When The CW head Mark Pedowitz waved off rumors about Constantine on his network with a really bizarre comment about the NBA or something, I considered the show was finished. No one is dumb enough to build buzz for a hot property on their network with a confusing metaphor. I went on my mourning period before I enjoyed the rest of this current TV golden age. I think this was around the time Daredevil premiered.

But some held on hope. Sadly, those who did can now exert their energy elsewhere: Constantine is totally, 100% finished. No Netflix. No CW. No whatever thing Big Lots has. Executive producer Daniel Cerone confirmed that much today in a genuinely moving, heartfelt letter:

His letter is reproduced below. From Daniel Cerone:

I promised I’d share news when I had it — sadly, that news is not good. The cast and writers of Constantine are being released from their contracts. The studio tried to find a new home for the show, for which we’re forever grateful, but those efforts didn’t pan out. I’m sorry, I wasn’t provided any information on the attempts to sell the show elsewhere. All I can report is that the show is over.

 

Many ingredients went into this TV series. From the dedicated cast that breathed these characters to life, led by Matt Ryan as the comic-made-flesh embodiment of John Constantine, to the exceptionality talented crew that put unreal images on screen, to the original Hellblazer writers and artists who gifted us a universe.
As a general principle, writers don’t choose a writing career to achieve stardom. Whatever demons or insecurities drove them to find freedom of expression through written words generally keeps writers comfortably obscure behind their words. Nor do people choose writing as a means to financial freedom. I’d venture to guess that most who set out to write professionally never receive a paycheck for their hopeful scribbles or key strokes.

 

In fact, nobody I know ever chose a writing career — it chose them. You write because that’s what you do. Like breathing, it just happens and you have to do it and you just hope that someday somebody out there notices what you’re trying to say.

 

If that’s the dream of writers, than [sic] the writers of Constantine lived the dream, because we’re leaving behind wild and passionate fans who believe in and were moved by what we tried to do. To leave such a significant, dedicated and active fan base on the table — that’s the real sadness. You all deserve many years of the series we set out to make, and we’re disappointed that we couldn’t deliver that to you. The good news is that Constantine will live on for years in many more forms. But our time as caretakers has ended.

 

Thanks for letting us in.

 

Daniel Cerone

What hurts more than the confirmation of the series’ end, is how right Cerone is. First, about writing: This job kind of sucks. Whether it’s journalism or fiction and entertainment writing, it kind of sucks. The benefits are great: you meet amazing people, you travel, and it’s absolutely rewarding whenever people tell you they read your stuff. The whole reason to write is for people to read it, so when people actually do it’s wonderful. And when they tell you, you feel like you’re qualified for a Nobel Prize. Never mind that all you’ve really done is write a funny joke about the Hulk’s schlong or something.

But writers aren’t sexy. Not in the way athletes, models, or rockstars are. Writers aren’t granted VIP access to clubs. Writers aren’t given free swag. Books signed by incredibly significant writers who have passed on are easier to buy than something Kanye West scribbled on with a Sharpie. We can hate this broken celebrity culture all we want, but we need to accept it if we want to maintain sanity. (Not that any writer is sane anyway.)

Secondly, Cerone is right: Constantine may not have more episodes, but it still exists. Maybe at some point NBC or the studio can release the show on home media and fans can enjoy it whenever they want. Firefly had nearly the same amount of episodes but that show has never felt like it’s gone away. While Constantine may never get Hellblazer: The Movie three years from now, they can still enjoy what was made, appreciate it, and move on to whenever the next reinterpretation of this character happens. Because this show seriously demonstrated that a non-superhero series can work, it just didn’t work the way anyone hoped.

I have faith we haven’t seen the last of John Constantine and his world. Maybe now just isn’t the right time.

Hard as they tried, fans couldn’t save the Hellblazer. NBC has passed on a season two of Constantine.

But true to the character of John Constantine, that clever bastard, hope still isn’t lost. The producers are working to find a new home for the series.

In this current golden age of television, an option like a move to cable TV or subscription streaming like Netflix or Hulu just doesn’t seem like that big of a leap anymore. With a rabid fanbase, no show ever completely dies. One need only look at Arrested Development.

Purely guessing from my point of view, I see a pickup by Netflix (or someone else) totally within the realm of possibility. And I hope they do: as much as I loved the show, Constantine just couldn’t live up to its potential on broadcast television. I hope the show finds a home with a big audience and little adherence to broadcast standards, and that they find it soon.

It’s difficult being a Constantine fan. Cancellation is like an impending death sentence, a swinging pendulum swinging too close to comfort. Not all hope is lost, but how much did we lose?

After the emotional rollercoaster from a short while ago, now it looks like there’s still a fighting chance. On NBC starting tomorrow, Friday (April 24), all thirteen episodes of the entire series first season will be available to stream for free — unless you count watching two minutes of State Farm ads and Undateable spots a form of existential payment — and for a limited time.

https://twitter.com/KitMoxie/status/591303399653699584

Meanwhile, as you watch the Hellblazer do his thing, the executive producers will be going up to bat to swing for the fences as they pitch* the second season to NBC bigwigs.

I’m not sure how much these streaming numbers actually count, but this gesture speak volumes. Now it’s time to take advantage. We want more Constantine gosh darn it, so stream it! You don’t even need to actually watch it, just open it up and hit play then go back to your Excel sheets at work like you should be doing. And forward it to your friends who haven’t seen the show yet. The more the merrier!

You heard the man.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2fYYWMtj1Ag

*I didn’t mean to use so many contradictory baseball metaphors.

UPDATE: If there’s ever a character you shouldn’t count out early, it’s John fucking Constantine. Apparently the show is still awaiting its final fate from the higher-ups at NBC. It’s not cancelled yet!

The original article is intact below.

Bollocks.

Despite rabid fan passion campaigning for a second season, NBC has opted not to renew Constantine. The news has been first reported by BuzzFeed entertainment writer Kate Authur.

More surprising than the cancellation is how quickly we’ve found out. Showrunner Daniel Cerone had tweeted several times that the producers would pitch the second season to NBC — who, according to Cerone via Twitter, wanted the show to succeed and acknowledged the feverish fan support — in late spring. I’ve just started leaving my house without my winter jacket and already we know the fate of one John Constantine.

It wasn’t a great show, but I loved it. Warts and all. It had a world to explore and frankly, it was quite a lot unlike a lot of genre television. This news will seriously hit me like a ton of bricks in due time. I’ll be at the DMV next week and I’ll just start tearing up.

