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Smallville
Smallville
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Smallville
Genre
Based on
Developed by
Showrunners
Starring
Opening theme"Save Me" by Remy Zero
Composers
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons10
No. of episodes217 +1 unaired pilot [1] (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
Production locationsBritish Columbia, Canada
Cinematography
Editors
  • Ron Spang
  • Andi Armaganian
  • Neil Felder
  • David Ekstrom
  • Debby Germino
  • Vikash Patel
  • Stephen Mark
  • Peter B. Ellis
Running time
Production companies
Original release
NetworkThe WB
ReleaseOctober 16, 2001 (2001-10-16) –
May 11, 2006 (2006-05-11)
NetworkThe CW
ReleaseSeptember 28, 2006 (2006-09-28) –
May 13, 2011 (2011-05-13)

Smallville is an American superhero television series developed by writer-producers Alfred Gough and Miles Millar, based on the DC Comics character Superman created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster. The series was produced by Millar/Gough Ink, Tollin/Robbins Productions, DC Entertainment, and Warner Bros. Television. Initially broadcast by The WB, the show premiered on October 16, 2001. After its fifth season, the WB and UPN merged to form The CW, the series' later United States broadcaster until its tenth and final season ended on May 13, 2011.

Smallville follows the coming-of-age adventures of teenage Clark Kent (Tom Welling) in his fictional hometown of Smallville, Kansas, before he formally becomes the Man of Steel. The first four seasons focus on the high school life of Clark and his friends, his complicated romance with neighbor girl Lana Lang (Kristin Kreuk), and his friendship with future nemesis Lex Luthor (Michael Rosenbaum). From season five onwards, Smallville ventures into Clark's early adult years, eventually focusing on his career alongside Lois Lane (Erica Durance) at the Daily Planet and introducing other DC comic book superheroes and villains.

Before the production, Bruce Wayne, a drama series chronicling the young protagonist's journey toward Batman, was proposed first. Although that series failed to generate interest, it inspired the idea of a Superman origin story, which later became Smallville. Gotham later used that idea three years after Smallville's conclusion.

Series developers Gough and Millar pitched their "no tights, no flights" rule to the president of Warner Bros. Television, reducing the Man of Steel to the bare moral essentials and examining what led Clark Kent to become the iconic superhero. After seven seasons with the show, Gough and Millar departed with little explanation. Smallville was primarily filmed in and around Vancouver, British Columbia, with local businesses and buildings substituting for Smallville locations. Most of the music for the first six seasons was composed by Mark Snow, who incorporated elements of John Williams's musical score from the Superman film series. Louis Febre (who worked with Snow from the beginning) became the series' primary composer in season seven.

Smallville was generally positively received when it began. Former Superman star Christopher Reeve approved of the series, making two guest appearances before his death. The pilot episode set a ratings record for a WB debut, with 8.4 million viewers. Over ten seasons, the series averaged about 4.34 million viewers per episode, with season two the highest-rated at 6.3 million. By the end of its run, Smallville passed Stargate SG-1 as the longest-running North American science fiction series by episode count.[2] Since its first season, the series has received accolades ranging from Emmys to Teen Choice Awards. Smallville spawned a series of young adult novels, a DC Comics bimonthly comic book, soundtracks, and series-related merchandise. All ten seasons are available on DVD in regions 1, 2, and 4. After the series finale in 2011, the story resumed in comic book form as Smallville Season 11, which ran from April 2012 to November 2014.

Series overview

[edit]
SeasonEpisodesOriginally releasedAverage viewership
(in millions)
First releasedLast releasedNetwork
121October 16, 2001 (2001-10-16)May 21, 2002 (2002-05-21)The WB6.41
223September 24, 2002 (2002-09-24)May 20, 2003 (2003-05-20)7.77
322October 1, 2003 (2003-10-01)May 19, 2004 (2004-05-19)5.64
422September 22, 2004 (2004-09-22)May 18, 2005 (2005-05-18)5.02
522September 29, 2005 (2005-09-29)May 11, 2006 (2006-05-11)5.32
622September 28, 2006 (2006-09-28)May 17, 2007 (2007-05-17)The CW4.52
720September 27, 2007 (2007-09-27)May 15, 2008 (2008-05-15)4.15
822September 18, 2008 (2008-09-18)May 14, 2009 (2009-05-14)3.88
921September 25, 2009 (2009-09-25)May 14, 2010 (2010-05-14)2.38
1022September 24, 2010 (2010-09-24)May 13, 2011 (2011-05-13)2.54

The regular cast is introduced in the first season, with storylines involving a villain deriving power from kryptonite exposure. The one-episode villains were a plot device developed by Gough and Millar.[3] Smallville's first season primarily dealt with Clark Kent's coming to terms with his alien origin and the revelation that his arrival on Earth was connected to the death of Lana Lang's parents.[4]

After the first season the series had fewer villain-of-the-week episodes, focusing instead on individual-character story arcs and exploring Clark's origins.[5] Major storylines include Clark's discovery of his Kryptonian heritage and Lex Luthor's escalating conflict with his father, Lionel.[6] The disembodied voice of Clark's biological father, Jor-El, is introduced; he communicates to Clark through his spaceship, setting the stage for plots involving his role in fulfilling Clark's earthly destiny.[7]

In a fourth-season arc Clark, instructed by Jor-El, searches for three Kryptonian stones which contain the knowledge of the universe and form his Fortress of Solitude.[8][9] Clark battles Brainiac in his attempts to release the Kryptonian criminal General Zod,[10] and must capture (or destroy) other escaped Phantom Zone criminals.[11] His cousin Kara arrives,[12] and Lex Luthor discovers Clark's secret.[13]

The eighth season introduces Davis Bloome (Smallville's version of Doomsday), and Tess Mercer replaces the departing Lex Luthor. Justin Hartley becomes a series regular as Oliver Queen (Green Arrow) after being a recurring guest in season six.[14]

In the ninth season Major Zod (Callum Blue) and other members of Zod's military group are revived (without their Kryptonian powers) by Tess Mercer,[15] and their efforts to regain their powers are the season's central conflict.

The final season revolves around Clark's attempts to lose his doubts and fears and become the hero he is meant to be, while confronting his biggest challenges: the coming of Darkseid and the return of Lex Luthor.[16]

Cast

[edit]
Young, casually-dressed man looking left
Although Welling initially refused to audition for the role of Clark Kent, he changed his mind after reading the script for the pilot episode.
  • Tom Welling as Clark Kent, a young man with superhuman abilities who tries to find his place in life after discovering that he is an extraterrestrial in origin and uses his powers to help those in danger. Clark's season-one problems include his inability to share his secret and his desire for a normal life. After months of scouting, Welling was cast as Clark.[17] David Nutter had to convince Welling's manager that the role would not hurt the actor's film career in order to get Welling to read the pilot script. After reading the script, Welling agreed to audition for the role of Clark Kent. Tom Welling operated under a strict "No Tights, No Flights" rule to stay true to the origin story element of the show.[3]
  • Kristin Kreuk as Lana Lang, the girl next door. Grieving the loss of her parents, she has empathy for everyone and feels connected to Clark.[18] Kreuk was the first to be cast, after Nutter saw an audition tape the actress had sent.[3] Although she left the series after the seventh season,[19] she returned for five episodes in season eight as a special guest star.[20]
  • Michael Rosenbaum as Lex Luthor, a billionaire's son sent to Smallville to run the local fertilizer plant. After Clark saves his life, they become fast friends.[21] As the series progresses, Lex's friendship with Clark crumbles until they consider themselves enemies. The role was difficult to cast;[4] Rosenbaum auditioned twice and, feeling that he did not take his first audition seriously enough, outlined a two-and-a-half-page scene indicating where to be funny, charismatic or menacing.[22] His second audition went so well that he was hired.[4] Rosenbaum left the show after seven seasons,[19][23] reprising his role for the series finale.[24]
  • Eric Johnson as Whitney Fordman, Lana's boyfriend in season one, who becomes mean to Clark and Lana's budding friendship and bullies him.[21] He reconciles with Clark before joining the Marines and going to Indonesia.[25] Although Whitney was written out of the show in the first-season finale, he made a special appearance in the season-two episode "Visage" (where it is disclosed that he was killed in action) and was also a guest star in the season-four episode "Façade" (during a flashback to Clark's freshman year of high school). Johnson, who auditioned for Lex and Clark before he was cast as Whitney,[26] was pleased that the writers gave his character a hero's exit.[27]
  • Sam Jones III as Pete Ross, another best friend of Clark and the first person to whom Clark voluntarily tells his secret.[28] Although he is in love with Chloe,[29] he does not admit it because of the Clark-Lana-Chloe love triangle already in place.[30] Ross was written out of the series at the end of season three, but made a guest appearance in season seven. Jones was the last of the series regulars to be cast, with Gough and Millar seeing him four days before they began filming the pilot.[30] Jones is African-American while the comics have traditionally portrayed Ross as Caucasian.[30]
  • Allison Mack as Chloe Sullivan, one of Clark's best friends, who is in love with him (although her feelings are not reciprocated).[31] Editor of the school newspaper, her journalistic curiosity and desire to "expose falsehoods" and "know the truth"[32] create tension with her friends (especially when she investigates Clark's past).[33] After learning about Smallville from casting director Dee Dee Bradley, Mack considered auditioning for Lana Lang but auditioned twice for Chloe Sullivan.[32] The character was created just for the series[4] and was intended to have an "ethnic background" before Mack was hired.[32] She has since appeared in the mainline DC continuity.[34]
  • Annette O'Toole as Martha Kent, Clark's adoptive mother. She and her husband, Jonathan, give Clark advice about coping with his increasing abilities. In season five, Martha takes a state-senate seat,[35] and in season six she leaves the show.[36] Although Cynthia Ettinger was originally cast as Martha Kent, during filming everyone (including Ettinger) realized that she was not right for the part.[4] O'Toole was committed to the television series The Huntress when Ettinger filmed the original pilot. Around the time the creators wanted to recast Martha Kent, The Huntress was coincidentally canceled, allowing O'Toole to join the cast.[37] O'Toole previously portrayed Lana Lang in the film Superman III.[38]
  • John Schneider as Jonathan Kent, Clark's adoptive father, who goes to great lengths to protect his son's secret; according to Schneider, Jonathan is "perfectly willing to go to jail, or worse, to protect his son".[39] Schneider was written out of the show in the series' 100th episode, with Jonathan dying of a heart attack on the night of his election victory.[40] Millar and Gough wanted a recognizable face for Smallville; they were happy to cast Schneider as Jonathan because he was known for his role as Bo Duke from The Dukes of Hazzard, which Gough saw as adding to the belief that Schneider could have grown up running a farm.[4]
  • John Glover as Lionel Luthor, Lex's father. Lionel is responsible for the Kents' adoption of Clark without legal ramifications or questions about his origins.[33] Glover tried to make Lionel seem to try to "toughen [Lex] up", and saw the character as a rich, powerful businessman who was disappointed in his son.[41] Lionel was created for Smallville to parallel the Kents and as an "experiment in extreme parenting".[4] A recurring first-season guest, Glover became a series regular from seasons two to seven until Lionel was murdered by Lex near the end of the seventh season.[42] Lionel returns in a parallel-universe version, also portrayed by Glover, during the final season as a special guest star.[43]
  • Jensen Ackles as Jason Teague, Lana's love interest, in season four. He follows Lana to Smallville from Paris, taking a job as the school's assistant football coach,[44] but is fired when their relationship comes to light. By the end of the season, it is disclosed that he was working with his mother to track the three Kryptonian stones of knowledge.[45] Before he was cast as Jason, Ackles was second in line for the role of Clark Kent.[46] Although Ackles received top billing for season four and was contracted for season five, he was written out of the show in the season four finale because of his commitment to Supernatural.[47]
Smiling young woman with long, light-brown hair
Erica Durance was cast as Lois Lane days before fourth-season filming began, and her appearance was initially restricted by the film division of Warner Bros. Studios.
  • Erica Durance as Lois Lane, Chloe's cousin who comes to Smallville to investigate Chloe's supposed death[8] and stays with the Kents. Durance, a recurring guest in season four, became a series regular. The producers wanted to bring Lois Lane to the series, and Chloe's supposed death in the season-three finale provided the opportunity. Durance was cast three days before filming began; although she could initially appear in only four episodes, according to the film division of Warner Bros., after negotiations her character was cleared for more appearances.[48]
  • Aaron Ashmore as Jimmy Olsen, Chloe's photographer boyfriend who works at the Daily Planet. Ashmore, a recurring guest in season six, became a regular cast member in season seven. He called his casting a welcome surprise: "I auditioned for [the role] and I put myself on tape. I hadn't heard anything, and a couple of weeks later, all of the sudden (sic), I got the call saying, 'You're going to Vancouver to start shooting Smallville'. It's a dream come true, really".[49] After three seasons on the series (two as a regular), Ashmore's character was killed off by Davis Bloome out of jealousy for his relationship with Chloe. Although Ashmore's Jimmy Olsen was murdered, he said his character was not the "real" Jimmy Olsen, his real name revealed to be Henry James Olsen. Jimmy's younger brother, who appears briefly in the season-eight finale, is intended to be the Jimmy who works with Clark and Lois.[50] Ashmore returns as the younger Jimmy in the series finale.
  • Laura Vandervoort as Kara Zor-El, Clark's Kryptonian cousin. Sent to look after Kal-El (Clark), she was in suspended animation for eighteen years. When the dam confining Kara's ship broke in the season-six finale, "Phantom", she was set free. She has Clark's abilities, including flight.[51] At the end of the seventh season, Kara was trapped in the Phantom Zone. Although Vandervoort did not return regularly for the eighth season,[52] she returned to wrap up her storylines as a guest in season eight's "Bloodline" and as a special guest star in season ten's "Supergirl" and "Prophecy".[53]
  • Cassidy Freeman as Tess Mercer, Lex's handpicked successor as LuthorCorp CEO in season eight.[54] Her name is an homage to two Superman characters, Eve Teschmacher and Mercy Graves.[55] Freeman described her character as "fierce", "fun", and "intelligent", with finding Lex her primary season-eight goal. Tess believes that Clark will be able to help her.[56] In the season-ten episode "Abandoned", it is disclosed that her birth name is Lutessa Lena Luthor and she is Lionel's illegitimate daughter.[57]
  • Sam Witwer as Davis Bloome, a "charismatic" paramedic struggling with inner darkness.[54] Davis Bloome is Smallville's version of Doomsday (the only character to kill Superman). Davis would come to resemble his comic book counterpart over the course of the season.[58] Brian Peterson said that with Michael Rosenbaum's departure, the new executive producers were looking for a villain "as great as Lex" and Doomsday fit the bill.[59]
  • Justin Hartley as Oliver Queen, the CEO of Queen Industries and leader of a small group of superheroes known as the Justice League. Hartley, a recurring guest in the sixth and seventh seasons, became a series regular in season eight[14] and was the producers' first choice to play Queen. He was designed to shake up Clark and Lois in season six and to give Clark an alternate view of how to fight crime.[60]
  • Callum Blue as Zod, a Kryptonian criminal who was imprisoned in the Phantom Zone. His character is first mentioned in season five, when Brainiac uses Lex's body as a vessel for Zod's spirit, and he appears in a Kryptonian sphere in the season-eight finale.[61] Smallville's executive producers called this incarnation "Major Zod" (as opposed to the typical "General Zod"), and in season nine "the venomous side of Zod rises because he experiences a few key betrayals with our beloved characters".[62]

