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Smallville season 2

The second season of Smallville, an American television series developed by Alfred Gough and Miles Millar, began airing on September 24, 2002, on The WB television network. The series recounts the early adventures of Kryptonian Clark Kent as he adjusts to life in the fictional town of Smallville, Kansas, during the years before he becomes Superman. The second season comprises 23 episodes and concluded its initial airing on May 20, 2003.[1] Regular cast members during season two include Tom Welling, Kristin Kreuk, Michael Rosenbaum, Sam Jones III, Allison Mack, John Glover, Annette O'Toole and John Schneider. Glover, who was a recurring guest in season one, was promoted to regular for season two. At the end of season one, Eric Johnson, who portrayed Whitney Fordman, had left the series.

Smallville
Season 2
DVD cover
Starring
No. of episodes23
Release
Original networkThe WB
Original releaseSeptember 24, 2002 (2002-09-24) –
May 20, 2003 (2003-05-20)
Season chronology
← Previous
Season 1
Next →
Season 3
List of episodes

Season two picks up directly where season one ended, with Clark (Welling) dealing with the aftermath of the tornadoes that hit Smallville. This season, Clark finally learns who he is and where he comes from, but must also acknowledge a potential destiny set into motion by his biological father that could change his life and the lives of those around him forever. Clark's relationship with Lana Lang (Kreuk) becomes increasingly closer, straining his friendship with Chloe Sullivan (Mack). Clark's best friend, Pete Ross (Jones III), learns Clark's secret this season.

Before the start of the second season, Gough and Millar established a writing staff to help develop episode stories for the show, which eventually saw the introduction of two characters that would shape Clark's life, Dr. Virgil Swann and Clark's biological father Jor-El. These roles were filled by Christopher Reeve and Terence Stamp, respectively, who were previously known for their respective roles as Superman and his nemesis General Zod in the Superman film series. Special effects company Entity FX became the primary effects unit for the show this season, winning awards for two of the episodes they worked on. Apart from the digital effects team, the series and its actors were nominated for and won various awards as well. Season two performed better than the previous season, averaging 6.3 million viewers a week, and placed #113 in the Nielsen ratings,[2] up from #115 the year before.[3]

