Caity Lotz's Sara Lance, who originated on Arrow, was part of the main cast of Legends of Tomorrow, the third series set in The CW's Arrowverse. Despite the show's passionate fanbase, Legends was canceled after its seventh season, leaving its characters' storylines unresolved.
In a recent interview with Screen Rant to promote her new movie The Lockdown, Lotz opened up about Legends' cancelation and where Season 8 would have taken her character had the show continued. "Yeah, it definitely was a cliffhanger," she admitted, noting how the series finale ended with Booster Gold and the Legends being arrested. "But I know we were going to be in prison, so the next season would've started off with us in prison. And I know the pregnancy wasn't going to be a normal pregnancy, which is what I was looking forward to. It wasn't going to just be basically what I am now...
In a recent interview with Screen Rant to promote her new movie The Lockdown, Lotz opened up about Legends' cancelation and where Season 8 would have taken her character had the show continued. "Yeah, it definitely was a cliffhanger," she admitted, noting how the series finale ended with Booster Gold and the Legends being arrested. "But I know we were going to be in prison, so the next season would've started off with us in prison. And I know the pregnancy wasn't going to be a normal pregnancy, which is what I was looking forward to. It wasn't going to just be basically what I am now...
- 8/7/2024
- by Lee Freitag
- CBR
Warning! This post contains Spoilers for Justice Society of America #2
Batman's future daughter Helena Wayne has come to the present in the latest issue of DC's Justice Society of America. Featuring past, present, and future versions of the classic team all at the same time, it will be up to the Huntress to save both versions of the Jsa, revealed to be the team's leader 30 years in the future. Witnessing the deaths of her team thanks to the villain Per Degaton, Huntress' mother Catwoman sent her to back in time to the 1940s, using a powerful temporal talisman made from the snow globe and watch that once belonged to Watchmen's Doctor Manhattan, imbued with his power.
In the new Justice Society of America #2 from Geoff Johns, Scott Kolins, Mikel Janín, and Jerry Ordway, the Huntress meets with the very first Jsa in 1940, and Kent Nelson's Doctor Fate attempts...
Batman's future daughter Helena Wayne has come to the present in the latest issue of DC's Justice Society of America. Featuring past, present, and future versions of the classic team all at the same time, it will be up to the Huntress to save both versions of the Jsa, revealed to be the team's leader 30 years in the future. Witnessing the deaths of her team thanks to the villain Per Degaton, Huntress' mother Catwoman sent her to back in time to the 1940s, using a powerful temporal talisman made from the snow globe and watch that once belonged to Watchmen's Doctor Manhattan, imbued with his power.
In the new Justice Society of America #2 from Geoff Johns, Scott Kolins, Mikel Janín, and Jerry Ordway, the Huntress meets with the very first Jsa in 1940, and Kent Nelson's Doctor Fate attempts...
- 2/1/2023
- by Kevin Erdmann
- ScreenRant
Warning: This article contains spoilers for Stargirl: The Lost Children #3!The DC Universe is being revamped as the Golden Age returns to prominence, with new stories featuring old characters. In Stargirl: The Lost Children, one of these old characters is Judy Garrick, the forgotten daughter of the original Flash, Jay Garrick. Trapped in a dimension outside of time, Judy aka the Boom might be the Lost Children's only hope for returning to their parents.
In Stargirl: The Lost Children #3 by Geoff Johns and Todd Nuack, Stargirl and Red Arrow have made it to Orphan Island, where several Golden Age sidekicks are being held captive by a mysterious figure known as "The Childminder." Unfortunately, Red Arrow is captured by one of the Childminder's egg drones and thrown into a cell. Through the wall, chained up to a treadmill is none other than Judy Garrick. Despite her circumstances, Judy remains optimistic, claiming...
In Stargirl: The Lost Children #3 by Geoff Johns and Todd Nuack, Stargirl and Red Arrow have made it to Orphan Island, where several Golden Age sidekicks are being held captive by a mysterious figure known as "The Childminder." Unfortunately, Red Arrow is captured by one of the Childminder's egg drones and thrown into a cell. Through the wall, chained up to a treadmill is none other than Judy Garrick. Despite her circumstances, Judy remains optimistic, claiming...
- 1/23/2023
- by Rebekah Galer
- ScreenRant
Character actress Zelda Rubinstein was best known for her role in the 1982 horror film Poltergeist. She starred as psychic Tangina Barrons, who’s small stature and childlike voice added more chills to the 1982 horror film about demonic forces at a suburban home. She reprised her role in the two sequels Poltergeist II: The Other Side (1986) and Poltergeist III (1988).
Rubinstein was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on May 28, 1933. She worked as a medical technician, before embarking upon an acting career in the early 1980s. the 4′3″ actress was cast in the 1981 film Under the Rainbow, and she became an outspoken critic of the way little people portraying Munchkins in the film were depicted. She soon formed the Michael Dunn Memorial Repertory Theater Company in Los Angeles to give acting opportunities to other little people.
Though of small size, she also made a large impression in the films Anguish (1987), Teen Witch (1989), Guilty as Charged...
Rubinstein was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on May 28, 1933. She worked as a medical technician, before embarking upon an acting career in the early 1980s. the 4′3″ actress was cast in the 1981 film Under the Rainbow, and she became an outspoken critic of the way little people portraying Munchkins in the film were depicted. She soon formed the Michael Dunn Memorial Repertory Theater Company in Los Angeles to give acting opportunities to other little people.
Though of small size, she also made a large impression in the films Anguish (1987), Teen Witch (1989), Guilty as Charged...
- 2/12/2010
- by Harris Lentz
- FamousMonsters of Filmland
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