Production

[edit]

Development

[edit]

Tollin/Robbins Productions originally wanted to do a series about a young Bruce Wayne, but the feature-film division of Warner Bros. decided to develop an origin story film for Batman and did not want to compete with a television series.[4] In 2000, Tollin/Robbins approached Peter Roth, president of Warner Bros. Television, about developing a series on a young Superman. That year, Alfred Gough and Miles Millar developed a pilot based on the film Eraser. After watching the pilot, Roth approached Gough and Millar about developing a pilot about a young Superman;[4] the two made a "no tights, no flights" rule that Clark would not fly or wear the Superman suit during the series.[63]

Young, blonde woman with arms folded at a table
Chloe Sullivan (Allison Mack) was created for the series.

Gough and Millar wanted to strip Superman to his "bare essence", exploring why Clark Kent became the Man of Steel.[4] They felt that because they were not comic book fans or familiar with the universe, they would have an unbiased approach to the series. Gough and Millar learned about the characters, researching the comics and choosing what they liked.[4] They pitched their idea to the WB and Fox on the same day.[64] A bidding war between the networks followed, with the WB committing to thirteen episodes.[64]

Although Roth, Gough and Millar knew the show would be action-oriented, they wanted to reach 7th Heaven's "middle America iconography". To create atmosphere, the team decided the meteor shower bringing Clark to Earth would be the ironic foundation of the show. The primary source of his life on Earth and the super-powered beings Clark must fight, it would take away the parents of the girl he loves and start Lex Luthor down a dark path. Roth appreciated Clark's conflict in dealing with the fact that his arrival caused so much pain.[4]

The creators also had to address why Lex Luthor would socialize with young people. They created a loneliness in the character which they felt would drive him to reach out to the teenagers,[4] a loneliness echoed in Clark and Lana.[3] Gough and Millar wanted a parallel to the Kents and created Lionel Luthor, Lex's father, whom they saw as conducting an "experiment in extreme parenting".[4] They wanted a younger Kent couple, to be involved in Clark's life and help him on his journey.[3] Chloe Sullivan (another character created for the series) was considered the "outsider" the show needed to ensure that someone would notice the strange happenings in Smallville[4] rather than a "precursor to Lois Lane".[3]

Smallville has been described by Warner Bros. as a from-the-roots reinterpretation of Superman mythology. Since the November 2004 reacquisition of Superboy by the Siegel family, a copyright infringement dispute has arisen over ownership of the fictional town of Smallville and a claimed similarity between Superboy and Smallville's Clark Kent. According to the Siegel heirs, "Smallville is part of the Superboy copyright" (which they hold).[65]

Crew changes

[edit]

In April 2008, after seven seasons with the series, Gough and Millar left Smallville. The developers thanked the cast and crew for their work, acknowledging that they never stopped fighting for what they saw as "their vision" of the show. The reason for their departure was not provided.[66] Gough and Millar were replaced as showrunners by Todd Slavkin, Darren Swimmer, Kelly Souders and Brian Peterson. All began writing for the series at the start of the second season, and were executive producers by the seventh season. In 2009, after one season, Swimmer and Slavkin took over the new CW series Melrose Place and did not return for Smallville's ninth season; Souders and Peterson would continue as showrunners.[67] Tom Welling became co-executive producer of the series that July.[68] In March 2010, Millar, Gough and co-producer Tollin/Robins Productions filed a lawsuit against Warner Bros. and The CW charging that Hollywood's "vertical integration" cost Millar and Gough millions of dollars. The suit claimed that Warner Bros. failed to "maximize profits" in marketing Smallville, misrepresented production costs and sold the show to foreign markets at "well below the value of the series", not specifying the amount of compensation sought by the plaintiffs.[69] The lawsuit ended with an undisclosed settlement in May 2013.[70] Tom Welling was appointed an executive producer for Smallville's tenth season in May 2010.[71]

Filming

[edit]

The series was filmed at BB Studios in Burnaby, British Columbia. Although production was initially planned for Australia, Vancouver had more of a "Middle America landscape". The city provided a site for the Kent farm, doubled for Metropolis, provided a cheaper shooting location and was in the Los Angeles time zone.[4] Smallville's Main Street is a combination of two locations in the town of Merritt and Cloverdale.[3]

A white billboard with a blue ribbon around the edges. On the ribbon, "Cloverdale Town Centre" appear in yellow surrounding two banners. The top banner reads, "Destination Cloverdale" and the bottom reads, "Home of Smallville".
Cloverdale welcome sign

Vancouver Technical School doubled as the exterior for Smallville High, since the school had the "mid-American largess" wanted by the filmmakers[3] and was in keeping with Millar's idea that Smallville should be the epitome of "Smalltown, USA".[21] Templeton Secondary School was used for Smallville High's interior.[72] During season one, the production team repainted most of Templeton in Smallville High's red and yellow and distributed large Smallville High Crows logos; so much of the school was painted that it adopted red and yellow as its school colors. The students became accustomed to the film crew (which had to shoot when school was in session), and when a class was dismissed the crew stepped aside so the students could move the equipment to get to their lockers for the next class.[73]

The Kent farm is a working farm in Aldergrove. Owned by the Anderlinis, the crew painted their home yellow for the show.[64] Exterior shots of Luthor Mansion were filmed at Hatley Castle in Victoria.[3] The interiors were filmed at Shannon Mews in Vancouver, also the set for the Dark Angel pilot and the film Along Came a Spider.[3] Clova Cinema, in Cloverdale was used for exteriors of the Talon, Smallville's coffeehouse.[74]

Reeve's guest appearances in the second and third seasons were filmed in New York City.[75][76]

The story is told from Clark's point of view, so color schemes and camera selection illustrate how he interprets his environment. When he is safe at home, the colors are "warm and gentle" earth tones and the camera movement is "very gentle". When Clark is keeping his secret and not in danger, the lighting is more neutral and the camera more mobile. When danger is present, the lighting becomes colder and the camera is handheld to allow for more "extreme angles".[citation needed] In Metropolis "clean, hard-lined architecture" predominates, with blues, purples and reflective metals the dominant scheme. The same concept is used for the characters; Lex usually has a "glass, steel background", and Lionel has a white or "clinical blue" background. Lex typically wears black, grey and "cool tones" (purples and blues). Clark is represented by red, yellow and blue, similar to the traditional Superman costume, and "All-American" red, white and blue.[77] From season two onward, Entity FX produced all of the visual effects for Smallville, including the view of the Metropolis skyline.[78]

Music

[edit]

Composer Mark Snow worked with producer Ken Horton to create Smallville's score. Snow composed music as he watched the picture, and tweaked his performance when he reviewed his initial recordings. He then sent the music to the producers, who sent it back for recomposition if needed. Individual episodes have their own soundtrack, comprising one (or more) songs. Jennifer Pyken and Madonna Wade-Reed of Daisy Music looked for songs for the soundtrack. Their choices were discussed by the producers, who decided which songs they wanted and secured their rights. Although Snow said it initially seemed odd to combine two types of music on a "typical action-adventure" television show, "the producers seem to like the contrast of the modern songs and the traditional, orchestral approach to the score".[79]

I get a locked picture on a videotape which syncs up with all my gear in the studio. I write the music, finish it up, mix it up, send it through the airwaves on the internet, and the music editor puts it in. They call up usually and say, 'Thank you, well done'. Sometimes they call and say, "Thank you, not so well done—can you change this or that?" I say "Sure", make the changes and send it back.[79]

—Mark Snow, on composing music for each episode.