Episodes edit

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateProd.
code
U.S. viewers
(millions)
221"Vortex"Greg BeemanStory by : Alfred Gough & Miles Millar
Teleplay by : Philip Levens
September 24, 2002 (2002-09-24)1750518.66[4]
Clark rescues Lana from the giant tornado which she was pulled into and takes her to the hospital. When he returns home, Clark learns that his ship is gone and that his father chased Roger Nixon (Tom O'Brien) into the storm for attempting to expose Clark's secret. Lex is wracked with guilt over not helping his father sooner when the mansion ceiling collapses. Lex makes a decision to rush his father into surgery in an attempt to prevent him from becoming paralyzed. The surgery is successful but results in the loss of Lionel's eyesight. Jonathan and Nixon attempt to dig themselves out of the crypt they fell into after a mobile home dropped out of the sky on top of them. Clark and friends search for Jonathan. When Clark finds out that Lex knows Nixon, he starts to doubt Lex's intentions. Clark uses his X-Ray vision and spots the crypt. He shows up before the two men lose all oxygen, but the meteor rocks in the crypt weaken him. Nixon takes advantage of the situation and kidnaps Clark. Jonathan chases him, but Nixon gets the upper hand. Lex shows up and saves Jonathan's life by shooting Nixon before he can kill Jonathan.
232"Heat"James MarshallMark VerheidenOctober 1, 2002 (2002-10-01)1750528.07[4]
During a record heat wave, Clark develops a new ability, heat vision, which causes him to have uncontrollable bursts of heat from his eyes. Clark quickly learns that his flare-ups are based on a state of sexual arousal, having started a fire at school and the local coffee shop while with Lana. With Jonathan's help, Clark is able to gain control over his new ability. Meanwhile, Lex marries Desirée Atkins (Krista Allen), a woman he barely knows and Clark's new biology teacher. Desirée has the ability to control men with pheromones enhanced by meteor rock. Desirée attempts to use her pheromones on Clark, but he is resistant. As a result, Desirée uses her abilities on Jonathan, convincing him to kill Lex so that she can inherit his fortune. Clark manages to save Lex before either Jonathan or Desirée can kill him.
243"Duplicity"Steve MinerTodd Slavkin & Darren SwimmerOctober 8, 2002 (2002-10-08)1750538.82[4]
Pete unknowingly discovers Clark's spaceship in a cornfield and makes plans to sell the story to the media. Against his parents' wishes, Clark decides to tell Pete the truth about his alien origins in an effort to keep Pete from telling anyone about the ship. Pete, more upset over Clark's dishonesty than the fact that he is an alien, leaves. Dr. Steven Hamilton (Joe Morton), suffering from overexposure to the meteor rocks, steals the spaceship. When Lex refuses to believe his rants about a ship, Dr. Hamilton seeks support from Lionel Luthor. After realizing that the ship requires a key to open it, Dr. Hamilton kidnaps Pete in an effort to find out where the key is. Dr. Hamilton threatens Pete's life before Clark arrives and rescues Pete. In the process, Dr. Hamilton has a violent convulsion, as a result of his condition, and dies. After returning the ship to the Kent farm, Pete and Clark reconcile.
254"Red"Jeff WoolnoughJeph LoebOctober 15, 2002 (2002-10-15)1750548.89[4]
Clark goes against his father's wishes and purchases an expensive Class ring. Unbeknownst to him, the ring contains a red meteor rock, something he had previously never seen. The red meteor rock affects Clark mentally, stripping away his inhibitions. With his restraint gone, Clark begins to act out of character. Clark asks Lana out on a date, but ditches her in the middle for another girl when Lana does not like how he is acting. Showing resentment toward his parents for forcing him to live the life of a farm boy, Clark decides to use his abilities to become rich and leave Smallville. Pete and Jonathan must work together to stop Clark, who goes after a young girl and her father who are on the run from mobsters. Using green meteor rock to weaken Clark, Jonathan smashes the ring with a sledgehammer. Later, Clark tries to apologize to his parents, but Jonathan suspects that Clark was expressing his true feelings.
265"Nocturne"Rick WallaceBrian Peterson & Kelly SoudersOctober 22, 2002 (2002-10-22)1750558.29[5]
While visiting her parents' grave, Lana finds a love poem left for her. The poem was written by a boy named Byron Moore (Sean Faris), whose parents (Richard Moll and Gwynyth Walsh) never allowed him to leave the house. Clark and Lana suspect that Byron is being abused, but when the police investigate Byron's parents, they say he died years earlier. Clark and Pete break into the home the next day and find Byron locked in the basement. When Byron is brought into the sunlight, he starts to act like a beast with superhuman strength. It is revealed that Byron had a deadly disease and was a test subject for one of LuthorCorp's projects run by Lionel Luthor. Byron goes after Lionel, but Clark tracks him down and slams him into a well shaft and out of the sunlight. The darkness returns Byron to normal long enough for Clark, with Lex's help, to get Byron to the hospital where he is placed under special lights. Meanwhile, Martha takes a position as Lionel's personal assistant, much to the dismay of Jonathan and Clark.
276"Redux"Chris LongRussel Friend & Garrett LernerOctober 29, 2002 (2002-10-29)2276218.22[4]
When a student is pulled out of the school pool, having aged 60 years in a few seconds, Clark and Chloe decide to investigate. They discover an 80-year trail of similar events left behind by Chrissy Parker (Maggie Lawson), another student at Smallville High, and deduce that she is draining the life force from her victims in order to stay young. Chrissy goes after the new school principal, but Clark manages to get there in time to stop her. Without a fresh victim, Chrissy's body begins to age rapidly until she deteriorates into dust. Meanwhile, Lana discovers a photo of her mother in a romantic pose with an unidentified man during a period of time when she believed her parents were happily married. Lana asks Lex to investigate who the man is, and she eventually learns that her parents were legally separated at the time of the photo and that the man in the photo could be her biological father.
287"Lineage"Greg BeemanStory by : Alfred Gough & Miles Millar
Teleplay by : Kenneth Biller
November 5, 2002 (2002-11-05)1750569.38[4]
A woman named Rachel Dunleavy (Blair Brown) shows up claiming to be Clark's biological mother and that Lionel was his biological father. Clark finds the truth about his adoption. Clark dismisses her claims, but Rachel files a court order to have a DNA test performed. Clark and Pete sneak into the testing labs and Clark swaps his DNA for Pete's so that the technicians do not figure out that he is not human. When the results come back negative, Rachel kidnaps Lex in an effort to force Lionel to admit that he fathered a child with her and that Clark is their son. Rachel witnesses Clark using his abilities when he rescues Lex and realizes that he is not her son. Lionel later admits to Lex that he did father another child, but that it died as an infant. Later, Lionel is seen with a locket and a picture of a young boy. Meanwhile, Lana finds the man from the photo, Henry Small, who eventually agrees to do a DNA test to determine if he is her father.
298"Ryan"Terrence O'HaraPhilip LevensNovember 12, 2002 (2002-11-12)1750577.35[4]
After his aunt abandons him because she can't handle his secret, Ryan (Ryan Kelley) phones Clark for help. Clark rescues Ryan from the Summerholt facility, where the boy was being held an unwilling subject of experimentation by Dr. Lawrence Garner (Martin Cummins), and brings him back to Smallville. He soon finds out that Ryan has a tumor in his brain, and that he only has a couple days left to live.
309"Dichotic"Craig ZiskMark VerheidenNovember 19, 2002 (2002-11-19)1750588.26[6]
Ian Randall (Jonathan Taylor Thomas), a straight-A student, has the ability to duplicate himself. He uses his power to take extra classes and to date Lana and Chloe at the same time. Clark and Pete reveal Ian's secret, which induces Ian to try to kill both girls. Meanwhile, Lex attends an anger management session, where he meets Dr. Helen Bryce.
3110"Skinwalker"Marita GrabiakStory by : Mark Warshaw
Teleplay by : Brian Peterson & Kelly Souders
November 26, 2002 (2002-11-26)1750598.55[7]
Clark stumbles into a local Native American cave, located below a new LuthorCorp construction site, and discovers symbols in an alien language on the cave walls. A local Native American, Joseph Willowbrook (Gordon Tootoosis) and his granddaughter Kyla (Tamara Feldman), recount a story that reflects Clark's life. In an effort to save the land, Kyla tries to scare the Luthors away, using her ability of skin-walking, but she is mortally injured during her attack on Lionel and later dies in the woods in Clark's arms.
3211"Visage"William GereghtyTodd Slavkin & Darren SwimmerJanuary 14, 2003 (2003-01-14)1750607.27[4]
Whitney Fordman returns from overseas, claiming to have lost some of his memory during battle. Clark discovers that Whitney is actually Tina Greer (Lizzy Caplan). Tina immobilizes Clark using green meteor rock, in the storm cellar, and his spaceship saves him. During a later confrontation with Clark, Tina impales herself and dies. It's later revealed that the real Whitney was killed in action.
3312"Insurgence"James MarshallKenneth Biller & Jeph LoebJanuary 21, 2003 (2003-01-21)1750626.62[8]
After Lex loses a 150 million dollar contract, he discovers that his mansion is full of listening devices planted by Lionel. Lex starts a plan to bug LuthorCorp's headquarters, but aborts when he finds out that Martha and Lionel are headed there. The abort is botched when the workers want to steal from the LuthorCorp vault. While held hostage, Martha learns that Lionel has files on Clark and bars of refined meteor rock. She also retrieves the octagonal disc and stores it in a flour jar in the kitchen.
3413"Suspect"Kenneth BillerMark Verheiden & Philip LevensJanuary 28, 2003 (2003-01-28)1750617.46[4]
Lionel is mysteriously shot at the Luthor mansion, leaving behind a huge list of suspects with various motives to want him dead. Jonathan, who is found unconscious in his truck with a bottle of tequila and a gun in his hand, is arrested as the prime suspect. Clark and Pete investigate and discover an elaborate plan orchestrated by Sheriff Ethan to get revenge on Lionel for the bad things that LuthorCorp did.
3514"Rush"Rick RosenthalTodd Slavkin & Darren SwimmerFebruary 4, 2003 (2003-02-04)1750638.14[4]
Pete and Chloe are infected by bug-like creatures that burrow into the necks of those who get close enough. The bugs cause people to engage in extremely risky behavior. Meanwhile, Clark finally asks Lana on a date. This infuriates a jealous Chloe who tells Clark that she wants him and kisses him in front of Lana. Pete uses a red meteor rock to get Clark to join them in their adrenaline-rushing behavior. Chloe tries to seduce Clark, and the rock is incidentally removed, restoring Clark to his normal self. Clark manages to get both his friends to the hospital, but he ruins his evening with Lana. Lex hires Dr. Frederick Walden (Rob LaBelle), an expert in ancient glyphs, to try to translate the language found on the walls of the Kawatche Caves.
3615"Prodigal"Greg BeemanBrian Peterson & Kelly SoudersFebruary 11, 2003 (2003-02-11)1750647.43[4]
Lex discovers that his half-brother Lucas (Paul Wasilewski) is still alive. Lionel has been looking after Lucas, and he uses him to steal Lex's inheritance, so he cannot buy out LuthorCorp. Penniless, Lex moves in with the Kents. Lucas, dissatisfied with Lionel's plans for him, discovers that Lionel has been faking blindness for a while. An elaborate scheme with Lex reveals Lionel's lie, and Lex secures his inheritance.
3716"Fever"Bill GereghtyMatthew OkumuraFebruary 18, 2003 (2003-02-18)1750657.85[9]
Martha, who has been hiding the key to the spaceship, becomes extremely sick from inhaling the dust of green meteor rock that was underground. The Kent farm is quarantined and the key discovered. Clark, who inhaled the meteor dust as well, falls sick too. While Clark is unconscious, Chloe reads him a note describing her love for him only to have him mumble Lana's name in his sleep. After testing his blood, Dr. Helen Bryce realizes that Clark is different. Martha is revealed to be pregnant after the ship removes her poisoning.
3817"Rosetta"James MarshallAlfred Gough & Miles MillarFebruary 25, 2003 (2003-02-25)1750668.72[4]
Clark decides to place the key into a slot in the cave wall. Upon inserting the key, the wall instills him with the language of the cave. Dr. Walden discovers the key and uses it himself, but the information overload puts him in a coma. At home, Clark's heat vision forces him to etch a symbol onto the barn door. He is contacted by Dr. Virgil Swann (Christopher Reeve), who educates Clark about Krypton, his home planet. Using the key on the ship, he uncovers a hidden message from his biological father stating that his destiny is to conquer Earth.
3918"Visitor"Rick RosenthalPhilip LevensApril 15, 2003 (2003-04-15)1750675.91[10]
A classmate at school, Cyrus Krupp (Jer Adrianne Lelliott), displays special healing abilities. Clark discovers that Cyrus believes he is an alien who arrived during the meteor shower, leading him to believe Dr. Swann was wrong when he told Clark he was the only Kryptonian on Earth. Cyrus shows Clark the transmission tower he is building to contact his alien parents, but evidence surfaces that proves that Cyrus is human.
4019"Precipice"Thomas J. WrightClint CarpenterApril 22, 2003 (2003-04-22)1750686.70[4]
After Lana is assaulted by a college student, Andy Conners (Michael Adamthwaite), Clark loses control and seems to injure the boy. When the Kents are sued for punitive damages, Clark begins to question his powers while trying to find a way out of the lawsuit. It is later revealed that Andy was faking his injuries, and, thanks to a plan concocted by Lana, Clark, and Chloe, he is exposed. Meanwhile, Helen's ex-boyfriend Paul Hayden (Anson Mount) arrives in town, intent on winning her back. When she turns him down, he stabs her, prompting Lex to take the law into his own hands.
4120"Witness"Rick WallaceMark VerheidenApril 29, 2003 (2003-04-29)1750696.50[4]
Eric Marsh (Zachery Ty Bryan), a baseball player at Smallville High, hijacks a LuthorCorp van along with two other thieves and steals a shipment of refined green meteor rock. Clark stumbles upon the robbery, but is no match for them. It turns out that Eric and his crew are manufacturing and inhaling liquid kryptonite, which leads to enhanced strength which rivals that of Clark. Eventually, however, Jonathan reminds a discouraged Clark that although Eric's gang has strength, they don't have any of Clark's other powers. As a result, Clark is able to subdue the trio of thieves and prevent them from pulling another job. Meanwhile, Lionel offers to fund the Torch and a position at the Daily Planet to Chloe.
4221"Accelerate"James MarshallStory by : Todd Slavkin & Darren Swimmer
Teleplay by : Brian Peterson & Kelly Souders
May 6, 2003 (2003-05-06)1750707.03[4]
Lana thinks she is seeing ghosts, when an old childhood friend, Emily Eve Dinsmore (Jodelle Ferland), who died six years earlier, appears. Clark discovers that the child is indeed real. By moving extremely fast, the girl seems to disappear and walk through walls. Clark learns that Emily's father has been cloning her, with the help of green meteor rock. The flaw with the Emily clone is that she has no sense of morality, which eventually puts Lana in danger. Meanwhile, Lex prepares for his wedding with Helen.
4322"Calling"Terrence O'HaraKenneth BillerMay 13, 2003 (2003-05-13)1750717.06[11]
Dr. Walden wakes up from his coma and tells Lex and Lionel that Clark is an alien that must be destroyed. A romantic encounter between Clark and Lana is quickly dismissed when Chloe finds out they are together. During a rehearsal for Lex and Helen's wedding, Clark hears a strange voice calling from the storm cellar.
4423"Exodus"Greg BeemanAlfred Gough & Miles MillarMay 20, 2003 (2003-05-20)1750727.53[12]
The will of Clark's biological father Jor-El (voiced by Terence Stamp) informs Clark he must leave Smallville. Not wanting to leave his family and friends, Clark steals Lionel's copy of the spaceship key made out of refined green meteor rock and sticks it into the ship, destroying it. The blast from the explosion causes Martha to lose her baby. Grief stricken, Clark starts using red kryptonite and decides to leave Smallville as Jor-El's voice is heard stating to Clark that he can't avoid his destiny. During his honeymoon flight, Lex wakes to find the plane going down and Helen and the pilot missing.

