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Re: "ARROW" Nueva serie de la CW para TV basada en Green Arr

Publicado: Mar Ene 27, 2015 1:05 pm
por Shelby
- Primera novela basada en la serie y Season Companion:
Los fans de la serie de la CW "Arrow" tienen dos citas en los próximos meses.

La primera, ya a la vuelta de la esquina, es la "Season Companion" de Arrow titulada "Arrow – Heroes and Villains" escrita por Nick Aires y cuya fecha de lanamiento se espera que sea el 3 de Febrero del 2015. Este libro presenta un desglose en profundidad de los personajes de Oliver Queen, Laurel Lance, Slade Wilson y muchos más. El libro es el regalo perfecto para los entusiastas de la serie o para aquellos fans que quieren aumentar su conocimiento de los personajes de la serie. Podéis conseguir la versión impresa ofrecida por Titan Books en Amazon por $15.45.
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El segundo libro, es una nueva novela basada en esta serie de éxito. El libro, titulado "Arrow – Vengeance" escrito por Oscar Balderrama y Lauren Certo, está previsto que se publique el 31 de Marzo del 2015. Podéis pre-ordenarlo en Amazon por $7.49 en su versión Kindle ó por $7.99 en la versión impresa ofrecida por Titan Books.
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Poco se sabe sobre esta primera novela más que el hecho de que empieza con el regreso de Oliver Queen a casa tras haber estado perdido en la isla durante cinco años. Empieza con su misión de salvar a Starling City creando su alter-ego de 'Arrow'.

http://dccomicsnews.com/2015/01/25/arro ... -hit-show/

Re: "ARROW" Nueva serie de la CW para TV basada en Green Arr

Publicado: Mié Ene 28, 2015 12:48 pm
por Shelby
- Katie Cassidy sobre el vestirse como Black Canary: 'Es un lío' (EW):
Katie Cassidy sobre el vestirse como Black Canary: 'Es un lío'
Por Natalie Abrams 27 Enero, 2015 a las 9:53PM


The moment Arrow fans have been waiting for finally came to fruition during last week’s episode as Katie Cassidy suited up as the Black Canary.

“I can’t tell you how happy it made me,” Cassidy gushes to EW. “I remember at the end of season 2, they needed to fit Sara’s [Caity Lotz] jacket on me and I started to cry when I put it on. I’ve been waiting for this for so long. I’m so happy and honored. From Day 1, I knew that eventually that’s where they were planning to go with the character, but I didn’t know when and it’s television, anything can happen. Honestly, there’s no words that can even explain lucky, excited, grateful, thrilled I am. For the Black Canary fans, I hope they’re happy with my performance and my take on the character. I hope people are happy.”

But Laurel is far from the fishnet-sporting hero fans know from the comics. In Oliver’s (Stephen Amell) absence, Laurel decidedly stepped up after new baddie Brick (Vinnie Jones) freed a slew of thugs Team Arrow worked so hard to put away. However, she doesn’t quite have the skills the Arrow does. “Even though it’s messy, you can tell there’s fire,” Cassidy says. “She has some skill, but she’s not trained.” That’s exactly why not everyone will be on board with Laurel suiting up. “But then she proves herself because she has so much heart and drive. Arsenal [Colton Haynes] is the first person to come around to it.”

Laurel’s transformation into the Black Canary will really culminate after the trilogy, in an episode aptly titled “Canaries.” “There’s going to be some really crazy, badass scenes of the Canaries fighting,” Cassidy cryptically teases. Let’s not forget, the other Canary—her sister Sara—is dead!

“You’ll be surprised how much Sara is a part of Laurel in season 3 in her going from avenging her sister’s death to honoring her sister’s death to becoming her sister,” Cassidy continues. “Sara is so much apart of season 3 as a character even though she’s physically not there. It stays with her and the show. It’s what gets Laurel out on the streets. It’s what she wants to do. She has a choice. The difference between Sara and Laurel is that Sara didn’t have a choice. When her and Oliver were on the island, she had to go through that with him. Laurel has a choice. She takes her sister’s position, but she it comes from her heart and again avenging her sister’s death and honoring her sister.”

As for the one who killed her sister, the cast has already revealed that Laurel will soon find out the truth that Thea (Willa Holland) did the dead, but we’ll be “surprised by her reaction,” Cassidy says. However, Sara isn’t the only one Laurel needs to avenge—after all, those left behind in Starling City believe Ra’s al Ghul (Matt Nable) killed Oliver. “She will seek vengeance on those who she feels deserves it,” Cassidy concludes.


http://insidetv.ew.com/2015/01/27/arrow ... poilers-2/

- Katie Cassidy Sobre el Legado de los Héroes, el entrenar a las 5 a.m. y los fans de Olicity (comicbook):
Katie Cassidy Sobre el Legado de los Héroes, el entrenar a las 5 a.m. y los fans de Olicity
Por Russ Burlingame 28/01/2015


Fresh off a small role in Taken, Katie Cassidy was one of the most recognizable faces i the cast of Arrow when the show launched just over two years ago. Playing Dinah Laurel Lance, she was immediately assumed to be a Black Canary-in-waiting...and then the waiting just kept going.

Eventually, Laurel's sister Sara -- not a character from the comic book source material -- was brought in to play the role of Canary and with Oliver's romantic interests directed primarily at Felicity Smoak, some fans wondered just what role Cassidy was set to play on the hit series.

The same as ever, it turns out. This season has revolved largely around the death of Sara and Laurel's subsequent transformation into a new, less well-trained and more tech-savvy Black Canary. We got to see her in action and in costume for the first time last week, in the first of what showrunners have described as a "Canary Trilogy," the second installment of which airs tonight.

Cassidy joined us to discuss the series, her years of waiting for a chance in the mask and just how she handles online fans and critics in a show that's got such a passionate base.

You've seemed really excited about your character and your story in recent interviews. Do you feel like you're about to enter a really good status quo for Laurel?

Yeah! I mean, look: As an actor, I remember when I met with Greg and Marc and Andrew about this show before we shot the pilot that this is where this character was going to go. That was definitely a huge thing for me. I wanted to do action, I wanted to stay with Warner Bros. and CW and I loved the fact that this character had this journey that she would go on but I didn't necessarily know how long it would take or what the journey would look like.

I don't think they did, either; they just knew eventually at some point that Laurel would turn into the Black Canary. When that would be...who knows? They assumed Season One or Two, but you're shooting a show and things change and you're trying to find your footing and what's working and what's not. I think it's smart that every character has to earn their suit or their costume. You can't just overnight all of a sudden be a superhero. You have to go through things and hit your rock bottom and then be able to come out on top and build character and be strong.

This season, it feels a bit to the viewer like it's been easier for you, so I think it's easy to forget that there's still a lot hanging over Laurel, including when Lance finds out about Sara.

Easier on who -- Laurel or Katie?

Well, I meant Laurel. She's found a role for herself and she's confident and it feels like she's in a good place...but there's still this past that's waiting to bite her in the ass.

Well, to be honest with you, I can't play anything that isn't as real as possible which is why I was in training over hiatus and I have been. And when I said to you, "Do you mean Laurel or Katie?," it's because this role has become a lot more physically demanding for me personally.

I wake up at 5 a.m. and go to the gym and work with my trainer as I go to work and it has taken a lot out of me but every single moment has been worth it because I live for it. I love it. I just think that I have the same reaction that Laurel would have, where yeah, this stuff has happened and she's honoring her sister's death and she's defending her sister but she doesn't want to think of the fact that her father doesn't know that she isn't Sara and she still is trying to bury it.

That's the thing that I can do because that's what I think she's doing until there comes a point where she's going to have to tell her father. How he will react and what she says and how she says it, you guys will find out but I think that there's a moment where it starts to become your reality so I try not to think too much about that because I feel like for Laurel, it would eat her up inside but she's dealing with so much that she can't take on more.

DC Comics has a history of legacy heroes -- people who take on the costume of their predecessors. I think this is the first time that's happened onscreen because obviously you don't usually kill your lead characters...

On Arrow it turns out we actually do! [Laughs]

...That's true! Is that kind of cool for you to be the tip of that spear in a way?

Yeah, absolutely. It's an honor and it's an honor to get the opportunity to play this character. Just being a part of a show that already had such a huge fanbase from the comic books, and to be perceived as well as it has been has been a blessing and I'm thrilled.

Last thing: How do you deal with the fans? The shipping community on this show has gotten so crazy that we now have Jimmy Kimmel having said "Olicity" on the air. Do you just kind of black all that out and work?

[Laughs] Um...yes! Because I think the worst thing that you can do as an actor is to get caught up in the bulls--t. And I'm sorry for saying that word, but I ignore...you can't compare yourself to other people, you can't get caught up in all the drama. The best way that I've been able to deal with it is to just ignore all of it. I'm here to do a job and I'm passionate about it and I love it and I want to make the fans happy but I don't need to be hearing or reading or seeing negative things because that's not going to help me or my character in any way.


http://comicbook.com/2015/01/28/arrows- ... -and-olic/

- ¿Está Laurel desbordada? ¡Katie Cassidy sobre los 'sorprendentes' giros de Canary! (ETOnline):
¿Está Laurel desbordada? ¡Katie Cassidy sobre los 'sorprendentes' giros de Canary!
Por Philiana Ng 28 de Enero, 2015 7:15 AM PST


Katie Cassidy swings into action in tonight’s all-new Arrow as Starling City’s latest crime-fighting crusader – but be warned, her debut isn’t exactly the stuff of lore. Driven by her quest to seek revenge for her sister’s death, Laurel’s sloppy rookie mistakes create more problems than solutions, and it’s an unlikely friend who may be her sole savior.

Without Oliver Queen in the mix, is Laurel in over her head as Black Canary? Cassidy caught up with ETonline to dish on what’s to come – plus, scoop on the upcoming “Canaries” reunion!

ETonline: You had such a dramatic entrance at the end of last week’s episode! Is that a preview of what’s to come for Black Canary?

Katie Cassidy: Yeah absolutely! We saw Black Canary at the end of the last episode and I definitely think that’s an introduction to her three-part arc in the next coming weeks – [from] avenging her sister’s death to honoring her sister and becoming her sister, but with her own take on it. She has a ton of drive and heart and she’s a fighter, a go-getter.

ETonline: How do the team – Felicity, Roy and Diggle – first react to Black Canary?

Cassidy: At first, “Team Arrow” doesn’t necessarily respond to it very well but eventually, Roy will start to see that Laurel actually has it in her to go out on the streets and to fight, and that she’s choosing to do this for her sister and for the city and that she means well. He begins to support her.

ETonline: Colton Haynes told us that Roy is the first one to be on Laurel’s side as she transitions to her Canary role. Sounds like their partnership progresses on a more serious level?

Cassidy: Yeah, it absolutely will – just with Laurel being involved in Team Arrow. It’s been a blast and I’m having the best time.

ETonline: Without Oliver there to lead, do you see this as Laurel’s time to shine, both as the Canary and as Starling’s Assistant D.A.?

Cassidy: With Oliver being gone, it is her time and it is Team Arrow’s time to rise above and take over the mantle and to do what the Arrow has shown he can do on his own. Him being gone, it’s definitely time where all these characters get to step up to the plate to show the best of themselves. I’m really excited for it to air these next few weeks because it’s an interesting perspective, especially for my character because I haven’t been in the lair and the foundry that often. It’s a different layer.

ETonline: Perhaps the circumstances played a role, but it seemed Laurel was integrated pretty seamlessly onto the team. Is that a fair statement?

Cassidy: We’ve always said when Laurel puts on the suit does she become the Black Canary? Just because she puts on the suit right away doesn’t mean she’s any good. She has a lot of heart and a lot of drive and a lot of reason, but she’s going to need professional training. She’s had some – her father being a cop and she’s taken boxing lessons – but I’m sure they’re going to call her out on it because she’s out there being sloppy, but she’s doing good. It’ll be a nice evolution.

ETonline: Does Laurel find out who’s responsible for Sara’s death? Does it complicate matters that Thea is the one who fired the fatal arrow?

Cassidy: Yes, Laurel will discover who killed her sister but her reaction to it is going to be really intriguing and interesting for the audience. I don’t think you’ll necessarily think that she would react that way. But yes, in an upcoming episode she will find out, and I won’t tell you how she reacts!

ETonline: Looking ahead a few weeks, Caity Lotz is back in “Canaries”! At this moment, Laurel is feeling the effects of vertigo and having hallucinations about her sister. What is that experience like for her and do we learn anything illuminating?

Cassidy: It’s a big wake-up call for her. I was so excited to have Caity Lotz back, she’s a wonderful actress and a great person, and you’ll get to see the Canaries in action. I think people are going to be excited and thrilled. It’s kind of jaw-dropping – I remember reading the episode [script] and going “Holy shit! This is crazy!” (Laughs.) This is one of my personal favorites thus far, and it was a blast to shoot. I’m looking forward to more.

ETonline: Jaw-dropping in what way?

Cassidy: Action-packed. You have to expect the unexpected. Our writers have really honed in on that and there are a lot of twists and turns that the audience doesn’t expect to happen. I believe that we deliver them and build on them in the right way.

ETonline: When Oliver does return to the fold, how much of a culture shock is it for him when it comes to the team?

Cassidy: Oh, everything’s shifted. I can’t tell you that, you’ve got to watch!


http://www.etonline.com/tv/157072_arrow ... ry_twists/

- ¿Cómo Impactará a Laurel el convertirse en Black Canary? (THR):
¿Cómo Impactará a Laurel el convertirse en Black Canary?
Por Aaron Couch 10:00 AM PST 28/01/2015


After going through years of tragedy, from Oliver's (Stephen Amell) disappearance to her sister Sara's (Caity Lotz) murder at the hands of Thea (Willa Holland), Laurel is taking over her sister's vigilante mantle in Wednesday's Arrow after giving fans a glimpse of the action last week.