The main Smallville theme was not composed by Snow, although he composed opening themes for other shows (including The X-Files). The series' opening theme is the short version of "Save Me" performed by Remy Zero. Snow composed the closing-credits music, which was intended as Smallville's theme. During the first two seasons, the closing-credits music was a potential theme for the series (before "Save Me" was selected); it was more "heroic" and "in-your-face". Snow was told during season two that the closing credits needed new music, since the show had evolved and the existing music was no longer suitable, and he created a new, toned-down score with a more "melodic" sound.[73] Snow has also reworked music from the previous Superman films. John Williams's musical score for the Krypton sequence in the opening credits of Superman was used in season two's "Rosetta" (which featured a guest appearance by Christopher Reeve) and several times in the season-two finale. To save money Snow recorded his version of Williams's score, since using the original version would have required the team to pay Williams's orchestra.[80]

Snow left Smallville following his work on the sixth season and moved on to other projects such as Ghost Whisperer. Reminiscing about his work on the show, Snow said that much of the music had not changed during the series and that it was "more [about] maintaining the heroic concept and the mythology than progressing through specific changes".[81] Louis Febre, who worked closely with Snow from the beginning, became the sole composer for Smallville in season seven. Febre said that since he began composing for Smallville there was a shift to "thematic development" in the score, paralleling the characters' growth: "As Clark grew emotionally and intellectually more complex, I found a need to comment musically on his growth, and as he drew closer to his Superman persona, it became obvious that a 'Superman' theme would be required".[82]

The creative team had a number of opportunities to try different music to enhance an episode's storyline. Pyken and Wade-Reed chose and coordinated music on the show when Snow and Febre's scores were not used.[83] In season three's "Slumber", producer Ken Horton wondered if they could get a band to provide music for the entire episode. During a breakfast meeting with the music department of Warner Bros. R.E.M. was suggested, and Pyken and Wade-Reed immediately saw an opportunity to connect the episode's featured band with its story (which revolved around REM sleep).[84] That season, Al Gough wanted to use Johnny Cash's cover of the Nine Inch Nails song "Hurt" for the final scene of "Shattered" (when Lionel Luthor looks at Lex through a one-way mirror at Belle Reve sanitarium) as soon as he read the episode's script. Cash died while Wade-Reed was trying to obtain the rights for the song and his heirs, believing that the song's use in the episode would honor his memory, gave Smallville the rights.[85]

For season three's "Resurrection" and "Memoria", songs were chosen as symbolism for the characters. In "Resurrection", The Rapture's "Infatuation" was used during a scene with Lex and Lana to symbolize the question, "Are we ever going to figure out what these two people think of each other?"[86] For "Memoria" Gough wanted to use Evanescence's "My Immortal" for the episode's final scene, telling Wade-Reed that he saw the song as being about mothers. In that scene Clark tells Martha that his first childhood memory was of his mother, Lara.[87]

Season three's "Velocity" provided the music editors with the opportunity to use hip-hop, rarely used in the series. The episode, similar to The Fast and the Furious, focused on Pete. Wade-Reed heard of British hip-hop artist Dizzee Rascal, and was the first person in the United States to secure the rights to Rascal's album.[88] Greg Beeman directed episodes, and sometimes scenes, with particular songs in mind. For "Vortex" in season two, he used Coldplay's "In My Place" for the final scene.[89] In the season-two finale "Exodus", Beeman directed the scene where Lana shows up at the Kent barn before Lex's wedding to Matthew Good's "Weapon". The lyrics speak of an angel and devil "by my side", and Beeman timed specific shots to the song's lyrics.[80]

Broadcasting

[edit]

Smallville premiered at 9:00 pm on Tuesday,[90] October 16, 2001 on the WB.[91] For five seasons, the series aired on the WB, moving from Tuesday at 9:00 pm to Wednesday at 8:00 pm and eventually to Thursday at 8:00 pm. In 2006, before the start of Smallville's sixth season, the WB and UPN merged into The CW and the series continued in its lineup.[92] During its seventh season, the series aired in Canada a day earlier than it did in the United States.[93] In May 2009, Smallville's ninth season moved to Friday at 8:00 pm, considered the "death slot" for television programs.[94][95] By the end of its tenth season it was the longest-running science-fiction TV show in the United States, breaking the record held by Stargate SG-1.[96] Syndication rights became available in October 2004 when it began airing alongside Gilmore Girls on ABC Family (now Freeform) five nights a week.[97] After the series concluded, TNT began airing episodes on October 3, 2011.[98] Smallville began streaming on Hulu on October 1, 2016.[99]

Reception

[edit]

Smallville set a WB record as its highest-rated series debut, with 8.4 million viewers tuned in for the pilot.[100] Its premiere set a WB record for adults aged 18–34 and finished first among viewers aged 12–34, with Warner Bros. president Jordan Levin crediting the series with invigorating the network's Tuesday-night lineup. Smallville appeared on the cover of Entertainment Weekly as one of five new shows to watch.[101] After its first season, the series was sixth on the Parents Television Council's 10-best list of broadcast programs.[102] Levin, acknowledging early concerns that Smallville had become a villain of the week series, said that season two would introduce "smaller mini-arcs over three to four episodes" and become less of a "serialized show".[103] According to Gough, although each succeeding season relied more on season-long story arcs, an occasional villain-of-the-week story was necessary. The villain-of-the-week stories were more harshly criticized by fans of the Superman mythology, but Gough wanted to please them and the WB's general audience (teenagers who preferred villain-of-the-week stories over episodes focusing on the Superman mythology).[104]

Christopher Reeve, star of the Superman films, expressed his approval of the show:

I was a little bit skeptical when I heard about [Smallville] at first, but I must say the writing, the acting, and the special effects are quite remarkable. In 1977, a big stunt scene would have taken us a week to film—it's pretty impressive what they are able to do with computers and effects technology today on a weekly TV show. It gives it a lot more production value and inventiveness than I thought I was going to see when I first heard about the series. I think the show is doing a really good job following the mythology, and Tom is doing a good job following the tradition.[105]

According to MTV's Karl Heitmueller, Smallville's Clark Kent was a better representation of the original material and remained "true to the heart of the story" by showing Clark's selflessness and his struggle between his desires and his obligations, but he also wrote that the series would have a difficult time addressing why no one in Smallville (including Lex Luthor) recognized Clark when he put on the suit.[106] TV Guide's Michael Schneider called it one of the best examples of a superhero adaptation for television,[107] but Christopher Hooton of Metro wrote that Smallville was a story which did not need to be told: "No-one bothered to follow Bruce Wayne's tedious years spent manufacturing microchips before he became Batman, so why must we endure a decade of flannel shirt-wearing Clark Kent bucking hay?"[108]

Nielsen rankings

[edit]

The following is a table for the seasonal rankings, based on average total estimated viewers per episode, of Smallville on the WB and The CW. "Rank" refers to how Smallville rated compared to the other television series which aired during primetime hours.

Viewership and ratings per season of Smallville
Season Timeslot (ET) Network Episodes First aired Last aired TV season Viewership
rank
Avg. viewers
(millions)
Date Viewers
(millions)
Date Viewers
(millions)
1 Tuesday 9:00 pm The WB 21 October 16, 2001 8.35[109] May 21, 2002 5.96[110] 2001–02 115[111] 5.90[111]
2 23 September 24, 2002 8.66[112] May 20, 2003 7.53[113] 2002–03 113[114] 6.30[114]
3 Wednesday 8:00 pm 22 October 1, 2003 6.82[115] May 19, 2004 5.92[116] 2003–04 141[117] 4.96[117]
4 22 September 22, 2004 6.07[118] May 18, 2005 5.47[119] 2004–05 124[120] 4.40[120]
5 Thursday 8:00 pm 22 September 29, 2005 5.90[121] May 11, 2006 4.85[122] 2005–06 117[123] 4.70[123]
6 The CW 22 September 28, 2006 4.96[124] May 17, 2007 4.14[125] 2006–07 125[126] 4.10[126]
7 20 September 27, 2007 5.18[127] May 15, 2008 3.85[128] 2007–08 175[129] 3.77[129]
8 22 September 18, 2008 4.34[130] May 14, 2009 3.13[131] 2008–09 152[132] 3.74[132]
9 Friday 8:00 pm 21 September 25, 2009 2.57[133] May 14, 2010 2.40[134] 2009–10 129[135] 2.38[135]
10 22 September 24, 2010 2.98[136] May 13, 2011 3.02[137] 2010–11 202[138] 3.19[139]

Accolades

[edit]
Welling, Durance, Kreuk and Glover at the 2022 New York Comic Con

During its ten seasons, Smallville won awards ranging from Emmys to Teen Choice Awards. In 2002, the series won an Emmy for Outstanding Sound Editing for a Series for its pilot episode.[140] Four years later, it received an Emmy for Outstanding Sound Editing for a Series for the fifth-season episode "Arrival".[141][142] In 2008, Smallville again won an Outstanding Sound Editing for a Series Emmy for season seven's "Bizarro".[143]

Smallville has received a number of Leo Awards. Make-up artist Natalie Cosco won two Leo Awards for Best Make-Up: for her work in the fourth-season episode "Scare"[144] and in the sixth season's "Hypnotic" and "Wither".[145] At the 2006 Leo Awards, Barry Donlevy won Best Cinematography in a Dramatic Series for his work on the fourth-season episode "Spirit" and David Wilson won Best Production Design in a Dramatic Series for "Sacred".[146] Smallville's sixth season won a Best Dramatic Series Leo. James Marshall won Best Direction for "Zod", Caroline Cranstoun won Best Costume Design for her work on "Arrow" and James Philpott won Best Production Design for "Justice".[145] In 2008, Smallville won Leos for Best Dramatic Series and Best Cinematography.[147] The visual-effects team was recognized for its work on the pilot with a 2002 Best Visual Effects Leo,[148] and received 2004 VES Awards for Outstanding Compositing in a Televised Program, Music Video or Commercial for the second season's "Accelerate" and Outstanding Matte Painting in a Televised Program, Music Video, or Commercial for "Insurgence".[149]

In 2002 the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers honored composer Mark Snow and Remy Zero, who provided the opening song "Save Me", for their contributions to the series; the award was given to individuals who wrote the theme (or underscore) for the highest-rated television series in 2001 for their network.[150] The American Society of Cinematographers awarded David Moxness for the sixth season's "Arrow", giving Glen Winter the same award the following year for his work on "Noir".[151] Series regulars have also won awards; in 2001, Michael Rosenbaum won a Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actor,[152] and Tom Welling won a Teen Choice Award for Choice Breakout TV Star — Male in 2002.[153] Allison Mack won the Teen Choice Best Sidekick award in 2006[154] and 2007,[155] and in 2009 Welling received the Choice TV Actor Action Adventure award.[156]

Millar stated that Smallville "visually and aesthetically, was a celebration of Americana", with aspects such as Clark's red, white, and blue apparel. Being an "idyllic portrait of America", he said, helped the show's popularity after the September 11 attacks on the United States. Actors reported that many United States military veterans told them of watching the show as a distraction from combat while serving overseas.[157]

Other media

[edit]

Smallville has generated other media and spin-offs, from young-adult novels and comic books to Internet-based mini-episodes with characters from the series. It influenced the British TV series, Merlin.[158]

Literature

[edit]

Two series of novels have been published since Smallville's second season. A series of eight young-adult novels was published by Aspect Publishing from October 2002 to March 2004, and a second series of ten young-adult novels was published by Little, Brown Young Readers from October 2002 to April 2004. A bimonthly comic book series, which often tied into the series, was also published.

