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Legends of Tomorrow season 3

Season of television series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Legends of Tomorrow season 3
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The third season of the American television series Legends of Tomorrow, based on DC Comics characters, premiered on The CW on October 10, 2017, and ran for 18 episodes until April 9, 2018. The season follows the Legends, a dysfunctional team of time-traveling superheroes and anti-heroes, and their mission to correct their unintentional anachronisms. Set in the Arrowverse and sharing continuity with that universe's other TV series, it is a spin-off of Arrow and The Flash. The season was produced by Berlanti Productions, Warner Bros. Television and DC Entertainment, with Phil Klemmer and Chris Fedak its showrunners.

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Ordered in January 2017, production began that July and ended in February 2018. Principal cast members Caity Lotz, Brandon Routh, Victor Garber, Franz Drameh, Maisie Richardson-Sellers, Amy Pemberton, Nick Zano, and Dominic Purcell return from previous seasons and are joined by new cast members Tala Ashe and The Flash alumnus Keiynan Lonsdale. Drameh, Garber and Lonsdale left the series during the season. Several of the season's recurring characters became regulars during the following season, including Matt Ryan, Jes Macallan, and Courtney Ford.

The season received positive reviews from critics who praised its lightheartedness and cast, and several felt that it was a great improvement over the previous two seasons. The series was nominated for a Best Superhero Television Series, and the season averaged 2.37 million viewers per episode.

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Overview

Following the season 2 finale where the Legends attempted to time travel with two versions of themselves aboard the Waverider had a larger impact on time than they thought. Due to this blunder, anachronisms (including objects and people) have popped up along the timeline. Rip Hunter's Time Bureau, a replacement for the Time Masters, forces the Legends to disband and resume normal lives. They are forced back into action as deputized members of the Time Bureau, however, unaware that Rip is planning to use their often-destructive tendencies for a threat bigger than the anachronisms.

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Episodes

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Cast and characters

Guests

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Production

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In January 2017, before the second season's conclusion, Legends of Tomorrow was renewed by The CW.[67] Later that year, the season was given an 18-episode order.[68][69] Filming began on July 6, 2017,[70] and ended in February 2018.[71] Season three has a genre shift, from science fiction to fantasy,[72] and a change in tone; it is lighter than the previous two seasons.[73][74] Showrunner Phil Klemmer described the season as "more in the world of the occult and monsters".[75] Co-creator Marc Guggenheim said that he wanted to have the Legends visit new locations, including Golden-Age Hollywood and Victorian London.[76]

The character Mallus serves as the season primary villain. As opposed to the villains of seasons one and two, Mallus was an original character created for the series rather than adapted from DC Comics.[77] The character Gorilla Grodd serves as an secondary antagonist.[78][79][80] He was written more sympathetically after his defeat in The Flash (as seen in the "Gorilla City" two-part episode).[81][82] Damien Darhk again acted as a supporting antagonist.[83]

In an interview with Collider Tala Ashe stated the season would revolve around mystical artifacts called totems.[84]

Casting

Main characters

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Partial cast of Legends of Tomorrow season 3 from left to right: Victor Garber, Maisie Richardson-Sellers, Brandon Routh, Caity Lotz, Nick Zano, Dominic Purcell, Tala Ashe

Returning series regulars from the previous season included Victor Garber, Brandon Routh, Caity Lotz, Franz Drameh, Maisie Richardson-Sellers, Amy Pemberton, Nick Zano and Dominic Purcell as Martin Stein, Ray Palmer, Sara Lance, Jefferson Jackson, Amaya Jiwe, Gideon, Nate Heywood and Mick Rory, respectively.[85][86] They were joined by Tala Ashe and Keiynan Lonsdale playing Zari Tomaz and Wally West, respectively.[87][88] Guggenheim explained that part of the motivation for adding the Muslim character, Zari Tomaz, to the series was the "political climate" in the United States after the 2016 elections.[89] For the episode "Here I Go Again", Amy Pemberton appeared as Gideon, unlike most episodes in which she voiced the character. Lonsdale had been a regular on The Flash.[88][90]

It was the only season in which Lonsdale was a regular; he left after the season finale, citing a desire for other acting opportunities.[91][92] This was the final season in which Garber and Drameh were regulars;[93] Garber left in "Crisis on Earth X, Part 4", followed by Drameh in the following episode.[94] While Garber wanted to resume his career in Broadway theater;[95] Drameh's exit was a creative decision,[96] and he returned in the season-finale "The Good, the Bad and the Cuddly".[97] Richardson-Sellers's character, Amaya Jiwe, left in the season finale and returned the following season as Charlie.[98][99]

Recurring and guest stars

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Arthur Darvill (left), who starred in the first two season, played a recurring role as Rip Hunter.
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John Noble (right) voices Mallus the season's primary antagonist.

