdays. All four series air on The CW. The "Invasion!" crossover will air beginning November 28.


http://comicbook.com/2016/11/28/andrew- ... ode-isnt-/

- Supergirl: ¿Qué es lo siguiente tras esas grandes revelaciones de la finale de invierno? (EW):
Supergirl: ¿Qué es lo siguiente tras esas grandes revelaciones de la finale de invierno?
Por Natalie Abrams 28 Nov 2016 — 9:09 PM EST


Warning: This story contains major spoilers from the winter finale of Supergirl. Read at your own risk!

Supergirl’s winter finale kicked off the upcoming four-way crossover with The Flash, Arrow, and DC’s Legends of Tomorrow, bringing Barry Allen and Cisco Ramon to Kara’s universe to enlist her help in fighting the Dominators. But that was the least of several big surprises in the final Supergirl episode of 2016.

In the winter finale, Cadmus unleashed Project Medusa, a Kryptonian-made virus created by Kara’s (Melissa Benoist) father with the sole purpose of killing other aliens. Ultimately, Lena Luthor (Katie McGrath) was able to prevent a widespread dispersion by pretending to side with her adoptive evil mother Lillian (Brenda Strong), but instead neutralizing the virus and turning dear mother in to the police.

“We have absolutely not seen the last of Lillian and Cadmus,” executive producer Andrew Kreisberg tells EW. “Sometimes an enemy is deadliest when they are trapped. How Lillian deals with her incarceration and what happens moving forward will make up part of the storyline of the next batch of episodes. But Cadmus is a multi-tiered organization, and like the worst terrorist groups, you cut down one head, another rises in its place.”

The question remains whether Lena truly is on Supergirl’s side; after all, she is a Luthor. “I don’t want to say definitively, because this season is all about testing Lena,” Kreisberg says. “She’s passed the goodness tests that have been placed in front of her up until now, but you always have to wonder if there is going to be a bridge too far for her where she will inherit the Luthor mantle of being a true enemy for Supergirl.”

Believing he would die after being infected by Medusa, Mon-El (Chris Wood) kissed Kara, though played dumb once he was healed — something that will continue when the show returns. “The chemistry between Chris and Melissa is definitely palpable, and we’re loving writing their characters together,” Kreisberg says. “The next episode is a big Kara/Mon-El story that we’re really excited about. They’re both obviously playing coy about what happened, neither admitting that they actually did kiss, so how and when that comes out is going to be fun and delicious.” Also on tap to shake up their blossoming relationship: There are aliens apparently hunting down Mon-El.

Elsewhere, Alex (Chyler Leigh) successfully came out to her mother Eliza (Helen Slater), helping Alex to realize that this is her “new normal” and coming out wasn’t necessarily tied to Maggie (Floriana Lima). Maggie, in turn, realized her own feelings for Alex after her near-death experience, leading to a steamy kiss. “The chemistry between Chyler and Floriana, if you could bottle and sell that, you could rule the world,” Kreisberg says. “They so deserve to be together, but like any great couple, they had to get past their own stuff to finally get there.”

“This is our holiday episode, it’s our midseason finale, and nothing ends this section of the show better and sends us into our next batch of episodes than having a kiss,” Kreisberg continues. “It was really important for us to progress this relationship along and to have it pay off everything that came before it. Everyone who works on this show loves Alex Danvers and wants good things for her and Maggie, so we decided to go for it.”

Stay tuned for much more scoop on Supergirl — including teases on Mon-El’s big secret, what’s next for J’onn and where Alex and Maggie’s relationship will fare — during the winter hiatus!

Supergirl will return in 2017.



http://www.ew.com/article/2016/11/28/su ... e-spoilers

- Marc Guggenheim adelanta el Mega-Crossover, Celebrando el episodio 100 de ‘Arrow’ (Variety):
Marc Guggenheim adelanta el Mega-Crossover, Celebrando el episodio 100 de ‘Arrow’
Por Jacob Bryant 29 Nov, 2016 | 11:48AM PT


When “Arrow” debuted in 2012, who knew it would become the launchpad to an enormous shared universe across four shows? The first show began by introducing Barry Allen in its second season, before “The Flash” became it’s own show. Then the two shows pulled off their first crossover in 2014, and last year “Arrow” and “The Flash” crossed over again while simultaneously launching a third show, “Legends of Tomorrow.”

Now, in what has become an annual end-of-year event, the Arrowverse is poised to pull off its biggest crossover yet with “Arrow,” “The Flash,” “Legends of Tomorrow” and the CW’s newest addition, “Supergirl.”

Variety spoke with executive producer Marc Guggenheim about the stress of planning a four-show crossover, celebrating “Arrow’s” 100th episode and more…

Two years ago was the first crossover; last year, the crossover launched a new show; this year, it’s a three-part crossover with four shows. Are you just trying to find new ways to make these crossovers more complicated every year?