She says it won't be a smooth transition from lawyer to superhero.

"Just because Laurel is in the suit, doesn't mean she's good at crime fighting. She doesn't all of a sudden have these superpowers," Cassidy tells The Hollywood Reporter.

Like the rest of team Arrow, Laurel is reeling from Oliver's disappearance from Starling City, after he left to fight Ra's Al Ghul (Matt Nable) to the death and lost. Though Oliver has been resurrected, his friends don't know that and are carrying on without him. For Laurel, avenging Sara, whose death was orchestrated by Malcolm Merlyn (John Barrowman), is a starting point, though she doesn't yet have all the information about how Sara died.

"She's doing the best that she can. I think it's her heart and her brain and her drive to avenger her sister's death that keeps her moving," says Cassidy. "But she absolutely gets broken down and taken down."

Cassidy teases that during the rest of the season, Laurel will learn to don the mask for her own reasons, not just for revenge or to keep her sister's memory alive.

"She goes from avenging her sister to honoring or sister to then becoming her sister," says Cassidy. "Then she goes to doing it for the right reasons, from something within her. You see in later episodes somebody alluding to that and it makes Laurel have that realization, that she's not just doing this to be her sister. It's inside of her and she has the capability to tap into that."


http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-f ... ack-767849

- Katie Cassidy habla sobre Black Canary, la Venganza y Birds of Prey (collider):
Katie Cassidy habla sobre Black Canary, la Venganza y Birds of Prey
Por Christina Radish 28 Enero, 2015


Now that Laurel Lance (Katie Cassidy) is suiting up as Black Canary, Episode 311 (called “Midnight City”) of Arrow will see Arsenal (Colton Haynes) and Diggle (David Ramsey) confront her about trying to step into her sister’s shoes and warn her to stop before she gets herself killed. Never one to shy away from a fight, Laurel’s mission to avenge her sister and protect her loved ones is only just beginning.

During this exclusive phone interview with Collider, actress Katie Cassidy talked about how getting to step into the Black Canary suit is everything she’s waited for and wanted, what an important part of Laurel’s journey Sara (Caity Lotz) is this season, the coolest thing about getting to be an active member of the DC superhero universe, how empowering it is to put on the full Black Canary look and get to kick some ass, that Roy Harper will be the first member of Team Arrow to support her, and that she thinks it would be cool to see Birds of Prey for at least an episode. Be aware that there are some spoilers.

Collider: When I first spoke to you about Arrow, before the pilot had even aired, you talked about your desire to eventually take the Black Canary path with your character. Is it bittersweet to get that opportunity on the heels of having lost part of the show’s family?

KATIE CASSIDY: That’s a really interesting question. It is bittersweet because I, personally, love Caity Lotz. She’s such a wonderful actor, she’s a good friend, and we had a really great time together. It sucks when cast members have different storylines and those storylines take them elsewhere. Losing her was definitely the bitter side of it, but at the same time, that doesn’t mean that she’s not coming back, or that we haven’t seen her back or will see her back. The sweet part about it is that this is everything that I’ve waited for and wanted. This is the reason that I initially had signed on to the show. But I understood where the writers and producers were coming from, saying, “You can’t just, overnight, become a superhero. You have to earn it. You have to hit rock bottom.” And I absolutely agree. It would have been a mistake to throw Laurel into the suit in Season 1, or even in the middle of Season 2. I think she really had to earn it, and I feel like, at this point, she really has. As much as Sara is gone, she is very much a part of Season 3. Physically, maybe not so, but emotionally, for Laurel, Sara is very much a part of her journey in Season 3.

What’s the coolest thing about getting to now be an active member of the DC superhero universe, and what’s the most daunting thing about it?

CASSIDY: Well, the cool thing, for me, as an actor, I like to be as true and honest as possible, and I’m into real fight training. I love that shit. Bring it! I love it. I’ll do as much as I possible can. I want it to be as realistic as possible. I know there’s a time when safety comes first, and my stunt double will step in and make me look great, but at the same time, physically, I have trained enough. Even before this, I have done action shows and movies where I’ve had fight training and I know how to sell it to the camera. It’s a very good team effort between actor, director, stunts and the writers. The best part is that, in all reality what now, if anyone wanted to mess with me on a daily basis, as Katie Cassidy, in real life, I can defend myself and probably kick some ass. And it’s tough because a lot of the time our show takes place at night, so our schedules are flipped and we’re shooting overnight. I’m actually more of a night person, so it doesn’t bother me as much, but the back-and-forth is where it can get tricky.

What did you think of the full look, the first time you put it on and saw the suit, the wig and the mask together? Is it just really empowering to put all of that on and go kick some ass?

CASSIDY: Oh, yeah, absolutely! It was definitely a collaboration. It was hair, make-up and wardrobe, and the producers let me put my touch on it. The suit itself is so masculine and so strong that I needed something to balance it out, so that it wasn’t too much or too overwhelming. I wanted the make-up and the hair to be a bit softer and more feminine, so that it was a good balance. With all of us, we came up with a really fantastic look. It’s really fun and, the second I put that suit on, it definitely helps tremendously. For me, as an actor, with any character I’m playing, wardrobe brings a whole other aspect. Once I have the clothing on, it helps the transformation.

How will Laurel’s transformation into Black Canary affect the dynamic within Team Arrow? Will they mostly be supportive, or will they continue to be concerned about and for her?

CASSIDY: At first, there’s definitely a lot of resistance. They’re concerned that there’s this crazy woman going out there and acting like her sister. They think she’s off her rocker. But it’s actually Roy who sees that, even though she’s sloppy and not trained, she’s actually doing something. She has a lot of heart, soul and passion, and she’s a fighter. He’s actually the first one who comes and supports her. Eventually, I think they’ll come around to it ‘cause they see how much she cares and how much she wants to avenge her sister’s death and honor her sister’s death.

What would you say Laurel’s goals are, as Black Canary, and where does her moral compass lie? Does she see a very clear difference between deciding someone’s justice and having it just be about revenge?

CASSIDY: I can’t answer that question. It’s always changing and evolving. The beauty in our show is that our writers are so smart. They’re constantly flipping things and changing things. I always say, “Expect the unexpected,” because that’s how I feel when I’m reading the scripts. I’m like, “Wow, I didn’t expect this! It’s genius that they came up with this.” So for her, you’ll see her go from avenging her sister’s death to then honoring her sister. I do think she’ll find within herself why she wants to do this and be there. She’s choosing to do this. Sara didn’t have that choice. She was with Oliver on the island. This is Laurel’s choice to go out there and say, “Okay, I want to do this, not only because of my sister, but because of the city and the people I care about.” She has very strong morals and values, and an enormous amount of integrity. She’s very driven. She’s an extremist. She’s going to give 100% of herself. In Season 2, at rock bottom, she certainly gave 100% of herself. Now, she’s coming out on top. It’s a nice journey and transition, and I think everyone is going to be really happy with the way she comes out of it all.

Now that you’re on the Black Canary path, would you like that path to lead to Birds of Prey, at some point, even if it’s just for one episode?

CASSIDY: Yeah, absolutely! I definitely think the fans would also really love it, and we always like to make our fans happy. I think that would be really cool.

How do you think Laurel and Sara’s father will react to finding out that he’s lost one daughter in this suit, and now the other daughter is taking her place?

CASSIDY: Well, we may or may not have shot some of it. It’s hard for her. She sees her father and cares about him. She’s worried about his health. She’s caught between a rock and a hard place. She feels guilty, but at the same time, she doesn’t want to physically or emotionally hurt him more. When she decides to tell him and what she decides to tell him, I can’t tell you. You’re going to have to watch.

We know that Laurel will be tracking down Vertigo soon, and since her biggest fears revolve around her sister, she’s going to have to face that. What was it like to shoot that and have Caity Lotz back on set? Does it make you wish there had been some way to keep Sara alive, so that the sisters could team up together, in some way?

CASSIDY: Having Caity Lotz back, in general, is lovely and wonderful. I love her to death, personally. She is a wonderful person. The chemistry between us is on screen and off screen. We got along really well, and she is missed, absolutely. It was lovely that she comes back, and maybe she’ll show up more. Who knows? Everything just has to fall into place, and that takes time. It’s all about the timing. You saw Tommy in Season 1, and hats off to Colin [Donnell] for really taking one for the team, at the end of the season. He was a series regular, and then was no longer on the show. It was sad to see him go, but he was so much a part of Season 2, and still is so much a part of Season 3. We talk about him often, and he comes back. And I feel like Caity certainly made her place and put her stamp on it. She is a huge part of Season 3 for Laurel. Whether she’s physically there or mentally there, for Laurel, it’s all about where her mind is. It’s all about her sister. I often will talk about her or think about her. She definitely plays a huge role in Season 3, whether she’s there or not.


http://collider.com/arrow-black-canary- ... interview/

- Brandon Routh sobre los sentimientos de Ray hacia Felicity, y por qué 'Oliver es el hombre' (accesshollywood):
Brandon Routh sobre los sentimientos de Ray hacia Felicity, y por qué 'Oliver es el hombre'
28 enero, 2015 02:27 PM EDT


Ray Palmer shared a kiss with Felicity Smoak in a recent "Arrow" episode, but just how into her is Starling City's billionaire businessman?

"I think he's a little confused by his feelings, a little bit," Brandon Routh, who plays Ray, told Access Hollywood, when we spoke with him at the Television Critics Association Winter Tour.

Brandon said he's noticed that some fans have worried about Ray's interest in Felicity (Emily Bett Rickards) over the course of Season 3, but he knows his character is coming from a genuine place.

"Obviously, there's a whole issue of people being concerned with Ray being stalker-ish and I've thought… a decent amount about it and the thing about it is, at the beginning, he just wants the best brain in the business. So he's not stalking her because he wants to be with her or for any weirdness that way. It's because he wants the best brain in the room to be a part of his company, which I guess could still be considered stalking, but is not the more scary kind of stalking," Brandon told Access. "But, I think that's why it hits him and why he's shocked by it when the kiss happens, because it's all wrapped up in this appreciating her brain and her talent, that [he's] not really seeing his true feelings. And so now, he's having to figure out how that works for him because he has kind of bottled all that up since his [fiancee] died."

There are plenty of fans rooting for a Ray/Felicity (Raylicity) romance between the two characters, but there are also those who are thoroughly are invested in Oliver/Felicity (Olicity) getting together properly (well, once Oliver returns).

Brandon said he hasn't minded seeing the Twitter reactions from the latter group.

"It's all in fun. It's good that people are reacting. Whether it's good or bad towards Ray, it's positive [for the show] and we're creating some kind of commotion and feeling, which is positive," he said. "I've definitely gotten more positive than negative support."

But, the actor said he can completely understand those who feel Oliver and Felicity are meant to be.

"He's the man and it's his show and I can't blame 'em either," Brandon laughed.

WATCH: Brandon Routh On Starting To Suit Up As The Atom

"Arrow" continues Wednesday at 8/7c on The CW.


Video: http://bcove.me/io87s02q


http://www.accesshollywood.com/arrow-br ... cle_103406

- Cassidy sobre el coger el testigo de Black Canary (cbr):
Cassidy sobre el coger el testigo de Black Canary
Por Bryan Cairns, 28 Enero, 2015


It was always just a matter of time before Katie Cassidy became a genuine superhero.

Ever since Dinah "Laurel" Lance was introduced, "Arrow" viewers have wondered when she would adopt her comic book counterpart's Black Canary identity. However, "Arrow" put its own spin on the Canary legacy, and threw DC Comics fans a curve ball, when Laurel's sister Sara turned out to be the classic hero. However, upon Sara's unexpected death in the season-three premiere, "The Calm," there's been a void that needed to be filled. Now, Laurel will be stepping up and honoring her sister by becoming the new Black Canary.

Ahead of tonight's episode, "Midnight City," Cassidy spoke with CBR News about Laurel's evolution, learning the superhero ropes, Black Canary and Arsenal teaming-up and paying homage to the character's comic book history.

CBR News: So many people have anxiously been waiting for Laurel to become Black Canary. Why has this slow burn worked out better than if she picked up the mantle in Season One?

Katie Cassidy: I look at it like human nature: You want what you can't have, which then makes you want it that much more. It's teasing, and giving the viewers the base and dragging it out longer has only made people that much more excited about it. It definitely made me more excited and anxious for it to happen.

On top of that, it's more realistic and makes more sense. We've said, "You can't become a superhero overnight." If I turned Black Canary in Season One, then what? That's coming out of the gates too fast. It's just too much. I agree with Marc [Guggenheim], Andrew [Kreisberg] and Greg [Berlanti] that every character has to be on a journey of hitting rock bottom. It took Oliver five years on the island. Laurel can't all of sudden jump in and be like, "Okay, I'm going to be a superhero." She has to go through things.

There has been loss with many characters on our show, but with Laurel, she's lost her sister and her boyfriend. It's been tragedy after tragedy after tragedy. She couldn't take it anymore, so Laurel turned to alcohol and pills. We saw Laurel hit rock bottom and it was whether or not she could rise above it and end up on top. She did.

Marc has stated that a mask does not make a hero. Can you talk about the hard lessons Laurel will be facing in upcoming episodes?

He's absolutely right. Just because Laurel is wearing a mask and wearing a costume, it doesn't necessarily mean she's good. You have to get broken down. That obviously builds character. She gets broken down. She's kicking ass, but she's also getting her ass kicked. She's seeing the repercussions and the other side of it, that you can't just go out there. Having heart and drive and wanting to serve your sister's death and have vengeance is part of it, but at the same time, you have to be trained. Laurel is learning that, but she's also very stubborn. She'll do whatever it takes.

What kind of team do Black Canary and Arsenal make in Oliver's absence?