Young adult novels

[edit]

Three novels were published on October 1, 2002: one by Aspect and two by Little, Brown Young Readers. The Aspect novel (Smallville: Strange Visitors) was written by Roger Stern, with Clark and his friends trying to uncover the truth about two religious con men who set up shop in Smallville and use kryptonite in their spiritual seminars to rob the townspeople.[159] Little, Brown Young Readers first published Arrival by Michael Teitelbaum, chronicling the series' pilot.[160] The second novel (See No Evil, by series writers Cherie Bennett and Jeff Gottesfeld) follows Dawn Mills, a young actress who wants to attend Juilliard. Dawn, who can become invisible, wants to get revenge on the people who have been talking behind her back but is stopped by Clark.[161] See No Evil was one of the original storylines for season one's "Shimmer".[162]

On November 1, 2002, Aspect published Alan Grant's Smallville: Dragon, about an ex-convict who assumes the abilities and appearance of a dragon after he is exposed to kryptonite in a cave; the mutation drives him to try to kill everyone who testified against him. In the novel, Clark is hypnotized into believing that he is a normal teenager with no special abilities.[163] A month after the publication of Grant's novel, Bennett and Gottesfeld wrote Little, Brown Young Readers' Flight, about a young girl (Tia) who Clark discovers has wings. He and his friends believe that Tia is being abused by her father, and teach her to overcome her fear of flying so she can find her mother.[164] Flight (like See No Evil) was a planned episode, but the crew was uncertain that they could get the flying effects right and the idea was scrapped.[165] Nancy Holder wrote the third novel in the Aspect series. Published on January 1, 2003, Hauntings follows Clark and his friends as they investigate a ghostly presence in a Smallville house.[166] Little, Brown Young Readers then published Animal Rage by David Cody Weiss and Bobbi Weiss, about animal-rights activist Heather Fox (who can change into any animal she touches). Heather uses this ability to harm people who hurt animals until Clark discovers it and stops her.[167] Aspect published Dean Wesley Smith's Whodunit, in which Clark, Chloe, Lana and Pete investigate the murder of a boy and his sister while Lex tries to decide whether to ransom his kidnapped father or try rescuing Lionel himself.[168]

Little, Brown Young Readers published the next two books in April and June 2003. The first, Speed, was written by Cherie Bennett and Jeff Gottesfeld. In it, a boy uses an hourglass his father gave him for his birthday to stop time and commit hate crimes without being caught. Clark stops him before he disrupts a local multicultural festival.[169] The second, Buried Secrets, was written by Suzan Colón. In it, Clark and Lex fall in love with a mind-reading substitute Spanish teacher, jeopardizing their friendship.[170]

On September 9, 2003, Aspect published Diana G. Gallagher's Shadows, about a girl and her father who move to Smallville; the father creates murderous monsters. Jonathan assumes that the deaths are related to LuthorCorp, creating tension with his son. Clark discovers the truth to prove Lex's innocence, stopping the creatures before they can kill again.[171] Colón returned to write Runaway, in which Clark runs away to the city and lives with other homeless teenagers; he falls in love with one of the girls before returning home.[172] In Smallville: Silence by Nancy Holder, the characters investigate zombies in town.[173] Little, Brown Young Readers published its eighth book, Greed, by Bennett and Gottesfeld in which Clark and his friends take summer jobs as counselors at a camp for disadvantaged youths. When a boy falls into Crater Lake, he develops the ability to foretell the future and Lionel tries to exploit this. Pete also tries to exploit Clark's abilities by tricking him into playing in a basketball game and betting on the outcome.[174]

Alan Grant returned to write Curse, about a gravedigger who unleashes a 150-year-old curse onto Smallville and Clark's attempts to put things right.[175] On February 1, 2004 Little, Brown Young Readers published Suzan Colón's Temptation, where Clark uses red kryptonite in an attempt to impress Lana and Chloe when they are infatuated with a French exchange student.[176] Aspect published its final novel on March 1, 2004. Written by Devin K. Grayson, City follows Clark and Lex on a trip to Metropolis. In the city, they are caught between the Japanese Yakuza and a secret agent who thinks he has found an alien.[177] In Little, Brown Young Readers' final novel, "Sparks" by Cherie Bennett and Jeff Gottesfeld, Chloe is hit by kryptonite sparks from a fireworks display. The sparks make Chloe the desire of every man, but when they wear off an admirer kidnaps her and she is rescued by Clark.[178]

Comic books

[edit]

Seasonal extensions

[edit]

Smallville's first venture into comics was "Elemental", a one-off story by Gough and Millar which appeared in TV Guide during the series' first season and set in that period.[179] Before the start of season two, DC Comics published a one-off comic based on the series. Titled Smallville: The Comic, it has two stories. The first, "Raptor" by Mark Verheiden and Roy Martinez, is about an abused boy who mutates into a velociraptor (thanks to kryptonite) and tries to get revenge on the Luthor family. Michael Green and John Paul Leon wrote "Exile and The Kingdom", with insight into why Lex remains in Smallville after his father offers him a position in Metropolis at the end of season one.[180] DC Comics then began publishing a bimonthly comic with stories about Smallville characters. Writer and script coordinator Clint Carpenter called the comic a companion to the series rather than a non-canonical version. According to Carpenter, the series expands on events in the series (such as season-ending cliffhangers) and gives "additional depth" to characters with limited screen time on the series or whose storylines needed additional explanation.[181] Carpenter was not the first person asked to oversee the comic; Mark Verheiden, who co-wrote the one-off comic, was originally intended to be in charge of the bimonthly series. Verheiden's commitment to the TV series kept him from working on the comic books, so he asked Carpenter to take them on. Although the comic book was intended to expand on the TV series, there was an occasional continuity overlap because of differences in production schedule between the comic and the series. In one instance, the comic book showed Clark robbing an ATM and the season-three premiere showed him robbing multiple ATMs.[181] The series tied into the TV series, the Chloe Chronicles webisodes[182] and Smallville-related webpages,[181] with cast and crew interviews and information on the episodes' production.[180][183] The comic series ended in January 2005 with #11, with no comics published until the Season Eleven series debut.

# Title Publisher Year ISBN Reprints
1 Smallville DC Comics 2004 ISBN 9781401202040
Collects

The reprinted material is, in whole or in part, from:

  • Smallville: The Comics #1 (November 2002) and Smallville #1–4 (March – November 2003)
 Credits and full notes
Writer(s)
Penciller(s)
  • Thomas Denrenick
  • Tom Derenick
  • Renato Guedes
  • John Paul Leon
  • Kilian Plunkett
  • John Van Fleet
  • Smallville Season Eleven

    [edit]

    The first digital issue of a Smallville Season Eleven comic book was released on April 13, 2012; the first print issue was published on May 2.[184] In the comic book (written by Smallville executive story editor Bryan Q. Miller), set six months after Darkseid's attack, Clark no longer fights crime as "The Blur" but as "Superman". Although Clark is generally accepted by the public, some distrust him (including Lex Luthor, despite his memory loss after his encounter with Tess Mercer),[185] and this worsens when he reveals himself as extraterrestrial. "Detective", a new series of adventures paralleling the TV series and the comic series' second arc, was published digitally on the title's off-week beginning January 4, 2013. A new arc, "Effigy", features a team-up of recurring character John Jones and Batman.[186] DC Comics cancelled the series after nineteen issues at the end of the "Olympus" story arc, with the rest of the season-eleven story continuing as miniseries under the Season Eleven banner.[187] In November 2014, Season Eleven concluded with the story arc "Continuity".[188][189]

    Main series
    [edit]
    # Title Publisher Year ISBN Reprints
    1 Guardian DC Comics 2013 ISBN 9781401238247
    Collects

    The reprinted material is, in whole or in part, from:

    • Smallville Season Eleven #1–4 (May 2012 – August 2012) **Digital releases (April 2012 – July 2012)
     Credits and full notes
    Writer(s) Bryan Q. Miller
    Penciller(s)
    Six months after Darkseid's defeat, Clark enjoys the general acceptance from the public. Lex Luthor makes plans to destroy Superman, despite having lost all of his memories. In addition, Lex encounters his half-sister, Tess Mercer, and a visitor from a parallel Earth arrives to warn Clark about a "Crisis".
    2 Detective DC Comics 2013 ISBN 9781401240943
    Collects

    The reprinted material is, in whole or in part, from:

    • Smallville Season Eleven #5–8 (September 2012 – December 2012) **Digital releases (August 2012 – November 2012)
     Credits and full notes
    Writer(s)
    • Bryan Q. Miller
    Penciller(s)
  • Chris Cross
  • Marc Deering
  • Jamal Igle
  • Mico Suayan
  • Gotham City's heroic duo, Batman and Nightwing, arrive into Metropolis to locate Thomas and Martha Wayne's killer, Joe Chill. They eventually team-up with Clark and his friends to battle against the Intergang, Oswald Loomis, and Victor Fries. Additionally, Chloe reveals a secret to Oliver, and Lex learns why Tess erased his memories.
    3 Haunted DC Comics 2013 ISBN 9781401242916
    Collects

    The reprinted material is, in whole or in part, from:

    • Smallville Season Eleven #9–12 (January 2013 – April 2013) **Digital releases (December 2012 – March 2013)
     Credits and full notes
    Writer(s)
    • Bryan Q. Miller
    Penciller(s)
  • Jorge Jimenez
  • Pere Perez
  • Cat Staggs
  • Scott Kolins
  • Bart Allen returns and meets with the Justice Society of America Jay Garrick. Lex is determined to learn Tess's secrets regarding Superman and his allies, and Chloe learns about her deceased parallel universe counterpart. This is chronologically parallel to the interlude story arc Effigy.
    4 Argo DC Comics 2014 ISBN 9781401246372
    Collects

    The reprinted material is, in whole or in part, from:

    • Smallville Season Eleven #13–15, Smallville Season Eleven Special #2 (May 2013 – July 2013)
     Credits and full notes
    Writer(s)
    • Bryan Q. Miller
    Penciller(s)
  • Daniel HDR
  • Pete Woods
  • Clark and Michael Jon Carter (Booster Gold) travel to the 31st century to team-up with the Legion of Super-Heroes trying to stop war between Earth and an unexpected enemy, Kara. This is chronologically parallel to the interlude story arc Valkyrie.
    5 Olympus DC Comics 2014 ISBN 9781401250768
    Collects

    The reprinted material is, in whole or in part, from:

    • Smallville Season Eleven #16–19 (August 2013 – November 2013)
     Credits and full notes
    Writer(s)
    • Bryan Q. Miller
    Penciller(s)
  • Jorge Jimenez
  • Cat Staggs
  • Twenty years ago, a young Steve Trevor washed up on the island of Themyscira and met the Amazon princess Diana. Now, Diana and Trevor finds the latter's mother disappears, and their search for her leading them face-to-face with Clark. This is chronologically parallel to the story arc Hollow. The main series ended after #19, and the rest of Season Eleven continues through mini-series.

    Note: The full title of all volumes listed here start with "Smallville Season 11: ".

    Interlude series
    [edit]
    # Title Publisher Year ISBN Reprints
    1 Effigy DC Comics 2013
    Collects

    The reprinted material is, in whole or in part, from:

    • Smallville: Season 11 Special – Chapter 28: Effigy, Part 1 (digital release: January 4, 2013)
    • Smallville: Season 11 Special- Chapter 32: Effigy, Part 2 (digital release: February 1, 2013)
    • Smallville: Season 11 Special- Chapter 36: Effigy, Part 3 (digital release: March 1, 2013)
    • Smallville: Season 11 Special – Chapter 37: Effigy, Part 4 (digital release: March 8, 2013)
     Credits and full notes
    Writer(s) Bryan Q. Miller
    Penciller(s)
    • Jorge Jimenez
    • Cat Staggs
    After an attack from a White Martian has left Barbara Gordon injured, John Jones arrives and offers Bruce Wayne his assistance on the investigation. This is chronologically parallel to the story arc Haunted.
    2 Valkyrie DC Comics 2013
    Collects

    The reprinted material is, in whole or in part, from:

    • Smallville: Season 11 – Chapter 41: Valkyrie, Part 1 (digital release: April 5, 2013)
    • Smallville: Season 11 – Chapter 45: Valkyrie, Part 2 (digital release: May 3, 2013)
    • Smallville: Season 11 – Chapter 46: Valkyrie, Part 3 (digital release: May 10, 2013)
    • Smallville: Season 11 – Chapter 50: Valkyrie, Part 4 (digital release: June 7, 2013)
     Credits and full notes
    Writer(s) Bryan Q. Miller
    As Clark travels to the 31st century with Michael Carter (Booster Gold) to avert a future war, Lois meets Lana at Cameroon. This is chronologically parallel to the story arc Argo.
    3 Hollow DC Comics 2013
    Collects
    The reprinted material is, in whole or in part, from:
     Credits and full notes
    Writer(s) Bryan Q. Miller
    Penciller(s)
    • Jorge Jimenez
    • Beni Lobel
    Tess finds herself that she must make a choice: should she initiate her revenge on Lex for her death, or to become the hero everyone believe her to be.[190]
    4 Titans DC Comics 2014
    Collects
    The reprinted material is, in whole or in part, from:
     Credits and full notes
    Writer(s) Bryan Q. Miller
    Penciller(s)
    • Cat Staggs
    Jay Garrick leads the Teen Titans to against an enemy who is determine to ensure that there will not be a next generation of superheroes. Conner Kent, Mia Dearden, and Jaime Reyes appear in the story.

    Note: The full title of all volumes listed here start with "Smallville Season 11 Specials: ".

