SMALLVILLE Creators Reveal Whether They'd Ever Revive The Series And What They'd Do Differently Now

SMALLVILLE Creators Reveal Whether They'd Ever Revive The Series And What They'd Do Differently Now

Smallville showrunners Al Gough and Miles Millar have shared their thoughts on possibly reviving the Superman series, revealing which character they'd handle much differently if they could go back in time.

By JoshWilding - Dec 27, 2022 11:12 AM EST
Filed Under: Smallville
Source: The Hollywood Reporter

Smallville ran for a total of 10 seasons, and while the show was arguably at its best during the first 100 episodes or so, there were still a lot of great ideas even in later years.

A series that put a very different spin on the Superman mythos, it delighted fans just as much as it frustrated them (why couldn't he fly again?), but concluded way back in 2011. This world has since been revisited as a comic book, though, while stars Tom Welling and Michael Rosenbaum are still thought to be plotting out some sort of animated follow-up. 

During a recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter to discuss their work on Wednesday, Smallville showrunners Al Gough and Miles Millar revealed how they would feel about any sort of revival or reboot of the series.

"To be honest, no," Gough responded when asked if he has any interest in the idea. "I think we told that story, and they’re always refreshing Superman. I feel like we were very, very fortunate to do the show when we did it because we got to make the show we wanted to make, and frankly, there was no committee sitting over us telling us what we could or couldn’t do."

"I mean, we had Warner’s features, who wouldn’t give us certain characters that we wanted, but we got to make the show we wanted to make which we wouldn’t be allowed to make that show today," he continues. "There were so many deviations from the canon. One generation’s heresy is the next generation’s gospel."

Millar would add to that by saying, "The whole premise of the show was not canon...we categorically would not be allowed to make that show and make those changes today, which is a real tragedy because I think what’s amazing if you look at the history of comics and these characters, is they’re always evolving."

"[We] were still very privileged to have had that moment where we were actually free to do whatever we wanted, and it was it was amazing and very liberating."

Smallville still has a very devoted fanbase, but no matter how you look back at the series, it's fair to say mistakes were made. That was probably inevitable over the course of 217 episodes, though for Gough and Millar, their approach to Lana Lang is the one thing they would like to go back and change.

"The Clark-Lana thing played out way too long," Gough acknowledges. "Something else had to happen there. I think that was one that got a little repetitive. I think there are things there, if we went back, we probably would be a little more adventurous with some of those relationships and bring them to certain heads and let them play out."

Millar agreed with that point, saying Lana didn't have enough agency and that, "She could have been a much stronger character, and she always felt put in positions of weakness. It’s a different era, a different time. So, that’s something I think we could have done and would definitely look at to do better."

Neither of the writers is wrong here as Smallville was indeed made at a time when a woman in a superhero movie or TV show was, more often than not, a love interest and little more. By the time all was said and done, Clark and Lana had to be separated in the most ridiculous manner, though that did lead the Man of Steel to his true love, Lois Lane. 

How do you think Smallville holds up today? 

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TyrantBossMedia
TyrantBossMedia - 12/27/2022, 11:03 AM
“ She could have been a much stronger character, and she always felt put in positions of weakness. It’s a different era, a different time. So, that’s something I think we could have done and would definitely look at to do better."

I didn’t even have to read the article to predict this,
I saw the headline and said, “they would have to have a stronger woman who would probably save Clark more than he saves her”

Of course I was right.
EgoEgor
EgoEgor - 12/27/2022, 11:10 AM
@TyrantBossMedia - I never watched Smallville, but the question is, is he wrong though?

Sometimes writers just write female characters as the thing the main character has to save, treated more as a plot device rather than a character with motivations.

I think Mary-Jane in Spider-Man is horribly written and literally is there to be saved. Would it be wrong if the writer said I wish I wrote her stronger(not just in strength but quality of writing as well). Even the 90s cartoon wrote MJ better than the Raimi movies.