Arthur Darvill, who played Rip Hunter in the main cast during the first two seasons, was a recurring character this season.[30] Several actors returned in their roles from other Arrowvverse series as recurring characters, such as Neal McDonough as Damien Darhk,[30] David Sobolov as the voice of Grodd,[100] and Christina Brucato as Lily Stein.[31] Tracy Ifeachor was cast as Jiwe's granddaughter Kuasa, replacing Anika Noni Rose (who voiced the character in the animated web series Vixen).[35] Courtney Ford replaced Tuesday Hoffman as Damien's daughter, Nora,[37][101] and Ford became a regular the following season.[102] Sellers' mother, Joy Richardson, was a recurring character as Jiwe's vision-quest ancestor.[36] Matt Ryan played John Constantine after playing the character in the canceled NBC series Constantine. Ryan became a series regular the following season.[103][104] Wentworth Miller (who played Leonard Snart as a regular in season one and a recurring character in season two)[30] returned to play the character's Earth-X doppelganger, Leo Snart / Citizen Cold.[52] Jes Macallan, Adam Tsekhman and Hiro Kanagawa recurred as Time Bureau agents Ava Sharpe, Gary Green and Wilbur Bennett, respectively,[33][32][34] and Macallan became a regular the following season.[105]

John Noble voiced the season primary antagonist Mallus. The character's true form is not revealed until the penultimate-episode "Guest Starring John Noble". In that episode, Noble also portrayed a fictionalized version of himself.[106]

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Release

The third season of Legends of Tomorrow aired on The CW in the U.S. weekly from October 10 through December 5, 2017, when it took a mid-season break.[1][107] It returned on February 12, 2018,[108] and concluded on April 9 of that year.[19][109] The season was made available for streaming on Netflix in late April 2018, soon after the season finale aired.[110] It was released on DVD and Blu-ray on September 25, 2018.[111]

Crossover

In May 2017, CW president Mark Pedowitz announced plans for a four-show Arrowverse crossover event consisting of Supergirl, The Flash, Legends of Tomorrow, and Arrow.[112] The crossover, Crisis on Earth-X, began with Supergirl and a special airing of Arrow on November 27, 2017, and concluded with back-to-back airings of The Flash and Legends of Tomorrow on November 28.[113]

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Reception

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Ratings

The season high in live viewership was "Crisis on Earth-X, Part 4", with 2.80 million viewers,[9] and the season low was "No Country for Old Dads"'s 1.19 million viewers.[14] In seven-day DVR viewership, "Crisis on Earth-X, Part 4" had an additional 1.82 million viewers for a total of 4.62 million.[114] The total season low was "Amazing Grace", with 2.03 million viewers.[115] Overall, the season averaged 2.37 million viewers per episode.

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Critical response

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 88% of 36 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 7.9/10. The website's consensus reads: "DC's Legends of Tomorrow lightens up the tone in its third season while spotlighting adventurous plots and a distinct sense of humor."[132] Critics praised the season for its lighter tone and overall cast, with several calling it the best one to date.[73][74][133]

Vox's Sara Ghaleb wrote, "The corner of The CW's Arrowverse became its best self in season three". Ghaleb described the episode as goofy and silly; the premise of the plot seemed ridiculous, but it came together neatly.[74] For Tell-Tale TV, Jennifer Ann rated the season 5/5 and felt that the season finale was a satisfying narrative conclusion.[134] IGN's Jesse Scheeden said that the season was the best of the series so far, but had the worst episodes overall and rated it 8.1/10. Scheeden criticized the season's main villain, saying that Mallus did not properly pay off the buildup, and called the totem plot line "boring". However, he praised the team dynamic and the overall cast.[77] Collider's Adam Virgona praised the season's transition from science fiction to fantasy.[72]

Screen Rant's Kath Leroy listed the season as the seventh-best Arrowverse seasons in a ranking. She placed Legends of Tomorrow season 3 ahead of The Flash season five and behind Supergirl season five. It was the second-highest-placing Legends of Tomorrow season, behind season two.[133] In Virgona ranking of all seven seasons, he placed season 3 ahead of season four and behind season seven.[72] MovieWeb's Richard Fink placed the season third overall, ahead of season four and behind season two.[135]

Accolades

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References

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