At first, you definitely see Team Arrow resistant to Laurel taking over the mantle. They aren't necessarily supportive. Roy is actually the first one who sees that Laurel is passionate and driven and has it in her. She just doesn't have the training. She's choosing to do this, so he's the first person who comes to her defense. Roy says, "She might not be good or trained, but she's a fighter." He recognizes that in her.

The tagline from "Midnight City" promises "Every hero will be tested." How does that apply to Canary?

It's basically what I mentioned before: A mask doesn't make Laurel a good superhero. She will fight, and do her best, but she hasn't had the training others have had. You might see her have that realization.

Quentin Lance should easily be able to put two and two together. What's his reaction to Laurel following in Sara's footsteps?

I don't know. You're going to have to watch to find out.

Lastly, comic book readers are well aware of certain cornerstones associated with Black Canary. She possesses the Canary Cry. She becomes a founding member of the Birds of Prey. She also gets brutally beaten in the "Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters" miniseries. Which arc would you like the writers to explore?

Personally, I feel we do a really good job at tipping our hats to the comics and making the fans happy. Our writers are so brilliant and amazing. They will figure out how to serve justice to all of those storylines, whether it be in the same form or not, such as the Canary Cry. Will we see it? I'm assuming yes, but in what form we see it, I have no idea. In some way, in some capacity, they will fulfill all of those storylines.


http://www.comicbookresources.com/?page ... e&id=58840

- Oliver está vivo – ¿Así es que qué es lo siguiente para ‘Arrow’? (Variety):
Oliver está vivo – ¿Así es que qué es lo siguiente para ‘Arrow’?
Por Laura Prudom 28 Enero, 2015 | 11:11AM PT


As some perceptive “Arrow” fans may have predicted, the hit CW show opted not to kill off its titular hero after a bloody battle with Ra’s al Ghul (Matt Nable), and last week’s midseason return saw Oliver (Stephen Amell) weakened but recovering, thanks to the intervention of League of Assassins member Maseo Yamashiro (Karl Yune) and his wife, Tatsu (Rila Fukushima).

But while the audience knows that the resilient vigilante survived his encounter with The Demon’s Head, Team Arrow is still mourning his loss, leaving Diggle (David Ramsey), Roy (Colton Haynes) and Laurel (Katie Cassidy) to try and fill the hero’s boots — some of them more successfully than others.

As executive producer Marc Guggenheim told Variety ahead of the midseason premiere, “Because it’s such a huge thing that happens in nine, we really needed three episodes to give it its due because those three episodes — 10, 11 and 12 — really are a trilogy dealing with the very real question of, ‘if there is no Arrow in Starling City, who is going to save the city?’” As the three-episode arc illustrates, there are a lot of contenders vying to be Starling’s protector.

But how will Oliver react to his allies’ tribute when he finally returns to reclaim his hood, whenever that might be? According to Amell, not well. “It’s rocky… Because all of them, when I’m gone, have to decide if they’re doing this because it was for me or if they’re doing this for them… So me coming back and just being dictatorial and ‘my way or the highway’ is just not going to work,” he told Variety at the recent Television Critics Assn. winter press tour.

“One of the things that Oliver is learning this year is, ‘wow, there’s a whole lot of people who have risen up,'” noted Guggenheim. “[He’s] going to have to come to terms with that, too. That’s not necessarily going to be easy for him.”

That conflict will be especially pronounced between Oliver and Laurel, who finally made her debut as Black Canary in the closing moments of the midseason premiere. Expect sparks to fly once Oliver discovers what his ex has been up to in his absence. “Oliver doesn’t want Laurel to be the Black Canary at all. He doesn’t want her out there,” Amell reiterated. “As far as he’s concerned, she’s more useful, and has been, in the district attorney’s office. ‘You catch them, I cook them’ — we said that in the season premiere.”

Despite Oliver’s righteous indignation over Laurel’s dangerous activities, Amell admitted that his encounter with Ra’s will have a profound effect on the Emerald Archer: “I think he comes back a little more soft-spoken, a little humbled and forced to do things and work with people that he never would have considered working with before. I wouldn’t go so far as to say he has to make a deal with the devil, but pretty close.”

Amell wouldn’t confirm exactly when Oliver will face off with Ra’s again, but previewed, “The thing I like about Ra’s al Ghul and Matt Nable’s Ra’s al Ghul — I think Matt’s fantastic — [is] it’s really difficult to say whether or not he’s a villain. I mean, what did he do wrong? He has a code. Malcolm Merlyn [John Barrowman] did something terrible: he wants him dead. Okay. Somebody killed his daughter’s great love: he wants that person dispatched. Fair enough. So, eventually, when the second confrontation happens, Ra’s’ reaction to Oliver should really take us all very much by surprise.”

Ra’s isn’t the only foe Oliver has to contend with this season; episode 14 will see the return of Manu Bennett’s Slade Wilson (aka Deathstroke). “I can’t say anything about it other than it’s in the present day,” Amell teased.

And while Oliver’s final thought was of Felicity (Emily Bett Rickards) before he fell, his Girl Friday will continue to grow closer to Ray Palmer (Brandon Routh) while he’s gone. “For Felicity it really becomes a difficult choice between these two men who are both in love with her, who in a way she has strong feelings for,” teased executive producer Andrew Kreisberg. “A lot of the back half of the year is her trying to figure out who [she should be with].”

Just don’t expect Felicity to rush into anything with Ray while she’s still mourning Oliver. According to Routh, although their connection deepens in upcoming episodes, “They’re feeling each other out a little bit more — she certainly knows more about him and his history and background and why he’s doing what he’s doing. He’s hesitant to jump into the relationship, because I don’t think he realized that a relationship was happening — he was just so involved in everything and she’s cool and then ‘oh wow, this is happening’ … Ray will challenge her and ask her to be a part of his mission, and she has to decide whether she’s going to help someone else go off and kill themselves potentially as well.”


http://variety.com/2015/tv/news/arrow-o ... 201417350/

- Marc Guggenheim da una primicia de mitad de temporada (AssignementX):
Marc Guggenheim da una primicia de mitad de temporada
Por ABBIE BERNSTEIN 29 Enero, 2015 / 10:50 PM


Marc Guggenheim, an executive producer/show runner on the CW’s ARROW, Wednesdays at 9 PM, and its spin-off THE FLASH, Tuesdays at 8 PM, is very happy. Not only have both series been picked up for next season – it will be ARROW’s fourth and THE FLASH’s second – but the network has put together an impressive display of costumes from both D.C. Comics-derived series for the Television Critics Association.

THE FLASH, a DC Comics title, was born for television in the generation within episodes of ARROW (itself derived from DC Comics’ GREEN ARROW), introducing super-fast Barry Allen (Grant Gustin) to brooding, wealthy vigilante Oliver Queen (Stephen Amell). This season, there has been a major crossover, just before a midseason ARROW cliffhanger that saw Oliver apparently killed by Ra’s al Ghul.

Guggenheim, who developed both shows alongside DC Comics Chief Creative Officer Geoff Johns and his fellow executive producers/show runners Greg Berlanti and Andrew Kreisberg, admires the costume exhibit as he talks about his work at generous length with a couple of reporters.

AX: Since Arrow is your title character and Stephen Amell is still contracted to play him, is it safe to say it’s not a spoiler that Oliver Queen/Arrow survives after all?

MARC GUGGENHEIM: I think, suffice it to say, we’re crazy, we’re not stupid. But I think for us the fun of the show is, even if you think you know what’s going to happen, it happens in a way you don’t expect.

AX: Can you talk about structuring that? Did you come up with what you’re doing after the midseason break and decide, “The best way to get there would be to have Oliver impaled” or did you go, “Let’s have him impaled, and uh-oh, now what do we do?”

GUGGENHEIM: I would say it’s a little bit of both in the sense that, we start the season off, we know exactly what the big tent poles are going to be and we know where we’re ultimately headed, and then as we move through the season, we dial in and focus each thing. A lot of the best ideas on the show really come from Greg, Andrew and I in a room together, going, “What if we do this? What if we do that?” And the ideas that excite us the most are not an individual idea, they’re the fifty other ideas that that one idea birthed. So if we go, “Wait a minute. If we impale Oliver and throw him off a mountaintop, then we can do this, this, this and this.” It’s not about stabbing him through the chest and throwing him off a mountaintop, it’s the fifty other things that happen as a result of that that get us excited.

AX: Stephen Amell has suggested that this plot development gives other actors/characters more screen time. Does this mean he’s actually out, except for flashbacks, for awhile?

GUGGENHEIM: He’s pretty gone. You’ll certainly have to watch the show to see what the amount is, but the first three episodes back from the midseason break, they really are a trilogy that explores in the present day the consequences of Oliver’s absence and what that means for Starling City, what that means for various members of Team Arrow, what that means for just about every character in the show. And everyone’s going to react in different ways, and everyone’s going to have different things to deal with. And that’s the exciting part of the story for us. We’ve sort of watched the show grow into a true ensemble, and I think Episodes Ten, Eleven and Twelve really sort of are a testament to that, that it is an ensemble. I think they’re some of the best episodes we’ve done. Episode Ten features some action and some moments that are unlike anything we’ve ever done on the show before. Glen Winter directed it. He’s the one who directed our big Episode Fifteen last year, with the ship and everything. I don’t even know how he comes up with half the stuff he comes up with. He’s an artist and it’s so much fun to get a chance to see Roy [Colton Haynes] and Diggle [David Ramsey] and Felicity [Emily Bett Rickards] all come to the fore a little bit more. It does create more screen time for other people.

AX: Without Oliver there, does this mean other characters are going to fundamentally have to change in order to fill the void of his absence?

GUGGENHEIM: I think exactly what it means is, they fundamentally have to change and so if Oliver does return, he’s going to return to a very different Lair and a different set of dynamics. Our goal with the show is, everyone should always be growing and everyone should always be developing. We start each episode off in terms of, what are the character journeys for this episode? So the show hopefully is never in statis. Hopefully, It’s never just one thing. I know people sometimes are very nostalgic [about], “Oh, we just like to see the troika of Felicity, Diggle and Oliver.” And we do, too. We love writing that troika. But the show has also grown and developed even beyond that, and part of the fun for us as writers is exploring the different character dynamics.

AX: Is Arrow’s apparent death going to affect Flash at all? Is he going to feel the need to come over there and comfort Felicity?

GUGGENHEIM: No, I think Flash actually has a lot of problems that he’s got to be dealing with in the wake of his midseason finale. Certainly, one thing we’re always talking about is, how can the two shows what’s going on in each other’s shows at the same time, especially on ARROW, we don’t want to sort of run into the problem of, well, why don’t we just call Barry, because he’ll solve the problem in thirty seconds? It’s not dissimilar to the Marvel movies where, post-AVENGERS, why doesn’t Captain America call Thor and just beat up H.Y.D.R.A.? So it’s always trying to be as realistic as possible, at the same time making sure that your characters are – on ARROW, they’re driving the drama.

AX: How did you originally become involved with ARROW?

GUGGENHEIM: Greg [Berlanti] and I have worked together for many years now. We did JACK AND BOBBY, we did ELI STONE together, we wrote THE GREEN LANTERN movie together, and when he mentioned that there was interest at Warner Brothers in this project, he asked if I would do it with him. At the time, I was already producing another pilot with Greg, it’s GREEN ARROW, I’m a huge comic book fan, there was very little decision-making involved.

AX: What is the division of responsibility between the three of you exec producers/show runners?

GUGGENHEIM: That’s a great question. Andrew and I run the room every day. Every day, we’re checking in with Greg, we’re showing him pages, we’re meeting with Greg, we’re breaking story with him. Greg is heavily involved with all the scripts, was heavily involved with the pilot. I’d say it’s a third/a third/a third. Each of us have different perspectives, each of us have different talents. The thing that we’re always saying is, the best version of the show is sort of a mix of the three of us and our three different sensibilities.

AX: Have Mike Grell or any of the other artists who worked on GREEN ARROW had input into this?

GUGGENHEIM: Not input, but actually, if you’ve seen the pilot, in the police sketch, that’s Mike Grell. That’s my little producorial suggestion – “Let’s get Mike Grell to do the sketch of Arrow.” In fact, there’s also a character named after him, Judge Grell, and Andy Diggle, obviously, the John Diggle character is named after him, because we were so inspired by GREEN ARROW: YEAR ONE, which he wrote. So the individual writers and artists have not weighed in, but we’re trying to keep them alive in the series.

AX: How much do you weigh referencing ARROW as a modern-day Robin Hood?

GUGGENHEIM: There’s an interesting thing that’s happening in the country right now, where you’re talking about one percent versus ninety-nine percent, haves versus have-nots. Poverty and whatnot has become a political issue, which is interesting, because to me, it was always an issue on both sides of the aisle, how we distribute wealth in this country. It’s a little scary to me that it’s become this polarizing political thing. That’s not the country I grew up in, so it’s weird also to be writing on a show that’s clearly dealing with that issue head-on. Obviously, GREEN ARROW is inspired by Robin Hood and we’re playing around with those elements, but you go it’s more about social justice than it is about politics. At least, that’s what the show should be about.

AX: Aren’t social justice and politics sort of the same thing?

GUGGENHEIM: Well, the point I’m making actually is that social justice has become a political issue in a way that it never has been in this country. Obviously, yes, there’s always been a political divide, we’ve always had disagreements in terms of how to address these issues, but it just feels like the disagreements have become so vitriolic and the differences have become so severe that it’s taken on a different cast than it used to have.

AX: Given that a lot of ARROW is set in the world of the one percent, is that a budgetary issue? Or is production design just as expensive if you’re building caves instead of mansions?

GUGGENHEIM: Richard Hudolin is our production designer. He did BATTLESTAR GALACTICA. He is amazing and he has delivered a look for the show that I’ve never had the good fortune to have on any of my other shows. When you get to Queen Consolidated, which is the company that the Queens own, you’re blown away by that set. But part of I think the nature of a CW show is a certain look and a certain glamour. I don’t worry about it from a budgetary perspective; we’ve sort of built that into the system and we’ve got great people, wonderful costume designers delivering that look, so that’s not a problem.

