I know that none of the other characters are the same, which is why i said pull a "Superman Returns" and truncate the latter half the series, getting rid of any of the "this person doesn't look like this person" problems..... just lilke the X movies have truncated X3 and Wolverine Origins from the canon.
I despise the later seasons, and have never completed watching them; too many characters and too much canon was destroyed, but the formative years were done fantastically.
And were two X-Men movies ignored? Or were a lot of events from the entire series simply wiped away with Wolverine's time travel in the most recent movie? I thought it was the latter.
Except this time they wore yellow spandex, going by Negasonic Teenage Warehead's appearance in Deadpool.Strictly speaking, Days of Future Past created a new timeline that overwrites every prior movie except First Class. ... Still, I would expect that most of the good stuff from the past movies can still be assumed to have happened more or less the same way in the new timeline.
I don't understand the hate;
I despise the later seasons, and have never completed watching them; too many characters and too much canon was destroyed, but the formative years were done fantastically.
Strictly speaking, Days of Future Past created a new timeline that overwrites every prior movie except First Class. With Mystique's redemption in DoFP, and with mutants becoming publicly known to the world decades sooner, the first two movies are unlikely to happen exactly as we saw them. And Singer has hinted that he might do a different version of the Phoenix Saga, try to get it right this time.
Still, I would expect that most of the good stuff from the past movies can still be assumed to have happened more or less the same way in the new timeline.
Delving into the off-topic X-Men thing, the idea that has been consistently put forward by all those involved with regards to the ways in which Days of Future Past affected what had come before is far more akin to what Star Trek '09 did than some people realize or want to accept, in that DoFP effectively 'split' the timeline of the X-verse, but did nothing whatsoever when it comes to the actual relevance or Canonicity of the pre-DoFP films themselves, or the viewing order thereof.
Supergirl and the '90s Flash do exist as part of what I'm calling the "Arrow-Derived Multiversal Reality Construct", but I don't personally see the reasoning behind including them in an "Arrowverse" viewing guide because they're not technically PART of that universe; they're simply connected to it via the concept of the Multiverse.
I'd be down for that. From what I've read, Constantine's appearance on Arrow was received very well and provided a small boost to that episode's ratings. NBC owns the rights to Constantine, the actual TV show, but unless there's some kind of exclusivity thing I can't imagine why Warner Bros. couldn't set up a new show on the CW with Matt Ryan back in the role. Maybe they could actually call it Hellblazer this time.I wish they would allow Constantine to become a full time member in the Arrowverse. Idk why, but TPTB for Arrow say the rights with the character at NBC said the crossover was a one time deal. Arrow, Flash and or Legends of Tomorrow could get a whole new angle if they had Constantine and the supernatural as apart of their universe. On TV our JL Dark could live!
Yeah, and it's probably years away, if it ever actually gets made.^^
There's a JLD film in development.
As @Christopher indicated, I'm including any show that's narratively connected to the wider Arrowverse. I wasn't going to include Supergirl until I learned about Gustin's forthcoming crossover appearance (and apparently we briefly see Melissa Benoist as Supergirl in the multiverse on The Flash, too). While Constantine was produced by a different group of people than Team Berlanti, the inclusion of Matt Ryan as John Constantine in Arrow makes him a part of that universe. While NBC's show might technically not be part of the universe, I included the show to provide context for the character. It's the same actor and (presumably) the same portrayal, and as far as I can tell nothing in his appearance on Arrow contradicts anything that happened in Constantine, so it doesn't hurt to include it. Besides, it's only thirteen episodes.BTW, I'd be interested in hearing the OP's though processes in approaching the topic, especially with regards to Constantine and how it fits into the larger context of Arrow and The Flash when it comes to sequences of events.
I see this the opposite way that you do. He already played one version of the character regularly for 10 years, this is a new version, let somebody else have a chance.I'd be happy with no references to SV, as long as Welling played the role; He's the perfect age currently, and has 10 years of experience with the character.
So the '90s Flash is connected to the modern Flash? I thought that was just a joke earlier in the thread.![]()
While Constantine was produced by a different group of people than Team Berlanti, the inclusion of Matt Ryan as John Constantine in Arrow makes him a part of that universe. While NBC's show might technically not be part of the universe, I included the show to provide context for the character. It's the same actor and (presumably) the same portrayal, and as far as I can tell nothing in his appearance on Arrow contradicts anything that happened in Constantine, so it doesn't hurt to include it. Besides, it's only thirteen episodes.
I should have mentioned the 90s Flash series. Three actors from the old show have reprised their roles on the new show. Or rather, they play characters with the same names. It looked like stunt casting but who knows where they might go with that given the recent revelation that the old show might be an alternate timeline within the Arrowverse. The brief glimpse of Shipp's Flash may indeed be just an Easter egg as Christopher mentioned but you never know.So the '90s Flash is connected to the modern Flash? I thought that was just a joke earlier in the thread.So I might need to include it after all?
I have heard some speculation that Zoom could be the Barry clone, Pollux, played by Shipp, from the 90's show, who vibrated into nothing (or into a different universe) at the end of his 90s episode.
Vito D'Ambrosio's Anthony Bellows is also a character on both shows. He's the mayor of Central City in the new show, and he was a cop in the '90s show.Yup, I was going to make the same comment - we have already seen both Tina Magee and Mark Hamill's Trickster on the Flash; Again, going with Earth 2 having similar genetics, it seems like the 90's Flash verse falls into the same category. .
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