I had a wonderful time meeting the showrunners and stars at this past New York Comic-Con, and I’m bummed I won’t see them again this year.

There were rumors circulating that the series would be rebranded as Hellblazer and broadcast on Syfy, and while many fans agreed that would be a spectacular idea Syfy it was basically bullshit.

Parting is such sweet sorrow. Sorry, Hellblazers. Maybe some other day. Like the Justice League Dark movie in a few years.

We here at Geekscape are massive fans of Constantine, and we’re doing our best to support the littlest DC Comics show that can. Arrow and The Flash might be the cool jocks of the class, but Constantine is that really nice but kind of quiet person that might be expelled if he doesn’t study more.

The latest rumor concerning everyone’s favorite occult detective is a really fascinating one: The show might be rebranded as Hellblazer and air on Syfy.

From Cinelinx:

Despite the low numbers, NBC’s Constantine show has a very active and rabid fan base.  When word about the series’ production halt came about, the internet was flooded with #SaveConstantine posts and hope for the future.  Sadly, things haven’t been looking all that good.  Recently NBC announced a wave of show renewals for their channel and the DC Comics show was nowhere to be seen.  So is all hope lost for this show?  Maybe not…

 

I’ve heard from a couple of sources now that NBC doesn’t really want to give up on Constantine and are actively searching for ways to keep the show going.  Let me preface the next thing I’m about say with this: the sources have made it clear that this is an IDEA/possible plan being bandied about.  So it’s not 100% and may not come to pass, but it is one of the more popular ideas being put out there right now amongst the show-heads.

 

Still with me?  Okay.  The idea here isn’t so much to keep Constantine going on NBC but to move it to the Syfy Channel (where the marathon they ran of the show did very well) and rebranding it as Hellblazer.  The new channel would give them a little more freedom to explore some of the darker aspects of the comic and appeal to a broader fanbase.

It’s still only a rumor and not an actual thing that’s going to happen, but let’s speculate because this is the internet and that’s all we do: it’s a great plan. Constantine clearly has dedicated fans willing to follow it into hell (HAHA, get it?). #SaveConstantine trends each time an episode airs. It’s like chanting “WE WANT SOMETHING” when that something is standing right there with their arms up.

Syfy has already aired Constantine with a marathon a few months ago, so this wouldn’t be the weirdest and biggest change ever. In fact, Syfy (when it was Sci-Fi) aired Heroes reruns to help build the audience for NBC.

And just how much cooler is the Hellblazer title than Constantine? Both names are evocative and unique for sure, but Hellblazer is far easier to understand and is just so rad.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hQauGK0AeS4

Basic cable is a great place for a show like Constantine. The show hasn’t shied away from the grosser aspects that John Constantine involves himself with. Last night’s episode had John inspect a corpse with an exposed chest. Despite having seen every nasty zombie and horror media, and even some actual medical procedures here and there, I got pretty squeamish.

Still, on basic cable where shows like The Walking Dead thrive, material like Breaking Bad explored the darker reaches of the human psyche, and The Americans can do some of the most brutal stuff ever seen, Constantine might be in better company. Let’s keep up with the high school metaphor: Constantine is that same nice kid but is like, super into punk, prog metal and gross stuff that turns you off. Putting the show on basic cable is like him going to a concert where he can hang out with others just like him instead of getting weird looks from everyone else in class.

Furthermore, it can benefit Syfy. Almost everybody had a laugh at the channel’s expense when its president admitted they missed the genre-TV train that everyone is on board now. Game of Thrones, The 100The Walking DeadArrowThe Flash, all of these are massively popular shows that could have done well for Syfy but now are nowhere near an inch of them. Syfy had momentum after the groundbreaking Battlestar Galactica reboot, but then they tried to attract a wider audience and lost focus. Now they’re Sharknado.

(If you blame WWE’s presence you can go fuck yourself, pro wrestling is a weird and awesome subculture that all geeks should love. Check out WWE NXT, Lucha Underground, or New Japan Pro Wrestling which is offering its stuff this month for free.)

Syfy is slowly but surely trying to win back viewers. While geeks aren’t normally into reality programming, having shows like Face/Off or Heroes of Cosplay are modest efforts that show that reality TV isn’t just for the uber-rich to be dumb asses. I’m a huge fan of Dominion, an apocalyptic series about humans warring with heaven’s angels. Z Nation, their zombie series, is starting to get an audience which has legitimately surprised me. Defiance is doing well, and 12 Monkeys is getting buzz like crazy. Then there’s Helix, which a friend told me he didn’t expect to like, and Ascension was a cool experiment.

Constantine would be an amazing fit. It can perform exactly how it does now and not concern itself with cancellation, and it pretties up Syfy in their mission to become must-see TV. Everybody wins.

http://youtu.be/ntqjeVq2qyA?list=PLe1meJtylm2UmSTzEFbP-k6wS5Z2Ms1FQ

Except maybe not. You should know that I think this is a great move, but a move to Syfy is something of a defeat for nerd culture. Constantine is one of the most popular comic book characters of all time, so if his show — on broadcast TV, which rubs elbows with Jimmy Fallon and SNL — moves to the network that the mainstream associates with weird stuff they would never watch, it seals the fate of Constantine to remain a niche property.

Think of it this way: Green Arrow was a D-string superhero barely known by the mainstream, but a well-made TV show on an accessible network allowed him to become a household name. So how is it that Constantine, who was voted the third most popular comic book character of all time by Empire magazine and once was portrayed by Keanu Reeves, can’t attract the same audience?

We talk often about how nerds have taken revenge. Everybody sees the Marvel movies, your whole family gathers for Game of Thrones, you and your friends get excited for The Walking Dead, and comic conventions are bigger than they ever have been and are no longer an easy joke. San Diego Comic-Con is so huge, the city depends on it every year to stimulate their local economy. For the entertainment industry and certain cities, geeks are needed.

giphy

Constantine‘s very premise is as grand and big as something like Doctor Who but its punk heritage gives it a sharp edge. Should it be popular, Constantine could open the doors for more similar media. What happens when it’s rejected?

One little weird show getting moved to a more appropriate network isn’t the death knell for who we are. Far from it. But it’s a stark reminder that we haven’t penetrated the culture as much as we thought we have.