AX: You had talked about “responsible violence.” What is non-responsible violence in this context?

GUGGENHEIM: I think it’s violence purely for the sake of violence, violence that is gratuitous. And it’s also without follow-up and commentary. It’s without consequence. One of the things that we’re very sensitive to in the show is, when you kill someone, there’s a reason behind it. It’s not gratuitous, it’s not violence for the sake of violence. And in future episodes, we’ll be dealing with the consequences of it, not just the consequences in terms of the idea of breaking the law, but the consequences for Oliver’s soul. What does it mean to be someone who kills somebody, even if you’re doing so in the guise of being a hero? I think it’s an important issue to address.

AX: Were you happy with the way ELI STONE wrapped up, or if you’d had more time to wrap it up, what would that have been?

GUGGENHEIM: The thing about ELI is, because we were always on the verge of cancellation, season finales became potential series finales, so every thirteenth episode, we had to make the episode work on both levels – as a satisfying conclusion for the show and a continuation of the show. I would say the last episode wrapped up a lot of the threads that we were talking about. Obviously, it didn’t wrap up all of the threads. There’s just no way for a forty-two-minute episode to do that. Plus, when we wrote it, we were still hopeful that we would get additional episodes. But I’d say as a final episode, it stands up. I’m reasonably satisfied with it creatively. It’s like, “Oh, we put a nice bow on it.” Returning to the Himalayas, which is where the final scene in the pilot takes place, [reuniting] Eli with his dad, there was a nice feeling of closure to it. So while there were dangling plotlines that were still left undone, like Eli’s vision of the future that’s established in Season 1, maybe the relationship with Maggie, while all of those things were unresolved, it put a nice bow on it. I couldn’t ask for more.

AX: Jonny Lee Miller as Eli and Katie Holmes as Grace had a fated relationship on the show. If Katie Holmes had been available, would Grace have appeared in the finale?

GUGGENHEIM: Well, actually, yeah. Because if you go back and you watch the last episode, there was a comment that his father makes about, “I did this for Grace. Grace was going back.” That was actually something that wasn’t in the original draft – it was something that we were planning for a future episode later in the second season. When we got canceled, I went back and wrote in that closing of the loop, because the idea was that Grace would return. You would discover that the woman’s heart went to her, her heart condition was cured, she and Eli could be together. It was going to be a nice thing, but it was also going to complicate the relationship with Maggie.


http://www.assignmentx.com/2015/marc-gu ... interview/

- Entrevista al productor de "Arrow" y "The Flash" Marc Guggenheim – Parte 2 (AssignementX):
Entrevista al productor de "Arrow" y "The Flash" Marc Guggenheim – Parte 2
Por ABBIE BERNSTEIN / 01 Febrero, 2015 / 10:27 PM


AX: Are you involved with the animated VIXEN series for CWSeed.com?

MARC GUGGENHEIM: I am, actually, and it’s a great deal of fun, I have to say. I always love working in different mediums, and we’re going to do, basically, an animated spin-off [of ARROW and THE FLASH]. It’s going to center on Vixen, who I came to know as a former member of the Justice League. This is a six-part origin story, but characters from FLASH and ARROW are prominently involved, and it’s in the continuity and the world. There’s actually a question I’ve been getting on Twitter a lot – is Oliver [Stephen Amell] going to find out that Felicity [Emily Bett Rickards] kissed Barry [Grant Gustin]? That’s actually going to happen in the VIXEN cartoon. So part of the fun is that close cohesion. And Vixen’s such a great character, because first of all, she represents magic, which is an area that we haven’t explored on either of the two shows as yet.

One thing we’re always saying is, FLASH is very different from ARROW, ARROW is very different from FLASH. If ARROW is crime and FLASH is science, VIXEN has a big magic component. The other thing is, it’s a strong African-American hero who’s, like I said, a former Justice Leaguer. It’s set in Detroit as a nod toward the Justice League stories. It’s done with the same love of the source material that we bring to everything. Two of writers on the project, Keto Shimizu and Brian Ford Sullivan, are every bit as geeky as I am. So look for a lot of things hopefully you’ve come to know and love from FLASH and ARROW in VIXEN. The Easter eggs, the winks, the nods and the cool action – one of the things we can do in animation is really push the envelope in a way that we can’t on either of the two shows. So there’s a much larger production value we’re taking advantage of [in] the animated form. That’s the other reason to do it.

AX: Might VIXEN become live-action at some point?

GUGGENHEIM: One of the things we say is, “Never say never.” And if the character resonates with people, that would be wonderful. I would love to be in a position where CW said to us, “Hey, we want a VIXEN live-action show.” We’ll have to see how things play out, but we really want to produce the highest-quality animated series. We want people to come to this who don’t normally watch an animated show. We want fans of THE FLASH and fans of ARROW to come to CWSeed.com.

AX: Does social media influence story and character choices you do on the series? For example, Felicity on ARROW has become much more important on ARROW and even THE FLASH, at the same time that she’s been embraced by the fans …

GUGGENHEIM: You know, when we started the ARROW journey, there was no Felicity. There was this IT [tech support] character. I always say, Andrew [Kreisberg], Greg [Berlanti] and I, in ARROW, we created a show where none of the characters talk the way we write. Oliver, Diggle [David Ramsey], Moira [Susanna Thompson], they’re all so quiet and taciturn. And we write these banter-y, fifty-mile-a-minute characters, and I think what happened to Felicity was, we got to Episode Three, we needed this character and we were just craving a character who we could write in our voice, and then we very fortunately cast Emily Bett Rickards and it was like, “Oh, my gosh, she’s terrific, let’s bring her back for Episode Four, let’s bring her back for Episode Five.” We just had so much fun writing the character. And then Stephen and Emily had this very natural chemistry that we just started writing towards. And it wasn’t like, “Hey, it’s our grand plan to get these two characters together.” There wasn’t even a grand plan to get Felicity to become a member of Team Arrow, it was literally, we’re having so much fun with this character and with this actress, to the point where the network was like, “You’re going to keep putting Felicity in the show, right?” And we’re like, “We’re three episodes ahead of you and she’s in the show.” And then of course, there are only so many times you can have her interact with Oliver without coming across like the biggest idiot in the world and she’s not an idiot, so bring her into Team Arrow.

It’s great that the fans on Twitter, to finally circle back around to your question, the fans on Twitter have embraced that relationship, but we sort of chart our own course. Look, there are a few moments coming up that all those people on my Twitter feed are not going to be happy about. Just straight up. And I’m going to have to stay off Twitter for a little while. But I will say that there’s a scene at the end of Episode Twelve – it’s Emily’s strongest performance on the show. It’s one of my all-time favorite scenes. We sort of give with both hands. The same people who wrote the scene between Oliver and Felicity in Episode Nine with the kiss on the forehead are the exact same people who wrote the scene with Felicity that ends Episode Twelve. So it’s a ride, it’s a roller-coaster.

Hopefully the show’s going to be on for a little longer.

AX: Do you think there’s any sort of cosmic reason that TV versions of Oliver Queen keep getting involved with the non-canonical characters? On SMALLVILLE, he wound up with Allison Mack’s character Chloe, who I think was a non-canonical character.

GUGGENHEIM: I don’t know if this is blasphemy, but Green Arrow does not have a big rogues’ gallery, or a well-known supporting cast. The reason Oliver Queen in the various other media [than comics] keeps interacting with non-canonical characters is, his canon’s pretty small.

AX: Most of your villains so far are canonical, right?

GUGGENHEIM: Yes. But honestly, we tried a couple – Cyrus Vanch [David Anders] in Season 1 was brand-new. Lately, I have found myself sort of thinking towards [ARROW] Season 4 and thinking, we may have to start adding some characters to the toy chest, rather than taking away some characters from the toy chest. But that’s exciting to us, too.

AX: How much are you concerned with maintaining a tone versus making each season new?

GUGGENHEIM: I think we have to be careful about making each season feel different. Certainly, the structure of [ARROW] Season 1 was, [Oliver] fought Malcolm [John Barrowman] and got his ass kicked, which is not dissimilar to the structure of Season 3, but the direction Season 3 takes, and this is not hyperbole – I know I’m prone to hyperbole, but no one is expecting where this is going. This show, I would say in Episode Fifteen, it takes such a hard left turn that no one is going to see it coming. It’s probably one of the biggest surprises we’ve ever done, probably because people are expecting a certain kind of story, and we have a different kind of story in mind.

I have faith in our fans, I have faith in our audience that they’ve got faith in us. And I know people are Tweeting, “We’re worried,” and it’s like, “Why are you worried?” Yes, the show is going to do something crazy and radical, but one thing we’re all always saying is, “It’s Season 3. We can’t repeat ourselves in Seasons 1 and 2. And we have to push the envelope.” And it’s a dangerous game. I have a lot of respect for shows that have jumped the shark, because jumping the shark is the result of – you need to push the envelope without tearing the envelope, and it’s very hard, because you don’t know where the line is. But you have to trust your gut and trust your instincts, and Greg, Andrew and I, we all trust each other’s instincts. It’s good that there’s not one of us in a room alone. We have each other as checks and balances.

AX: You were quoted as having said you’d like to see Batman on one of the shows …

GUGGENHEIM: The question that was put to me – it’s amazing what gets carried – the question that was put to me is, who would I like to see on the show, if I could have anyone? Well, yes, if I could have anyone, I would love to have Batman. I mean, yes. Duh. [It’s akin to the question] if I could sleep with anyone …

AX: You’d sleep with Batman?

GUGGENHEIM: Yes. That’s your quote. That’s your lead. [NOTE: Guggenheim is joking.] “Marc Guggenheim says he wants to sleep with Batman.” In a perfect world, sure, it would be wonderful [to have Batman interact with Oliver and/or Barry], but that’s just [not practical]. The one thing I always say is, I look at all these costumes – we never in a million years planned on doing this many costumed characters on the show, ever. By the end of Season 1, we didn’t expect to get Deathstroke, we didn’t expect to get the Huntress. We went and moved so much faster and farther than we ever had planned, that’s only doubled.

The great thing that FLASH has done and the crossover has done is, it’s introduced, in the most organic way, superpowers and the wondrous into the more grounded world of ARROW. We started off ARROW – we had zero plans for superpowers. When we said, “No superpowers,” we really meant it, but, “Wait a minute, we’re going to do FLASH.” Is anything off-limits? No. I think the question has changed. It’s now not, “What can we do?”, it’s “How can we do it in a way that honors that world that we have established?”

AX: Is the question also, “Where do we do it?” or is it like, “No superpowers, it’s on ARROW, with superpowers, it’s on FLASH”?

GUGGENHEIM: I think we started the season off with that dogmatic sort of division and I think we’ve all – Greg, Andrew and I – collectively softened on that. We always had a plan for this year in terms of the Atom, in terms of the world of Ra’s al Ghul. And again, it’s just feeling what feels right. I’m sure there’s a way to do GREEN LANTERN in the world that we’ve created on ARROW and FLASH. How and when and why that happens, part of it’s a creative thing and part of it’s what is D.C.’s plan and certain decisions get made way above our heads. We’re very happy with the characters we’ve got right now.

AX: Will we be seeing more of Ra’s al Ghul on ARROW?

GUGGENHEIM: You will see a lot more of him. Right now, we’re breaking Episode Nineteen, so we’re half a season ahead of you guys, and there’s a lot of Ra’s to come.

AX: One possible outcome of the arc that you’ve started on ARROW now is, by the time Oliver gets back, the people on Team Arrow may feel, “We’re fighting crime on our own, stop expecting us to be your support staff,” and Oliver is like, “I don’t know how to relate to you people as my equals” …

GUGGENHEIM: I would say there are huge chunks of that that are very much in line with what we’re doing, and then there are huge chunks of it that are [not]. We’ve got a slightly different plan, but there’s a reason why the [phrase] “Oliver’s crusade” is repeated in the beginning of every single episode, and there’s a reason why Oliver told Diggle in the premiere, “This is my crusade.” We go into each season with a plan. We know where we’re headed. It has a relationship to what you were talking about, ish.

AX: So far, flashbacks have been part of ARROW’s structure. Are you going to run out of back story, or is that going to be a feature forever?

GUGGENHEIM: It’s not a question of running out of back story, it’s a question of running out of time. We’re doing each year of flashbacks in five-year increments. If the show goes beyond five years, we’ve got to come up with a game plan. We just got picked up for Season 4, so we’re not quite at the point where we have to worry about this yet.


http://www.assignmentx.com/2015/marc-gu ... interview/

- El 'Deadshot' de "Arrow" (Michael Rowe) Habla sobre la película del Suicide Squad, un Spinoff de TV, el Crossover con Flash y Más (Comicbook):
El 'Deadshot' de "Arrow" (Michael Rowe) Habla sobre la película del Suicide Squad, un Spinoff de TV, el Crossover con Flash y Más
Por BD Comito 30/01/2015


With all the talk of the Suicide Squad coming back to Arrow, soon, we decided to reach out to a key member of the squad: Deadshot, known in the real world as Michael Rowe.

Mike agreed to an exclusive interview with ComicBook.com, discussing the Suicide Squad's return, his beef with Diggle, Will Smith taking on the character in movies, and much more.

BD: I need to start off with some confirmation. I’ve heard Suicide Squad is going to be back, does this mean Deadshot is coming back?

MR: Yeah, man, I was on set last night. It’s been awhile. But, usually they keep these things pretty tight under wraps, but I woke up to a couple of articles online, so I guess somebody, one of the higher ups, had done an interview with Entertainment tonight or one one of these publications and spilled the beans that it was going to be a new Suicide Squad episode.

BD: It must be tough to do all this stuff and not be able to tell anybody.

