Wilmer on Ellick and the season finale
Me: 🤐🤐🤐 (trying not to get my hopes up, but like what else that fans have been dying to see could happen? Also get answers to many of which questions? 🤔)
Source: tvline.com
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Wilmer on Ellick and the season finale
Me: 🤐🤐🤐 (trying not to get my hopes up, but like what else that fans have been dying to see could happen? Also get answers to many of which questions? 🤔)
Source: tvline.com
The CW seemingly is looking to rename the Arrowverse aka its slate of DC superhero shows. And though we planned to simply ignore the effort, Stephen Amell himself has now weighed in. So here we are.
A promo released on Tuesday afternoon acknowledges up front that “FROM ONE HERO… AN ENTIRE UNIVERSE… WAS BORN” — referring to Green Arrow’s eponymous series and the half-dozen DC comic dramas that it has sired in the years since: The Flash, Supergirl, Legends of Tomorrow, Black Lightning, Batwoman and, as hyped in the final seconds, incoming freshman Superman & Lois (premiering in 2021).
Wynonna Earp is ready to tangle with the Garden of Eden, hopefully save some loved ones, and maybe grab a drink along the way — though all without
.
TVLINE | OK, Wynonna Earp: Without spoiling anything, I have to say that the first two episodes of Season 4 are so fricking eventful. Is that almost a theme for the whole season? [Melanie Scrofano:] We come out swinging, that’s for sure. But yeah, I think this season is eventful — in a lot of different ways — from what I’ve seen. I’ve read up to Episode 8 and they’re all sort of really eventful. Sometimes it’s quirkier, and sometimes it’s more like life-or-death. I mean, it’s always kind of life or death but sometimes you’re laughing while you might almost die, and sometimes you’re crying.
TVLINE | Given how Season 3 ended, compare for me what you thought would happen next versus what actually happens next this Sunday. I really, like everyone, pictured the Garden of Eden. But what we get is so totally different, almost a metaphor — like, “expect the unexpected.” I expected to immediately go on a hunt for Waverly and Doc, and I expected floral motifs and leaves and…
TVLINE | …an apple tree, a snake joke…. Yeah! Yeah, but as with everything we do, it feels like there’s a fresh take on an old idea. I think that’s what our show does really well. We’re like, “OK, well, we want to do this, but we have this,” and we figure it out. But that also sort of what the magic of the show is.
TVLINE | What can you tease about the “most diabolical, Earp-hating enemy yet”, that we are getting this season? Well…. [Choosing words very carefully] I can say that I helped with casting, because it starts in my episode [that I directed]. I’m trying to be careful what I say, but I helped cast these characters and I feel like we hit like the mother lode of actors for this, so I’m really excited…. I don’t know what else I can say!
TVLINE | Wynonna and Doc have been through so much over the years…. Where is left for them to go? Do they get any fun, new beats to play this season? Will it make them stronger than ever? I think a bit of both, maybe. Everything that they go through lives in their combined baggage, and so I think that that’s almost a “gift” because any history you have with people is still history. Good or bad it’s still something you share. But it certainly doesn’t get less complicated.
TVLINE | And what is life like without Peacemaker? Well, that’s Wynonna’s identity and that is how she related to the world — that’s how she knew her place in it — so I think that without it, she is stripped and vulnerable and insecure. I think she will need to figure out who she is outside of the curse. And she will also come to rely on her people.
TVLINE | Talk about your connection with [showrunner] Emily Andras, and the partnership you’ve formed over the years. Emily is the smartest, funniest, quickest person that I know — but she’s also so collaborative and trusting and generous. When you feel that safe as an actor, you’re willing to try things and you’re willing to fall on your face because you know that she’s OK with it. I think a lot of the things that people like about Wynonna are because I, the actor, feel so safe trying and doing them, because I know that Emily has my back — and she’s had my back all the way through. I mean, she wrote in my pregnancy [in Season 2]. There is no bigger ally than Emily Andras.
TVLINE | Heck, she had my back on Twitter the other day when a fan claimed I had tweeted an Episode 2 spoiler that was totally not a spoiler. Listen, I wouldn’t want to f–k with her, but she has your back, so it’s not surprising to me that she did that.
TVLINE | “#WayHaught” has evolved into quite a thing over the years. What was it like to observe what Kat [Barrell] and Dominique [Provost-Chalkley] built with their characters? It was really interesting to watch them go from, like, “little ducklings waddling along” [Laughs] and trying to tread water and seeing where these characters lived, into what it is now.
TVLINE | They’re all in. They’re all in. Yeah. And you can only do that when you have a trust with each other. Ironically, that type of relationship could tear people apart a little, if you have the wrong personalities. You could get into, like, “Well, I want to be more important.” “No, I want to be important,” but they are just resistant, they will not allow that. I don’t think any of us will allow that for any of our characters. They’re just really loyal to each other and to their characters.
TVLINE | We’re only getting six episodes before you all go bye-bye for a bit and eventually shoot the rest of the season. Does that sixth episode (scheduled for Aug. 30) happen to be a particularly good midseason finale? Yes. [She then remembers something] Oh, my God, yes! I change my answer to, “Oh, my God, yes” — and the fact that it is, is totally by accident.
I stand with tvline.com, the viewers, Matthew & Aj, the writers, and most of all MATTHEW AND AJ. rb if you agree
Warning: Read no further until you’ve seen Friday’s Grimm, because there are major spoilers ahead. Epic battles tend to have heartbreaking casualties, and
SPOILERS
Which series held out for the longest time to give viewers that much-anticipated smooch? TVLine looks back at the small screen’s longest-awaited first kisses from Castle, The Vampire Diaries, Friends and more shows, in order of how many episodes it took the will-they-or-won’t-they couples to lock lips.
Oliver and Felicity, Arrow
First Kiss: Season 3, Episode 1 (Watch it here.)
Wait Time: 45 episodes (Note: Felicity was introduced in Season 1, Episode 3.)
Weddings! Kisses! Justice! To celebrate LGBTQ Pride Month, TVLine is looking back at 30 moments of triumph on TV from the past calendar year (between June 1, 2019 and May 31, 2020).
Arrow‘s William Tells All to Oliver
Upon being flung back in time 20 years, William had so much to tell his father, Oliver. For one, yes, he turned out to be a tech mogul. But more importantly, “I’m gay,” William shared. Oliver’s reaction came in the form of a loving smile, followed by the confession that he and Felicity suspected as much during the lad’s teen years. “We hoped that you would come out to us when you were comfortable,” he explained. Alas, given the drama surrounding a vigilante’s kid, “You clearly didn’t get that chance, and that’s on me,” Oliver apologized. When it comes to tender father/son moments, this one hit the bull’s-eye.