It certainly seems to be what we’re doing. Every year we pull it off and it’s a small miracle, and then the next year we try to find a way to increase the degree of difficulty. Truth be told, the whole thing is really an exercise in insanity and we just keep making it harder and harder and harder on ourselves.

How difficult was it to schedule everything this year across the four shows?

It was definitely hard. The thing we learned from last year was ways to make scheduling more efficient. One thing we did this year was we built two shutdown days into “Flash” and “Arrow” and “Legends.” What that did was alleviate some of the pressure. It didn’t solve all of our scheduling problems by any stretch of the imagination, but it did improve the efficiency of things. From what I’ve been told from the actors, the scheduling actually went smoother this year than last year.

Did you get to be on set when everyone was there and suited up?

No! I wasn’t unfortunately. I tend to go up for the prep. It’s in the prep that I feel I can do the most good — or the most damage.

Why choose the Dominators as the villain for the crossover?

For us, it didn’t start out so much as, “Well let’s do the Dominators,” but it started out as us knowing we wanted an external threat — something that wasn’t tied to the mythology, or big bads, of any of the shows. We wanted it to be something that came outside the four shows to threaten the heroes and the world. From there, we landed on aliens invading, and when you’re in the DC Universe and you talk about aliens, our heads immediately went to “Invasion!” which was a story that didn’t introduce the Dominators, but popularized them.

Aliens are a big focus in “Supergirl,” but not so much with the other shows. How do the characters in “Flash,” “Arrow” and “Legends” react?

They all handle it a little differently. For a lot of these characters, they’ve reached the point where they’ve dealt with time travel, parallel universes and super powers, so were aliens that much of a leap? In the case of the crossover, I think Oliver Queen (Stephen Amell) has the most visceral response to aliens. For him, it might be the straw that breaks the camel’s back, or the bridge to far, for him.

It’s also “Arrow’s” 100th episode. Did that add even more pressure to the crossover?

Yeah — to the point where we were wondering if it was even going to be possible. Greg [Berlanti] came up with a really terrific device that could only be done with the crossover, but works perfectly with the 100th episode of “Arrow” that really allowed us to have our cake and eat it too.

What kind of an impact do the new recruits in “Arrow” play in the crossover?

The recruits play a pretty large role in the crossover — probably a little larger role than people are expecting. You would think that with all of these different characters that the recruits would take a back seat, but they’re right there front and center. One of the fun things was seeing their reactions. I think Wild Dog’s (Rick Gonzalez) reaction is priceless.

Nate just got his costume last week in “Legends” and this is his first major team-up. How does he handle it?

In many respects, he’s got a pretty calm demeanor about it. In some respects, when you have all these characters, you kind of have to pick your spots. You don’t want to have this montage of characters standing there with their mouth agape. Thea (Willa Holland) and Diggle’s (David Ramsey) reaction, because they come from the most grounded show of the three, they tend to get most of those moments.

This is the first time the Legends have been back in 2016 since Flashpoint. Do they notice anything funky?

Yeah. Stein (Victor Garber) is going to notice something pretty funky, to use your word, when they get back.

Speaking of Stein, does the issue of the message from future Barry get brought up?

You’re going to hear more of the message, yes.

Would you consider doing another four-show crossover in the future, or do you want to keep them a little smaller going forward?

Truth be told, I think that’s something that is more up to the network and the audience. If there’s an appetite for it from the fans and from the network, I would think that next year we could do a proper four-part crossover.


http://variety.com/2016/tv/news/cw-cros ... 201928834/

- Andrew Kreisberg revela su equipo favorito del crossover de los superhéroes de la CW (CBR):
Andrew Kreisberg revela su equipo favorito del crossover de los superhéroes de la CW
Por Albert Ching 29 Nov 2016


A major part of the promise of any crossover is seeing characters interact who don’t normally get to share scenes. That certainly wasn’t lost on Andrew Kreisberg — an executive producer on “Supergirl,” “The Flash,” “Arrow” and “Legends of Tomorrow” — when approaching The CW’s “Invasion!” crossover between the four DC Comics-based superhero shows.

When asked by CBR during a Q&A Monday at The CW’s Burbank headquarters for his favorite meeting between unfamiliar characters in the crossover, Kreisberg picked the combination of what he dubbed “the most pure and good of heart” and “the biggest malcontent psychopath” — respectively Supergirl (Melissa Benoist) and Heat Wave (Dominic Purcell), a former villain on “The Flash” turned series regular on “Legends of Tomorrow.” A glimpse of their dynamic was already seen last week in a promotional video (check out the clip below starting at around the 0:56 mark), with fans getting a kick out of their awkward meeting seen in full on tonight’s episode of “The Flash.” (Heat Wave: “I burned my family alive, and I like to light things on fire.” Supergirl: “That’s a… colorful back story.”)