Production edit

Writing edit

"As a writer, you only have so many tricks in your bag. It's always about expanding the world and deepening the relationships".
— Gough on having a writing staff[13]

At the start of the second season, Al Gough and Miles Millar brought in Ken Biller to run the newly formed writers' room. For the first season, Gough and Millar usually wrote the final draft of every episode because they were still seeking the show's voice. The pair understood that a writing staff would help "expand [the] show". As part of their expanding, they also brought in comic-book writer Jeph Loeb, who spent his first two weeks seeking fresh ideas for new episodes.[13] One of the decisions the new writing team came up with was letting Pete in on Clark's secret. The decision to let Pete learn Clark's secret was a choice made so that the character would have a function on the show, and allow Clark someone who was not one of his parents.[14] It was also a way to examine the "power of friendship and loyalty", and "the price of having to keep a secret".[15]

Not all of Smallville's stories this season came from the writing staff. Mark Warshaw, who was head of the internet team that wrote the online Smallville articles for the Ledger and Torch, which interwove the television episodes with online, fictional newspapers that continued the stories from the show, was the one that came up with the idea behind "Skinwalker". Warshaw's story was about a Native American girl who falls in love with Clark, while at the same time revealing Clark's destiny to him. The story was bought and given to Kelly Souders and Brian Peterson on the writing staff to work on a screenplay. The episode had a significant role in the series, as it introduced the Kawatche caves—which held the Kryptonian language written on its walls—and explored Clark's origins, while at the same time posing the question that people from Clark's homeworld may have visited Smallville before Clark arrived on the planet.[16]