MR: Yeah, it sucks man! I gotta say. I mean, it’s a risky process when you know you’re going to be back on the show. I’m not under contract, so when you get the call you don’t really know what’s coming, but then they’ll reserve you for a bunch of days and you’ll know around when it’s coming, and then you’re just kind of waiting and waiting for details, then they’ll send you a script and then I’m like a kid on Christmas morning- I’ll start ripping through the script and see what’s happening. That’s one of my favorite parts of the job, man, it’s just like the wheels start spinning and you start getting ideas for scenes and yeah, it’s…it’s fun. It’s like a Batphone rings and you just gotta spring into action.

BD: There must be so much going through your head, because last time we saw your character he was cooperating but not really by choice, and he sort of redeemed himself, but you don’t know. Does he want to be a hero or a villain? And that’s something you have to balance as an actor, how do you do that?

MR: I think everybody has a bit of a hero and a bit of a villain inside them. You know, when it comes to Deadshot, he’s such a polarizing figure. He doesn’t work well in a team environment and he’s got a ton of issues. He’s like the lone wolf, you know what I mean? He just does what he’s gonna do and people tune in to see what decision he’ll make and you never really know which way he’s gonna go. When I was a kid I loved professional wrestling. I loved these old school, like, 80s, 90s wrestlers, like, Rowdy Roddy Piper, Jake the Snake, Randy Macho Man Savage- the dudes that didn’t really play nice with anyone. They were like their own team. They weren’t good guys, but they weren’t really with the group of villains either. And when you watch them fight you didn’t always root for them to win because they were kind of d---s, but you couldn’t wait to see what kind of s--- they were gonna stir up, you know what I mean? Anything was possible. So there’s characters, people are drawn to them just to see what the hell is gonna happen, ‘cause you never know. And the guy doesn’t even know, you feel like he’s acting like he doesn’t even know what he’s gonna do next. There’s just real freedom to it.

BD: Yeah, that just speaks a lot to how you play it, because everything you just described is so true and believable to the character, so compliments to you for that.

MR: Thank you.

BD: One thing I wonder when I’m watching is whether you have to train or prepare to convincingly portray this ace sniper?

MR: I do on-set kind of sessions with real snipers. We’ve got this dude named Ryan that usually shows up, he’s a military trained sniper. He’s like a 16 time Canadian champion or something like that. He’ll show up, he’ll give me the run down on my weapon, and because they use real weapons a lot of times they’re illegal in this country, so you know for the gear heads, they’ll tune in and see what kind of sniper rifle I’m using so they’ll tune in and know what it’s used for. So, if I’m filming in public, a lot of times there’s a police escort to bring me the weapon. So then we’ll go through the scenario of where I’m shooting and where my target is and what the options are in a situation like this in Ryan’s mind. We’ll go through a couple positions and he’ll give me all these choices and we’ll kind of talk out and we’ll have this little pow-wow and we’ll have mentor sessions. They’ll be really quick but really intense and really detailed and then they’ll let me choose what I’m comfortable with and what I think the character would do and we start to talk about what we be the best way to film and come up with the best possible scenario for the shot. But, I, you know, I haven’t spent a lot of time really firing guns. When I was a little kid, my dad had a rifle and we would go to his place where he grew up in this remote area and shoot bottles and cans, and I was a pretty good shot.

BD: So maybe you were destined for the role.

MR: Yeah, exactly. You know, I didn’t see this coming from back then, but yeah, I’ve handled guns before but near the capacity to the character.

BD: That’s pretty cool. I knew people paid attention to details but I didn’t know it was that intense and there would be someone on set teaching you.

MR: Yeah, and he’s offered to take me out in the woods and blow stuff up and shooting and everything, I’ve just been too busy right now, but I plan to do so. Because, you’re firing blank rounds. You see the bullet fire from the gun but you don’t actually feel much of a kick back, so it’s up to me to make it look like it’s firing real bullets. So, I really need to have the feelings of what type of round makes what type of kickback.

BD: Even more compliments to your acting, that’s stuff I hadn’t even picked up on that they’re blank rounds that don’t kick back.

MR: I didn’t see it coming either. It’s just having to do it and facing these challenges, you gotta figure it. So you’re there, and you’re doing it. And another thing, Ryan’s telling me, when you’re a sniper, a sniper doesn’t blink when he fires. Like a boxer doesn’t blink when even when a punch is being thrown at his eye. It’s just something you train yourself to do. But especially when you’re firing these blank rounds, there’s a lot of gun powder or whatever makes it pop, that disperses outside of the gun, to make it look better, for camera. So I’m blinking because I feel it hitting my face and my eyes, and they’re like you can’t blink man, you can’t blink. So I’m forcing my eyes to be open but I have these bullets with s--- like, in my eyes, and I’m just AHHH firing away, trying to keep it together! If people saw some of the stuff half the stuff that happens while we’re filming, it’s hilarious. Like, in the show it looks like I’m perched up on a balcony firing at a crowd of people and taking them out, but really I’m shooting at like a cardboard box with an “x” on it, you know what I mean?

BD: Yeah.

MR: And we do stuff where, the episode where Diggle breaks me out of the Russian jail. And, we had this kind of, it got edited out, but we had this through-line where I go for the gun and Diggle won’t let me have it and I take the guy’s baton- the security at the jail has these batons on their belts. And so I take the baton, and then as we’re going through trying to bust out, getting in little scraps with people and I’m using the baton getting to see a whole different fighting style from Deadshot. But then when I bust out, when we blow up the side of the building and we bust out, Diggle and Lyla start shooting at this one group of guards, Arrow is taking out another group of guards, and this one guy comes flying around the alley, and I take the baton and throw it across the courtyard and knock the guy out. And we’re really set up in this courtyard scenario and they’re telling me, “so you’ve gotta really launch this thing, like it could really take this guy out all the way over there.” And I’m like, “No problem,” and they say, “You’re kind of throwing it high, like lobbing it, it needs to be more of straight line. Try and keep it close to camera.” So I’m like, “No problem, I got it, I got a pitching arm, I’m gonna wing this thing like you’ve never seen.” This stunt baton has got padding around it and there’s someone taking still photos, so I ask them to move aside because that’s the path I’m gonna take and we come out and we’re riled up and stuffs on fire and this guy comes around and I take one step in and I throw the thing as I hard as I can I smoke the camera guy right in the chest, neck area. And I’m like “Oh, damn!” It was one of those moments where it’s really funny, but you know, he didn’t find it funny. So you’re trying not to laugh but everyone is like “Oh my god, that was so hard.”

BD: Do you think Diggle and Deadshot will ever see eye to eye? Or do you think the past will keep getting away?

MR: Even if you remove the past and what I did to Diggle, their relationship is so unique, because the end result they share. The place they want to get to in a mission or a situation… They want to end up in the same place, but the steps one would take to get there are completely opposite. So they’re kind of really drawn to each other because of that. They’re like polar opposites and I’m really intrigued by how he makes decisions and he’s really blown away by why I would do it the other way. So we start in the same spot and end in the same spot but the path we take to get there couldn’t be any more different. I don’t know that Diggle would ever be able to let go of the fact that every time he sees me he’s reminded that I took his brother. I also see something in Diggle, that… this is the way I come at the character, I had an older brother. I looked up to him, he was my hero, stuff went down… This is from the comics, the way stuff went down, I ended up accidentally shooting and killing my own brother. So, there’s something in Diggle, maybe, that reminds me of my own brother and also kind of, maybe, when I was a kid I thought I would be like him, but because of the events and the fallout from my brother and everything else that happened in my life, I ended up where I am. So I do see something in Diggle that attracts me to him and I think he sees something in me that keeps him interested in me. But will we ever see eye to eye? No.

BD: Who do you think wins in a fight, though?

MR: Now this has been discussed on set, a lot.

BD: I bet David takes that pretty personally.

MR: Well, yeah! He’s like this little dude would never be able to beat me in a fight. Here’s how I see it: I see at as I will always have the upper hand, because in a fight, when you fight angry, you don’t stick to the game plan and you don’t fight smart. Diggle sees red when it comes to me and it comes to a fight situation. Deadshot stays calm, cool, and collected which is what makes him a good sniper, that’s what will keep him focused in a fight. Diggle is much bigger, much stronger, but Deadshot’s got some moves, man. We’ve talked a lot about it, in hand to hand combat, they want to make him quicker, they want to make him more, like, Bruce Lee-esk, a lot kicks and stuff like that. I hope we get to see it, I don’t know how it’ll go, every time we’ve faced off so far, I’ve come out on type. I’m definitely the faster, more composed fighter, but he’s got the strength.

BD: You really have this character down. You’re in his head, really.

MR: I spend a lot of time with this guy, man! You know what I mean? Maybe it’s a bit of a blessing and a curse, because I have such big gaps between bringing him back to life on set. I wish I could play him more.

BD: So how does this make you feel about the Suicide Squad movie, do you think it owes a thank you to how successfully you and the team have been on TV? And how about Will Smith taking over Deadshot?

MR: I imagine that them pulling the trigger on doing the film has maybe a little bit to do with what we’re doing on TV and proving that fans are drawn to it. I really appreciate the Deadshot from comic books and the Suicide Squad stuff they were doing in the comic books. But it was kind of only for the hardcorers. It wasn’t, sort of, a known top notch DC book.
I’ve grown quite attached to it, the character and the squad. So for Will Smith to takeover Deadshot, it’s gonna be fun, man, because he’s gonna take the squad, and all the A-lsit stars, are gonna make the squad into a household name and give it the respect that it’s due, so that makes me really happy. I guess if you do look at it, as we proved it on TV and it graduates into film, it does kind of take away some of the stuff that we could have done because we’re sharing the property with the film, it does limit you. So there’s good things and bad things for it. I think Will Smith is going to make a very interesting Deadshot so I can’t wait to see what he does. I do take is as a little bit of a compliment. I didn’t in the beginning, I didn’t think much, but the conversations I’ve had with people and stuff lie that, we did our job on TV, we work hard. It is a compliment to say “Let’s go to the biggest level we can with it.” Definitely a pat on the back there.

BD: Do you know if there’s any talks of a Suicide Squad spinoff show? Would you want to do that?

MR: Yeah, I’d be into it, man! Like I said, I would love to do this character more. That’s my problem with it, there’s so much we can do, but there’s only so much we can do on Arrow. We can’t develop them into full capacity. I hear the buzz that goes on online and I hear people chirping around the background, stuff like that. It definitely was a possible, but I don’t know now because of the film. If it ever does happen, I’m all in, 100%, I’d love to do it. We just gotta wait, that ship is sailed for the time being, we just gotta wait and see what happens.

BD: You think there’s a possibility of the Suicide Squad crossing over with Flash?

MR: I think so. Mainly because once Captain Boomerang showed up everybody’s minds went there. He one of the main Rogues to Flash from the comics and he’s also in most of the Suicide Squad stuff from the comics so, you know, I think that was a little bit of a teaser to that down the road.

BD: That would be fun. We love those crossovers.

MR: Yeah I would love that. I’m a fan of The Flash, I’ve been watching that since the pilot. Super fun show. It’s got a whole different feel than Arrow and I dig it.

BD: You guys are all doing great work on CW. What about this Tomorrowland? Nobody really knows much about it, the trailers are kind of vague, and the synopsis is kind of vague, but what can you tell me about your role in it?

MR: I can’t tell you much, man, they made me sign a bunch of stuff, it’s pretty tight-lipped. I can tell you this: unfortunately I didn’t get to work with George Clooney on the film. I have a really small role. I’m really hesitant to talk about films, man, because I worked on Godzilla, that latest film that came out. I worked on that fora couple of days for a couple of scenes and then we hit the cutting room floor with all our stuff. They edited us out- me and the other guy I worked with. So, you can’t really jump the gun on films because you never really know what’s going to make the final cut on film stuff. So I’m hesitant talking about anything I do in the film world until I see the film, otherwise it just makes me look like an idiot, you know what I mean?

BD: Yeah, I would be pretty bummed if I got to work on a film and then watched, just like, “What? Where am I?”

MR: Yeah, I was kind of choked, mainly because I have a little nephew. He’s 5 years old and a huge Godzilla fan. He goes back and watches all the spinoff stuff from the Japanese movies with, like, all the other characters that come to fight Godzilla.

BD: That’s a pretty hardcore fan.

MR: Yeah, no, he’s really into it. We watch these videos all the time and when he found out Uncle Mike was gonna be in Godzilla he was really excited. So that’s what bummed me out more than anything. He knew I worked on it, he saw the Godzilla movie, and he just didn’t understand why. You know, he doesn’t comprehend all the stuff that goes into film, like, “What do you mean, he’s not in the movie?” It didn’t make any sense to him. It just bummed me out more than anything.


Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lARcrRCYXh4


http://comicbook.com/2015/01/30/arrows- ... tv-spinof/

Re: "ARROW" Nueva serie de la CW para TV basada en Green Arr

Publicado: Mié Ene 28, 2015 4:14 pm
por Shelby

Re: "ARROW" Nueva serie de la CW para TV basada en Green Arr

Publicado: Mié Ene 28, 2015 9:27 pm
por Shelby
- "Arrow" hará otro episodio centrado en el "Suicide Squad":
mKRy6Fq.jpg

ETOnline ha llegado hoy con la exclusiva de que la serie de la CW "Arrow" volverá a nuestras pantallas con otro episodio centrado en el "Suicide Squad".

Volveremnos a ver al equipo en nuestras pantallas en el episodio 3.17 titulado “Suicidal Tendencies” (Tendencias Suicidas).

La jefa de A.R.G.U.S. Amanda Waller (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) regresa en este episodio junto a los favoritos de los fans Deadshot (Michael Rowe) y Cupido (Amy Gumenick), que es el nuevo miembro del equipo. Sin embargo, no estarán todos presentes ya que Bronze Tiger no aparecerá y Shrapnel murió en el último episodio en el que aparecieron.