“Watching Supergirl deal with Heat Wave was a lot of fun to write,” Kreisberg told CBR. “It’s not a stretch to see that Kara would get along with Barry, Sara, Ray, that group. But watching the two of them have to deal with each other? Those scenes were even longer, because you just start writing and the dialogue comes to you. They’re such polar opposites, it’s so easy to watch them play off of each other. That was probably the one that was the most fun for me, especially because I don’t get to do a lot of writing on ‘Legends.’ To get to sit down and write Mick Rory again, and have him [interact] with Kara, that was probably the most fun writing I got to do on the crossover.”

The “Invasion!” crossover is based on a 1988-1989 DC Comics story of the same name by Keith Giffen, Bill Mantlo, Todd McFarlane and Bart Sears. Like the comics series, this week’s crossover is centered around an alien race known as The Dominators attacking Earth — which brings together the heroes of all four shows (including Supergirl, who, as fans knows, lives on a separate Earth).

Following a short prelude in Monday’s “Supergirl,” the crossover continues tonight at 8 on The CW with “The Flash,” then tomorrow at 8 p.m. on “Arrow,” before concluding Thursday at 8 p.m. with “DC’s Legends of Tomorrow.”


http://www.cbr.com/the-flash-ep-reveals ... crossover/?

- El Crossover de DC de la CW: ¿Por qué The Dominators? (ksitetv):
El Crossover de DC de la CW: ¿Por qué The Dominators?
Por Craig Byrne 29 Nov, 2016 Craig Byrne


This week’s DC Comics show crossover on The CW kicks into high gear with The Flash tonight, and many might be wondering how the shows’ producers landed upon using the alien Dominators from DC’s Invasion! crossover as the threat that the heroes unite to defeat.

Speaking to press yesterday, Arrow and DC’s Legends of Tomorrow Executive Producer Marc Guggenheim discussed the genesis of the idea.

“It was Greg [Berlanti]’s idea to do the Dominators,” Guggenheim told the room. “I don’t want to speak for Greg, but I think the way it came out was we all collectively wanted the superheroes to face an external threat. And by external, I don’t mean extraterrestrial, I mean not a Big Bad from one of the shows; rather, a threat that came from outside of the shows. Greg just walked in one day and was like, ‘Let’s do Invasion!‘ I think we both had the exact same twin reactions: that’s totally awesome and oh my God, how the hell are we going to do that?” he recalled.

invasion1“I’m a big fan of that particular series and I’m a big Bill Mantlo fan,” Guggenheim said, referencing the prolific comic book writer of the 1970s and 1980s who was sadly struck down by a hit and run driver in 1992. In addition to creating or co-creating such characters as Marvel’s Rocket Raccoon and the soon-to-be-a-Freeform-TV-series Cloak and Dagger, Mantlo was the writer of the original comic book Invasion! and his brother, Michael Mantlo, continues to care for his brother, who was forever damaged from the accident. BillMantlo.com has details on how fans can support Bill Mantlo’s care. “That particular series looms very large in my personal estimation,” Guggenheim says.

The Dominators do not have their robes that were worn in the original comics – visual effects-wise, that would be very time consuming – but the finished product does look very cool, which audiences will see tonight on The Flash.


http://www.ksitetv.com/green-arrow/cws- ... rs/132020/

- Guggenheim & Kreisberg explican por qué 'Invasion!' era la historia adecuada para el Crossover de la CW (CBR):
Guggenheim & Kreisberg explican por qué 'Invasion!' era la historia adecuada para el Crossover de la CW
Por Albert Ching 29 Nov 2016


This week, millions of viewers will watch The CW’s crossover between its four DC Comics-based superhero shows — “Supergirl,” “The Flash,” “Arrow” and “Legends of Tomorrow” — but if you’re not a longtime DC Comics fan, you’re likely not familiar with the story that inspired it.

This week’s crossover, titled “Invasion!,” is loosely adapted from a 1988-1989 DC Comics event series of the same name, from the creative team of Keith Giffen, Bill Mantlo, Todd McFarlane and Bart Sears. That story presented the alien Dominators, seen previously as “Legion of Super-Heroes” villains, as the leaders of an alliance of invaders, with Earth’s superheroes stepping up to save their planet. According to “Arrow” and “Legends” executive producer Marc Guggenheim, the decision to adapt “Invasion!” came directly from Greg Berlanti, the executive producer of all four shows participating in the crossover.

“It was Greg’s idea to do the Dominators,” Guggenheim told press including CBR during a Q&A Monday at The CW’s Burbank headquarters. “We all collectively wanted the superheroes to face an external threat. By external, I don’t mean extraterrestrial, I just mean not a big bad from one of the shows, but rather a threat that came from outside of the shows. Greg just walked in one day — ‘Let’s do Invasion!’ I think [Andrew Kreisberg and I] both had the exact same reaction: ‘That’s totally awesome’ and ‘Oh my god, how the hell are we going to do that?'”