Superman mythology edit

This season, Gough and Millar brought in Christopher Reeve, who portrayed Superman in four feature films, as a guest star for a pivotal role in Clark's life, that of Dr. Virgil Swann. The pair always had intentions of bringing Christopher Reeve onto the show, and when they found out that he enjoyed watching the show himself Gough and Millar decided that they were going to bring him on for season two. They had already crafted a character, Dr. Virgil Swann, they knew would reveal the truth about Krypton to Clark, and they decided that Reeve would be perfect for the part.[17] Gough and Millar believed it was "natural" for Reeve to be the one to educate Clark about his past, and help him see his future,[15] and the scenes between Reeve and Welling have been described as a "passing of the torch" moment for the series.[17] Along with Reeve, another actor from the Superman films to be brought into the show was Terence Stamp, who portrayed General Zod in the first two Superman films. Stamp's role as Zod in the films, coupled with how the writing team portrayed Jor-El's early appearances—giving Clark a message that he will rule Earth with strength—led to fan theories that Jor-El was in fact General Zod at the ComicCon that met two months after the episode aired. Gough assured the ComicCon audience that the character was Jor-El, and not Zod in disguise.[18]

In addition, Jeph Loeb requested the introduction of Superman's future ally, Metropolis Police Lieutenant Maggie Sawyer, for the episode "Insurgence". As Loeb recalls: "Ken [Biller] had written a hard-bitten, crusty kind of cop. I asked him if he minded if it was a woman, and explained who Maggie Sawyer was and the role she would play in the future".[19] The concept for "Insurgence" also developed from an aspect of the Superman mythology that stemmed back to Superman's original incarnation, which was his ability to leap tall buildings in a single bound. After their Thanksgiving break, the "Smallville" writers were in the writers' room when Miles Millar walked in and exclaimed, "I think it's time for Clark to leap a tall building". Jeph Loeb and the other writers had already been trying to develop a story that involved a hostage situation, and after Millar made his announcement the team suggested that they also pay homage to the Bruce Willis action film Die Hard. The setting for the hostage situation was LuthorCorp Plaza; the team introduced the "Daily Planet", another pivotal piece of Superman lore that would one day employ Clark Kent and his alternate identity of Superman, by using it as the building that Clark uses to execute his "first leap".[19] "Insurgence" was actually written before "Visage" and "Suspect", but not filmed until after both of those episodes because the team was having difficulty figuring out the logistics of producing the episode. Afterward, the episode would be scheduled to air between "Visage" and "Suspect".[19]

This season also saw the introduction of red kryptonite. In the fourth episode of the second season, titled "Red", Clark buys a high school ring that contains a red kryptonite gem. The effects of the kryptonite were meant to act as a metaphor for drugs. Loeb was given the task of writing "Red" by Gough and Millar, and one of the things he decided on was that the ultimate pay off with the kryptonite would be Clark finally kissing Lana.[20] As Tom Welling describes it: "With 'Red Clark' he's completely aware of the consequences of his actions at the time, but he doesn't care! He doesn't care what happens to you, and he certainly doesn't care what happens to himself, because he probably realizes that nothing can happen to him. It's always fun to be that way, even in real life, because we're not allowed to be that way all too often".[21] One of the concerns for the episode was whether the audience would embrace the idea of a "bad Clark", as Ken Biller knew that Clark would have to be "the villain of the story".[20] Fortunately, audiences did embrace the idea and after the good ratings "Red" received, the WB requested more episodes with red kryptonite. In contrast, Gough and the crew did not like using it because of the idea of "Clark [turning] bad", but the team asked themselves, "what if a friend slips something in your drink and you don't know it?" This became the basis in "Rush", where Pete slips a shard of red kryptonite into Clark's pocket; it also gave the network what they wanted, but in the form of a single act instead of the entire episode.[22] This element would show up again in the season finale, when Clark slips on another red kryptonite ring before riding out of Smallville on a motorcycle. According to Ken Biller, the moment Clark goes searching for the kryptonite is the payoff they had wanted with that piece of Superman mythology. The show had established that red kryptonite removes Clark's inhibitions, and in the season finale, Clark is to the point that he is willing to "go 'on drugs' to solve his own pain and [...] guilt about what he's done".[18]

Apart from the classical Superman mythology, the creative team developed more of the show's take on Superman lore. In this instance, the Smallville team wanted to get rid of Clark's spaceship in the finale, because they felt that the characters would not realistically travel to the storm cellar that often. With the introduction of the Kawatche caves in season two, the creative team had the Kryptonian connection they needed in order to safely rid themselves of the spaceship.[18] "Rush" provided an expansion on the mythology within the show as well, by explaining that Kryptonians had been to Smallville before Clark.[22]

Characters edit

Season two expanded the lives and relationships of the main characters. Gough and Millar used the season opener, "Vortex", to establish multiple dynamics for the seasons, including: "Lana's distrust of Clark; what happened to the spaceship, which [developed into] Clark looking into his origins; Lex protecting Clark and killing the reporter; and the Lex/Lionel dynamic, with Lionel being blind."[23]

A second development for the show was the relationship between Lionel and Martha Kent. As part of season two was about expanding the lives of the adults away from Clark, "Nocturne" saw the beginning of the Lionel/Martha relationship. This relationship allowed for more situations of Schneider and O'Toole doing scenes together that were not about the kids.[24] By the end of the season, each of the main characters reach turning points in their lives. Welling also commented on his character's development over the course of the season, specifically on Clark meeting his biological father and how that affects his life: "To have two very strong father figures telling you different things is a lot to handle, and Clark has to take this information, put it to the test and come to his own conclusion, and it's not an easy one".[18]

"You've got Clark dealing with his father and his destiny and trying to overcome it. He's trying to continue to be [who] he believes himself to be. [...] Then you've got Lex and Helen and their [...] problems [...] Lana and Clark are dealing with their issues too [...] She's watching him fall apart, and that's really difficult for her because he never tells [her] what's going on".
— Kristin Kreuk on where the characters ended up by the season finale.[25]

According to Gough, they had a specific intention for the ending of the second season: "Season one ended with the height of heroism, with Clark running into a tornado to save Lana. For season two, we wanted to see the nadir of that, which is Clark running away [...] from his problems". Gough likens the finale to the ending of The Empire Strikes Back, in that Clark leaves Smallville and everyone he loves because he is scared. According to Gough, in order to do "the character justice", they have to take his journey through the darkness, with him failing along the way.[18]

The lives of multiple characters changed during season two, including that of Whitney Fordman, who left Smallville in season one. Whitney would return in season two's "Visage", when the creative team decided to combine two of their favorite characters from season one: the series regular Whitney Fordman, and Tina Greer, the shape shifting teenager with a fixation on Lana. The result was Whitney's return from war with amnesia, and subsequent revealing that Whitney died overseas and that Tina Greer has been impersonating him since his "return". The episode also held lesbian undertones between the characters of Tina and Lana, as well as with Tina and Chloe. As Greg Beeman points out, Tina's ultimate goal was to take over Whitney's life and live forever with Lana; the character also "lusted over Chloe" during a portion of the episode.[26]