As of right now Constantine is still an NBC show and a move to Syfy isn’t even hinted at. Keep up with Geekscape and we’ll let you know more as soon as we do. Until then, #SaveConstantine.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nwtt4Eapeyk

NBC’s freshman series Constantine is back where it was weeks before its winter-hiatus: Near cancellation.

According to Entertainment WeeklyConstantine‘s return hailed just 3.1 million viewers on Friday night, and if you do not get Game of Thrones-caliber numbers on a night no one watches TV you deserve to get verbally slapped in the form of an excuse at a TCA press tour. That’s how this business works, right?

From EW:

“Still talking about [whether to renew the show],” Salke said. “We wish the show had done better live. It has a big viewership after [live airings] in all kinds of ways, and it has a younger audience. The live number is challenging. It hasn’t kind of come out of Grimm the way we wanted it to. We love the show. I think it’s fair to say we’re really still talking about it.”

 

Added Greenblatt: “We got on the bandwagon of these shows based on comic books, and maybe there are too many of them. It’s a popular series of comics, but it’s not The Flash. It’s not Batman, so maybe it suffers a little bit there. But as Jen said, it’s a show we really liked. We love Matt Ryan, who is the star of it. I think we did right by the fans who didn’t like the film that was made of it, and I think the future is still up in the air on that show.”

Holy misguided notions, Batman! In what galaxy did NBC think Constantine is a superhero? Yes, he’s in comic books, and yes, he’s had some outings with guys like Batman. But a superhero? The fuck, NBC? Lesson learned: Our basic understanding of geek culture still has a long, long, long way to go.

And what a shame too, because the return episode fucking ROCKED.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A0ERukJvW6g

Their mention of Grimm is on the right path, but saying Constantine is failing because there are too many superhero shows on the market is way off the mark. It’s not like The Flash because before the show, people vaguely knew the character. No one knew who Constantine was, and even now they still don’t know. The 2005 movie flopped and left no pop culture footprint, so NBC had a totally fresh slate. People didn’t know or care about Constantine and NBC had the chance to make them.

Constantine and his world should be the farthest things you can think of when you think of “superhero.” Did they choose Constantine because they thought it would be like Batman, except British and a Sex Pistols fanboy? If they did then this whole thing was a mistake from the start. Dark fantasy. Gothic horror. That is what should have been in their heads, and that is what their competition should be. Adult fantasy is fairly in vogue despite uneasy acceptance by the mainstream audience; Game of Thrones is as big as it can be, Dragon Age is a really popular video game, Buffy is beloved, but no one gave a shit about I, Frankenstein or Dracula Untold. Only cool people liked Hellboy.

Constantine on broadcast TV should be like The Exorcist mixed with Law & Order — something NBC should be familiar with — while having a punk Han Solo as a lead. It’s a winning formula that’s rather unique, even against the current crop of other supernatural horror shows. They shouldn’t be picking fights against Marvel or The Flash, they should be trading jabs with Supernatural and Penny Dreadful.

But they do have an audience. The buzz created at Comic-Con was successful enough that it has become the current underdog favorite. Campaign hashtags are a big sign that something is worth looking into, and #SaveConstantine has made regular appearances just before, during, and after episode airings.

NBC should have known that unless by some drastic paradigm shift in our culture, the macabre aesthetic of Constantine would never let it be the next Batman. Even Batman shed his gothic texture to appeal to mainstream audiences. Take a bow, Christopher Nolan, that’s all you.

As much as I love Constantine and want to keep it going, this loss of faith by NBC proves they went into this kind of blind. I want to believe David Goyer when he told me that people at NBC have been wanting to produce Constantine for years, but I get the feeling it wasn’t a group effort.

From our New York Comic-Con interview with executive producer David Goyer:

 “We have an executive at NBC, Perlina, whose been a fan of the character even when she used to work at Showtime with Bob Greenblatt, so she’s been wanting to do a Constantine show ever since then. And Bob Greenblatt came over from Showtime and they came from pay cable sensibility, and watching what’s been happening with cable versus network and clearly network has had to change so I think it’s a comfortable fit. Of all the networks, it’s hard to imagine Constantine working on any of the other networks.”

After these recent events, I almost cringe reading that. Clearly NBC was not the best station for Constantine. Maybe Netflix or premium cable, but broadcast — even on Friday nights — isn’t where the beautiful bastard belongs. Still, I’m not going to lose hope. Here are some “hacks,” because no one in my generation knows what a hack actually is, that NBC can do to keep Constantine.

1) Consider a new air schedule.

Constantine changed its timeslot to an earlier 8 PM, but as you can see that did zilch to help matters. Earlier in the show’s lifespan, comparisons to Hannibal made sense because like it, Constantine is a dark show (not nearly as Hannibal, of course) that found success despite a Friday night slot. But unlike Hannibal, NBC stands to lose money when Constantine performs poorly. NBC has no major stake in Hannibal‘s success or failure due to its foreign investment, but Constantine is produced more traditionally, with the network ponying up dough. In order to make more on their investment, would it be too much if NBC considers a new timeslot for the show’s hopefully-not-unlikely second season? Perhaps Sunday when they’re not competing with non-competitors Arrow and The Flash?

2) Yeah, uh, don’t compete with The Flash or Arrow.

Despite being a DC comics property, Constantine is not a damn superhero. Even in a sanitized vision, Constantine does not and cannot carry himself like a brooding, self-righteous vigilante or a smiling, can-do speedster. His very essence is very unsuperhero-like. So don’t steer the ship into the storm and focus on calmer waters: Appeal to the horror crowd. They may intersect with superheroes, but go after fans of The Walking Dead and American Horror Story without mercy. They may not be big bucks like superheroes, but they’re far more devoted, loyal, and they will reward quality with immortality.

3) You know what? Make Constantine just the fucking worst.

John_Constantine_0029

While on the subject of superheroes, make Constantine unique on broadcast TV and actually make him a fucking bastard. Television has embraced anti-heroes since the Age of Tony Soprano, even though they haven’t found a place on broadcast yet. If you truly want to make Constantine a hit, do something different that your supposed competition, super heroes, can’t ever do with their protagonists: Make them terrible. To the show’s credit, they have had him smoke, drink, and sleep around, but there is still a righteousness to Constantine that dulls his edgy vices, making him resemble everyone’s dad in a trenchcoat. Take this opportunity and embrace Constantine’s worst aspects.

4) Build the Justice League Dark now.