También se introducirá un nuevo personaje al universo de Arrow, un político corrupto, el 'Senador Cray' que será interpretado por Steven Culp (Grey’s Anatomy, Bosch).
Imagen
En la época que John Ostrander estuvo al frente de los cómics del "Suicide Squad", 'Joe Cray' era un sucio senador que usaba el equipo para avanzar en su carrera política. En "Arrow", el 'Senador Cray' estará en el centro de una operación de rescate en la República de Kasnia.

En su regreso, Floyd Lawton/Deadshot tendrá algunos enfrentamientos con Diggle y seguramente el regreso de Carrie Cutter/Cupido también agitará las aguas de Starling City.


http://www.etonline.com/tv/157074_arrow ... _are_back/

Re: "ARROW" Nueva serie de la CW para TV basada en Green Arr

Publicado: Mié Ene 28, 2015 9:57 pm
por Shelby
- Revelado el título y créditos del episodio 3.17:
Ya tenemos el título y créditos de un nuevo capítulo gracias a Marc Guggenheim:

Imagen

https://twitter.com/mguggenheim/status/ ... 6567680000

El episodio 3.17 de 'Arrow' tendrá por título "Suicidal Tendencies". Está escrito por BKeto Shimizu y está dirigido por Jesse Warn.

Re: "ARROW" Nueva serie de la CW para TV basada en Green Arr

Publicado: Mié Ene 28, 2015 10:30 pm
por Shelby
- ARROW 3.11 "Midnight City" Clip #2:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IeZ-jKDoAB0



- Arrow "Inside: Midnight CIty with Colton Haynes" Featurette:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T4BEokRs1ws

Re: "ARROW" Nueva serie de la CW para TV basada en Green Arr

Publicado: Jue Ene 29, 2015 3:25 am
por Shelby
- Arrow 3.12 "Uprising" Promo (HD):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4XFpnmKEJVQ


- Arrow 3.12 "Uprising" Extended Promo (HD):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vvrTvyHAW08



- Arrow 3.12 "Uprising" Canadian Promo (HD):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nLhImFOnGFk
http://fponthedl.tumblr.com/post/109449 ... -quality-i

Re: "ARROW" Nueva serie de la CW para TV basada en Green Arr

Publicado: Jue Ene 29, 2015 4:20 pm
por Shelby
- Imágenes BTS del rodaje del episodio 3.17 "Suicidal Tendencies", en el que se ve la boda de Diggle y Lyla (28-01-15):

Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen

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



(Thanks to @canadagraph, @david_ramsey, @willaaaahh, @MzKatieCassidy, @emilybett, @ColtonHaynes)

http://www.socialitelife.com/photos/the ... -vancouver
http://canadagraphs.weebly.com/arrow-bl ... and-for-it




- Video de Stephen Amell entrevistando a Brandon Routh para su campaña benéfica de camisetas "The Sinceriously":

https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=79 ... =2&theater


Durante la entrevista, Amell le pidió a Brandon que creara una palabra que significara algo para él y el por qué, "Bueno, hablando sobre gratitud, todos vosotros sois increíbles. Es un elenco y equipo increíble que ha sido muy amable conmigo. Los fans en su mayoría también me han dado la bienvenida. Los fans de Olicitu definitivamente lo han hecho...". Luego Amell le preguntó qué planes tenía para Felicity, a lo que Brandon esquivó la respuesta, Brandon dijo que "está pasándoselo increíble interpretando a Ray Palmer y viendo qué sigue" y también hablaron sobre el traje, a lo que Brandon respondió que "El traje es muy apretado, pero se ve increíble".

Re: "ARROW" Nueva serie de la CW para TV basada en Green Arr

Publicado: Jue Ene 29, 2015 8:41 pm
por Shelby
- Arrow New S3 Promo "Dangerous":

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HOnBG-gac6o

Re: "ARROW" Nueva serie de la CW para TV basada en Green Arr

Publicado: Vie Ene 30, 2015 2:56 am
por Shelby
- Arrow 3.12 "Uprising" Stills:

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

Re: "ARROW" Nueva serie de la CW para TV basada en Green Arr

Publicado: Vie Ene 30, 2015 11:31 am
por Shelby
- Descripción oficial del 3.14 “The Return”:
3.14 “The Return” (18/02/15): EL REGRESO DE DEATHSTROKE y TOMMY MERLYN — Malcolm (John Barrowman) pone a Oliver (Stephen Amell) y Thea (Willa Holland) en una situación peligrosa que los lleva a Lian Yu con el antiguo enemigo de Oliver, Deathstroke (la estrella invitada Manu Bennett). Un flashback revela cuando Oliver y Maseo (la estrella invitada Karl Yune) regresaron a Starling City para recuperar el arma biológica Omega, y a pesar de estar bajo órdenes estrictas de Amanda Waller (la estrella invitada Cynthia Addai-Robinson) de no revelarse a sí mismo a nadie, Oliver busca a su familia, a Laurel (Katie Cassidy) y a Tommy (la estrella invitada Colin Donnell). Dermott Downs dirige el episodio escrito por Marc Guggenheim & Erik Oleson (#314).

http://www.greenarrowtv.com/arrow-3-14- ... tion/21322



Añadidos los rátings del 3.11 "Midnight City". Podéis encontrarlos AQUÍ

Re: "ARROW" Nueva serie de la CW para TV basada en Green Arr

Publicado: Sab Ene 31, 2015 3:12 am
por Shelby
- Arrow Stunt Series: "Arrow Vs. Nyssa Vs. Malcom Merlyn":

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xuUm9AvCRlc

Re: "ARROW" Nueva serie de la CW para TV basada en Green Arr

Publicado: Dom Feb 01, 2015 2:34 am
por Shelby
- Arrow 3.12 "Uprising" Clip:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4DpEXiJpb3M




- Nueva imagen BTS de la S3 (30-01-15):

Imagen

(@ArrowProdOffice: ook who dropped by! @EmilyBett and @ColtonLHaynes #UnderTheHood!)



- Imágenes BTS del rodaje del 1.17 "Suicidal Tendencies" en Vanvouver (28-01-15):

Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen Imagen

http://yvrshoots.com/2015/01/shoot-arro ... M2LIS5HJ1D

Re: "ARROW" Nueva serie de la CW para TV basada en Green Arr

Publicado: Mar Feb 03, 2015 1:03 pm
por Shelby
- The Flash: Ray Palmer de Arrow va a conseguir ayuda con su traje de Atom (IGN):
The Flash: Ray Palmer de Arrow va a conseguir ayuda con su traje de Atom
Por Max Nicholson and Roth Cornet 2 Feb 2015


Recently, IGN's own Roth Cornet and a handful of other outlets spoke with The Flash executive producer Andrew Kreisberg about what fans can expect to see in the rest of Season 1. During the Q&A, the EP dropped a few hints about the upcoming Flash/Arrow crossover in which Felicity and Ray Palmer (Brandon Routh) travel to Central City. He also touched on the challenges of working with The Flash and Arrow's shared universe and how Arrow is more of a soap opera...

Atom Needs a Suit Assist

Last week, we learned that Ray would be joining Felicity Smoak (Emily Bett Rickards) on her next visit to Central City. But what brings the future Atom to Barry Allan's neck of the woods? "At that point Ray needs a little help with his suit, and who better than Felicity's high-tech guys at STAR Labs?" Kreisberg said. "I hadn't gotten to write much Ray this season on Arrow. I got to write him in the comic book, in the Season Zero that we wrote. I loved it. So getting to write him, he's just so much fun."

Kreisberg also noted that the episode, called "All-Star Team-Up," will feature the debut of the Bug-Eyed Bandit, a prominent Atom villain in the comics.

You've Got a Friend in Geek

When Ray and Felicity arrive at STAR Labs in episode 18, Ray also hits it off with one of Team Flash's crew. "He finds a best friend in Cisco," Kreisberg revealed. "There's even a line in the script where Felicity says, 'Ray is like Barry in Oliver's body.' [Laughs] Then she goes, 'Oh, God, did I say that out loud?' And Ray, even though he looks like Brandon Routh, he's just a big tech geek at heart. So he and Cisco quickly bond."

Meanwhile, Barry is having a tough time, much like the last time Felicity was in town. "It happens to come at a particularly bad moment for Barry, but that's partially why we did it," Kreisberg continued. "The first episode with Felicity, episode four, she came along at a time where her experience in being a part of a crime-fighting team definitely helped Barry overcome what he was facing that week. Similarly, when she comes, he's having a crisis of conscience that in some ways only somebody like she can help him through. It's a really fun episode."

The Beauty (and Headache) of Shared Universes

Spoilers for Arrow to date follow...

TV crossovers like "All-Star Team-Up" can be fun, but the shared universe aspect can also be problematic. Kreisberg explained, "Sometimes it's a real hinderance because, even in the room, we're like, 'Oh, Oliver's missing? Call Barry. Have him run all over the place until he finds him.' So when it serves us, it's absolutely great, but the more we talked about it, sort of bringing all that up on the Flash side of things -- especially given all the Flash stories and knowing that Oliver is missing -- it sort of created more problems than it was worth. Because if you address it on the show, then they seem sort of unsympathetic that they're not throwing all their STAR Labs research to finding Oliver. So sometimes discretion is the better part of valor."

He continued, "But then Ray and Felicity are coming -- and that one, actually, because the air dates changed, we're trying to square the circle on what was happening on Arrow when they come to Flash. So hopefully it won't feel too much like an evergreen episode, because we felt like it really worked the first time around... There's [also] an upcoming thing in a Flash episode, which feels like a throwaway, but it actually describes an event that happens in the flashback story this season on Arrow. We do stuff like that. For us, it's so much fun, and hopefully the audience finds it fun. Like last season, with all the mentions of the Accelerator on Arrow."

Arrow is More of a Soap Opera

That said, tonally, The Flash and Arrow are still two very different animals. Kreisberg recalled an upcoming scene on The Flash where Barry and Caitlin end up singing karaoke at a bar. "Jake Coburn, one of the Arrow co-EPs, came by, and I was watching [that scene], and he was like, 'Yeah, scenes like this are where Arrow goes to die.' [Laughs] Like characters going out for a drink or going out for fun. Whenever we try that on Arrow, it never works. We either cut it or, unfortunately, it airs. [Laughs] But it's fun with The Flash. You really can have these 'After work, everybody goes out and has a drink and a fun night.'"

Kreisberg added, "I think one of the great strengths of The Flash is just how close everyone is on the show. They tend not to have these raging conflicts the way we giving everybody on Arrow. [Laughs] That show's more of a soap opera -- and I don't say that derogatorily. I mean, I'm one-third responsible for it. [Laughs] But there we always think to ourselves, 'How can we hurt these people more?' You know, 'What's the worst thing we can do to Thea, and what's the worst thing we can do to Laurel? What's the worst thing we can do to Oliver?' That's where the drama comes from. I think part of the strength of The Flash is that the drama comes from how these people who have banded together and love each other and trust each other deal with conflicts that come their way."


http://www.ign.com/articles/2015/02/02/ ... -atom-suit?

- Vinnie Jones sobre la última posición de Brick (IGN):
Vinnie Jones sobre la última posición de Brick
Por Matt Fowler 04 Febrero 2014


While Oliver's been out of commission, Roy, Diggle, and Laurel (masquerading as Black Canary!) have been trying their damnedest to shut down the nefarious schemes of Vinne Jones' Danny Brickwell - aka "Brick."

Brickwell's out to make The Glades his home, free and clear of all cops, vigilantes, and do-gooders. On Wednesday's brand new Arrow episode, "Uprising," Jones' villainous multi-episode arc comes to a close. I had the chance to talk to the rough and tumble star about the episode, the possibility of returning as Brick, and the rise of the superhero genre.

IGN: So it seems like your run as Brickwell is coming to an end for now. What can you tell us about this next episode, "Uprising?"

Vinnie Jones: [laughs] Well, it's hard to say anything without revealing too much obviously, but it's been great fun taking over The Glades. And meeting everybody and all the assorted characters. It's been good fun.

IGN: I like Brickwell because he has a particular way of doing things. Almost a code - where he won't hit women, or he'll give a guy a gun and a chance to live once he's crossed him.

Jones: Yeah. But I also think that because of his skin situation that he's not too worried about losing those fights. Not worried about bullets and things like that. He's been shot with bullets, arrows, and everything and it doesn't seem to bother him so he's got a lot of confidence. And I did like the little twist with Black Canary when he said that he didn't hit women. And then a little bit later I said "I could make an exception for you."

IGN: Will we learn a bit more about Brick's skin situation?

Jones: Not too much. And a few episodes back, when we first met him, it wasn't too distinctive but he's got some bullet wounds there. Maybe that should have been brought more to the forefront more, but then who knows in the future whether Brick will get brought back. They have this legacy of not quite killing people off on Arrow so I'm still optimistic.

IGN: Are you saying that there might not be a definitive ending for Brick in the episode and you might return?

Jones: Let's put it this way. If there is a chance, Brickwell doesn't know about it. [laughs]

IGN: The episode also contains flashbacks concerning Malcolm Merlyn. Can we expect Brickwell to be a part of those perhaps?

Jones: I don't want to give away too much but yes. In the storyline, yes.

IGN: Back when you were Juggernaut in X-Men: The Last Stand, superhero movies had just recently become big money-makers at the movies, with the X-Men and Spider-Man movies. Now they're everywhere, in movies and on TV. What's it like to see these comic characters take over pop culture?

Jones: It's great. I mean, I can remember doing Swordfish with Hugh Jackman years back and he had the first Wolverine blow-up doll. It was quite hilarious. And to now see how far it's come now, it's amazing. Working on X-Men was amazing. I think at the time it was the biggest base camp ever on a movie. I mean it was absolutely massive up in Vancouver. So it was nice to go back to Vancouver here with Arrow. It's a special spot for me. I love fly fishing as well so it's a great place for me to film.