Whitney was not the only character whose fate was met with demise. "Suspect" became the show's first "cracking the mystery" episode, which revolved with the attempted murder of Lionel Luthor by a mysterious assailant; it was influenced by the Japanese film Rashomon, just like season one's episode "Zero", which is told from different people's perspective of the same event. It was originally decided that Lionel's assistant, Dominic Santori, was going to be the person who attempted to kill Lionel, but ultimately it was decided that Sheriff Ethan would be villain of the episode. Although Jonathan Kent was also a suspect, it was clear to at least Greg Beeman that they could not pin the crime on a series regular, so they decided to try to surprise the audience by making it Ethan. Mitchell Kosterman, who plays Sheriff Ethan, was a little distraught over his character's fate, having grown comfortable with his place on the show. The original ending of the episode featured Ethan taking a nurse hostage, which Kosterman felt was out of character; subsequently, the final version had Ethan giving up the second it is revealed that he was caught. To Kosterman, this ending allows the character to stay sympathetic, by showing that he was "pushed to a bad place", because Kosterman feels "that whole dynamic of good people being pushed to do the wrong thing by bad people like Lionel Luthor is a pervading theme in the whole show".[27]

The fate of Dr. Helen Bryce, who would marry Lex in the season two finale, was already established by the time the creative team was working on "Precipice", the season's nineteenth episode, though it did change from the writers' original intentions. Initially, the character was to be killed off at the end of the season, on her wedding day, but the quality of Emmanuelle Vaugier's performances and her chemistry with Michael Rosenbaum inspired the creative staff to keep her around until the start of the third season.[28]

Episode development edit

Although the majority of the season two episodes were conceived during pre-production, as well as during the filming of the second season, other episode ideas, or scenes, were originally intended to be scripted for the first season. A scene involving Clark inadvertently using heat vision in his sexual education class was originally scripted for the pilot, but was cut when the budget became too large. That scene would become the inspiration for the season two episode "Heat".[15][29] Since his initial performance as Ryan in season one's "Stray", Gough and Millar had hoped to be able to bring Ryan Kelley back to "Smallville". In season two they got their chance, with the intention to kill off the character, who was suffering from a brain tumor. Gough and Millar were initially apprehensive about how audiences would react to the death of a young teenager whose age was representative of the target demographic. For the episode "Ryan", the creative team wanted to show that Clark, even with all his powers, cannot save everyone; in this case, Clark's speed and strength are no help against the tumor growing in Ryan's brain. The episode is about Clark's trials of learning that life is not easy, and how those trials change him.[30] "Lineage" was one of the original stories Gough and Millar pitched to the studio when they were first trying to get Smallville off the ground. The episode was designed to explain why Jonathan hated Lionel Luthor—having made a deal with him in order to be able to adopt Clark—as well as set up the character of Lex's half brother, Lucas, in the forthcoming episode "Prodigal". As he wrote the episode, per Millar's suggestion, Biller drew inspiration from John Sayles's Lone Star when writing the flashback scenes. In Lone Star, to illustrate the moment of flashback, the camera would pan around until it revealed the past.[31]

As with season one, the writing team came up with more "what if" episodes for the series, like season two's "Visitor", which came from the idea of, "what if someone showed up and Clark began to believe that he wasn't the last person from his planet".[32] In the case of "Nocturne", "what if Clark had been brought up by different parents?" With "Nocturne", the episode is meant to be "an extreme version of the Clark story". As Gough explained: "Here's a kid with a condition, whose parents literally lock him in the basement. It's an extreme parenting episode—contrasting how these parents deal with Byron, and how the Kents deal with Clark". The episode also dealt with Clark's fallibility, in the fact that Clark is only a teenager, and he does not always have all of the facts; just because he thinks he is doing the right thing does not necessarily mean that he is. In this case, Clark believes that he is saving Byron from his abusive parents. Gough clarified: "[Clark]'s doing what he thinks is right, but ultimately unleashes the kid, and [Byron] causes damage. Just because you have the power and you think you're right doesn't always mean you're taking the right course of action".[24] Another "what if" episode was "Witness", which originally came from the concept, "what if Clark witnessed a crime and had to testify in court as to why he was standing in the middle of the road at 2 o'clock in the morning?" In the end, the court angle was dropped from the storyline, with Clark making an anonymous phone call to the Sheriff and eventually having to battle the three kryptonite powered thieves that he had witnessed stealing.[33]

"Witness" is not the only episode to be altered from its original concept. "Dichotic" began, in its early stages, as a story about a news reporter who had the ability—thanks to kryptonite—to split himself in half. The reporter would create the news at the same time that he was filming it. Ken Biller and Mark Verheiden discussed a teaser that involved the reporter pushing someone out of a window and as the body plummeted to the ground the audience saw the same person reporting the news as it happened. The main story would focus on the reporter attempting to assassinate Lex Luthor, but it eventually evolved into what Biller refers to as "a metaphor on trying to super-achieve at high school". In the revamped version, a high school student uses his ability to duplicate himself so that he can take classes in high school and at the community college at the same time, in an effort to win a LuthorCorp scholarship and go to the university of his dreams. With Jonathan Taylor Thomas playing the over-achieving student, the character of Ian Randall was also used to stir up the Lana-Clark-Chloe triangle. Beeman explained that a problem exists in developing new storylines involving the characters: "We want the characters we're familiar with, and on the other [hand], you have to search for ways to change them up". Even the ending was altered during filming, as both copies of Ian were to fall over the edge of a bridge; then, as the two Ians fall they touch each other's fingers slowly fusing together before hitting the ground. The team was so impressed with Thomas's performance they opted to keep the character alive.[34]

The twenty-second episode of the season, "Calling", initially had a different opening sequence involving Clark and Lana. In the original version, Clark and Lana were staying up late to watch a comet through Clark's telescope. Through the dialogue exchange between Clark and Lana, there was supposed to be a correlation between the arrival of the comet and Clark and Lana's relationship status. The comet also signified the arrival of Jor-El, Clark's biological father, and Clark's departure from Smallville. However, the effect for the comet was expensive, and if they cut the comet they had to cut the dialogue because it would have made no sense if you could not see the comet. Instead, the scene was rewritten to be about Lana visiting Clark at midnight to celebrate his birthday.[35]

Filming edit

The first episodes filmed for season two was actually the sixth episode aired; "Redux" finished principal photography shortly after filming for "Tempest" ended, which was just before the crew went on their summer break.[13] With "Redux" filming directly after the season one finale, the cast and crew were required to forgo the immediateness of their summer break so they could film; it was not aired in season two until the sixth scheduled airdate because of complications that arose after filming had ended. During the summer hiatus, after director Chris Long finished working on his cut of the film, it was decided the episode needed more visual effects. Since the shots were not originally planned, Entity FX, the show's special effects contractor, had to create completely new shots.