Should Constantine be blessed with season two, the show should waste no time and expand the scope of the show. I’ve already stated that the strongest asset Constantine has is its ultimate control of DC’s occult territory. As soon as they can, they must build towards this woefully unexplored side of DC — which hopefully can alter notions of what a “comic book show” can or should be, because The Walking Dead is long past its comic book roots now.

Swamp Thing. Zatanna. Deadman. Shade. Madame Xanadu. Frankenstein. The Spectre, because sometimes you can flip off the comics too. Neither The Flash or Arrow are any closer to bringing us the Justice League. To the producers of Constantine, jump on this chance now. Introduce these freaks to pop culture as soon as possible.

5) More of this. Way more. Give us barrels full of this.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lPGL2iuRDnA

If you build it, they will come. And you’ve built it, NBC. Just clean it up (so to speak) and hold out for people to see.

The “Keep Constantine On-Air Watch 2014″ is nigh here at Geekscape HQ (aka, my desk at home). According to Deadline, NBC has halted production on Constantine after work on the initial 13-episode order was completed. The network will still air the remaining episodes at its usual time slot while they decide what to do next. Renewal or an episode order past thirteen episodes is a possibility at this moment, but the situation is delicate.

I like to imagine NBC executives are now pacing around the room, with an intern scribbling on a yellow legal pad with “PROS” and “CONS” written on opposite sides.

From Deadline:

NBC had to make a decision whether to keep Constantine in continuous production with little ratings information. While the series began production on a standard fall premiere production schedule, its launch was delayed until late October when NBC’s Friday genre block usually debuts, so the network had to make a call whether to order additional episodes after only four episodes had aired vs. at least seven, which is the norm for freshman series.

 

Constantine has not been a breakout the way fellow NBC Friday genre drama Grimm was in its debut. But NBC brass were probably encouraged by the freshman’s +38% week-to-week ratings jump for Episode 5 this Friday to a 1.1 among adults 18-49 in Live+Same day, the show’s highest mark since the series debut, and by its best retention of the Grimm lead-in, also since the series debut. Additionally, Constantine, based on the DC property, has strong fan base because of its comic origins and has seen big DVR lifts, most recently rising +81% in Live+3 for Episode 4, regarded by fans as a possible creative turning point in the series.

I don’t know what to blame should Constantine be canceled. I’d like to blame something, because that’s just how I pathetically occupy my time, and I point the finger at timing or lack of week-of promotion. Friday nights might be a “death slot” but that hasn’t stopped shows from finding an audience. It seems no one paid attention in the week it premiered, no matter how many ads they bought on YouTube, and definitely no one paid attention in week two which was Halloween night. That has left just the last few weeks for the show to build an audience — and it has! — but on the executives’ end of things it may not have come soon enough. All the summer hype seemed to fade when it came to the week of the premiere. Who in the marketing department slacked off?

It still baffles me how The Walking Dead succeeded premiering on Halloween night in 2010.

Deadline had some additional information that made me chuckle:

NBC has been supportive of the show, running a marathon of episodes on cable sibling Syfy this weekend and slating Constantine cast members to appear on the network’s broadcast of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade next week.

Having the cast show up on one of the biggest daytime television events of the year? That just might do the trick! If not, at least we’ll have the memory of an Alan Moore creation smiling next to Santa Claus in the most corporate of carnivals in the 21st century. That’s a scary enough thought to last a lifetime. See? Constantine IS a horror show!

Speaking of the cast, remember when I spoke to executive producer David S. Goyer and actors Matt Ryan and Angelica Celaya about the show at this year’s New York Comic-Con? Good times.

My fellow Constantine fans should hope for the best, but after my heart was broken with the cancellation of Selfie (I’m serious) I’m preparing for the worst. Still, hope is not lost! If you want the show to remain on air, show support and watch live (ESPECIALLY you bastards who are in Neilsen homes) and flood your social media as much as possible. No one cares about that Mumford & Sons lyric anyway, so tweet #Constantine instead!

Meanwhile, “Danse Vaudou” was last week’s episode, and was also probably the best of the season (so far).

http://youtu.be/ELBDBua4k3w?list=UUwLw7wMt6ra3yIdSd8EK8FQ

(Psst. If you haven’t seen Constantine yet, allow me from a few weeks ago to convince you why you should!)

NBC’s Constantine has gone from hyped genre TV train to a little engine that just maybe can. The excitement from this past summer, as I’ve written before, has kind of vanished, but there’s a renewed vigor amongst fans on social media to keep the show going after cancellation seemed like a possibility just a few short weeks ago. Executive producer Daniel Cerone tweeted this early this afternoon:

I’m not sure just how good exactly a 1.1 is, but because it’s Fridays nights I’m sure the rules are a little different. Ratings, ultimately, are a totally archaic and old-school perspective on television and if I had the power I’d do away with them completely. It’s unfair that a small portion of the TV viewing audience dictates what everyone else gets to see. But because that’s how the game is still played, we have to live with it for now.

While the ratings have spiked, there is still a way to go. The numbers could be better, and the show’s quality — while improving — is still erratic and both the storytelling and the filmmaking are kind of messy. It’s a fun show for sure, but stacked against fellow DC series like The Flash and it pales in comparison.

But congratulations are in order to the cast and crew of Constantine for finally being able to etch out their audience and stay in the fight. As you know, I’m a total supporter for the show (as a lover of Power Rangers for two decades, I always root for potential, and Constantine has that in spades). If you haven’t watched it yet now is the time to dive in. Last night’s episode, “Danse Vaudou,” sees the return of Papa Midnite and is easily the best episode of the season so far. That’s kind of a dubious statement since it is only just the fifth episode, but if the upward trajectory in quality that the show-makers have demonstrated continues, we’re bound to be in for a hell of a ride. I can’t wait for next week.

It demands repeating: Constantine has the entire occult corner of the DC Universe covered. While The Flash and Arrow take on superheroes and super beings, Constantine‘s territory is the supernatural. Should the show thrive, we’re going to see characters like Swamp Thing and Zatanna. Without spoiling, we were introduced to Jim Corrigan (played by Emmett Scanlan), and the producers have made it pretty clear that he will be The Spectre eventually.

I reiterate that I am not paid or sponsored in any way by NBC Universal, DC Comics, or anybody involved with the production of Constantine. I’m just a fan who wants good television to stay on the air. You can watch Constantine on NBC, Friday nights at 10 PM EST. Set your DVR or something. Remember, even Arrow was kind of bad at first.