IGN: Brick seems like a fun villain to play because people just can't seem to stop him. And he's been given this three-episode story too which is more than other villains usually get.

Jones: Yeah, he's really tough to keep down. Very similar to the Juggernaut in that respect. And if you remember in X-Men, Juggernaut wasn't killed, he was just knocked out. So maybe we'll see the same sort of twist with Brickell. And yeah, it's sort of the first time they've done a three-episode arc on a character like this. So who knows? Maybe in the future they might do more. That'd be fantastic.

IGN: The stunts on Arrow are amazing. What was it like working with that crew?

Jones: Oh, they're great. And I'm a big fan of letting the stunt guys do their work because they are fantastic at it. And I would say that the stunt people on Arrow rank as some of the best I've worked with. We did one scene where Black Canary dives out of a window and grabs hold of a ladder attached to a helicopter. And I'll tell you, I was sweating more than her. [laughs] We did that take about five times and every time she would just dive through the window and grab that ladder. And they'd say "go again" so she'd just brush herself off, they'd reset the window and out she would go again. And everyone was concerned for her, but you know, that's their adrenaline rush. That's their buzz. And I'm a big fan of allowing the stunt people to make you look good. When I first started with Swordfish and with Gone in Sixty Seconds I wanted to do all my own stunts and everything. But then you just sit back and see how good these people are. They're just there to make you look good and to help the story out. I haven't been met with a bad attitude with any stunt person I've ever worked with. I have a lot of respect for them.

IGN: Stunt people aside, you come off as so intimidating usually that it's easy to believe that you're the one doing the fighting.

Jones: I think that's what I try and bring to a show. People see that in me. And also some of the dialogue is - although there's lots of intimidation there's a lot of tongue-in-cheek stuff. So it's been quite a start to the year for me what with Galavant on Sunday nights and Arrow a few days later. So I get kitted up for Galavant, obviously. And then I get kitted up for Arrow. But Arrow's nice because I get to wear a suit. It's a lot easier in the morning.


http://www.ign.com/articles/2015/02/04/ ... ium=social

- Vinnie Jones sobre el interpretar a Brick & el recibir 'un abrazo' del elenco (accesshollywood):
Vinnie Jones sobre el interpretar a Brick & el recibir 'un abrazo' del elenco
Por Jolie Lash 04 Febrero, 2015 01:05 PM EDT


As tough-as-nails criminal mastermind Brick, Vinnie Jones has made his plans clear on "Arrow" – he wants to rule The Glades.

But, Team Arrow isn't about to let that happen and Black Canary, Arsenal, Diggle, Felicity Smoak and more will be battling to stop Brick from taking over their house in Wednesday's "Uprising" episode of The CW drama.

The British actor, known for his lengthy career playing hard men across television and film, went from the leather and chain mail of his character Gareth in ABC's "Galavant," to smart suits as the unforgiving "Arrow" villain and he told Access Hollywood about his latest leap. But while he's known for being a tough guy, former soccer (UK football) star Vinnie admitted it can be a little "daunting" – even for him – to join as a guest star on an established show. Luckily, the "Arrow" cast was more than welcoming, something he told us about in a new interview.

AccessHollywood.com: How did this work with 'Galavant'? Did you have to go back and forth?
Vinnie Jones: No. Literally the week I was coming back from 'Galavant,' from England – we film that in England and Wales – I actually got a call, and [they] said, 'Would you like to do 'Arrow'?' … Obviously we looked at it all and seeing how much of a popular show it was, I literally came back, I think I had a day or so in LA, at home and then I flew up to Vancouver. So... I didn't get much rest. We filmed long days on 'Galavant.' We had to get everything in, and so I was all ready for a rest and some nice golf days, and then I was straight up to Vancouver (laughs).

Access: Did you get to see many episodes [of 'Arrow'] before filming? What did you think of it?
Vinnie: I'd just done the normal research -- go on YouTube, watch some shows and that, and it was great. I'm sort of a comic book guy and obviously with 'X-Men,' and I did 'The Cape'… Yeah, I do like the comic book stuff. I'm a real big fan of it, and you know, as I've said in the past, Superman was always my thing growing up and so I was thrilled to do it.

Access: Did you get to talk to Brandon Routh, who has obviously played Superman, about his experiences?
Vinnie: Brandon came and played football for us at Hollywood All-Stars, so I know Brandon from way back. And a very good friend of mine, one of my best friends is Tom Welling.

Access: Another Superman…
Vinnie: Yeah, but he won't say that. He says, 'No, I'm Clark Kent.' But his nickname is 'Superbaby.' So we called him 'Superman' playing golf. So yeah, I get a thrill out of the comic book stuff.

Access: I watched a little sneak peek they had online of this weeks 'Arrow,' and it reveals Brick [has a history with] Malcolm [Merlyn]. Are we going to get into some of the backstory… and maybe do some flashbacks?
Vinnie: Yeah, I think [on Wednesday] you'll get some of that, yeah.

Access: Does that involve wearing wigs or old '90s clothing or anything sort of fun like that?
Vinnie: Not really, no. I do try and stay away from that – all the fake beards and the wigs and everything. It's just an absolute nightmare. We [did] a lot of night shoots up in Vancouver, and it's cold and all the glue's coming off and the girls are sticking you back together and all that, so as much as I can, I try and steer away from that. I do like the suits. But, I mean, with 'Galavant,' I was getting into the costume every day and then I come out of that and I'm putting Hugo Boss suits on, so it was fantastic.

Access: That's a nice change. It's funny you just said it was cold in Vancouver because I would have thought – is it because you've been in LA so long that Vancouver is cold for you now?
Vinnie: There's no mistake, from Vancouver to LA, it rains in Vancouver. It pissed down, and it pisses down and it pisses down. … I'm quite a veteran now, so I take -- from 80 degrees in LA, going down to LAX, I have my jacket under my arm. I know as soon as I get off that plane I need my jacket. … But, I love it up there. I love going fly fishing up there. I was up there about five months on 'X-Men,' and I just really got into the fly fishing scene. I didn't get much time for that with 'Arrow' because we filmed a lot of night shoots, so it was… getting to bed at like 6, 7 in the morning, have a bit of a sleep, in the gym, grab a coffee and the car was waiting for you.

Access: I know you get to work with John Barrowman in this. Did you guys know each other beforehand?
Vinnie: Obviously I've known of John and I've known some of the fine work he's done, and especially some of the theater stuff he's done, but [he is] a very charming man. We got on great and it was nice. I got in there and he came into the makeup trailer and was, 'Awww, I'm so thrilled to see you. I've seen lots of your work. I'm a big fan,' and all that. It's very nice. It settles you in, you know, and they were a lovely bunch up there – the cast and the crew, a real nice bunch. When you go in as a guest star, whether it's for one episode or three like this, it's really nice that – and we did it on 'Galavant,' when we had guests like Ricky Gervais, John Stamos and that – when they come in, it's important for the regular crew and the regular cast to embrace them and make them feel part of it. It warms them to it, and I think that comes out in the performances. It's quite daunting going on to a set where you've got a hundred crew, you've got all the cast, they all know what they're doing and then you sort of come in...stone cold, and straight away you enter a big dialogue scene and you don’t know whether you're doing it sort of right and all that and then you get the thumbs up, and then, you know you do a good day's work, and then the other actors come over and you know, they give you a cuddle and they're like, 'Oh, that was great,' and it boosts your confidence. But even for myself, it is quite daunting walking on to a set and just being thrown straight into the mixer.

Access: Who gives Vinnie Jones 'a cuddle'? You just said they give you 'a cuddle.' That was really cute.
Vinnie: Barrowman! John Barrowman for sure (laughs).

Access: I imagine he's a huggy guy. So I've got to ask you about [Brick], and there was a thing in last week's episode where Ray was talking about how much money he had and Brick really didn't care about the money. Why he doesn't care about money?
Vinnie: I've got all the crew with me now, and that's not gonna be an issue. I'm gonna own the banks anyway. How's that gonna be a problem to Brick? Once he's taken over, he can walk in and just tell 'em how much he wants. That's not a problem.

Access: It looks like there's a massive showdown going on in the streets of The Glades in this episode. Was that a lot of choreography? Tell me about that.
Vinnie: Yeah, there was one big one that was about three nights for one scene. You'll see it. It's pretty epic.

Access: Did you have to do a lot of choreography with the stunt guys?
Vinnie: Yeah. Done a lot, but they're so finely tuned. … They're probably the most well-oiled bunch of stunt guys I've ever worked with. I mean, they were on it. For me now -- early days I wanted to be the man and do [my] own stunts and all that, but you can never look as good as those guys. And you can never tell. I've been watching the last two episodes and not in a million years can you tell whether it's me or a stunt man, you know? I know a lot of actors like to say, 'Yeah, I've done all my stunts.' That's all bulls**t, I think. You've gotta let these guys work.


http://www.accesshollywood.com/arrow-qa ... cle_103726

- Vinnie Jones y Stephen Amell hablan sobre la batalla en Talk Glades (Variety):
Vinnie Jones y Stephen Amell hablan sobre la batalla en Talk Glades
Por Laura Prudom 04 Febrero, 2015 | 10:58AM PT


In this week’s “Arrow,” titled “Uprising,” Starling City is still trapped under the iron fist of the gangster known as Brick (Vinnie Jones), and after the bulletproof bad guy gave Diggle (David Ramsey) and Roy (Colton Haynes) a spectacular beatdown last week, it will take a fighter of immense skill to take the villain out. Could that fighter be Oliver Queen (Stephen Amell)?

“It’s not my showdown to have, it’s Malcom’s — episode twelve is his flashback,” Amell told Variety , hinting at an hour stuffed full of backstory for John Barrowman’s manipulative Malcolm Merlyn, which will feature flashbacks to almost a decade earlier in the Dark Archer’s life. “There’s a young Oliver. I met the actor too. He was such a nice young man; very, very respectful. We spoke outside of the trailers and he was asking me these very profound questions. ‘Why’d you get into acting? What was your inspiration?’ So we had a nice chat.”

And wherever young Oliver goes, it’s a fair bet that a young Tommy Merlyn is sure to follow…

Jones admitted that while it was “nerve-wracking” to join the show for his three-episode arc — “They’re all a well-oiled machine, and you don’t want to block the cogs up,” he said — he was satisfied by tonight’s denouement: “There’s a big standoff. I think they had two or three hundred extras, and it took about three nights to film it, so it’s a hell of a finale.”

No stranger to physical roles, Jones relished the opportunity to take part in “Arrow’s” ambitious fight scenes. “They gave us plenty to do and they did it in segments,” he recalled. “You practice and practice with the stunt guys for a couple of days and then you get it. They bring the stunt guy to do the big wide [shots] and you get in for the close-ups so it’s good fun. You end up with a few aches and pains and bruises but it all comes out well, and the stunt people are fantastic. They make you look so good.”

Jones is also a veteran of comic book properties, having played Marvel character Juggernaut in “X-Men: The Last Stand” on the big screen in 2006, and a villain known as Scales in NBC’s shortlived superhero series “The Cape” in 2011.

He noted that during his “X-Men” stint, the comic book genre “was just taking off. I met Hugh Jackman on ‘Swordfish’ after he did the first ‘X-Men’ and I can remember, while we were on set they’d just brought out the first blow up doll of The Wolverine, and I tied it up on my trailer and I used to bash it up, and we had a good laugh. Hugh took it in good humor, never thinking how big it would blow up. It’s absolutely gone through the roof. But it’s like the horror stuff — the horror stuff has gone nuts, the comic book stuff has gone nuts; the fans are really getting what they want to see, which is fantastic.”

As for “The Cape’s” failure to launch, Jones observed, “I thought ‘The Cape’ was a great concept; it was all magic and stuff, but I thought the timeslot was totally ridiculous. It was an eight o’clock show and they put it on at 10 p.m. on a Monday night. The rope was round the neck before we even went on air, I thought. It’s proven — look at ‘Arrow,’ eight o’clock. That’s the time; you’ve got younger audiences right up to the 50-year-olds, and you’ve got to bring in the younger audience.”

Recently, Jones’ small screen luck has improved between “Arrow” and ABC’s “Galavant,” a “Monty Python”-esque musical comedy starring Joshua Sasse as the titular knight, which saw the British thesp playing scene-stealing bodyguard Gareth to Timothy Omundson’s prissy King Richard. Jones admitted he’d be “gutted” if the show didn’t return, and hopes ABC will pick it up for 13 or 16 episodes next season. “It’s brilliant to come off ‘Galavant’ on a high with the ratings and everyone talking about it, asking ‘is there a new season?’ They’re asking the actors — the actors are the last to know,” Jones laughed. “But it was nice to come off that and get on to something else. To be honest, my friends take the mickey out of me: ‘you’re all over the TV, Sunday nights, Wednesday nights, you’re on “Conan.”‘ I said ‘yeah, that’s how Hollywood is — when you’re hot, you’re hot, when you’re not, you’re not.’ You’ve got to roll with it.”


http://variety.com/2015/tv/news/arrow-u ... 201423604/

- Oliver Regresa para la "Mayor Batalla" de la Serie hasta el Momento (THR):
Oliver Regresa para la "Mayor Batalla" de la Serie hasta el Momento
Por Aaron Couch 8:00 AM PST 04/02/2015


Brick (Vinnie Jones) isn't done with Starling City just yet.

The criminal mastermind has terrorized the world of Arrow for two episodes, puling such ambitious villain moves as taking over The Glades, kidnapping government officials and giving Laurel (Katie Cassidy) a beating (even though he doesn't "like to hit" women.)

On Wednesday, Arrow will reveal Brick's very personal connection to Merlyn (John Barrowman); Oliver (Stephen Amell) will finally return to Starling City after being presumed dead; and team Arrow will face Brick's gang in a huge confrontation.

"It's one of the biggest fight scenes of the show to date," Jones tells The Hollywood Reporter.