"[In season two's "Redux"], the idea wasn't to do something soap opera-y. As Clark was finding out about his origins, [Lana] was finding out about hers, and trying to forge connections with [her father]. And what would that be like? That was another storyline where there were several episodes where we shot three or four scenes, and by the time it was cut for time there'd be one scene that might seem to come out of nowhere. That can be frustrating. That's just the limitations of TV. If an episode comes in at fifty-four minutes and it's got to be forty-two minutes, you end up chopping lots out, particularly character stuff that focuses on guest characters—we always keep the Clark/Lana scenes!"

— Ken Biller on television limitations[36]

The production crew attempted to use money saving techniques when it came time to film scenes in locations other than the usual spots—the Kent farm, Luthor mansion, Smallville High, and the Talon. For instance, the Kent barn was redesigned as Dr. Hamilton's lab for the final climax in "Duplicity".[14] When it came time to create the Kawatche caves for "Skinwalker", the production crew built on a sound stage in Vancouver. The team created movable pieces, which allowed them to rearrange the set, and give the effect that it was larger than it really was. The production team also used sandstone to give the impression that the caves may have once been a riverbed, and thus allowing the crew to not have to worry about putting a ceiling on the set.[16]

When the crew cannot get away with using a sound stage they have to scout actual locations that reflect a similar look to what needs to be filmed; sometimes those on-location shots create problems for the crew. Pitt Meadows, in the Fraser Valley east of Vancouver, subbed for the Indonesian landscape the crew needed for the sequence of Whitney Fordman's ultimate demise during battle "Visage". This location presented its own problems for the crew, as the swampy waters of the river slowed production as well as the limited daylight available—in November, there is only six hours of daylight in the Pitt Meadow's region. The crew had to return eight days before the scheduled airdate for the episode in order to shoot close-ups of Whitney and the rest of the soldiers.[26] The location that was scouted for the river scene, where Emily Dinsmore pushes Lana off a bridge and into a river, became problematic on the first day of shooting. The river had become too dangerous to shoot the water scenes, so they simply tied Kreuk to a safety line and had Jodelle Micah Ferland (Emily) push her over the edge, but without her actually going into the water. They moved the set to a sound stage where they filmed Kreuk's remaining scenes—where Tom Welling dives into the river to save her—in a water tank.[37]

 
Christopher Reeve, speaking at an MIT event. In order to accommodate the necessary assistance Reeve required for his paralysis, the Smallville crew met him in New York to film his scenes for the show.

For season two's "Rosetta", the crew was presented with a dilemma that required the help of television producer John Wells, that was the guest starring of Christopher Reeve. Because of the expense of flying Reeve to Vancouver, Greg Beeman and Tom Welling flew to New York City to "bring Smallville to him". This is where Wells lent his hand, as he allowed the Smallville crew to film Reeve's scenes on the set of NBC's Third Watch,[15] similar to how he allowed them to use his West Wing set for season one's "Hourglass".[38] The decision to go to New York was also made because Reeve used a wheelchair and required much assistance when he traveled. Although James Marshall directed the episode, for Reeve's scenes in New York the Smallville crew sent Greg Beeman as a stand-in director. Beeman was accompanied by Al Gough, Tom Welling and Mat Beck.[17] There was initial concern about Reeve's stamina for shooting the scenes, as his particular scene with Welling was six pages long, which translates to approximately twelve hours of work day. Beeman tried to design everything so that it was as simple as possible, but Reeve quickly readjusted the scene. Beeman originally had Welling walk into frame and stand in front of Reeve, and then make a single move behind Reeve. Beeman was told, by Reeve, that the scene needed more dynamic between the characters, and if Welling only made a single move then the dynamic would be lost. According to Reeve: "Tom moving around me will hide the fact that I'm unable to move". Beeman's fear of overstretching Reeve's stamina, because of the added shots to the scene, were put to rest when Reeve himself stated that it did not matter how long it took to finish the scene, as long as it turned out great.[17] Reeve filmed all twelve hours in one stretch, and then went on to hold a press conference, as well as a public service announcement following his scenes.[15]

 
The Vancouver Marine Building had always been Al Gough and Miles Millar's ideal location to be the series' Daily Planet, which would make its first appearance in season two's "Insurgence".

At times, production designer David Willson has to build entire sets, or props for sets, from scratch instead of finding an available alternative. For "Witness", David Willson found an abandoned warehouse to use for the scene where Clark is thrown into a furnace by the three kryptonite-powered thieves. In the warehouse, Willson built a 40-foot-square (12 m), 30-foot-tall (9.1 m) blast furnace.[33] In "Visitor", David Willson and his production crew built a "practical, functioning" tower for the scene in the woods where Cyrus attempts to call for his alien transport. Willson's inspiration came while working on Love Field, starring Denzel Washington and Michelle Pfeiffer. While working on the project, Willson met a man named Bowler Simpson, who had built a 10-acre (40,000 m2) memorial, to his deceased daughter, out of old license plates and STOP signs. Willson used this image when constructing Cyrus's tower. Even though the tower was physically built, Entity FX still stepped in to create 2-D light beams located on the tower.[32] Willson also likes to add elements to his sets that correlate thematically with the episode, like in "Red", where Clark is exposed to red kryptonite. Here, Willson emphasized the "red theme"; working with director Jeff Woolnough, Willson tried to make sure there was something red "popping-out" to catch the audiences' attention in each scene. This would include red objects in the foreground and background, as well as red lenses added to the cameras.[20] Going along with the theme of colors in the show, Metropolis was given a "glass and steel and blue wash of color" for the look of the city. The crew found a new building in Vancouver, which was not yet occupied, and turned it into LuthorCorp plaza. By coincidence, the building sat neighboring the Marine Building, which Gough and Millar had always seen as becoming the Daily Planet building for the series, as the Marine Building held an "art deco structure from the 1930s" they felt embodied what their version of the Daily Planet would look like.[19]

Flashback sequences became an important element in two episodes this season, "Lineage" and "Suspect". Greg Beeman, who directed "Lineage", worked off the same inspiration as Ken Biller, who used John Sayles' Lone Star when writing the flashback sequences for the episode. Beeman tried to visually shift from the present to past without any effects shots; this included changing night to day in the same shot, and removing/inserting actors from shots when they were out of the view of the camera.[31] In his directorial debut, Ken Biller was met with the challenge of creating flashbacks for all the scenes that retold the event of the attack on Lionel. Biller had already seen Beeman's take on flashback scenes from his work on "Lineage", but Biller wanted to do something different. Alongside director of photography Glen Winter, Biller opted to shoot all the flashback sequences on 16 mm color reversal film, which would give the flashbacks a "grainy, dirty look" that Biller thought gave an interesting quality to the flashback scenes.[27]