Looking at both San Diego Comic-Con and the New York Comic-Con, one would be correct to assume NBC’s freshman series Constantine, based off the DC Comics series Hellblazer would be a smash hit. It had all the promotion a show could ever need and had enough pre-premiere buzz to warrant a sure bet it would last the season until the inevitable renewal. In fact, the night of the premiere it seemed all but assured.

And then the next week happened, and almost everything went to hell.

The showed dropped significantly in the ratings, and any sort of fire and passion amongst geeks went ice cold almost instantly. I can’t tell you what happened, because I don’t know. I would guess that Halloween is basically a really awful time to premiere or release anything because who the hell stays indoors on Halloween? And then I remember The Walking Dead and realize nothing is sacred.

Either way, no matter the reason I will be damned if a show as fun as Constantine gets the boot during the age when a TV show like it should be thriving. Here are four solid reasons why you should be tuning in or setting your DVR on Friday nights.

http://youtu.be/1okpAwCSQM0?list=UUwLw7wMt6ra3yIdSd8EK8FQ

1) We’re exploring another corner of the DC Universe.

Back at the New York Comic-Con, executive producer David Goyer said Constantine is comfortably exploring the occult corner of the DC Universe. Is this ambiguous statement meaning they’re open to a crossover with other DC series like Arrow or The Flash? Unlikely, although I’m sure those discussions have happened behind closed doors. But dwelling on what Goyer said, Constantine serving as a platform to explore the weirder underbelly of DC means all eyeballs should be on the show. While the blockbuster Arrow and the freshman The Flash have superheroes covered like a blanket, DC has a whole other side where the supernatural lives and breathes. Constantine — should it be successful — is where we can maybe see Zatanna, Swamp Thing, and the Justice League Dark come to life. We just got Papa Midnite, and his clashes with Constantine alone should get anyone excited. Who wouldn’t want to see more?

jld
This can be your television. Why would you NOT want to see this?

2) It’s already the most visually unnerving show on broadcast television.

It’s been toned down just a tad since the pilot, but the Friday night slot has proved beneficial to Constantine in a way no other show could take advantage. Taking a page off HannibalConstantine is primed to bring some super fucked up darkness to broadcast TV, which I stress could only have happened in this current television age. Right in the pilot, besides the standard creepy corpses and nasty cockroaches, there were some great scares and demonic creatures that show up which makes it hard to believe this is the same channel Jay Leno used to tell jokes on. The episodes since have relaxed on these scares, but there is no doubt that should they get the audience they want, there is nothing stopping them from going berzerk.

3) It’s faithful to the source material.

While of course it isn’t word for word, and in fact the show began introducing a character who has never existed in the Hellblazer titles before, Constantine is presenting a rather faithful recreation of the source material while making smart, creative liberties necessary in any adaptation. Star of the show, Matt Ryan, downright looks like Constantine and, most importantly, is British! His primary motivation — redeeming Astra’s soul — is almost taken for word from Hellblazer. And, to reiterate the last point, if they continue it’s possible they will reveal more about that fateful night Astra was taken which will present dark material unheard of on broadcast television.

But even if it doesn’t, take a look at everything else! Zed IS Zed, Chas IS kinda Chas, and Constantine is definitely Constantine.

4) The freaking Sex Pistols.

In the most recently aired episode, Constantine hunts for a possessed vinyl record that plagues anyone who hears it agonizing pain until death. Constantine puts on an MP3 player and cranks up the Sex Pistols. According to David Goyer at Comic-Con, this was the first time the Sex Pistols was heard on broadcast TV.

http://youtu.be/P6LBn9r8xvs

OK, maybe that last one isn’t too much of a solid reason, but Constantine, despite all warts — and believe me, there are warts — has demonstrated it can be and is a fun romp through the supernatural. It’s not a unique premise, sure, but the source material Constantine derives from is rich with potentially fantastic arcs that can be portrayed wonderfully through the TV storytelling form. The show, proven how it can faithfully and intelligently adapt material, should be on everyone’s radar since all the great Hellblazer stuff can finally make its way to TV. Who wouldn’t want to see Swamp Thing on the same network that had Johnny Carson? Constantine has a fun world, a great central character, and a core cast with chemistry improving with each passing episode.

The episodes individually, I will admit, have not demonstrated excellent television storytelling. The second and third episode are exceptionally mediocre, but altogether — thanks to the strength of the pilot — will have you convinced to stick with ConstantineAnd if the previews are to be believed, it will get better.

Don’t let this potentially great show slip. If it died, that would be bollocks and I would damn you all to hell.

Constantine airs on NBC, Fridays at 10 PM EST and 9 PM CT. I am not sponsored or reimbursed by NBC or Warner Bros. in any way, I just want you to watch the damn thing.

The 2014 New York Comic-Con had attendance that far surpassed that of San Diego (according to NYCC, but we’re still skeptical). While the multi-billion dollar movie industry still dominates San Diego, this makes New York Comic-Con the largest pop culture event in the United States in cold numbers. And inside this leviathan of an event housed in one of the busiest cities in the entire world, I managed to have a relaxing little chat.

Constantine, the newest DC/Vertigo show, will soon hit broadcast airwaves in a little under ten days. Show stars Matt Ryan, Angélica Celaya, and executive producer David S. Goyer sat down with me for a few minutes and answered questions after I asked them, because that’s how these things work, you see.

10472144_800697513324297_8516506830480095738_o

The show is housed on a kind of left-field network: NBC. While the channel has had varying degrees of success with genre shows — from Heroes to Hannibal — it’s still hard to imagine Constantine being in the house that Johnny Carson built. Constantine seems destined to be the next hot item, but what’s standing in its way?

“I mean obviously there are some constraints you have to deal with on network that you don’t have to deal with on pay cable,” says executive producer David S. Goyer. “But having said that, we’re on on the same network on the same time slot that Hannibal also inhabits and … I’m shocked by some of the things they do on Hannibal. So, I don’t think we’ve toned it down that much actually.”

How did NBC become the choice for Constantine anyway?

“We have an executive at NBC, Perlina, whose been a fan of the character even when she used to work at Showtime with Bob Greenblatt, so she’s been wanting to do a Constantine show ever since then. And Bob Greenblatt came over from Showtime and they came from pay cable sensibility, and watching what’s been happening with cable versus network and clearly network has had to change so I think it’s a comfortable fit. Of all the networks, it’s hard to imagine Constantine working on any of the other networks.”