    Chloe Chronicles

    [edit]

    Allison Mack's character, Chloe Sullivan, has starred in two promotional tie-in series: Smallville: Chloe Chronicles, and Vengeance Chronicles. Two volumes of Chloe Chronicles totaled eleven mini-episodes. In the first volume Chloe investigated events leading to the death of Earl Jenkins, who held Chloe and her friends hostage at the LuthorCorp plant in the first-season episode "Jitters". It aired from April 29 to May 20, 2003 to AOL subscribers.[191] After the first volume received positive responses from viewers, the second volume was created as a continuation with Sam Jones III as Pete Ross. This volume used the Smallville comic books as a secondary tie-in to the series. Viewers could watch Smallville, Chloe's Chronicles and finish with the Smallville comic book, which would provide an "enhanced backstory to the online segments".[192] The later series, Vengeance Chronicles, is a spin-off of the fifth-season episode "Vengeance". In this series Chloe joins a costumed vigilante, whom she calls the "Angel of Vengeance", to expose Lex Luthor's Level 33.1 experiments on meteor-infected people.[193]

    The idea for an online show about Chloe originated with Mark Warshaw, who ran the show's website and was in charge of the DVDs. The series intended to wrap up "unfinished business" from the television show.[194] Although Smallville: Chloe Chronicles began on AOL, it made its way to the United Kingdom's Channel 4 website.[194] According to Lisa Gregorian, senior vice president for television of Warner Bros. Marketing Services, their goal was to create companion programming that offers new and exciting ways to engage the audience, just as music videos did for record promotion.[191] Allison Mack described the show as "very Nancy Drew and mysterious": "I think it's a bit more like The X-Files or NYPD Blue. The Chronicles are like a detective story, with Chloe following clues and interviewing people, going from spot to spot, figuring things out".[194] The scripts were written by Brice Tidwell; Mack was given script approval for the series, allowing her to review and make changes to the script. Warshaw communicated with Gough and Millar to expand Smallville stories in Chloe's Chronicles.[194]

    Promotional tie-ins

    [edit]

    For the season-three premiere, the Smallville producers teamed up with Verizon to enable its registered users to view plot updates (as Daily Planet press releases), quizzes and games related to the show with Verizon product placement.[195] Smallville Legends: The Oliver Queen Chronicles, a six-episode CGI series which chronicled the early life of Oliver Queen/Green Arrow, was released in a promotional tie-in with Sprint. According to Warner Bros. Television Group executive vice-president of worldwide marketing Lisa Gregorian, the promotional tie-ins got fans more connected to the show.[196] In April 2007 a tie-in with Toyota promoting the Yaris featured an online comic strip, Smallville Legends: Justice & Doom, as an interstitial program during new Smallville episodes.[197] The interactive comic was based on the "Justice" episode, which follows Oliver Queen, Bart Allen, Victor Stone and Arthur Curry (the initial members of the "Justice League" in Smallville) as they seek to destroy LuthorCorp's secret experimental labs. The online series allowed viewers to investigate with the fictional team to win prizes. Stephan Nilson wrote all five episodes, working with a team of artists on the illustrations. Nilson received the plot for each comic episode as Smallville's production crew was filming its current television episode. Artist Steve Scott drew comic book panels which were sent to Motherland, a consulting group. Motherland reviewed the drawings, telling Scott which images to draw on a separate overlay; this allowed objects to be moved in and out of a frame.[198]

    In 2008 The CW joined the manufacturers of Stride gum to give viewers an opportunity to create their own Smallville digital comic, Smallville: Visions.[199] The writers and producers developed the comic's beginning and end, allowing viewers to provide the middle. The CW began its tie-in campaign with the March 13, 2008 episode "Hero", where Pete develops superhuman elasticity after chewing kryptonite-infused Stride gum. On The CW's website, viewers voted on one of two options (each adding four pages to the comic) every Tuesday and Thursday until the campaign ended on April 7.[200] In season seven Smallville again worked with Sprint, bringing its customers "mobisodes" titled Smallville Legends: Kara and the Chronicles of Krypton with Clark's cousin Kara.[201][202]

    Spin-offs

    [edit]

    Gough and Millar developed an Aquaman pilot for the WB, with Justin Hartley as Aquaman (Arthur Curry).[203] As work progressed on the Smallville season-five episode "Aqua", although the episode was not intended as a backdoor pilot for an Aquaman spin-off[204] the character was seen as having potential for his own series.[203] Alan Ritchson was not considered for the role in the new series, because Gough and Millar did not consider it a Smallville spin-off. Gough said in November 2005 that the series was to be a different version of the 'Aquaman' legend[203] and suggested a crossover with Smallville at some point.[205] Although the pilot was given a good chance of being picked up, when the WB and UPN merged into The CW the new network passed on the show.[206][207][208]

    During the sixth season there was talk of spinning off the Green Arrow into his own series, but Hartley refused to talk about the possibility of a spin-off because of his role on Smallville. The actor felt it his duty to respect what the show had accomplished in five seasons, and not "steal the spotlight" because there was "talk" of a spin-off after his two appearances. According to Hartley, "talking" was as far as the spin-off idea ever got.[209] Steven DeKnight revealed that a spin-off Justice League series was expected to happen after the episode "Justice", and would have continued the story of Oliver and his new team.[210]

    Arrowverse

    [edit]

    Tom Welling and Erica Durance reprised their roles as Clark Kent and Lois Lane for the Arrowverse crossover event "Crisis on Infinite Earths".[211][212] The crossover retroactively establishes the events of Smallville as taking place on Earth-167 and depicts a Clark who has given up his powers and taken over the Kent farm, where he and Lois raise their two daughters.[213] While discussing the Smallville episode "Persona" in 2025, Welling provided some context to Clark's powerless state in the crossover. According to him, Clark was using Blue Kryptonite, like Dax-Ur in "Persona".[214] Within the context of Smallville, Blue Kryptonite strips a Kryptonian of their powers as long as they are exposed to it.[215][216] In "Persona", Dax-Ur wore a piece of Blue Kryptonite in a bracelet. If the bracelet was removed, his powers would instantly return.[216] In the Smallville episode "Hereafter", Jordan Cross has a vision of Clark, in a distant future, as Superman. He then describes Clark as not having an ending, but going on forever.[217]

    In the Crisis Aftermath aftershow, Marc Guggenheim describes the scene as ten years after the viewers last saw Welling's Clark and Durance's Lois. Chronologically, the last appearance of them had been in 2018 in the series finale.[218]

    Michael Rosenbaum was approached about reprising his role as Lex Luthor, but he declined when Warner Bros. did not show him a script, tell him what his character was going to do, nor let him know when he was going to film (it was referred in the scene that Lex was President).[219] Alan Ritchson, who played Arthur Curry / Aquaman on the series, was also approached to reprise his role in the crossover but turned it down due to scheduling commitments with Titans.[220] Despite this, Ritchson did make an uncredited cameo appearance in the crossover as his Titans character, Hank Hall / Hawk, through archival footage from that series.[213]

    The crossover ends with the birth of a new multiverse. Smallville or Earth-167 does not appear in the montage of new universes, which depicts Earth-2 now being the home of Stargirl, while Earth-19 is now the home of the 2019 Swamp Thing television series.[221] In the Titans episode "Dude, Where's My Gar?", Gar Logan (Beast Boy) travels this new multiverse. After briefly visiting Earth-2 (the universe of Stargirl), he continues traveling the multiverse, where he sees or hears different universes (represented by archival footage or audio) inhabited by Christopher Reeve's Superman, Adam West's Batman, the DC Extended Universe, Swamp Thing (2019), Smallville, among others. With Smallville, no footage is shown. Only the voice of Dr. Fate saying that Clark's fate is "binding."[222]

    Possible animated series revival

    [edit]

    In 2021, Tom Welling and his Smallville co-star Michael Rosenbaum were developing an animated series revival to the series and hoped to "use as many of the original cast members as possible".[223] He and Rosenbaum were preparing a pitch of the series for Warner Bros.,[224] and they delivered to them in January 2022.[225] John Glover, Sam Jones III, Kristin Kreuk and Erica Durance, and original series showrunners, Gough and Millar, were said to return,[226] with the exception of Allison Mack due to sex trafficking charges made against her for which she was convicted and imprisoned.[227] The series was said to be in some stage of pre-production or production, but still alive, according to Durance.[228]

    Home media

    [edit]

    Seasons one through ten have been released on DVD in Regions 1, 2 and 4. Seasons five and six were also released in the HD DVD format on November 28, 2006[229] and September 18, 2007,[230] respectively. Seasons six, seven, eight, nine and ten have been released for Blu-ray. The DVD releases include deleted scenes, behind-the-scenes featurettes and commentary by cast and crew members on selected episodes. The promotional tie-ins Chloe Chronicles and Vengeance Chronicles accompanied the season two, three and five box sets. Other special features include interactive functionality (such as a tour of Smallville), a comic book and DVD-ROM material.[231]

    For the 20th anniversary, the complete series was released for the first time on Blu-ray on October 16, 2021.[232] Season one is the only season to be produced in standard-definition; all subsequent seasons were produced in high definition. The 20th Anniversary Blu-ray release contains the original standard-definition of season one, upscaled; with seasons two, three, and four in their native high-definition for the first time.[233] It also marks the first time season five being released on Blu-ray. Season five had previously been released in high definition on HD-DVD only.[234] The Blu-ray release was repackaged and re-rereleased on February 25, 2024. This version of the Complete Series includes all 217 episodes on Blu-ray and 2 DVDs with hours of bonus features.[235]

    Complete Season Release dates
    Region 1 Region 2 Region 4
    1st September 23, 2003[236] October 13, 2003[237] December 3, 2003[238]
    2nd May 18, 2004[239] September 17, 2004[240] January 1, 2005[241]
    3rd November 16, 2004[242] April 18, 2005[243] July 13, 2005[244]
    4th September 13, 2005[245] October 10, 2005[246] November 11, 2006[247]
    5th September 12, 2006[248] August 28, 2006[249] April 4, 2007[250]
    6th September 18, 2007[251] October 22, 2007[252] March 5, 2008[253]
    7th September 9, 2008[254] October 13, 2008[255] March 3, 2009[256]
    8th August 25, 2009[257] October 12, 2009[258] March 31, 2010[259]
    9th September 7, 2010[260] October 25, 2010[261] June 22, 2011[262]
    10th November 29, 2011[263] October 17, 2011[264] April 4, 2012[265]
    Complete series November 29, 2011[1][263] October 17, 2011[266] August 1, 2012[267]
    Season Smallville Blu-ray releases
    Region A Region B
    United States Canada United Kingdom Australia
    6th September 18, 2007[268] October 9, 2007[269] October 13, 2008[270] March 3, 2009[271]
    7th September 9, 2008[272] October 13, 2008[273] March 3, 2009[274]
    8th August 25, 2009[275] October 12, 2009[276] March 31, 2010[277]
    9th September 7, 2010[260] October 25, 2010[278] June 22, 2011[279]
    10th November 29, 2011[263] October 17, 2011[280] April 4, 2012[281]

    Merchandise

    [edit]

    Since Smallville began airing, a variety of merchandise connected with the series has been produced. Two soundtrack albums of songs from the show have been released. Smallville: The Talon Mix, with a group of artists who licensed their music for the show, was issued on February 25, 2003.[282] Smallville: The Metropolis Mix, with another group of artists, was released on November 8, 2005.[283] In addition to the soundtracks, action figures, T-shirts, hats and posters have been produced.[284] In December 2002 autographed Smallville merchandise was listed for auction on eBay, with the proceeds going to charity.[285] In 2003, Titan Magazines began publishing a monthly Smallville magazine with cast and crew interviews, information on Smallville merchandise and photos. The 34th and final issue was published in November 2009.[286]

    Titan Books published companion volumes for each season with cast and crew interviews, episode descriptions and behind-the-scenes photos. On September 1, 2004, the company published its first companion for the series.[287] Written by Paul Simpson, the book has sixteen pages of color photos of the cast.[288] On March 1, 2005 Titan Books published its season-two companion, also written by Simpson,[289] which details the series' special effects.[290] Titan published the third-season companion on September 1,[291] the last written by Simpson. He described the episodes' plots, discussing the neglect of the Martha Kent character and the failure of the Adam Knight storyline.[292] Titan Books released the fourth-season companion by Craig Byrne, who wrote the subsequent companion books, on September 4, 2007.[293] It contains interviews with the cast and crew and color photos of the production.[294] Titan published the season-five companion on December 26, 2007.[295] The season-six companion, with an introduction by Justin Hartley, was published on March 25, 2008.[296] The season-seven companion (Titan's last) has a foreword by Laura Vandervoort, a reflection on the "Smallville phenomenon" and a discussion of Gough and Millar's departure.[297]