Digital effects edit

A big part of the Smallville series relies on the effects it delivers, whether digital (CGI), physical, or special make-up effects. The effects shots, part of the post-production work, were originally developed and added in Los Angeles.[39] At the start of season two, Entity FX, which is based in Santa Monica, California, became the primary special effects team.[13] One of the first jobs the team had was creating the tornado that would suck up Lana in the season two opener, as well as creating the truck that would disintegrate around her as the winds from the tornado pulled it apart. Mat Beck, the visual effects supervisor, describes the effects used to create the tornado as being similar to the techniques used to create the Balrog in The Lord of the Rings trilogy. For the scene of Lana's truck spinning around in the tornado, Mat Beck used "animated sprites of real smoke that flew around following particles". Visual effects supervisor John Wash filmed debris hanging from a green screen, like loose straw and mailboxes, which he would "swirl around" the stage. The truck was then built on a computer by Jon Han, who created individual pieces—engine block, fenders, and other similar parts—that he would rip off to give the appearance of the truck breaking apart. Welling and Kreuk were filmed with tracking marks, which the computer used to line up the digital truck around them.[23]

 
Upper: Clark's heat vision begins with a flare up in his iris
Lower: Going against the previous "laser vision" looks of heat vision, Gough and Millar chose to use a "heat ripple" effect.[29]

When Entity FX took over the duties of creating the digital effects for the series, they also took over the challenge of crafting effects that would illustrate Clark's super-powered abilities, including the new "heat vision" that was introduced this season. The visual effects for heat vision evolved over the course of the first season, until Gough and Millar agreed on one that reflected their image of what heat vision should look like; they did not want the usual "red beams" or "laser vision". The visuals developed from the idea that they wanted Clark to be able to use it in front of people without them being able to see it. What emerged was a "heat ripple" from "distorting the frame".[29] John Wash explained what the creators were looking for:

"[Gough and Millar] wanted to be fairly accurate in terms of what you might see from something that was searingly hot traveling through the air, like a disturbance of the atmosphere. We keyed our research off the little ripples that you see if a light goes past a hotplate and reflects on a wall. We used a computer to create a conical version of that effect that could emanate from Clark's eyes, in combination with a little effect".[29]

They used "blobs of heat vision" instead of "constant rays" for the first instances of Clark using his ability, in an effort to simulate Clark's attempts to control it.[29] A couple of episodes later in "Red", the special effects team would use similar techniques for red kryptonite. To illustrate red kryptonite's effect on Clark, and it releasing his inhibitions, the special effects team crafted digital effects in his eyes. Brian Harding tweaked the effects they were already using for Clark's heat vision, giving them a "little devilish, hellish red flicker" in Clark's iris.[20] To help illustrate Clark's super speed, Mat Beck and his team would slow down and speed up background settings in a single shot. For example, in "Ryan", when Clark speeds up to the camera everything else slows to a stop—leaves stop blowing and birds are frozen in mid-flight—then everything begins moving normally as Clark races away from the camera. Entity FX also adds a blurring effect to Clark's body, as well as a distortion to the background to help further illustrate the speed at which Clark travels.[30]

In "Accelerate", Entity FX was able to create a visual effect of Clark superspeeding through the rain—something Gough and Millar had wanted to see since season one—that eventually won them a Visual Effects Society award. Gough and Millar had always wanted to see Clark superspeeding through a rain shower, but "the opportunity, [and] money" never presented itself, until now. Entity FX had an extended period of time to research the kinetics of the cemetery scene, where Clark would speed through rain drops, because there were limited effects done for the episodes "Precipice" and "Witness". Using HoudiniTM, Mat Beck and his team began creating their digital raindrops: "Each raindrop can be thought of as a lens, as a mirror, and an object in itself. The entire backdrop is refracted through it like a lens, and the area behind the camera is being reflected in it. By adjusting those parameters, we were able to give it a brilliant jewel-like magical quality". When trying to decide on the shape of the raindrops, Beck explained: "We figured that round drops weren't that interesting, and teardrop ones looked a little silly and over the top, so we settled on this round diamond shape". Entity FX created "collision events" as Clark ran through the raindrops, breaking them up. Beck remembered watching the cars on the freeway, during a rainstorm, "throwing up these loose trails of spray". Eli Jarra added a similar mist trail to Clark as he ran through the cemetery to give a more realistic effect, although Beck admits to taking a few liberties with the final look of the mist.[37] Occasionally, Mat Beck and his team have to stretch the limits of the realistic physics they try and create when illustrating Clark's abilities. While creating the alley scene in "Prodigal" where Lucas Luthor is attacked by an assassin with an Uzi 9mm, Mat Beck had to "cheat" the realism on the special effects used. First, the length of the alley is exaggerated in order to create enough time to show Clark stopping the bullets from hitting Lucas. Based on the calculations of how fast an Uzi 9 mm fires, and the muzzle velocity, they estimated that the bullets would be approximately twenty to thirty feet apart; four alleys would have been needed for Clark to catch up to all of the bullets in time. Second, the bullets themselves were enlarged so that audiences would be able to see them.[40]

Apart from creating the effects for Clark's powers, Entity FX also has the responsibility of dressing up the backgrounds of location shoots. For instance, in a flashback sequence from "Lineage", where Lionel finds his son in a field of flattened corn, Entity FX had to step in and adjust the scene based on executive producer Ken Horton's request. The script called for "corn flattened as far as the eye could see", but Horton wanted a defined stopping point for all the destruction; a wall of corn was digitally erected surrounding the area of trammeled corn stalks.[31] For the final shot of the season finale, where Clark is on a motorcycle heading toward Metropolis, Entity FX had to remove the forests and mountains that occupy the Vancouver landscape and digitally insert hills, extend the road into the distance and create a digital version of Metropolis in the background.[18] In the episode "Insurgence", during the moment when Clark is about to make his leap from the Daily Planet to LuthorCorp, the camera pans around the Daily Planet globe revealing Metropolis in its reflection before shifting down to the roof as Clark walks out. Entity FX created the image of Metropolis by using a computer to combine CG buildings, matte paintings, and real elements from the Vancouver streets. The company also took over the rest of the visual elements for the shot of Clark's actual leap. After Welling was shot on a green screen performing the leap from the Daily Planet, Entity FX performed their usual slowing and quickening of the timing elements, to give the effect of Clark's speed, as well as added a reflected version of Clark in the LuthorCorp building to illustrate Clark's impending crash through the glass.[19]

