Nick Leshi

Nick Leshi
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Bronx, New York, United States of America
Birthday
December 13
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Writer, actor, media professional, fan of entertainment, pop culture, and speculative fiction. Contact nickleshi@aol.com for more info.

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JANUARY 13, 2012 9:41PM

Green Arrow Drama Coming to TV

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The CW is still trying to find another super-successful show to recapture the ratings gold of its decade-long hit Smallville. It might take a chance on Green ArrowDeadline Hollywood reports that the tiny network is close to ordering a pilot for the sharpshooting emerald-clad crimefighter.  The CW currently has a lineup of Supernatural, Ringer, The Secret Circle, The Vampire Diaries, Gossip Girl, Nikita, America's Next Top Model, One Tree Hill, Hart of Dixie, and 90210.  It can use a blockbuster that can attract a broader demographic range of viewers, as Smallville did.

But what version of Green Arrow will the CW show give us?  It will allegedly be called simply Arrow and not be bound by the comic book.  The character also appeared (and was very popular) on Smallville, but apparently this won't be a spin-off, despite some fans hoping to see actor Justin Hartley reprise the role. It won't be associated in anyway with the Green Arrow script Super Max that has generated some buzz over the years, but never made it to the silver screen. It will be a brand new depiction of the bow-and-arrow-wielding hero.

Green Arrow isn't one of the top superheroes in DC Entertainment's roster compared to some of its other superstars, but he has a loyal fan following nonetheless.  He's changed over the years, starting out as a conservative-type multi-millionaire using his riches to battle evil via an assortment of inventive gadgets. He even had a sidekick named Speedy.  Yes, he had many similarities to Batman, but never reached his storytelling potential until the writers made him lose his fortune and become a liberal blowhard. The best tales were when he was partnered with Green Lantern and there was a wonderful "right vs. left" dynamic as they confronted social issues together, such as racism and drug use.  He even had a great cameo in Frank Miller's The Dark Knight Returns, standing up against the future version of Superman who was just a government tool. Will the new show have such high-reaching and exciting storylines, or will it be a watered-down disappointment?

It isn't easy making a superhero TV show.  The CW (when it was the WB before merging with UPN) tried to bring Aquaman to the screen, but failed.  Its shortlived Birds of Prey, featuring a trio of female heroes --Huntress, Oracle, and Black Canary -- was shortlived. Hollywood tried to bring the story of the original Robin to the small screen in a show called The Graysons, but that never happened. Let's not even talk about NBC's recent Wonder Woman fiasco that never lived to see the public light of day (except in a forced plot on Harry's Law where Erica Durance donned the costume from the never-aired pilot).

TV execs, however, aren't giving up on comic book adaptations. In addition to Green Arrow, we also have Deadman, Cloak and Dagger, Powers, and hopefully The Incredible Hulk in the works.

Can the people in charge get it right?  The pessimistic news is that the makers of the recent lackluster Green Lantern movie are spearheading this new version.  The optimistic news is that David Nutter, who directed the awesome Smallville pilot, will probably make the pilot for Arrow, so my fingers are crossed.

I do hope that they stick somewhat to the elements that worked in the comics instead of straying too far.  I don't want to see a kid wearing the mask, I want to see a mature hero -- maybe even cast Josh Holloway who played Sawyer on Lost in the lead, as one of the readers of Deadline.com's article suggested.  I think Oliver Queen can be a great hero on television -- unless they manage to screw it up.

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I was wondering when they would start mining the more "obscure" (as if these long time characters from either of the 2 major publishers are really "obscure") characters since they have nearly sucked all of the life out of the more mainstream ones (because, while I love the 1st 2 movies in the Nolan Batman trilogy, I swear to fucking god, if I have to sit through another Batman origin story, I will get up in the middle of the theater, scream....and then sit down and watch the rest of the movie...seriously, though, if someone doesn't know the basics by now - parents are killed, he grows up all emo until he decides to become the dark avenging angel for the city that took his parents - they don't care and never will...skip it and get to the meat of the story already...).

I will check out Cloak and Dagger for sure if they make that. Those two were always underrated, and even in the early 80s, a big black dude running with a cute, skinny, blonde, white girl - it was well ahead of its time for what society was willing to accept, that's for sure.

I'm curious to see how they handle Hawkeye in the Avengers movie...the only thing that ever made him cool was that he was a smart-ass and completely doubted his ability to lead, thinking himself too immature to do so.

Green Arrow has similar inferiority issues. I think if they work with those, it could be a cool show, since the only thing that ever made Superman interesting was Kryptonite.
I liked how Kevin Smith handled the Green Arrow character (especially his relationship to Black Canary). He was an older character with a lot of backstory. Like you say, they don't have to retell the origin. They have to know when to jump into the story. Much more interesting when the hero has already seen a lot in life.
I never saw that...cartoon or something else? (everything I remember about these characters is from a while ago, but the basic personality traits tend to stay similar unless they go through a major overhaul, and while I don't end up reading these overhauls, I hear about them and can figure out how the characters have changed this or that...usually just a costume and a more "extreme" aesthetic).

This is why I tend to read you as much as I do...just enough information to keep me in touch with what the kids are up to without actually having to consume children's media any longer. It's perfect, actually (and, I also like talking about the more overarching social implications of the character's existence in the younger society's zeitgeist...and you seem to as well, so it works out.)
Thanks, Malcolm. The Kevin Smith storyline I mentioned was in the comic relaunch of Green Arrow in the late 1990s I think.