In the last few years pay cable has certainly raised the bar for what audiences perceive television storytelling to be. But what of that story? What are we going to get with Constantine? Constantine isn’t Batman, but he still has a passionate fanbase that knows his stories well. “Any adaptation of something in a different is going to change a little bit but it stays very closely,” says Goyer. “I think by the time people watch the first twelve or thirteen episodes, they will be shocked at how much of that original Hellblazer milieu is embodied in the show … We’ve already adapted some specific issues within the first season.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hQauGK0AeS4

Constantine himself has got a ton of signatures: The trench coat. The smoking. The tie. The punk rock music? “We do kind of have a punk soundtrack. We have Buzzcocks on the show, Ramones, and I’m incredibly proud to say, in episode 3 — this may be the first time it’s happened in network television, I could be wrong — I got them to license a Sex Pistols song. So John is listening to the Sex Pistols in that episode, in a scene in which Papa Midnite shows up.”

Judging only by the trailers, it appears Constantine is kind of stuck in a few certain locales. According to Goyer, Constantine will be up and about a lot more than one might think. “The show will ultimately take place all over the world. Even in the first season we’re out of America for some of the show. We’re not in London yet, but … if you think about [it], when John was first introduced, it was in America. “American Gothic” took place in America. But we’ll go back to London at some point. And we’ll be dipping back into what happened in New Castle.”

In 2005 a big-budget film starring Keanu Reeves was released to a lukewarm reception. Personally, I enjoyed it, but it’s hard to deny the somewhat lethargic effect it had on mainstream audiences. How much of the movie influenced the decision to produce the show? Were they worried at all about the less-than-stellar first impression the movie made? “Not at all,” says Goyer. “I think to a certain extent people are used to there being different iterations of things. Lord knows there have been multiple iterations of Batman and Superman and whatnot. The movie was polarizing, I enjoyed it for what it was, but first and foremost we cast a British actor to play a British character.”

constantine-review_article_story_large
Matt Ryan as “Constantine”

Matt Ryan is certainly one of the more exciting factors for Constantine. “And I know people that have seen the show, almost to a man or woman, feel that Matt has completely embodied John Constantine,” says Goyer. And he’s right. Matt Ryan, dressed in all black with a leather jacket and unbuttoned boots, swaggers to my table like he actually just finished fighting off a demon and had a smoke outside the Javits Center like it was no big. The first question someone asked: Did you ever do the Mumbles Mile? “I’m from Swansea. I can’t remember doing the Mumbles Mile, but that’s the whole point. We used to do a beer and a shot in every pub.”

Everyone in the press room had been working (which involves lots of waiting, and waiting) throughout the convention, but Ryan’s presence put everyone at ease. And he’s the one playing demon hunter. But what is it like being Constantine? What dictated his decisions as an actor who John Constantine was? “It’s interesting because there are so many different writers that write him and artists that draw him, but what’s great is that there are so many things you can pick out for different episodes and different storylines,” says Ryan. “It’s like this canvas of stuff,” he motions with his hands, circling them around. “You’re never lost for ideas. You can just dip in and go, ‘Oh, I can use that.’ [But we’re] keeping the core DNA of the character there consistently, and then using the rest of it then as you see fit.”

Ryan says the most fun he has playing Constantine is “when he’s just a real bugger … And he does it with a smile.” And why? “You don’t get to do that in real life. You get slapped and knocked out.”

No matter your thoughts on previous portrayals, for many it was great to finally hear Constantine speak in a British accent. But there was more to it than just that. “What was important to me was kind of trying to get the essence of the character, rather than just playing a Scouse accent and going ‘Okay, this is my John Constantine and he’s a Scouse.’ I was just trying to get the the DNA of him and be true to him. And I also wanted to do something accessible to a broad audience. He’s kind of like a northern, you know he’s from the north, but I’m not going too Scouse with it. I kind of just concentrated on really getting under his skin and getting the essence of it.”

The heaviness of Constantine is taxing for any one man to play. It’s not uncommon to hear about roles leaving their mark on the actors who portray them, so how does Ryan deal with it? “It’s weird, because I don’t know, I just play him. I try to dip into a comic before going to bed, but some days you work fifteen hours a day, and then you decide to read a comic and you just give yourself nightmares. So some nights I listen to nursery music.” The whole table erupts in laughter. “It’s quite taxing, but it’s fun and great.”

“God is he funny,” Goyer says about star Matt Ryan. “I’m excited for you guys to see subsequent episodes because what you hope for a show is they get better and better with each subsequent episode, and episodes three, and four, and five, six, seven, it just ramps up and ramps up. And he is just mainlining John Constantine. We saw over 500 people and it’s really hard because we had this sort of impression in our minds who John should be. Matt did a self-tape, he was on stage in London with a giant beard. He looked like Sasquatch. And I said, That’s the guy.’ Showed it to the studio and they said that’s not the guy. I said, ‘That’s the guy!’ I said to our casting lady, don’t let him out of his option. We kept on seeing people and I did my best to sabotage all those auditions. Eventually, Matt finished his run, shaved the beard, and I said, that’s the guy. And eventually we cast him.”

Did Matt Ryan live up to the original vision of what Constantine was? “I wanted someone to look like he leapt off the page, from the Delano comic books. Or Tim Bradstreet covers. And Matt looks like John Constantine! And acts like John Constantine! And so for all these years, decades, I’ve had this kind of idea in my head, and to actually cast someone who brings that to life is amazing.”

Constantine isn’t the kind of character you’d expect to headline a network show. He’s compelling, sure, but there was a reason why he was created in late-80’s comic books and not immediately for mainstream television. Goyer and his team knew that. “He had to be a bastard,” he says. “Sometimes a real asshole. That’s just who he is. Snarky and he lies. He’s terrible to the men and women he sleeps with. He’s not your first choice when you think of somebody to save the world, unfortunately he’s the guy we’ve got. And that’s what makes him so fun. And we said those things to NBC. We said in the beginning, if you can get behind this guy — he’s not a shiny, matinee idol guy — then we’re good. And they’ve embraced that.” There was something akin to a grocery list of who Constantine had to be. “He had to be British. He had to have the trenchcoat, skinny tie, and even though he’s on network he had to be a smoker. There was some negotiations to that, because that’s just part and parcel to his character. We all know he gets cancer later on and that’s something we wanted to give a nod to.”