I can't say since I never liked and never saw it.
TyrantBossMedia
TyrantBossMedia - 12/27/2022, 11:14 AM
@EgoEgor - I have no issue with well written strong female characters, but don’t do it “because we live in a different era” or to pander.
Write them strong like they did for decades including the 80s.
Make it organic to the story not just to say “we need to check a box with a strong female”
Origame
Origame - 12/27/2022, 11:18 AM
@EgoEgor - well to an extent, yeah. It's escapism for males. A fantasy most men have is being the hero and saving lives. And when they have a crush they often imagine saving them too.

Why is this a problem needing to be fixed?

Need I remind you there's almost always a male best friend just as weak and needing to be saved, such as Jimmy Olsen.
TyrantBossMedia
TyrantBossMedia - 12/27/2022, 11:22 AM
@Origame - Also a very good point,

EgoEgor
EgoEgor - 12/27/2022, 11:23 AM
@TyrantBossMedia - Well, we do live in a different era though. I think pandering just to pat yourself on the back is wrong and lazy, but if he honestly feels that way is he wrong to? Is Lana Lang badly written in the show? If she is, why are you disagreeing with him?

But I will say though, a lot of writers confused strength of character with actual physical strength. A character isn't strong because they're perfect and don't have flaws, but is strong from having flaws and overcoming them; the bigger the flaw the stronger they are.
EgoEgor
EgoEgor - 12/27/2022, 11:34 AM
@Origame - To me it just comes down to quality of writing. We as an audience have consumed so much story there's a higher standard, imo. And that standard starts with writing good characters; and if the writer/creatives see the female character as a plot device than it just poorly written.

And while certainly comics and superheroes are a male dominated fantasy, I think it's not like it used to be. Superhero films are dominating movie screens everywhere, and women are engaging in it more than ever, why shouldn't they be included in that fantasy?

I don't have a problem with the "friend/lover/relative that needs to saved", my problem is writing characters as plot device and not characters that exist in the world and have their own believable and interesting motivations in the story.
SorceresSupreme
SorceresSupreme - 12/27/2022, 12:18 PM
@TyrantBossMedia - you predicted it because he's right, pretty obvious. do us a favor and don't be so stupid while throwing your rants.

also, he's talking about us living in a new era because EVERY creation is a product of that creation's era, and the characteristics that make every era distinct from each other come from what people thinks and believes in, not just like "oh its 2022, now it's _______ turn". its the product of a collective consciousness. that radical change from our era and previous ones is always worth reflecting about, but that doesn't mean immediately that he's pandering. talking about the upbringing of female voices in our era is just acknowledging something that IS happening today, day to day. so don't pat yourself on the back for stating the MOST obvious thing. you just come off as stupid.

ok you always do but right now you excelled, congrats bae
Origame
Origame - 12/27/2022, 12:41 PM
@EgoEgor - first of all, whether or not a character is strong or weak, regardless of gender, is quality neutral. All that matters from a writing perspective is if the character is believably weak or strong.
For example, Mary Jane is a waitress in comparison to super-powered beings. Of course, comparatively speaking at least, she would be considered weak. That as well as not being prepared to be attacked by such powerful beings means personality wise she'd be weak as well. Poor writing is making a character strong without adequate reasoning simply due to her gender.

Secondly, why are you assuming I'm trying to make it apply to all superheroes? Of course they're for everyone. And we have examples like wonder woman that don't have that trope. But it's still male dominated, despite what the writers of she hulk think. So it's only natural the writers would appeal to that group more than the female group. And there's nothing wrong with that.

And when has that ever been the case? Lois lane was a reporter with dreams of being the best in her field. Mary Jane is an aspiring actress trying to move past the trauma of her family life. Gwen Stacy is caught in between her superhero boyfriend and her police captain father trying to take him down. And I can keep going on. When are they just a plot device?
OmegaBlack13
OmegaBlack13 - 12/27/2022, 1:05 PM
@Origame - Wow you missed so much of the point of what he said. Truly amazed at how you can continue to raise the bar for being crazy on here my man.