Wednesday's episode will be a conclusion to Brick's arc, with the show's executive producers describing the first three episodes of 2015 as a trilogy. But Jones believes he'll be back on the show at some point, and he would like to see Brick team up with other villains for an epic brawl.

"I'm sure at some stage, whether it's six months or six years down the line — that's the comic book Bible, isn't it?" he says of a possible return.

Following Oliver's apparent death in December, Amell wrote on Facebook, "Our show is bigger than any one character," and along with the rest of the cast, Jones has had the heavy task of helping carry the show during Amell's absence from the Starling City scenes. Jones says when Oliver returns, it's a powerful moment.

"He comes back and he's the big star of the show," Jones said.

That added to the challenge of being able to attempt to intimidate Oliver during Wednesday's big brawl.

"As a guest-star you have to match that and your presence has to be as though you've been there for years," Jones says.


http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-f ... est-769934

- Diggle (David Ramsey) de Arrow Habla sobre el Suicide Squad y Green Lantern (comicbook):
Diggle (David Ramsey) de Arrow Habla sobre el Suicide Squad y Green Lantern
Por BD Comito 06/02/2015


Diggle is an integral part of Oliver Queen's team on the hit CW show, Arrow. Having spoken to the character's arch nemesis on the show, Deadshot, last week, ComicBook.com decided to reach out to David Ramsey for some insight on what to expect from the character and the show (and of course, address some rumors).

David agreed to join us for an exclusive interview.

-----

I have to start by asking you about the Instagram photo you posted standing next to Deadshot, and the Suicide Squad. On the post you wrote, “Coming.” I thought Diggle was never going to work with the Suicide Squad again?

Diggle’s a liar. No, I’m kidding!

There’s no secret that philosophically he doesn’t agree with Amanda Waller and her brand of justice with the Suicide Squad and by relation his own wife is a high ranking official at ARGUS, as well and to some great degree, moves along with the way Amanda runs ARGUS and agrees with many of the tactics. Specifically the way there are bombs in the backs of criminals heads and detonating them when they don’t do your bidding. So, that’s one of many things he doesn’t quite see eye to eye with Amanda or his wife.

But, for a certain chain of events, in an episode coming up, he does end up working with Amanda and the Suicide Squad, Task Force X, on another noble mission. That’s the thing. Even, the first time he teamed up, it was a noble mission. It’s the way [Amanda] handles things when people aren’t cooperating that he doesn’t agree with. The mission itself is noble. I think that’s kind of Diggle’s M.O. He’s about doing the right thing with the right mission, so he kind of overlooks some of the things that Amanda does in an effort achieve a higher goal. There’s a bigger picture.

And he’s on a mission with his wife, so there’s that drama and that dynamic.

So, you’re right. He did say “wasn’t gonna do it again,” but through fantastic story telling, he is going to do it again.

We also spoke to Mike [Rowe] the other day, and we talked about the relationship between Diggle and Deadshot. Do you think Diggle could ever forgive Deadshot for what he did to his brother, even if Deadshot continues to redeem himself?

This is the great thing about the show. We’re gonna see some more of that in this upcoming episode that I took the Instagram photo of. We’ll get some more about Deadshot, who is such a great character. And what’s great about the show is that they take these strides to really show the humanity of people. When they get involved with the character they do some great stuff in terms of creating a human tissue.

So, Deadshot, Floyd Lawton, is a very interesting character. As we saw in the other Suicide Squad episode, when I had a conversation with him about his daughter and the fact that he’s doing this and sending checks back home to his daughter and in doing so created kind of a connective tissue with Floyd. In that sense, I think Diggle kind of dials into the humanity of Floyd Lawton. He sees that underneath this scarred assassin is a beating human heart and a real man with real emotions. That being said, I think he is still very bitter toward Floyd Lawton for pulling the trigger. Even though, he knows he was just an assassin for hire for a larger, more nefarious group, called H.I.V.E., which the show has not forgotten and will definitely be getting into, by the way. Even though he knows that he was just an assassin, there is still a sort of bitterness that he holds toward Floyd. Diggle is a smart man. I think he can compartmentalize that to a certain degree in order to work with him and in order to find the humanity in Floyd. He certainly does not feel the full fledged hatred to Floyd that he did once before when he thought that he just a man that killed his brother. He understands that he was an assassin, that he was a hired gun. Not that he excuses him, not that he finds forgiveness for Floyd, but I think he can work with Floyd because i think he’s found a connective tissue or a humanity in Floyd that he hasn’t before.

We also asked Mike who would win in a fight between the two of you, and he mentioned that it gets talked about on set and you’ve joked about it before. He says Deadshot wins, but I have to ask you: who wins a fight? Deadshot or Diggle?

I think Diggle is an emotional fighter. I think he’s an emotional man. He has the ability to think really clearly on his feet, a very wise guy. He’s the voice of reason, but I think he does have a lot of passion. I see where Mike’s coming from where he’s an emotional fighter and Deadshot is kind of composed and he’s gonna score some. But you take away the sniper rifle, you take away the knifes, you take away the bullets, you go shirtless with just pants and combat boots on…there’s very little way once I get him in a lock that he’s getting out. Now I’m gonna pay for that! He’s quick. But once I get that, what’s he gonna do? I mean, the length, I’m so much longer. If he stays on the end of my punches it’s just a matter of time. I would say Deadshot has a shot because of his craftyness… And the thing about him is he’s going to try and get my head, he’s gonna try to Ali me, he’s going to talk about my brother, what he did to my brother, I’m gonna see my brother tattooed across his chest, pounding on all of that to get in my head. After he wins a few rounds from that, it’ll be a knockout. I’ll knock him out.

Does any of this change Diggle’s relationship with ARGUS going forward?

That’s interesting, too. ARGUS isn’t going anywhere, right? Like S.H.I.E.L.D. in the Marvel Universe? They just see everything. They know everything. So, they’re not really gonna disappear. They’re kind of what you have to deal with. In terms of what Diggle’s role will be, it’s gonna be interesting. His wife is gonna be there and by association he’s there. So, it’s gonna be very interesting. The writers have something big coming up, specifically season four with ARGUS. So, ARGUS isn’t going away in the DC Universe and certainly not in the Arrow Universe. They’re gonna be here for a while and Diggle’s association with them is just gonna get more involved. If for no other reason than the fact of his wife. It’s a fixture.


Theres been a lot of talk recently on whether or not Diggle needs a mask. Some have gone as far to say they’d want you to be the Green Lantern, John Stewart. What are your thoughts on that? Does Diggle need a mask? Would you want to become the Green Lantern?

Diggle can be a husband, a father, and a hero. He didn’t go through some type of tragic event. He’s a guy who grew up in the Glades, which is the hood, he did four tours, and he joined the special forces. This is a guy that I can be, that you can be, that any of the viewers can be, unlike the others who went through some tragic event and compelled them to become these characters. Diggle did through simple sheer force of will. That’s survival with regular folks. I think that’s part of the power this character has. When you cover it with a mask, he becomes something. That’s why in general we’ve been struggling with, “How do we give Diggle a mask of any sort?” Obviously, he’s out in the open, he has a wife and a child to protect, there’s a fair question about how we protect that identity and still keep him out in the field. That’s a very fair question and we’re working on it.

Now, John Stewart… Is John Diggle John Stewart? I cannot say “yes,” and cannot say, “no.”

Oh, come on!

I’m serious! I do know that there is serious discussion about whether or not this guy becomes John Stewart. But, I mean, I’ll say this: it is top secret. David Ramsey has asked them, and they’re like, “we’re working on some stuff.” If that’s the case, it’s gonna be huge. This is the stuff they want to avoid. I think they don’t want anybody to know yet and they haven’t even told me. They have told me that they are thinking about it and they are considering it. Greg Berlanti told me that. Andrew and Marc have told me that. I haven’t spoken to Geoff Johns about it, yet. But that’s the word from people directly involved in Arrow- that they’re working on something.

Here’s the truth of it: if I knew, I would tell you I knew and I’m not at liberty to tell you that. I probably wouldn’t tell you anyway! I would at least tell you that I know. But I honestly do not know.

Would you want to see them go that route and see Diggle become a super-powered Green Lantern?

I love John Stewart. At one of the comic cons I met the original creator of John Stewart and he is just an awesome, awesome character. To answer your question: if Diggle become John Stewart, I would be honored to be play that character. Honored. The same way that I am honored that John Diggle is now a part of the DC canon. That’s just an incredible honor to me. I would love it because I think that he’s an awesome character. I would love to sink my teeth into it. I don’t know how would fit into the Arrow Universe because the Arrow Universe is so rooted in kind of grounded reality, if you will, however real people with a bow and arrow can be. I don’t know how a thought-based weapon fits into that world. I don’t know how that fits into Arrow, but yes, to answer that question I would love to play the character.

Have you seen the new A.T.O.M. suit?

Yeah, I did see it before it got released. It’s just awesome! Awesome. Awesome!

That’s pretty much the unanimous reaction, everybody loves it. Has Diggle seen it?

Diggle has not seen it.

What do you think his reaction will be?

He’ll probably have the same reaction he did to Flash, but he will. The whole team will see it.

It’s exciting because we’re only in Season 3. You’ve got A.T.O.M., Flash, Canary, Black Canary, Speedy, all these great characters and it’s just Season 3. Could the Lantern happen? Could the Green Lantern come about? I mean, it’s only season 3, anything can happen.

Do you think we get anymore spinoffs in the future?

Yes.

You do?

Oh, yeah. I personally think that almost everything that we see on TV has been a direct reflection of the success of Arrow. I think Arrow has something to do with Gotham, something to do with Constantine, something to do with the upcoming Supergirl, has something to do with all of it. I can’t give you a percentage of how much it is, but sure, I think people have dialed into Arrow and been like, “Oh, wow! Look at that!” You know, because things are in development for years and I think things get pushed along when other things are successful.

With success we get success. As long as this stays successful there will be other things that come out. Flash came out. Other things are coming.

Maybe Green Lantern. Who knows?

Maybe Green Lantern! I think television finally has the ability to do things like Supergirl and Green Lantern. This is a great time for comic book franchises on television.

Do you think there’s a chance we see Batman or Bruce Wayne on Arrow or Flash?

Andrew Kreisberg has gone on record to say there are two cities you will not be hearing about in our universe. He didn’t go on to say what those cities were but you can assume they are Metropolis and Gotham City. so I would assume that also means Bruce Wayne and Clark Kent a.k.a. Batman and Superman. Whatever great things have happened, it’s happened in less than three seasons. It’s been a quick ride. The show has been huge. I personally think when I read the scripts that Geoff, Andrew, Marc, & Greg put together they are better, and better, and better. Anything can happen. You know, like you said before, Diggle said he wouldn’t work with the Suicide Squad… Less than a season later, he’s working with the Suicide Squad. Anything can happen.

Do you watch the movies? Marvel or DC?

Marvel is holding the chalice right now. They’re the champs right now. Any reasonable person will say that Marvel in movies- “They’re doing it.” I will say that Batman vs. Superman may be a game changer and the upcoming Justice League may also be a game changer. I think there’s something to be said about the fact that they’re taking their time and doing it right. You know, Superman, there’s a lot of things to get over into making that successful and they did! They were climbing up a mountain, you know what I mean? And it came out well. It was successful and now there’s a Batman/Superman movie coming from that. Ultimately, a Justice League movie coming from that. I think over the next few years, four or five years there might be a shift, but, sure right now movie-wise Marvel holds it down and TV-wise, DC holds it.

Did you have a favorite super hero growing up?

I did, man! You know, something, I was kind of a cross between the two. I loved the Hulk. I loved the idea of the X-Men, you know, the outcasts, and finding a school and being able to use their powers that people didn’t like in this group. So, I was a big X-Men fan and the Hulk. Part of that was the TV series that Bill Bixby was in, and Lou Ferrigno. That was a part of my growing up. That was part of my allure toward the Hulk- this tragic guy, running from this reporter who’s trying to get a story… There was something that was real dramatic about that. I was really into Marvel. My DC guy was Batman. That was my DC love. Silver Surfer was a big one, too. Fantastic Four, those are big. I was heavily into Marvel.

Have you seen the new Fantastic Four trailer?

I have not. I’ve been told about this, I have not looked this up yet. I have to look at that. I have seen Daredevil’s.

Yeah, Daredevil looks interesting. It looks like what you said earlier, similar to Arrow, taking that grounded and dark take on a super hero.

It’s not even a cousin show! It’s almost a brother. It’s a direct connection.

I agree. I think that may be Marvel’s competition for Arrow. Arrow and Flash are staples of DC comics and they’re on TV. Marvel might have to use mainstay heroes in a show. Maybe if they get Spider-Man back, I would like to see a Spider-Man TV show.

I would like that, too. Peter Parker is a character that you can really get into. You know this is stuff TV can do. Getting back to DC, I would love Bruce Wayne. You know? Batman… Fine. But, Bruce Wayne. I would love to see him come to Starling City or maybe he’s part of the League of Assassins. You know? Just where is he during the show? Maybe he’s in protective custody? Just lost his parents? Who knows? I don’t know. I would love to see just where… Batman is such an iconic character and by association Bruce Wayne. I was such a fan of Batman and Bruce Wayne as a kid, I would love to see him Arrow.

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David seems to believe, with good reason, that Arrow is only going to continue to grow. What do you think? Will we see more spinoffs from the series? How about Diggle becoming Green Lantern? It would be fun, but is it necessary?

Arrow airs Wednesdays at 8 EST. David Ramsey will also be starring in Accidental Love, which hits theaters February 10.

http://comicbook.com/2015/02/06/exclusi ... d-and-gre/

Re: "ARROW" Nueva serie de la CW para TV basada en Green Arr

Publicado: Mar Feb 03, 2015 7:10 pm
por Shelby
- Arrow - Stunts: "Felicity Vs. Five Sit-Ups":

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lyFPbqkJeF8