    In 2010, the Smallville Roleplaying Game was released by Margaret Weis Productions using its Cortex Plus System. Using the series' season-nine setting, it includes rules for earlier seasons. Two supplements, the High School Yearbook and the Watchtower Report, were produced. Players can play the characters from Smallville, or create their own spin-off of the series.[298] Ultimate Smallville Soundtrack, a five-CD box set with 100 songs from the series' 10 seasons, was released by Vicious Records in May 2013 with all profits benefiting the Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation.[299]

    See also

    [edit]

    References

    [edit]
    [edit]
    Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
    from Grokipedia
    Smallville is an American superhero television series created by and that chronicles the teenage years of Clark Kent, the future , as he discovers and controls his extraordinary abilities in the fictional town of Smallville, . Premiering on October 16, 2001, on network, the show transitioned to after the networks' merger and concluded on May 13, 2011, spanning 10 seasons and 217 episodes. Produced by Warner Bros. Television, , and DC Comics, Smallville blends elements of drama, action, and science fiction to explore themes of identity, friendship, and destiny without depicting Clark in his iconic Superman costume during the series run. The narrative centers on Clark's adoptive parents, , who guide him through moral dilemmas posed by his heritage and the arrival of his spaceship during a meteor shower that brought kryptonite to , causing mutations among locals known as "meteor freaks." Key relationships include his romance with , support from best friend and investigative journalist , and a fraught alliance with ambitious billionaire , foreshadowing their canonical rivalry. Starring as Clark Kent, as , as , as , and others, the series introduced innovative takes on DC Comics lore while maintaining a grounded, no-tights policy for its protagonist.

    Premise and format

    Plot summary

    Smallville chronicles the early life of , a teenager in the rural town of Smallville, Kansas, who discovers his extraterrestrial origins from the planet following a that devastated the area years earlier. Raised by adoptive parents , grapples with emerging superhuman abilities such as super strength, speed, and invulnerability under Earth's yellow sun, while striving to lead a normal life amid high school challenges, budding romances, and friendships. The series explores his journey of self-discovery, as he learns to harness his powers for good against various threats, including meteor-infected individuals and otherworldly dangers, all while keeping his alien heritage a closely guarded secret. Central to the narrative is Clark's complex relationship with , the brilliant but ambitious son of billionaire , which begins as a profound after Clark saves Lex from a car accident. Over time, this bond evolves into a tense rivalry, fueled by Lex's growing suspicions about Clark's abilities and his own descent into moral ambiguity and ruthless ambition, ultimately positioning Lex as Clark's primary adversary. This arc underscores the series' examination of trust, destiny, and the blurred lines between heroism and villainy. Key supporting characters like , , and play integral roles in Clark's personal growth, providing emotional support and challenging him to confront his identity. Throughout the ten seasons, Smallville delves into overarching themes of moral dilemmas, the burdens of , and the protection of loved ones, as Clark navigates ethical choices in using his powers and resists temptations that could lead him astray. The narrative builds toward Clark's maturation into the iconic hero , emphasizing his commitment to justice without seeking glory. In the 2011 series finale, Clark fully embraces his destiny, donning the Superman suit and taking flight to defend the world, marking the culmination of his transformative journey from uncertain youth to legendary protector.

    Episode structure and themes

    The episode structure of Smallville evolved significantly over its ten seasons, beginning with a procedural "monster-of-the-week" format in the early years that emphasized standalone stories involving meteor freaks—individuals mutated by from the 1989 that brought Kent to Earth. These episodes typically centered on confronting a new with unique powers, allowing the series to explore his developing abilities and moral compass while maintaining a self-contained narrative arc per installment. This approach grounded the show in teen drama elements, with each freak serving as a for adolescent struggles like isolation or unchecked ambition. As the series progressed into later seasons, the structure shifted toward serialized arcs, integrating ongoing mythology tied to history, Clark's alien heritage, and broader elements such as the formation of the . This transition reduced the frequency of isolated villain encounters in favor of multi-episode plotlines that built tension across seasons, focusing on Clark's journey toward embracing his destiny as . The change reflected the show's maturation, balancing episodic resolutions with long-term character development and lore expansion. Recurring motifs underscored the thematic depth of Smallville's , including Clark's unwavering no-kill rule, which prohibited him from ending lives even when facing existential threats, reinforcing his commitment to hope and redemption over vengeance. The tension between destiny and permeated the narrative, with often resisting predestined paths imposed by figures like while asserting his agency in protecting humanity—as exemplified in his declaration that "destiny is another word for not having a choice." The iconic "no tights, no flights" rule, established by creators and , further shaped episodes by delaying Clark's full transformation, compelling him to rely on ingenuity and emotional growth rather than overt tropes until . Thematically, Smallville progressed from the lighter teen drama of seasons 1–4, where episodes highlighted high school relationships, family dynamics, and amid conflicts, to the darker elements in seasons 5–10. Later seasons delved into epic stakes, including invasions and the assembly of a proto-Justice League, evolving Clark's story into one of global heroism while retaining core explorations of identity and responsibility. devices like frequent flashbacks to Clark's 1989 arrival on Earth provided for his powers and upbringing, dream sequences revealed fears or alternate paths (such as visions of a future without his intervention), and occasional alternate reality episodes examined "what if" scenarios to probe themes of choice and consequence. These elements, drawn from lore, enriched the episodic and serialized formats without overshadowing Clark's human-alien duality.

    Cast and characters

    Main cast

    Tom Welling portrayed Clark Kent, the teenage son of farmers , who discovers and grapples with his emerging superhuman abilities while navigating high school life in the rural town of Smallville, Kansas. Cast in 2001 at age 24 to play the character starting as a 15-year-old high school freshman, Welling depicted Clark's evolution over the series' 10 seasons from a reluctant hero hiding his powers to an adult embracing his destiny as , emphasizing themes of identity, family, and on the . Michael Rosenbaum played Lex Luthor, the bald, wealthy son of billionaire industrialist Lionel Luthor, introduced as a charismatic and intelligent newcomer to Smallville whose near-fatal car accident leads to a fateful friendship with Clark. Originally cast in 2001 as a seventeen-year-old senior to Clark's freshman, Rosenbaum's portrayal spanned the first seven seasons as a complex anti-hero driven by curiosity, ambition, and a troubled family legacy, before departing the series and returning for the 10th season finale, appearing in seasons 1 through 7 and the season 10 finale as the character's arc shifts toward outright villainy. The core ensemble also featured Kristin Kreuk as , Clark's high school crush and the orphaned niece of a local tavern owner, appearing as a main cast member from seasons 1 through 7. Erica Durance joined as , the bold investigative journalist and cousin of , starting with a recurring role in season 4 before becoming a series regular through season 10. Allison Mack portrayed , Clark's witty best friend and aspiring reporter with a passion for uncovering Smallville's meteor-related mysteries, serving as a main cast member across all 10 seasons. Mack was convicted in 2019 for her role in the cult and released from prison in July 2023. Annette O'Toole played Martha Kent, Clark's adoptive mother and a nurturing figure who supports his secret while managing the family farm, cast in the role for the 2001 pilot after an initial actress was replaced.

    Recurring and guest characters

    John Glover portrayed , the ruthless billionaire patriarch of the Luthor family and a central , appearing in 145 episodes across seasons 1 through 10. As Lex Luthor's father, Lionel's manipulative and abusive behavior significantly shaped Lex's descent into villainy, serving as a key influence on his son's moral corruption and ambition. His character evolved from a special guest in season 1 to a series regular through season 7, with additional guest appearances in seasons 9 and 10, often driving corporate intrigue and ethical conflicts central to the series' themes. John Schneider played Jonathan Kent, Clark Kent's adoptive father and moral compass, in 117 episodes primarily spanning seasons 1 through 7, with select later appearances. Jonathan's grounded, principled guidance provided essential emotional support to Clark's development, emphasizing themes of family and responsibility amid supernatural challenges. Sam Jones III depicted Pete Ross, Clark's loyal best friend and early confidant, across 59 episodes in seasons 1 through 7. Pete's role highlighted the normalcy of small-town life contrasting Clark's emerging powers, offering comic relief and unwavering friendship before his character's arc concluded with a move away from Smallville. Among notable guest stars, appeared as Dr. Virgil Swann, a who unlocked key aspects of Clark's heritage, in 2 episodes during seasons 2 and 3. Swann's interactions introduced pivotal artifacts and messages from Clark's homeworld, bridging the protagonist's earthly upbringing with his alien origins. provided the voice for , Clark's biological father and a guiding AI presence, in 23 episodes across multiple seasons starting from season 2 (died August 17, 2025). Jor-El's holographic directives delivered lore, ethical lessons, and warnings, profoundly impacting Clark's understanding of his destiny and powers. The series also featured early appearances by actors who later became prominent in the DC universe, such as as a young Kent and in 2 episodes of season 10. These cameos connected Smallville to broader franchise elements, culminating in the finale's depiction of Clark's full transformation. To broaden the supporting ensemble and integrate classic Superman mythology, was cast as , the enthusiastic photographer and Sullivan's love interest, appearing in 22 episodes from seasons 6 through 10. This addition enhanced the journalistic and heroic network around Clark, promoting diversity in the cast by including a fresh take on a longstanding ally.

    Episodes

    Season overviews

    The first season of Smallville, which aired from 2001 to 2002, consists of 21 episodes and introduces Clark Kent's emerging superhuman abilities following a that brought him to as an infant. The narrative establishes the town of Smallville as a hub for "meteor freaks"—individuals mutated by from the shower—and marks the arrival of LuthorCorp through Lex Luthor's relocation, setting up their complex relationship with the Kents. Seasons 2 through 4, spanning 2002 to 2005 with 23, 22, and 22 episodes respectively, escalate the threats Clark faces during his high school years, including deeper explorations of his origins via Jor-El's messages and intensified conflicts with kryptonite-enhanced antagonists. Clark develops new powers like heat vision, grapples with his destiny to leave Smallville, and navigates romantic tensions with amid Lex's growing suspicions. A key milestone occurs in the season 4 finale, where Clark achieves his first sustained flight after uniting Kryptonian artifacts. Seasons 5 to 7, airing from 2005 to 2008 and comprising 22, 22, and 20 episodes, shift to Clark's college life in , where he confronts interstellar threats like escaped prisoners and the villain Brainiac while hinting at the formation of a proto-Justice League through alliances with heroes such as and . Lex Luthor's transformation into a full accelerates, marked by ruthless experiments on meteor-infected subjects and manipulations involving technology, culminating in betrayals that strain Clark's circle of trust. The final three seasons, from 2008 to 2011 with 22, 21, and 22 episodes, position as a central romantic and investigative partner to at the , while introducing the overarching arc as an apocalyptic force corrupting heroes and society through the Vigilante Registration Act. undergoes rigorous training in the , battles resurgent invaders like Zod, and confronts cloned iterations of Lex, leading to where he fully embraces his identity by donning the iconic suit and saving the world. Over its ten-season run, Smallville produced 217 episodes, initially broadcast on for seasons 1 through 5 before moving to for seasons 6 through 10.

