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SMALLVILLE

Did you enjoy SMALLVILLE?


  • Total voters
    38
  • Poll closed .

Taylirious

Rear Admiral
Rear Admiral
Did you enjoy this series? Up :bolian: - Down :thumbdown: - Dafuq? :wtf:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smallville
Smallville is an American television series developed by writers/producers Alfred Gough and Miles Millar. It is based on the DC Comics character Superman, originally created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster. The television series was initially broadcast by The WB Television Network (The WB), premiering on October 16, 2001. After Smallville's fifth season, The WB and UPN merged to form The CW, which became the broadcaster for the show in the United States. It ended its tenth and final season on May 13, 2011. The series follows the adventures of Clark Kent (Tom Welling), who resides in the fictional town of Smallville, Kansas, during the years before he becomes known as Superman. The first four seasons focus on Clark and his friends' high school years. After season five, the show ventures into more adult settings, eventually focusing on his career at the Daily Planet, as well as introducing other DC comic book superheroes and villains.

The concept for Smallville was created after a potential series chronicling a young Bruce Wayne's journey toward becoming Batman failed to generate interest. After meeting with the president of Warner Bros. Television, series developers Gough and Millar pitched their "no tights, no flights" rule, which would break Superman down to the bare essentials and look at the events leading up to Clark Kent becoming Superman. After seven seasons with the show, Gough and Millar departed without providing a specific reason. Smallville was predominantly filmed in and around Vancouver, British Columbia, with some of the local businesses and buildings substituting for Smallville locations. The music for the first six seasons was primarily composed by Mark Snow, who incorporated elements of John Williams's musical score from the original Superman film series. In season seven, Louis Febre, who had worked with Snow from the beginning, took over as primary composer.

The series was generally positively received when it began broadcasting. Former Superman star Christopher Reeve voiced his approval of the series, making two guest appearances before his death. The pilot episode broke the record for highest-rated debut for The WB, with 8.4 million viewers. Over ten seasons, it averaged approximately 4.34 million viewers per episode, with season two averaging the highest ratings, at 6.3 million. By the end of its run, Smallville had surpassed Stargate SG-1 to become the longest-running North American science fiction series, as well as the longest running comic book-based series in television history.[1][4] From its first season, the series earned distinctions ranging from Emmy Awards to Teen Choice Awards. The show has spawned a series of young-adult novels, a DC Comics bi-monthly comic book and soundtrack releases, as well as Smallville-related merchandise. All ten seasons of Smallville are available on DVD in regions 1, 2 and 4. In April 2012, the series was continued in comic book form, with the storyline picking up shortly after the end of the series finale.

[yt]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ppEg3xk4Ez0[/yt]

Smallville Season 1-10 OFFICIAL Opening Credits
 
I can't vote. Need a "Yes, at first...not so much later" option. :)


Yep. If I may quote myself, as I've said before...


For me, the point of no complete return came in 3.2, when Lana KILLED a guy and it was never mentioned again. Clark accidentally killing is one thing; he has a different perspective on life, but it should have had an effect on Lana.

Some good eps followed, including Memoria (the series' single best, as far as I know), but they had an elegiac quality to them; it was clear to me that the show was no longer interested in reconciling the comic book mythos with reality (we only saw one classroom in the first three years), and without that crucial balancing act, I wasn't interested.

Legacy should have been great, but barely made sense. The S3 finale was decent enough, but though I may watch 4.1 one day just to see how it ends (I've read the spoilers), I wasn't invested enough to continue.

Maybe I'll watch some of the better-reviewed S8s one day, but the emotionally rich and tantalizingly realistic show I'd identified with (I was a high school sophomore during S1, and, like Clark, had an impossible crush) died in 3.2.
 
I thougt that the latter seasons where much better, especially when Lois Lane came in the show and when Clark and Lex getting bigger fights
 
There used to be a version of smallville on the internet that cut the first two seasons down to 4 hours by extracting all the meteor freak adventures. It was just all the running background plotlines about Lex, Clark, Chloey and... Who was the other girl?
 
^Chloe Sullivan.

It had its moments. I liked how the series incorporated every other super hero in the DC Comics 'universe'. It had great ideas. Then it started to drag its feet for a very long time while establishing everything that would equate to Superman without Superman existing as that. I did like Chloe. She was a very good character.
 
Odd set of poll options to go for. Usually a positive one, a middle one, and then a negative one is the route to go. But this has an enthusiastic positive one and two negative ones?

Anyway, I thought it was good. When it began to shed its sappy teenage melo-drama/soap opera ways and began to embrace its comic book origins it became a lot more interesting and fun.

It has lots of problems in it but, overall, I enjoyed it.
 
I liked the show throughout its run, but it got better after the High School era was over, Lana left and Lois became a main character. I especially liked later seasons when it started embracing the superhero stuff and we got Oliver Queen/Green Arrow as a recurring character, Supergirl, the JSA (that two parter is still my favorite episode), the Legion of Superheroes, Booster Gold, Blue Beetle, Cyborg, Aquaman, Flash, Black Canary, Zatanna, Amanda Waller and other superhero elements that had rarely or never been seen in live action.

It stumbled sometimes, like killing off Jimmy (even if the actor wanted to leave, killing off a big part of the Superman property and replacing him with a conveniently clone-like younger brother who can also be called Jimmy was just weird). The shows creators apparent idiotic rule against Clark flying or wearing a costume also sucked, and I still don't think anyone has mangled Doomsday quite like they did (and DC Comics really did their best to eliminate any sense of menace and threat Doomsday had). But I still liked the show.

Clark and Lois were good characters, Lex was pretty good and Chloe was great. I also liked their Oliver, maybe even a bit more than Arrow's version (although I like him, too). It had problems, like how Lana was a pretty mediocre character when she was in the cast, and the ending wasn't very satisfying (a time skip that included Clark and Lois still delaying their wedding for no reason years into the future, an awakened Luthor becoming president, and a younger brother of Jimmy Olsen that looks like his clone/secret twin) but overall I enjoyed it, while admitting it had problems.
 
I vote for meh. The season premieres and finales were cool but that was about it. Though the last 2-3 years were a drastic improvement.
 
It's like Anne Elk's theory about dinosaurs, but reversed. It was big at one end, much smaller in the middle, and big again at the far end. ;)
 
When it comes to SMALLVILLE there is no room for "Meh". :p

I think the writer's strike killed it for me I guess after S5 things when down but after S7 it was bad. Adding Cassidy Freeman was a plus however. :)
 
I enjoyed it. I was there from the first episode to the last. It has some problems, but I guess any show that runs that long will develop a few. Overall I thought it was a great take on Clark's formative years.
 
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