“Invasion!” provided a special challenge for Guggenheim and Kreisberg (also an executive producer on all four of CW’s DC-based shows), who are both major comic book fans and comic book writers themselves — Guggenheim was announced this week as the writer of Marvel’s “X-Men Gold” series. Guggenheim was particularly excited to be adapting the work of Bill Mantlo, a veteran writer and the co-creator of Rocket Raccoon, who suffered permanent brain damage after being struck by a car in 1992.

“I’m a huge fan of [‘Invasion!’], and I’m a huge Bill Mantlo fan,” Guggenheim said. “That was Bill Mantlo’s first work at DC Comics after decades at Marvel, so that particular series looms very large in my personal estimation.”
Invasion!

According to both producers, the crossover was originally conceived as hewing closer to its source material, including in the visual depiction of the Dominators themselves.

“We originally had designed Dominators with the green robes that were very iconic of the comic,” Guggenheim said. “When we decided to do all the Dominators full CG, the robes had to go away, because the presence of the robes made animating them prohibitively impossible.”

“There was discussions about the size of their circles, and how that was indicative of where they stood in the caste system,” Kreisberg said. “I’m sorry some of that stuff went away, just because it was great flavor, and I think the people who are fans of the original comic book would have seen a lot more of our joy at adapting ‘Invasion!’ in there, but to get these down to the proper time, that’s the kind of stuff that tends to fall by the wayside.”

Following a short prelude in Monday’s “Supergirl,” “Invasion!” continues tonight at 8 on The CW with “The Flash,” then tomorrow at 8 p.m. on “Arrow,” before concluding Thursday at 8 p.m. with “DC’s Legends of Tomorrow.



http://www.cbr.com/guggenheim-kreisberg ... crossover/?


- Andrew Kreisberg revela su parte favorita del crossover de Invasion! (comicbook):
Andrew Kreisberg revela su parte favorita del crossover de Invasion!
Por Russ Burlingam 01/12/2016


Mainstream superhero comics are often talked about as being testosterone-fueled soap operas: the reason so many people come on board at a young age and stay for the rest of their lives is that they've formed a relationship with the characters.

That's why it's probably not surprising to learn that as much fun as it is to put all the toys together in one box and bang them all together in big, bombastic fight scenes on Arrow, The Flash, and DC's Legends of Tomorrow, what really makes the stories work in the mind of the producers is the relationships between the characters.

"I always love is when Barry is training Wally and he's trying to explain to him how to deal with things and then he goes, 'Oh God, I sound like Oliver,'" executive producer Andrew Kreisberg said. "These people all do know each other and they're all friends, especially Barry and Oliver. It's probably my favorite part of all three hours is them having a beer together. It's part of the story they always come together because of crises. Those little moments, like in last year's crossover when they were all, before The Vandal Savage attacked and they were all just having a drink together, like they do care about each other. They are brothers in arms."

That's how the crossover ended, of course: once everyone went home or back to their own time/universe, Barry and Oliver went out for a beer and toasted their weird, wonderful, superheroic lives.

"It's those little quiet moments between the fights that are the most interesting to me, as a writer and as a viewer. Hearing those little shout outs along the way, I think is, does a service to the relationships that they've all formed," Kreisberg continued. "It isn't like the crossovers of the 80's where they'd see each other for that one episode and then it was like it never happened. These things do happen and they do have ramifications and not all the ramifications are always bad. Some of them are just good because now these people have these amazing relationships that continue on."

Arrow, The Flash, and Supergirl will cross over with DC's Legends of Tomorrow this week in "Invasion!" a three-part crossover that starts in the final moments of an episode of Supergirl and then plays through the other series. Based on the 1988 comic book event miniseries Invasion! from Keith Giffen, Bill Mantlo, Todd McFarlane, Bart Sears, and the crossover -- with its marketing title "Heroes vs. Aliens" -- will closely track the plot of that storyline: aliens will be assembled by The Dominators and descend on Earth to bring an end to the "threat" of Earth's burgeoning metahuman community.


In the comics, the Dominion were secretly hoping to build their own super-race, and as a result created a handful of new superheroes in the course of the story.


http://comicbook.com/2016/12/02/andrew- ... ion-cross/

- ¿Qué fue cortado del crossover del Arrowverse crossover? (EW):
¿Qué fue cortado del crossover del Arrowverse crossover?
Por Natalie Abrams 01 Dic 2016 — 9:00 PM EST


The heroes of The Flash, Arrow, Supergirl, and DC’s Legends of Tomorrow saved the day, preventing the Dominators from essentially killing off all metahumans. And while the four-way crossover had a solid dose of heart and offered up some laughs, there were a few great moments that didn’t make the cut.