The show is called Constantine but he’s not the only one playing in this weird-ass universe. Enter Zed, portrayed by the excellent Angelica Celaya. “She comes from the Hellblazer world,” says Celaya. “She’s sensitive, she gets visions, she’s always within the arts. She’s spray painting or drawing, and that’s how she translates her visions. And she’s running away from situations in her life. And within the show we see her running with walls, not really trusting, scared, but through being scared she becomes tough. That’s what Zed is. It is based on Zed from Hellblazer. It is 100%. And we’re not shying away from her at all.”

Angelica Celaya as "Zed"
Angelica Celaya as “Zed”

Zed’s presence has come as a surprise. The pilot introduced us to Liv Aberdine, who was portrayed by actress Lucy Griffiths. After the pilot, the producers sought a different direction and took another character from the Hellblazer universe, Zed. How did she prepare on such short notice? “They gave me a stack of books, and they were like, here you go. And that’s where I got she was extremely sarcastic, so funny, refreshingly sarcastic. And then I realized, I get to be her!”

But who is Zed? What is she in this universe for? “She really really wishes that her family could be a real family,” muses Celaya. “She really wishes love was love, and protection was protection. That’s why she runs to Constantine in this badass world, because in a way that’s protection.”

 

So if Constantine is protection, is Zed a damsel in distress? Hell no. “Oh my God! I am blessed!” screams Celaya from excitement. “I don’t know how to play the damsel in distress! I’m a big Mexican! My mother taught me, if there’s trouble fix it. You cry? No honey. You dry you tears and you fix the problem. There’s no crying in baseball.” 

I was thrilled to learn that Zed wouldn’t be a damsel in the show adaptation. But how will she still measure against the con man himself? “She can be physical, but toe-to-toe with Constantine? You know besides a master of the dark arts, he’s also the master of saying all this stuff and manipulation, and running around ten times without you even noticing. That’s what he does. And Zed is like, no. Cut it down. Okay, you said all that? You mean this. So that’s going toe-to-toe, and Constantine trying to push Zed away, and Zed is going, ‘What? Excuse me? No.'”

Diversity in genre media has been a hot button topic in the last several years. Sleepy Hollow, among other shows, have gained a solid reputation for proving (gasp!) diversity and compelling characters mix well. Super well. Marvel, meanwhile, has been celebrated for introducing superheroes of color and bending genders in their comic books. But while the mediums at large still remain largely colorless, Constantine is amongst the few genre programs leading the way. “They casted it so that she happens to be Latina … and I give John Constantine a little run for his money when I talk Spanish,” says Celaya. “You know, give it a little sass there.” She snaps her fingers. “[And] I love it. I love the fact that she’s Latina, and that she happens to be Latina! Not that she’s, you know, showing her butt or her breast. It’s like, no, no stereotypes here. She just so happens to be Latina as all Latinas are. They didn’t choose to be! And it’s a big step forward. I’m so blessed and honored to be given that. I couldn’t ask for more.”

Her influence in portraying Zed is equally exciting and intriguing. “I based her and what I did with girls I grew up around seeing who were running away from family and who were running away from home and who wished they had a solid ground to be embraced, and the consequence of that is they become a little rough, they become a little protective.”

The DC Universe may not have the cinematic presence that its competitors do, but it has surely taken over television in a big way. Does Constantine fit into the larger DC television multiverse? Yes, and no. “We’re safe in the occult corner of the DC Universe,” says Goyer. “We have access to those characters, those characters are kind of reserved for us. The longer we’re on, the more we’ll be introducing.”

Constantine premieres October 24, 2014 on NBC.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2fYYWMtj1Ag

Briefly: We saw a cool new featurette for the series just a few days back, and today NBC debuted a new TV spot for this month’s premiere of Constantine.

The video features some footage we haven’t seen yet (well, unless you’ve seen the pilot), and really emphasizes the loneliness of the character.

In any case, the series looks very cool, and I can’t wait to dive in. You can take a look at the video below, and let us know what you think!

http://youtu.be/cWSV53kzlr0

CONSTANTINE follows enigmatic and irreverent Liverpool con-man-turned-occult-detective John Constantine, who is reluctantly thrust into the role of defending our world against dark forces from beyond.

Briefly: NBC has just released a new featurette that takes us deeper into the world of Constantine, which is now just a few weeks away from its October 24th premiere.

The video features interviews with Constantine himself, Matt Ryan, as well as executive producers David Goyer and Daniel Cerone. We get plenty of new footage during its 2.5 minute runtime, as well as a few choice comedic moments.

We’re excited. How about you? Take a look at the featurette below, and let us know what you think!

http://youtu.be/2fYYWMtj1Ag

CONSTANTINE follows enigmatic and irreverent Liverpool con-man-turned-occult-detective John Constantine, who is reluctantly thrust into the role of defending our world against dark forces from beyond.

Briefly: Following the trailer released last month, NBC today announced the premiere date of their upcoming Vertigo adaptation, Constantine.

The series will premiere on Friday, October 24th in the 10PM timeslot, following their other supernatural hit, Grimm.

Haven’t seen the trailer? You can take another look at the video below, and let us know if you’re looking forward to the premiere, and what you think of our new John Constantine!

http://youtu.be/uPE2oBnzROY

CONSTANTINE follows enigmatic and irreverent Liverpool con-man-turned-occult-detective John Constantine, who is reluctantly thrust into the role of defending our world against dark forces from beyond.

Briefly: Well that didn’t take long.

Just a few days after picking it up (and a couple of days after cancelling Community), NBC has debuted the first trailer for Constantine, which will will air on Fridays this Fall.

David S. Goyer (The Dark Knight trilogy, Man of Steel) is Executive Producer on the series, and he states that he has “been a fan of John Constantine since he was first introduced in 1985. This Constantine, envisioned by Neil Marshall and embodied by Matt Ryan, looks like he sprang directly from the comics’ covers. Fans old and new are going to be in for a treat.” Goyer has done some great work in the past, so I’m really excited to see what happens here.

You can take a look at the promising trailer below, and be sure to let us know what you think! Which new or returning comic-based TV show are you most looking forward to this year?

http://youtu.be/uPE2oBnzROY

CONSTANTINE follows enigmatic and irreverent Liverpool con-man-turned-occult-detective John Constantine, who is reluctantly thrust into the role of defending our world against dark forces from beyond.

