I've seen it suggested that Ollie may befriend a pre-GL Hal Jordan in the flashback storyline. Who exactly was it who was flying that plane Arrow jumped out of when rescuing Walter?
I've seen it suggested that Ollie may befriend a pre-GL Hal Jordan in the flashback storyline. Who exactly was it who was flying that plane Arrow jumped out of when rescuing Walter?
I'll vote for Zinda, but as a character. I'm a huge Birds of Prey fan, so seeing Zinda, and possibly having her team up with some version of Black Canary, would be awesome. Heck, having the Blackhawks in general would be cool.
Me too. Devon Aoki was pretty kickass as Miho in Sin City, but Rila Fukushima was great in The Wolverine and I've been wanting to see her in something else ever since.^Actually like that recast. I thought she was the best part of the last Wolverine debacle.
So how about Liam Neeson, who played Ra's in Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy?
You wouldn't think the actor would be up for transferring his take to television, but as MTV News found out when we sat down with the actor at the junket for his new movie "A Walk Among The Tombstones," that couldn't be farther from the truth.
"No, I haven't, I haven't at all," Neeson said when asked if either Warner Bros. or The CW had approached him about the role on "Arrow."
Which isn't that surprising, as the Nolan movies (and "Man of Steel") have so far been kept very much separate from the TV universe created in "Arrow" and the upcoming 'The Flash."
But would Neeson reprise the role if asked?
"I would, in a heartbeat, if it came my way, yeah," Neeson continued. "Very much so."
Which certainly sends any superhero fans' mind racing, but before we get too excited, chances are "Arrow" will snag someone new for their take, rather than creating a direct connection with Nolan's movies.
Amy Gumenick, who has played Mary Winchester on Supernatural (and recurred on AMC’s TURN), will guest-star on Season 3 of the CW hit as Carrie Cutter, the No. 1 fan of Starling City’s masked vigilante, EW.com reports.
Per DC Comics lore, Carrie boasts the alter ego of Cupid, a murderous villainess with a tenuous grasp on reality, as she seeks extreme ways to demonstrate her obsessive love for Oliver.
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