“[The crossover] came in wildly over [time], not surprising,” executive producer Andrew Kreisberg says. “You’ve got to keep the plot going, and you had to have room, especially in these episodes, which probably had even grander visual effects sequences than we’re used to in an average episode, so it tended to be those little jokey moments that fell by the wayside.”

Below, Kreisberg and fellow EP Marc Guggenheim reveal what else could’ve happened in the epic team-up:

An Alex/Sara romance that never was: “There was a little exchange between Sara [Caity Lotz] and Kara [Melissa Benoist] that I really liked — I don’t think we even filmed it — where Sara says, ‘Hey, do you want to get a drink when this is all over?’” Kreisberg reveals, “and Kara says, ‘I think you wanna meet my sister.’ Just the idea of starting the Sara/Alex [Chyler Leigh] shippers going…”

Familiar faces: “There were moments with Colton [Haynes] and Colin [Donnell] in Arrow that were scripted that we obviously just couldn’t do because of Colin and Colton’s availabilities,” Guggenheim says. “For example, Roy was going to be Thea’s [Willa Holland] boyfriend, that hadn’t changed, and they met when he stole her purse, and that also hadn’t changed. I just thought that would have been fun and nice to see.”

For the diehards: “There were a lot more nods to the comic book,” Kreisberg says of the Dominators. “There was discussion about the size of their circles and how that was indicative of where they stood in the caste system, so I’m sorry some of that stuff went away just because it was great flavor, and I think people who are fans of the original comic book would have seen a lot more of our joy at adapting Invasion in there, but unfortunately, to get these down to the proper time, that’s the kind of stuff that tends to fall by the wayside.”

A change of clothes: “Originally we had designed the Dominators with the green robes that were very iconic of the comic,” Guggenheim says. “When we decided to do all the Dominators full CG, as we ended up doing, the robes had to go away because the presence of the robes made animating them prohibitively impossible.”

A super moment saved for later: “There was a Supergirl moment on the Waverider that I really wanted to get in there,” Guggenheim says. “I’m not going to tell you what it is, because we may do it next year, but Supergirl never ended up on the Waverider, so we couldn’t do the moment.”

Speedy says what we’re all thinking: “There was a funny scene between Speedy and H.R. [Tom Cavanagh] where she says, ‘So what are you doing here? What value do you bring?’” Kreisberg says. “He’s like, ‘Well I’m writing a book,’ and she’s like, ‘Oh, that’ll be a big help,’ and walks away.”



http://www.ew.com/article/2016/12/01/ar ... ted-scenes

- Productores ejecutivos del Arrow-verse sobre los efectos colaterales del Flashpoint, el regreso de los Dominators y más Crossovers (EW):
Productores ejecutivos del Arrow-verse sobre los efectos colaterales del Flashpoint, el regreso de los Dominators y más Crossovers
Por Vlada Gelman / 01 Dic 2016, 6:00 PM PST


Superheroes: 1. Aliens: 0.

The CW’s #DCWeek crossover event wrapped up on Thursday night’s Legends of Tomorrow with a victorious celebration for the costumed crimefighters — but the Dominators aren’t gone for good.

Let’s briefly recap the episode’s key moments: The Dominators revealed that they came back to Earth because of The Flash and the rise of metahuman powers; the aliens promised to leave peacefully if Barry gave himself up, but Oliver & Co. eventually convinced their self-sacrificing pal not to surrender; Stein decided not to erase his new daughter from existence; after doing some timeline tampering of his own, Cisco — who gifted Supergirl with her own tachyon device portable breach-opener — finally forgave Barry, who also earned the forgiveness of Dig; the heroes were publicly acknowledged by the new President of the United States for their courage in fighting off the extraterrestrial threat; and Barry and Oliver shared a toast to “life being full.” #besties

Below, executive producers Andrew Kreisberg and Marc Guggenheim tackle several burning questions about the Dominators’ comeback, Flashpoint’s future consequences, Stein’s secret and much more.

WILL THERE BE MORE FLASHPOINT CHANGES FOR ARROW AND LEGENDS CHARACTERS? | The producers are keeping mum on that front, but Guggenheim did share that “there’s a fair amount of discussion” about the subject in next Wednesday’s Arrow midseason finale. “[The characters] deal with — in some humorous ways, actually — some of the ramifications. For example, I think Curtis is concerned that maybe he was straight, originally.” As for whether Barry’s voicemail is directly tied to Flashpoint or referencing more changes that the speedster makes down the road, Kreisberg offers this cryptic tease: “The message from the future relates to Flashpoint, but it also may relate to something else coming up.”