Briefly: Just days after The CW gave us our first official look at Grant Gustin’s full The Flash garb, NBC has followed suit by giving us our first official look at Matt Ryan as John Constantine.

David S. Goyer (The Dark Knight trilogy, Man of Steel) is Executive Producer on the series, and he states that he has “been a fan of John Constantine since he was first introduced in 1985. This Constantine, envisioned by Neil Marshall and embodied by Matt Ryan, looks like he sprang directly from the comics’ covers. Fans old and new are going to be in for a treat.” Goyer has done some great work in the past, so I’m really excited to see what happens here.

Take a look at the first image below, and let us know if you’re looking forward to the series. We’re still without a premiere date, but we’ll let you know as soon as one is announced.

Constantine

CONSTANTINE follows enigmatic and irreverent Liverpool con-man-turned-occult-detective John Constantine, who is reluctantly thrust into the role of defending our world against dark forces from beyond.

Briefly: It looks like Gotham isn’t the only comic book based TV series being announced this week.

THR has learned that NBC and David Goyer are developing a series based on DC’s Constantine franchise.

Little else is known at this time, but it’s probably safe to bet that the series will hold very few similarities to the 2005 film of the same name. At this point, the network has committed to a script plus penalty, meaning that a series (or even a pilot) hasn’t been fully greenlit yet, but they’re actively working on it.

Is it just me? Or does it seem like every new show being announced is based on a comic book? Let us know what you think of the news below, and sound out on who you’d like to see play the titular character!

We’ll share more Constantine info as soon as it’s available!

hellblazer

I’m not one to get particularly sentimental when it comes to creators of the media I consume, let alone executives and editors. Of course, like everyone, I have my  pantheon of persons whom I trust and whose content I relish and devour and track the moment it is in announced but they are few and far between, but even of those, I know which projects I might cling to and which I can avoid. That said, there was one imprint I trusted fully when I wanted to try something new, back when my income was more disposable than it is now; before the recession, before I was an ‘adult’. The imprint in question was Vertigo Comics, and the reason I trusted it was by and large because of Executive Editor and Senior Vice President Karen Berger.

An end of an era has come, as DC has officially announced that Berger shall be leaving Vertigo and DC Entertainment this coming March in a statement released Monday:

Karen Berger, Executive Editor & Senior Vice President of DC Entertainment’s Vertigo brand, has announced she is stepping down from her post after nearly 20 years at the helm of the award-winning literary imprint. She will remain on through March 2013 where she will be assisting in the transition to a new leadership team which includes veteran staffers whom she has mentored over the years.

As I am writing this, I am more than a little choked up. Tears are stinging my eyes, as I look at my physical comic book collection (I have gone mostly digital in the past few years) and think back on my development as a comic book reader over the last decade. From the near-universally adored Sandman and Fables, the controversial-but-profitable V for Vendetta, to the practically unknown 12-issue run of the Vinyl Underground. Berger was behind each of these titles and shaped my reading and understanding of comics in ways that the mainstream superhero titles could not. They explored heavier philosophical ideas, endured more mature themes (not just violence and sex, but the many shades of gray that gradient between our concepts of right and wrong), and they kept my interest in the graphic medium when spandexed crime fighters began to feel a little too puerile even for me. Vertigo was like an independent publisher but with the luxury of a corporation behind it. Under Berger, it took chances at every turn and refused to rest on its laurels, even when the money made sense to do so.

As a girl real reading comics, it didn’t hurt that she was a woman. I remember the first time I flipped through a volume of Sandman and saw her name in small print on the inside cover. I must have been fifteen or so  when I ran to my mother enthusiastically and said, “Look! We can work in comics. She did it, so can I!” Even though I am writing this article in a feature called “Heroine Addict,” which is all about women and their place, role, and future in geek culture and genre fiction, I still forget how much it means to see other women succeeding and paving the way for future female creatives and executives. Visibility matters.

It only helped that she managed such a strong and stable history of amazing titles and creators filter through during her tenure. American Virgin, TransmetropolitanGarth Ennis, Grant Morrison. Household names now, but then? What would life be like if Karen Berger hadn’t been there? Certainly some of the greats would have made it through, but in a world where George R. R. Martin turned down Neil Gaiman to write for an anthology because he was too unknown, one cannot truly surmise how greatly she has impacted us as individuals, let alone as a community. I do not want to spend too much time on hypotheticals, but one thing is certain: for the past decade when I picked up a number one of a new title or bought a trade by an author with whom I was not yet familiar, if it had the Vertigo logo on it, I knew I was in for some solid storytelling, brilliant ideas, and great characters.

We do not know yet where Berger plans to go from Vertigo. She simply said that she was in need of a “career change,” and in light of DC pulling the plug on Hellblazer and other Vertigo staples coming to an end, one can only speculate that even with Fables, its spin-offs continuing their runs, and Sandman returning in March, this very well appears to be Vertigo’s twilight. Lucky, for me, there is still a back catalog of work that was produced under her tenure that I have yet to complete (namely Y: The Last Man and Scalped), and a few I couldn’t quite get behind but may revisit (i.e., Preacher—I loved the ideas, but sometimes the gore was just too gruesome for me to get past). At least for now, there is more to be read and, of course, her legacy will remain in print thanks to trades and digital publishing. But what of the future—for both Vertigo and Berger? We will have to wait and see: one with morbid curiosity, the other with hope.

Since the start of the New 52, John Constantine has been a part of the new universe with Justice League: Dark. The character still maintained his Vertigo title Hellblazer as well. Currently that title is DC’s longest running title at the moment.

However, it’s been revealed earlier today that with issue #300 in February, Constantine’s Vertigo series will come to an end and we will see Constantine launched as part of the New 52. The 300th issue of Hellblazer will be written by Peter Milligan with art from Giuseppe Camuncoli and Stefano Landini. Constantine will be writen by Robert Venditti (X-O Manowar) with Renato Guedes (Superman: New Krypton) handling the art. Venditti stated:

“He’s going to be the same age that he is in Justice League Dark and the same character that people know and recognize – the drinking and smoking, the con man aspect of him – that’s going to be very much part of the series.

He is devious, he is underhanded and he’s a very big-picture oriented guy. When you’re dealing with things like demons running loose on earth, you need to be that way.”

Source: DC