Also the superheroes being escapism fantasy about saving crushes is so… weird haha
Origame
Origame - 12/27/2022, 1:35 PM
@OmegaBlack13 - 1) what point am I missing exactly? He isn't correcting me on what his point is. Maybe don't speak for others on what their point is?

2) what's so weird about imagining saving someone you're interested in? No really. I want an answer.
dragon316
dragon316 - 12/27/2022, 2:31 PM
@TyrantBossMedia - isn’t same thing said about Mary Jane and Spider-Man , Superman and Lois lane there in trouble always Expect Superman and Spider-Man save them Lois looks for trouble never learn stay out of it , Mary Jane always in crossfire
TyrantBossMedia
TyrantBossMedia - 12/27/2022, 2:53 PM
@SorcererSupreme - “ talking about the upbringing of female voices in our era is just acknowledging something that IS happening today”

So you mean to say that female voices were silent in other eras like the 90s or early 2000s?
Or are the professionally offended and politicians trying to use women to further divide the public for their own monetary, policy and political gain.

The answer is the latter.
There have been strong women in movies and on TV for decades.
And for people like you to think that women now need special consideration simply because of their gender is an insult to them. You and yours actually don’t think women can donut on their own without being handed roles or positions simply because of their gender.
You feel they need to be catered to and pandered to by the studios who are then using their “respect for women” to market their products, virtue signal and make money off of these “newly strong women” that apparently didn’t exist before this. 🙄

The harder you and they try to virtue signal the more transparent your attempts become.

Unlike you I don’t feel that women need special consideration and especially don’t need the reduction of a male role to make them strong. People just have to write strong female characters who are strong organically not simply to check a box.

The louder you protest and the angrier you get the more you prove my point,
dagenspear
dagenspear - 12/27/2022, 9:38 PM
@EgoEgor - That's not accurate. MJ's life is explored, her emotions, her goals, her struggles, in the Raimi movies.

Even Lana has that, though to arguably to varying degrees.
dagenspear
dagenspear - 12/27/2022, 9:40 PM
@TyrantBossMedia - You make a massive assumption on their intentions and seem to project a viewpoint onto it, I think, maybe, based on a single phrase.
dagenspear
dagenspear - 12/27/2022, 9:40 PM
@TyrantBossMedia - They didn't say that would be their reason.
TyrantBossMedia
TyrantBossMedia - 12/27/2022, 9:56 PM
@dagenspear - They didn't have to say that. And do you really think they would admit it?
TheManWithoutFear
TheManWithoutFear - 12/27/2022, 11:09 AM
I like these guys. I didn't know they worked on Wednesday I might check it out.

"One generation’s heresy is the next generation’s gospel." This is pretty wise words tbh.
LlamaLord
LlamaLord - 12/27/2022, 11:41 AM
@TheManWithoutFear - I love it, I wish more fans would remember that.
dagenspear
dagenspear - 12/27/2022, 9:37 PM
@TheManWithoutFear - It's a false take actually. None of these things reach that level.
dracula
dracula - 12/27/2022, 11:11 AM
didnt they leave the show after season 7 because they were having issues with Welling on the direction
dracula
dracula - 12/27/2022, 11:16 AM
this was the first show I watched from start to finish, was 5 when it started.

honestly don't think it holds up all that well

the kents and the luthors are great, but honestly once you leave the kent farm, it feels like a mediocre buffy knock off, especially the early seasons

so much tonal clash between the highschool stuff and the farm stuff

when its focused on the kents its like a really good family drama like everwood

when its focused on smallville high its like any other teen show
DudeGuy
DudeGuy - 12/27/2022, 11:18 AM
Smallville will always have a special place in my heart.
Himura
Himura - 12/27/2022, 2:17 PM
@DudeGuy -
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