    Episode production and notable episodes

    The production of Smallville episodes involved a collaborative process where story ideas were developed through detailed outlining and pitching sessions. Showrunners and oversaw the seasonal arcs, ensuring mini-arcs every seven to eight episodes culminated in cliffhangers, while assigning scripts randomly among the team for revision based on collective input. They personally reviewed every script with a final pass, balancing network notes to refine the narrative, and structured episodes around 12-page outlines that "white-boarded" key scenes before drafting. Budget constraints posed significant challenges, particularly in the early seasons, where limited funds for —such as a $100,000 cut in season two—prompted creative adaptations in depicting Clark Kent's emerging powers. This led to innovative, grounded manifestations like heat vision tied to emotional triggers rather than high-cost spectacle, allowing the show to emphasize character-driven storytelling over elaborate visuals. Several episodes stand out for their milestones and narrative impact. The pilot episode, airing on October 16, 2001, drew 8.4 million viewers, marking The WB's highest-rated and establishing the series' tone of Clark's . "" (season 2, episode 17) marked the first significant Kryptonian contact, introducing Clark's birth name Kal-El and his alien heritage through an encounter with Dr. Virgil Swann, played by . The 100th episode, "" (season 5, episode 12), featured flashbacks and an alternate timeline reset after a tragic family loss, forcing Clark to confront the consequences of revealing his secret and highlighting themes of destiny and sacrifice. "Absolute Justice" (season 9, episodes 11 and 12), written by comic book author , introduced the as a precursor team of heroes, connecting Clark to a broader legacy of vigilantes through a murder mystery involving legacy artifacts. The series finale (season 10, episodes 21 and 22), presented as a two-hour event, culminated in Clark's transformation into , with flash-forwards depicting his heroic debut and resolution of long-running arcs.

    Production

    Development and writing

    The series Smallville originated from a pitch by writers and to Television in August 2000, following an approach by network president Peter Roth to develop a story centered on a young Clark Kent before he becomes . Initially, Gough and Millar considered concepts involving a college-aged or a young Bruce Wayne, but they refined the idea into a high school drama titled Smallville, emphasizing Clark's personal growth in a rural setting. The project was greenlit for broadcast on network in 2001, with the pilot episode airing on October 16 of that year. Gough and Millar served as the primary showrunners and executive producers from seasons 1 through 7, overseeing a writing team that included early contributors like producer , who penned multiple episodes across the first three seasons. As the series progressed, the writing staff evolved with the addition of long-term writers Brian Peterson and Kelly Souders, who had contributed scripts since season 2 and gradually took on more supervisory roles. Following Gough and Millar's departure after season 7 in 2008, Peterson and Souders ascended to showrunners alongside Todd Slavkin and Darren Swimmer for season 8, with Peterson and Souders remaining as the lead creative forces through the series finale in season 10. A key creative directive established by Gough and Millar during the 2000 pitch was the "no tights, no flights" rule, which prohibited depictions of Clark Kent wearing the costume or achieving full flight capabilities, aiming to ground the narrative in realistic teen drama and emotional development rather than spectacle. This approach focused storytelling on Clark's internal struggles and relationships, though later seasons under new leadership gradually introduced more overt lore, including partial flights and costume elements, to build toward the character's evolution by season 10. Significant crew changes impacted the writing process, notably actor Michael Rosenbaum's departure after season 7, attributed to burnout from the role's demands—such as weekly head-shaving—and a desire to avoid while pursuing diverse opportunities like projects. Rosenbaum's exit, alongside Gough and Millar's, prompted script adjustments to re-center narratives around , with Peterson and Souders steering toward fresh arcs involving new antagonists and alliances. Additionally, the merger of and into , which began airing Smallville from season 6 onward, influenced writing by imposing budget constraints that necessitated more contained storylines, though the core team maintained continuity in mythological progression.

    Filming locations and techniques

    The series Smallville was primarily filmed in and around , , , which served as a stand-in for the fictional American town of Smallville, Kansas. This choice leveraged the region's diverse landscapes, including rural farmlands and urban settings, while benefiting from 's established film infrastructure and tax incentives. Interiors, such as those for the Kent family home and LuthorCorp offices, were shot at various soundstages in , including facilities like Bridge Studios in , throughout the show's run from 2001 to 2011. Key exterior locations included the Kent Farm, depicted as a modest rural property central to Clark 's upbringing, filmed at a real farmhouse at 843 248th Street in Langley, . The opulent Luthor Mansion exteriors were captured at Hatley Castle in , a historic Tudor Revival-style building on the grounds of , chosen for its grandeur and isolated estate-like setting. Smallville High School scenes utilized and elements of the University of 's Robson Square Campus, providing authentic schoolyard and hallway aesthetics. Filming techniques evolved with the show's progression from grounded, teen-focused narratives to more expansive superhero action. In early seasons, practical effects dominated portrayals of Clark's emerging powers, such as super speed, achieved through controlled environments where background actors froze in place while moved through scenes, often augmented by wire work for dynamic motion and height illusions. Safety concerns arose during these setups, including risks from wire rigs and rapid movements, reflecting the era's emphasis on tangible, on-set effects over digital ones. Later seasons shifted toward (CGI) for complex sequences like flights, large-scale destruction, and enhanced superhuman feats, with houses like Entity FX handling increased demands starting in season six to depict escalating threats and powers. Production faced logistical challenges inherent to Vancouver's climate, including frequent rain that required adaptations like covered sets, weatherproofing equipment, and scheduling around overcast days to maintain the show's Midwestern sunny aesthetic. Each season demanded approximately 200 to 220 filming days, given the 20–22 episode order, compressing into tight windows that amplified weather-related delays and crew fatigue. Following the network transition to in 2007 for season seven, production incorporated larger soundstages to accommodate bigger sets and reduce reliance on location shoots, partly to manage rising budgets amid the merger's financial adjustments.

    Music and visual effects

    The music for Smallville featured an original score composed primarily by , who died on July 4, 2025, for the first six seasons, beginning with the in 2001. Snow's contributions emphasized orchestral elements that evoked the epic scope of the story, including subtle integrations of motifs from John Williams's film score to underscore Clark Kent's emerging destiny. After Snow, Louis Febre took over scoring duties for seasons 7 through 10, maintaining a blend of dramatic tension and heroic swells tailored to the show's themes of identity and power. The series' opening theme was "Save Me" by , a rock track that played over the title sequence from seasons 1 through 10. Guest-licensed songs were frequently incorporated to enhance emotional beats, such as Five for Fighting's "Superman (It's Not Easy)" featured in season 1 episode "Stray" to highlight Clark's internal conflict. in Smallville began modestly in season 1 due to constraints, relying heavily on practical stunts and simple digital enhancements for Clark's abilities like super speed and heat vision. Starting in season 2, Entity FX became the primary VFX vendor, expanding the scope with greenscreen composites and CG elements to depict increasingly ambitious sequences, including artifacts and otherworldly environments. By in 2011, the effects had matured significantly, with Entity FX delivering nearly 80 shots for the two-part episode, prominently featuring Clark's long-awaited flight in a climactic montage that symbolized his transformation into . Sound design complemented the VFX progression, creating distinctive audio cues for superhuman powers—such as the signature whooshing build-up for heat vision—to immerse viewers in Clark's abilities without relying solely on visuals. These elements evolved alongside advancing digital audio tools by the 2011 finale, allowing for more layered and dynamic mixes that integrated seamlessly with and Febre's scores.

    Broadcast and distribution

    Premiere and international release

    Smallville premiered in the United States on October 16, 2001, airing on network. The series initially broadcast on Tuesdays for its first three seasons before shifting to Wednesdays for season 4 and Thursdays starting with season 5. Following the 2006 merger of and to form , seasons 6 through 10 aired on the new network, primarily on Thursdays until season 8, after which it moved to Fridays for the final two seasons, concluding on May 13, 2011. Each of the ten seasons featured 21 to 23 episodes, with a common format including two-part episodes for season premieres and finales. Internationally, Smallville was distributed in over 100 countries by Warner Bros. Television, which handled global rights for the series. In the United Kingdom, it debuted on Channel 4 on December 31, 2001, before transitioning to E4 in later seasons starting around 2002. In Canada, the show aired on CTV beginning November 23, 2001. Syndication in the U.S. began in 2005, with episodes later airing on TNT starting in 2011. Digital distribution commenced on iTunes in 2008, allowing purchase of individual seasons and episodes.

    Viewership ratings

    Smallville achieved its peak viewership with the season 2 premiere episode "Vortex," which drew 8.9 million viewers according to , marking the highest-rated episode in the series' history. The pilot episode also set a strong benchmark, attracting 8.35 million viewers and establishing a WB network record for a series debut. Over its ten seasons, the series maintained a solid overall average of approximately 4.5 million viewers per episode, with early seasons performing strongest before a gradual decline. Season 2 averaged the highest at 6.3 million viewers, while initial seasons generally hovered between 5 and 6 million; viewership dipped to 2.5–3 million in later seasons following the WB-CW network merger, reflecting broader industry shifts toward fragmented audiences. in 2011 garnered 2.97 million viewers, peaking at 3.35 million in its final half-hour. The show demonstrated strong appeal among younger demographics, particularly adults aged 18–34, where it often ranked number one in its time slot, including among men 18–34—a challenging group for broadcasters. This skew contributed to the CW network's reputation as the youngest-skewing broadcaster, with Smallville frequently leading in women 18–34 and persons 12–34 as well. In syndication, Smallville saw significant success starting in 2004 when ABC Family acquired cable rights to 66 episodes for $400,000 per episode as part of a nearly $100 million deal for content, outbidding competitors like Sci Fi Channel, which underscored the show's enduring popularity in reruns.

    Reception

    Critical reviews

    The first season of Smallville received widespread critical acclaim for its innovative approach to the mythos, earning a 78% approval rating on based on 27 reviews. Critics praised the series for reimagining familiar elements through a teen drama lens, with of Time noting that it "rethinks familiar Superman motifs in fresh ways." awarded the show an overall 8/10, highlighting its engaging retelling of Clark Kent's backstory without relying on traditional tropes. Subsequent seasons drew more mixed responses, particularly from seasons 7 through 10, where reviewers criticized repetitive and a perceived decline in momentum. Season 7 holds a 40% score from five reviews, with IGN's Chris Carabott giving it a 5.7/10 and arguing that the series had "run its course" amid formulaic plots involving meteor-infected antagonists. Despite these issues, the central dynamic between Clark Kent and was consistently lauded for its emotional depth; a analysis described Lex as the "real star," emphasizing the tragic evolution of their friendship through psychological tension and moral contrasts. Critics have analyzed Smallville's cultural impact as a pioneering blend of soap opera elements and science fiction, influencing the structure of modern superhero television by prioritizing ensemble casts and character-driven arcs over immediate action spectacles. A CBR retrospective credits the show with serving as the "blueprint of modern superhero TV series," particularly through its focus on Clark's personal growth amid relational drama. Feminist critiques, as explored in the academic collection Mapping Smallville: Critical Essays on the Series and Its Characters, highlight both progressive aspects—like strong, agency-driven female roles such as —and shortcomings in arcs for characters like , often portraying them as emotionally reactive foils to male leads. Post-finale retrospectives have underscored Smallville's enduring legacy, particularly its "no tights, no flights" rule that delayed Clark's full transformation, allowing for a grounded ahead of its time. A 2021 review by Digital Chumps rated the complete series 9/10, affirming that it "holds up better with narrative and character progression than any other show." This approach influenced later adaptations, positioning the series as a foundational text in serialized storytelling.

    Awards and nominations

    Smallville garnered significant recognition in genre and youth-oriented awards ceremonies during its ten-season run, accumulating 35 wins and 155 nominations overall. The series peaked in accolades during its early years, reflecting its initial popularity as a fresh take on the Superman mythos, though it received no Emmy nominations or wins in major acting or writing categories.

    Saturn Awards

    The Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films honored Smallville with eight Saturn Awards between 2002 and 2009, establishing it as a standout in science fiction television. Notable wins included Best Network Series in 2002 and 2006, recognizing the show's innovative storytelling and production quality. Tom Welling received Best Actor on Television awards in 2002 and 2009 for his portrayal of Clark Kent, while Michael Rosenbaum won Best Supporting Actor on Television in 2002 for Lex Luthor. Additional wins encompassed categories for supporting performances and genre excellence, such as Allison Mack's 2003 win for Best Supporting Actress on Television.)

    Teen Choice Awards

    Smallville achieved 14 Teen Choice Awards from 2001 to 2010, appealing strongly to younger audiences through its teen drama elements fused with lore. Lead actors dominated the wins, with securing multiple Choice TV Actor – Drama/Action Adventure awards, including in 2002, 2003, 2004, and 2009. won Choice TV Actress – Drama in 2002 and 2003 for , and took Choice TV Actress – Sci-Fi/Fantasy in 2007 and 2008 as . Supporting wins included Allison Mack's 2006 Choice TV Sidekick for and pairings like the 2004 Choice TV Chemistry for Welling and Kreuk. These accolades highlighted the cast's appeal and the series' cultural resonance with teens.