WILL SUPERGIRL VISIT EARTH-1 AGAIN? | Now that Kara has a way to communicate and travel across Earths, crossovers are certainly “easier” to execute, Kreisberg says. “The next time we do it, it means it doesn’t necessarily have to be because Oliver and Barry need Kara; it could be because Kara needs them.” However, the EP notes that nothing is in the works, seeing as how “we just barely survived this one. So we’re not too concerned with what we’re going to try to do next year. But it just gives us another way to come at a story.”

HAVE WE SEEN THE LAST OF THE SPACE MEN? | Considering they didn’t die, but simply retreated, it’s not crazy to wonder if the mind-controlling Dominators will reappear. “We’ve certainly talked about it,” Guggenheim says. “We don’t want to do it immediately because we just told that story. I think it’s more of a Flash and Legends question than an Arrow question because… that’s not really what Arrow traffics in.” Actually, it’s what their alien pal on Monday nights is all about: “The Dominators will return on Supergirl later this season,” Kreisberg reveals.

DOES THE WORLD KNOW ETs EXIST? | A line was cut for time, in which the G-man known as “Glasses” says, “‘Cover up what? A dozen weather satellites falling out of orbit?'” Guggenheim explains: “People see the ships, but no one ever really saw the Dominators. The way we’re sort of playing it going forward is that Glasses is good at his job, and when he says he’s going to cover it up, he’s going to cover it up.” Adds Kreisberg: “There’s a mention of it in The Flash, that the threat of aliens brought out all the crazies. But we’re sort of Doctor Who-ing it.”

WILL STEIN’S DAUGHTER BE BACK? | “You’ll see her again in a few episodes,” Guggenheim says. And as early as next Thursday’s Legends midseason finale, “the ramifications” of Stein and Jax keeping the doc’s newly discovered offspring a secret “come into play.”

COULD THE NEW PRESIDENT HAVE BEEN LYNDA CARTER? | “Actually, in the original draft of the Legends episode, she was the Vice President, who became the President,” Guggenheim reveals. “The studio had what we all considered to be a very fair note [that] it was a bit too confusing.”


http://tvline.com/2016/12/01/legends-of ... rs-return/

- Los productores del Crossover de DC de la CW adelantan las repercusiones de ‘Invasion!’ (Variety):
Los productores del Crossover de DC de la CW adelantan las repercusiones de ‘Invasion!’
Por Jacob Bryant 01 Dic, 2016 | 06:01PM PT


SPOILER ALERT: Do not read on unless you’ve seen Season 3, Episode 8 of “The Flash”; Season 5, Episode 8 of “Arrow”; and Season 2, Episode 7 of “Legends of Tomorrow,” titled “Invasion!”

There you have it. With the end of “Legends of Tomorrow’s” episode, the first four-show Arrowverse crossover comes to a close. The Dominators were defeated, Stein (Victor Garber) now has a daughter, Barry (Grant Gustin) and Oliver (Stephen Amell) shared a much-deserved drink, and the CW pulled off what producer Marc Guggenheim calls “an exercise in insanity.”

“Every year we pull it off and it’s a small miracle, and then the next year we try to find a way to increase the degree of difficulty,” he said. “Truth be told, the whole thing is really an exercise in insanity and we just keep making it harder and harder and harder on ourselves.”

The crossover may be over, but the events in “Invasion!” will be felt across the shows going forward. Earlier this week, at a press screening and Q&A Variety attended, Guggenheim and fellow producer Andrew Kreisberg talked about those repercussions, whether this was the button on Flashpoint, and more …


What will be the repercussions, or fallout, in the upcoming episodes?

Kreisberg: As far as “Flash” is concerned, in Episode 7 Cisco and Barry were probably at their lowest point — because Cisco learned that Dante had died as a result of Flashpoint. Their friendship has been renewed through the course of these episodes, and when we come back in Episode 9 Team Flash is in a really good place. They need to be, because they’re going to confront Savitar in Episode 9.

With “Supergirl,” it doesn’t really have that big an impact. She’s the one who brought the light. It was really Barry and Oliver who had to go on a journey, and she brought the fun and charm and kicka–ness.

Guggenheim: With respect to “Arrow,” going into Episode 9 you’ll see that Oliver has a new sense of purpose. The events in Episode 8 forced him to double-down on his mission, and also a reaffirmation of his bond with Thea — because they chose each other.

In terms of “Legends,” the two big takeaways are Stein’s daughter — you haven’t seen the last of her, you’ll see her again in a few episodes — as well as Ray (Brandon Routh) getting his suit back.

Would you consider this the button on Flashpoint, or will there continue to be more ramifications going forward?

Kreisberg: There’s a villain coming up that’s another one of those husk villains created by Alchemy, so there’s that to deal with. The mid-season finale, Episode 9, kinda creates a new problem for our heroes that they weren’t anticipating — something that they’ve never faced before. Flashpoint won’t loom as large as the challenge that presents itself in Episode 9.