    Other Awards

    In technical categories, Smallville earned three for Outstanding Sound Editing for a Series in 2007, 2008, and 2009, praising episodes like "Noir" (2007), "" (2008), and "Bloodline" (2009) for their immersive audio design. The series also secured for visual effects in 2003, 2004, and 2005, acknowledging the innovative CGI used to depict Clark's powers without full flights until later seasons. It received nominations at the , including for Favorite New Dramatic in 2002 and Favorite Sci-Fi/Fantasy TV Show in later years, underscoring fan support. The show won Best Dramatic Series at the in 2011. Overall, these honors, exceeding 50 nominations in key ceremonies, affirmed Smallville's impact on television production and cultural representation.

    Expanded media

    Novels and literature

    The Smallville television series inspired a line of official tie-in novels published between and , consisting of original prose stories that expanded on the show's lore of meteor-infected individuals and Kent's early life in Smallville. These books, released under the Warner Aspect imprint of Warner Books, numbered eight in total and were aimed primarily at young adult and teen audiences to delve into side stories involving supernatural threats and character backstories not fully explored on screen. The inaugural novel, Strange Visitors by Roger Stern, was published in October 2002 and introduced a plot centered on a charismatic leader exploiting 's effects on Smallville residents, forcing to confront his emerging powers while protecting his friends. Subsequent entries included by Alan Grant (November 2002), which featured a meteor-freak with reptilian abilities terrorizing the town, and Hauntings by Nancy Holder (January 2003), exploring ghostly apparitions tied to the 1989 that brought to . Other volumes, such as by Alan Grant (January 2004) and by (March 2004), continued this pattern by weaving original narratives around themes of isolation, heroism, and the dangers of Kryptonite mutation, often bridging gaps in the TV series' early seasons. In parallel, a separate series of ten novelizations adapted key episodes from the show's first two seasons, published by from October 2002 to 2004. These shorter books, targeted at teenage readers, retold on-screen events with added internal monologues and background details on meteor freaks and Clark's heritage. Representative examples include Arrival by Michael Teitelbaum (October 2002), a direct of the pilot episode depicting Clark's high school struggles and first encounters with extraordinary abilities, and See No Evil by Cherie Bennett and Jeff Gottesfeld (October 2002), which dramatized a theater production plagued by sabotage linked to a antagonist empowered by . Titles like Flight by Cherie Bennett and Jeff Gottesfeld (December 2002) and Speed by Cherie Bennett and Jeff Gottesfeld (January 2003) similarly focused on Clark's moral dilemmas and budding relationships, enhancing the series' exploration of adolescence amid superhuman challenges. Collectively, these novels served to deepen the Smallville universe by providing prose-based extensions of its central motifs—such as the tension between normalcy and destiny—without altering canonical events, thereby appealing to fans seeking more insight into the pre-Superman era of Clark Kent. As of November 2025, no further developments in other expanded media have occurred.

    Comic books and continuations

    DC Comics published a series of tie-in comic books from 2002 to 2005 accompanying the early seasons of the Smallville television series, including a one-shot in October 2002 and 11 issues from 2003 to 2005 that expanded on unaired stories and character arcs, written by various contributors. Following the 2011 series finale, Smallville Season 11 served as an official continuation in comic form, a digital-first miniseries written by Bryan Q. Miller and published by DC Comics from 2012 to 2015, depicting Clark Kent's life as Superman six months after the TV conclusion, alongside allies like Lois Lane, Lex Luthor, and members of the Justice League facing threats such as Doomsday and Cyborg Superman; the core series consisted of 15 issues plus additional specials and miniseries like Lantern (6 issues) and Continuity (4 issues). The first collected volume, Smallville Season 11 Vol. 1: The Guardian, compiling issues #1–4 with art by Pere Perez, was released in print in April 2013 (ISBN 978-1401238247). Additional one-shot releases included the Smallville Season 11 Special #1: Effigy (2012), a stand-alone story spotlighting the , and other specials exploring side characters like the Titans in Smallville Special: Titans (2013–2014, 4 issues), bridging to broader DC elements. Across the franchise, more than 100 issues were produced, including the early 2003–2005 print series (11 issues), the Season 11 extensions, and reprints by publishers such as Titan Books, which issued collected editions and companion magazines with original content from 2004 to 2010. The artistic style in later Smallville comics, particularly Continuity (2014–2015), featured dynamic penciling by Ig Guara, emphasizing high-energy action sequences involving the against emerging threats like multiversal Monitors, with detailed character expressions and environments rendered in a modern, cinematic manner to evoke the TV series' visual tone.

    Web series and promotional tie-ins

    The Chloe Chronicles is a web series tie-in to the television show Smallville, featuring 11 webisodes released across two volumes from 2003 to 2004 and starring Allison Mack as reporter Chloe Sullivan. In the series, Chloe delves into meteor rock-related anomalies and "Wall of Weird" cases, uncovering connections to Smallville's supernatural events through investigative segments that extend main series plotlines. Produced by the core Smallville team at Tollin/Robbins Productions and Warner Bros. Television in collaboration with AOL and The WB, the low-budget episodes were filmed during the show's production breaks to engage fans between seasons. Volume 1 consists of six episodes that premiered on April 29, 2003, and aired weekly on (via keyword: Smallville) and TheWB.com until May 20, 2003, coinciding with the season 2 finale. These installments focus on interviewing witnesses to incidents, revealing a secretive group of scientists experimenting with . Volume 2, with seven episodes, debuted on April 14, 2004, and ran weekly through May 26, 2004, exclusively for Broadband members, incorporating guest appearances by cast members like and John Glover while tying into the concurrent Smallville comic book series for deeper backstory. In 2006, the Vengeance Chronicles extended the web content with six additional episodes, bringing the total to 19 webisodes across the Sullivan-focused series. Airing from February 17 to March 24, 2006, on TheWB.com following the season 5 episode "," the series follows partnering with vigilante Andrea Rojas, the Angel of Vengeance (played by ), to combat corruption in after Rojas's failed attempt on . Like its predecessors, it was produced on a modest budget by the Smallville crew during off-season periods, emphasizing quick-paced action and character development to bridge TV episodes. These served as promotional extensions, fostering fan engagement by introducing subplots and character arcs that influenced the main narrative, such as expanded lore on meteor effects and themes. A 2003 (ARG) on the official Smallville website further tied into the initial Chronicles launch, embedding puzzles and clues within the fictional Smallville newspaper to mimic the show's investigative style and encourage interactive mystery-solving among viewers.

    Crossovers and franchise connections

    Smallville established several connections to the broader DC Comics television landscape, particularly through character introductions and actor crossovers that bridged to the . The series introduced Oliver Queen/Green Arrow, portrayed by from seasons 6 through 10, which helped popularize the character on live-action TV and influenced subsequent portrayals; Hartley was considered for the lead role in before was cast, and he later expressed openness to guest-starring on the series. The ninth-season episodes "Absolute Justice, Part 1" and "Part 2" (2009–2010) brought the Justice Society of America into the narrative, featuring legacy heroes like Hawkman (Michael Shanks) and Stargirl (Britt Irvin); Shanks reprised a version of Hawkman/Carter Hall in Arrow's second season, while other cast members like Brent Stait (as the Silent Knight) appeared in Arrowverse projects, creating indirect ties between Smallville's team-up storytelling and the Arrowverse's ensemble dynamics. A major franchise link occurred during the Arrowverse's "Crisis on Infinite Earths" crossover event in 2019, where reprised his role as Clark Kent/ in a cameo on , portraying a retired, de-powered version living on the Kent farm with [Lois Lane](/page/Lois Lane) (, who also appeared); this sequence officially designated Smallville's continuity as Earth-167 within the DC , allowing it to coexist alongside the primary Earth-Prime. While Smallville produced no direct spin-offs, its emphasis on interconnected superhero teams and meteor-infected elements influenced later Arrowverse series like DC's , particularly in handling ensemble casts and time-travel arcs; for instance, Smallville's villain Curtis Knox was retroactively revealed as an alias for in Legends of Tomorrow season 1. Additionally, creators and developed an unaired Aquaman pilot in 2006 intended as a Smallville-adjacent project, featuring as Arthur , but it was shelved by in favor of other priorities. Beyond the Arrowverse, Smallville featured DC ties through guest appearances and voice work, including —renowned for voicing Batman in —providing the voice of an animated Batman in a season 3 sequence alluding to Bruce Wayne's Gotham operations. Post-series, actors from Smallville made cameos in other DC shows, such as reprising a Kara Zor-El-inspired role as the villain () in Supergirl's first season (2015–2016), linking the series' Kryptonian lore to the .

    Animated sequel development

    In October 2021, actors and announced their plans to develop an animated sequel series to Smallville, envisioned as a continuation titled Season 11 that would focus on an older Clark Kent, , and the return of as adversaries. The project aimed to build on the narrative established in the Smallville Season Eleven series, adapting its storylines for . Progress advanced in early 2022 when and Rosenbaum pitched the concept to Warner Bros., including a scripted pilot episode. However, development stalled by 2024 amid Warner Bros. Discovery's broader DC Comics reboot under and , who prioritized a new live-action film. In November 2024, confirmed the delay, stating that Warner Bros. had not responded to their pitches and describing the project as "not a priority" for the studio. By March 2025, Smallville co-creator reiterated the project's indefinite hold during an appearance on the Talk Ville podcast, noting it was "off the table for a bit" due to the ongoing focus on the (DCU) under the new regime. expressed optimism that the idea could resurface eventually but emphasized the current emphasis on Gunn's initiatives. As of November 2025, the series has not received a from Warner Bros. or . The proposed animated series included potential story elements such as the resurrection of Lionel Luthor, as teased in concept art featuring the character looming over the cast, and plans for the original voice actors—including Welling, Rosenbaum, and John Glover—to reprise their roles.

    Home media and merchandise

    DVD and streaming releases

    Warner Home Video began releasing individual season DVD box sets for Smallville starting with the first season on September 23, 2003, followed by annual releases for each subsequent season through the tenth and final season on November 29, 2011. The complete series collection, a 62-disc set containing all 217 episodes, was issued on November 29, 2011, compiling the full run in a slipcase edition with bonus materials. Blu-ray releases were more limited, with individual seasons 6 through 10 made available between 2011 and 2013 via Warner Home Video. Seasons 1 through 3 received partial Blu-ray treatment during this period, but a full high-definition series set was not produced at the time due to visual effects (VFX) created in standard definition for the early episodes, which did not upscale well to HD without quality degradation. A complete series Blu-ray edition arrived later in 2021 for the 20th anniversary, featuring upscaled video for the initial seasons alongside remastered later ones. Smallville became available for streaming on Max (rebranded as Max) starting in 2020, with continued availability on the platform in various international markets. In the United States, all ten seasons stream on as of November 2025, while digital purchase options on and Amazon Video have been offered since 2006. DVD editions across seasons include extensive special features such as featurettes, deleted and extended scenes, audio commentaries by cast and , and gag reels, enhancing viewer insights into production.

    Toys and other products

    DC Direct produced a line of Smallville action figures from 2002 to 2011, featuring characters such as Clark Kent, , and in the initial Series 1 release. Later series included Kryptonian variants and Justice League-inspired figures like , , Impulse, and from the "" episode storyline in Series 2. Apparel items, including T-shirts and hoodies featuring show logos and character designs, were licensed through retailers like from 2001 to 2015, capitalizing on the series' popularity among fans. Trading cards produced by Inkworks in 2005 featured stills, character profiles, and autographed inserts from the cast, appealing to collectors during the show's mid-run. Official calendars and posters were also available through licensing, providing seasonal and decorative items for enthusiasts. In the modern era, released Pop! vinyl figures in 2018, with reissues and new variants like Clark Kent and continuing into 2019 and beyond, reflecting ongoing fan demand. Post-2011 convention exclusives, such as limited-edition figures at events like , have further extended the merchandise line for dedicated collectors.

    References

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