Guggenheim: “Arrow’s” mid-season finale has a fair amount of discussion about Flashpoint given the fact that the crossover outed it to the “Arrow” characters that weren’t Felicity (Emily Bett Rickards). They deal with it in some humorous ways actually, for example Curtis (Echo Kellum) is concerned that maybe he was straight originally.

Was the message that Barry sent from the future talking about Flashpoint, or was it about more changes he makes sometime in the future?

Kreisberg: The message from the future relates to Flashpoint, but it also may relate to something else coming up.

With Stein and Jax (Franz Drameh) keeping Stein’s daughter a secret cause strife within the group?

Guggenheim: “Legends” operates different than “Arrow,” which is all about people keeping secrets and secrets coming out, but I will say that we’re setting up “Legends'” mid-season finale where the ramifications of that secret do come into play.

What were some of the scenes that you wanted to get in to the episodes that were left on the cutting room floor?

Kreisberg: There was a little exchange between Sara (Caity Lotz) and Kara (Melissa Benoist) where Sara says “hey, do you want to get a drink when this is all over,” and Kara says, “I think you wanna meet my sister.”

It’s those little moments that were left on the cutting room floor. It’s amazing how many of them we were actually able to keep, because these episodes came in wildly over so it tended to be those little jokey moments that fell by the wayside.


http://variety.com/2016/tv/news/arrow-f ... 201931686/

- Supergirl: ¿Nos encontraremos alguna vez a Kara Danvers en Tierra-1? (EW):
Supergirl: ¿Nos encontraremos alguna vez a Kara Danvers en Tierra-1?
Por Natalie Abrams 05 Dic 2016 — 6:56 PM EST


Could there be a version of Kara Danvers on Earth-1? That’s the looming question following the big crossover between The Flash, Arrow, DC’s Legends of Tomorrow and Supergirl.

While viewers previously knew that Kara hailed from a different universe — Earth-38, to be exact — it hasn’t been made clear whether a version of Melissa Benoit’s Supergirl character resides on Earth-1. The chances that Krypton would be destroyed in this universe, and a pod housing Kara Zor-El landing on Earth-1, where she’d then be taken in by the Danvers family seem rather slim. However, the powers that be behind the Berlanti-verse haven’t ruled out introducing Power Girl. In the comics, Power Girl (a.k.a. Kara Zor-L) is the cousin of Superman, but from an alternate universe — specifically Earth-2.

“We hadn’t discussed [introducing Power Girl] formally, but I think that certainly after these three episodes, there’s literally no limit to the things that we can do,” executive producer Andrew Kreisberg says.

After Ray’s (Brandon Routh) comment during the crossover that Kara looked like his cousin, some viewers hoped that meant Benoist was primed to play the relative of Ray Palmer. Alas, it was more a sly nod to the fact that Routh previously portrayed Superman. “It was a throwaway [line],” executive producer Marc Guggenheim says. “It was a total throwaway.”

“Last year on Legends, we did the prison break,” Guggenheim continues. “I said to the writers, ‘If we don’t make a Prison Break joke here with Wentworth [Miller], we’re not doing our jobs.’ I was like, ‘If we have Brandon and Melissa share the screen, and we don’t make some sort of joke like that, we’re not doing our job.’ The truth is, that joke existed on Arrow originally, and then a certain scene got cut, so then I moved it over to Legends; I just kept moving it back and forth. I’m like, ‘I’m getting it in one of these episodes!’”

The good news is that viewers may get to see more of these characters crossing universes now that Cisco (Carlos Valdes) devised an interdimensional extrapolator, which essentially creates small breaches so that Supergirl can cross over to, or communicate with, this universe whenever she wants — which will likely come in handy for the upcoming Supergirl-Flash musical crossover.

“The [crossovers have] gotten to the point where we wanted to make that a little bit easier,” Kreisberg says. “The next time we do it, it means it doesn’t necessarily have to be because Oliver and Barry need Kara; it could be because Kara needs them. We don’t have anything planned. We just barely survived this one, so we’re not too concerned with what we’re going to try to do next year, but it just gives us another way to come at a story.”

Does that mean the heroes of The Flash, Arrow, and Legends could head to National City? “Maybe next year,” Kreisberg says.

And though Kara may be gone, she’s certainly not forgotten. “These people all do know each other, and they’re all friends,” Kreisberg says, noting that shoutouts to Kara on other shows will be seldom, but moments like that are vital to the success of these shows. “Hearing those little shoutouts along the way I think does a service to the relationships that they’ve all formed — that it isn’t like the crossovers of the ‘80s where they’d see each other for that one episode and then it was like it never happened. These things do happen, and they do have ramifications, and not all of the ramifications are always bad; some of them are good, because now these people have these amazing relationships that can continue on.”


http://www.ew.com/article/2016/12/05/su ... power-girl?



- Arrow EP Gives a Sneak Peek Of The Mid-Season Finales (EW):

https://soundcloud.com/ewradio/mid-season-finales

Re: "SUPERGIRL", nueva serie en la CBS/CW

Publicado: Lun Nov 28, 2016 8:46 pm
por Shelby
- Nuevas imágenes y videos bts de la S2 (28 Nov-26 Dic 2016):

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(@dccomics: Supercast! #Supergirl @christophrwood @chy_leigh @mehcadbrooks @jeremymjordan
@DavidHarewood: Invasion!!!!#HeroesVAliens #SupergirlCW #Crossover
@DerekSimonilD4: at some point during rigging and prep, our @MelissaBenoist stand-in's head fell off. less Girl of Steel, more Girl of Styrofoam #Supergirl
@DerekSimonilD4: at some point we got her head back on, but didn't have the same luck with her hair. maybe I should have named the mannequin Lex #Supergirl
@DerekSimonilD4: to save @MelissaBenoist time in the flight harness, our incredible DP rigged this mannequin to help set up lights and camera #Supergirl
@dccomics: Super Girl. Love Melissa! Such a hard working actress. She's an inspiration. Jeremy's fun too!#Supergirl @jeremymjordan
@dccomics: Love working with @realleal What a great actress and a fabulous Miss Martian #Supergirl #crossover
@dccomics: Cyborg Superman mask fitting. An uncomfortable 2 hours!
@FLASHProdOffice: The cast wall was overflowing for #TheFlashCrossover #TheFlash
@chy_leigh: Thank you @gberlanti @andrewkreisberg @aliadler @sarahsowitty and all the writers for #Supergirl for such beautiful and authentic words to tell a moving, relevant, and sincere story about love. After all... #loveislove I'm full of #pride Lv ya Flo @florianalima @supergirlcw #Sanvers
@officialrickg: Tonight, it ain't all smiles on the #Arrow100 episode crossover. #Arrow
@strongbrenda: Luthor Ladies at Large @supergirlcw #katiemcgrathonset #badassmom
@tengstagram: Stunts Canada jam. With my boys @davidharewood @jeremymjordan @james2bambamford #supergirl
@tengstagram: That time when @christophrwood saved a girl from... a piece of wood. @supergirlcw #supergirl #changing #actioncomics1
@mehcadbrooks: When your fitting goes really well. #supergirl #wearesuper #jamesolsen #guardian #cw)
@mehcadbrooks: This woman is more than a cast mate. She's an inspiration to millions of people with her and @florianalima #sanvers storyline. Coming out cannot be easy. My uncle Jason Brooks died of a broken heart because he couldn't be who he was around his family and what this storyline is doing for young gay and lesbian people around the world -- letting them know it's okay to be themselves is such a beautiful thing and I'm proud to be a part of a series that's pushing the envelope and proclaiming that #loveislove thank you @chy_leigh for your portrayal of #alexdanvers on #supergirl. My uncle Jason would have loved you. #cw #jamesolsen #wearesuper
@mehcadbrooks: Me and my good buddy aka producer and fabulous director of #supergirl @tengstagram He said I couldn't post 14 pics yesterday. I tried. I got to nine. #jamesolsen #cw #wearesuper
@davidharewood: Winn and Kara. #cwsupergirl
@davidharewood: Me and my shadow!#martianmanhunter #cwsupergirl #Henshaw
@ready2prop: Heroes out standing #setlife #rooftopSHOW #ep207 #dc #legendsoftomorrow #bts #legendsofflarrowgirl #crossover
@chy_leigh: HAPPY BIRTHDAY to the coolest guy around... @davidharewood You are one of the most genuine, joyful, hilarious, gifted, badass dudes I've ever known. I pray this year brings you peace, adventure, and fulfillment in all areas of your life. I'm honored to be your #righthandgirl at the #DEO but even more so, your friend #happybirthday #martianmanhunter #supergirl @thecwsupergirl
@DavidHarewood: Full respect due to @ChristophrWood. He sleeps on his marks overnight so when we're ready to rehearse next day he's already there.#Pro
@davidharewood: This is not a teleportation machine. @jeremymjordan
@davidharewood: Cyborg.#cwsupergirl
@tengstagram: That time when @chy_leigh was showing the crew the meaning of holiday spirit Happy Holidays from National City! #Supergirl)




Vids:

https://www.instagram.com/p/BNXLfX0DHSf/
https://twitter.com/DavidHarewood/statu ... 4984744960
https://www.instagram.com/p/BNX9bC5hloU/
https://www.instagram.com/p/BNp_qAoDQk8/
https://www.instagram.com/p/BNsTNuzhJPA/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wkpz0G0ZNjg
https://www.instagram.com/p/BObpMOdh7JF/