Sometimes the cleanup is a last minute job that could not be completed during production. In "Fever", time constraints forced the production team to rely on Entity FX to create the Talon marquee that hangs outside of the building, something that they typically do not do.[41] While filming the shots in Hamilton's lab that involved kryptonite, the special effects team had to go in during post-production for "Duplicity" and make the kryptonite glow, because the material used in production to make the kryptonite glow did not photograph well.[14] A last minute change in the storyline for "Skinwalker" required Entity FX to digitally adjust the opening teaser. In the original scene that was filmed, a wolf watched the aftermath of an explosion at the LuthorCorp construction site. It was decided that the wolf would watch the explosion as it happened, so Entity FX had to go back to the scene and recompose it. Hiding the head of the trainer who was holding onto the wolf, Entity FX digitally corrected the color composition and the lighting around the wolf so that it appears as though the explosion was occurring right in front of the wolf.[16]

"We couldn't track it to the exact action of his hands on the live-action footage. I guess he doesn't have a lot of experience hanging onto a Bell Jet Ranger".
— Mat Beck on tracking Faris' hands for the CGI shots[24]

For the episode "Nocturne", Entity FX ran into a snag when it came time to create the image of the episode's villain grabbing hold of a LuthorCorp helicopter. Mat Beck did not want to "cheat" the audience by using a cut technique to show Byron holding the helicopter; instead, Entity FX used CGI to create an entire helicopter. From there they decided they wanted the helicopter blades to cut-up the hedges. The special effects team tried to track Sean Faris' hands, as he was holding onto a crossbar that represented the helicopter's skid, to find a spot where they could make the helicopter roll toward the hedge. However, Faris did not move in a manner that they could use, so the effects team created a pair of CGI hands on the skid, and performed the action they needed with the computer model.[24] In "Dichotic", guest star Jonathan Taylor Thomas plays Ian Randall, a high school student who can duplicate himself. To create the effect of Ian splitting himself, Entity FX used three difference techniques. First, the primary shot of a CGI face pushing its way through a digital image of Thomas' back in three dimension; second, the team used "shadowplay", which is a two dimensional shot appearing on a wall as though the audience is seeing Ian's shadow as he splits himself; last, the team applied another two dimensional effect to the final moment of separation, when strands of CGI flesh snap back to each body.[34] Entity FX worked on the scene in "Fever" where the audience follows kryptonite particles down into Martha's lungs. Mat Beck and his team wanted to be as realistic as possible when digitally crafting the anatomy of the lungs, but they also decided to take certain liberties with the structures in order to "make [them] look cool". The camera follows the green kryptonite particles down Martha's throat, until they attack the alveoli, which subsequently begin turning green.[41]

 
Entity FX illustrated the destruction of Clark's spaceship by crafting the scene to look as if the ship was decaying from the touch of the kryptonite key placed in its slot.

The season finale required numerous computer-generated imagery. At the start of the episode, Jor-El's disembodied voice talks to Clark through the spaceship. For this scene, Entity FX created a completely computer-generated model of the ship, because the ship had to transform into multiple objects as the scene progressed, creating it digitally was the best option. Later in the episode, when Clark refuses to leave Smallville, Jor-El brands him with a Kryptonian tattoo. Brian Harding worked on the tattoo that is placed on Clark's chest, creating an effect based on the idea that it appeared to burn from the inside. For the same scene, Beck and his team had to digitally create a bare chest for Welling's stunt double, who had to wear a shirt to hide the safety harness he was wearing when they dropped him in the moment Clark is released from the ship's hold.[18]

In order to escape his father, Clark decides to use a kryptonite key to destroy his spaceship. When Clark puts the kryptonite key into the spaceship, Beck and his FX team tried to create a "virus/fungus" growth from the key slot to simulate "some sort of fractal decay". Mike McCormick worked specifically on the process of destroying the ship, giving the ship the appearance that it has a "nasty skin infection" that is spreading as if it is caught in the circulatory system. Next, Beck had to tackle the problem of the ship's final destruction. Originally, it was intended to have the ship explode, but no one wanted to have to rebuild the Kent farm. Instead, they settled on a giant EMP wave given off by the ship the moment it is destroyed. Entity FX created a beam of light that shot vertically up from the ship's location and then fell back down expanding into a "ripple that spread across the land". This beam of light would create a crater where the storm cellar was, which was dug prior to filming and digitally covered up so as to keep the illusion. One of the final shots of the episode was of Lex watching as his plane crashed into the ocean. In a homage to Robert Zemeckis's Cast Away, Entity FX crafted a digital effect of the ocean water flooding Lex's plane as it hits the ocean. The scene is reminiscent of the same scene in Cast Away where Tom Hanks's character also watches as the ocean water floods his plane as he crash lands in the ocean.[18]

Physical effects edit

Sometimes the digital effects are not necessary, even when they are expected. For the scene where Joe Morton suffers a fatal seizure, the crew used an under-crank shooting technique, to speed up the movements of Morton's character, coupled with Morton's own shaking.[14] In "Precipice", John Wash assisted the digital effects team when the production crew was filming a scene that was going to involve Clark X-raying a car with a group of teenagers in it. To achieve the effect of Clark X-raying a SUV, John Wash had all the actors in the SUV sit on apple boxes to get them at the representative height they would be in the SUV. The actors then went through all the motions they needed in order to "sell the X-ray effect".[28] For season two, John Wash added prosthetic veins to Welling's hands, which would move when he moved, to help simulate the kryptonite poisoning his character would undergo. Then, in post-production, Entity FX would add a green hue to them, and digitally hide the prosthetics when Clark was not affected by the kryptonite; in the first season, there were no physical prosthetics and all effects were done digitally.[14]

Apart from digital, the physical effects performed in Smallville are key, especially when dealing with the villains that Clark must fight in each episode. In "Nocturne", a teenage boy named Byron is transformed into a monster with superhuman strength. To demonstrate Byron's strength, the stunt team did a fifty-five foot "chuck", where Bryon throws Clark across the front lawn. To accomplish the task they connected a wire to the stunt man's back, so when Bryon hits "Clark" they can use a crane and hydraulic system, positioned one hundred feet in the air, to pull the stunt man. Twenty-five feet into the pull the wire is released and the stunt man flies the rest of the distance to the landing pad.[24] In "Visage", the bone-morphing Tina Greer returns disguised as Whitney Fordman. When she learns that Lana wants Clark she decides to become Clark. The real Clark confronts Tina, which results in a physical fight between the two Clarks. The fight sequence between the two Clarks originally had more choreographed shots, but had to be cut down to five actions, as the fight sequence was pushing twenty minutes. For the scene, Welling performed all of his stunts alongside his usual stunt double, Christopher Sayour, who doubled as the "second Clark" in the sequence.[26] For the actual stunt of leaping from the Daily Planet to the LuthorCorp building, the production team hooked Welling to a "parallelogram" on the studio greenscreen stage, and then filmed him running across a platform and leaping into the air. The parallelogram rig floated him in midair as he went over the building sill and began his downward trajectory. Although Welling did the initial stunt, his stunt double took over the chore of sliding through the glass as it explodes on contact.[19] Welling is not the only actor to perform his own stunts. Kristin Kreuk performed her own stunts for the bridge scene in "Dichotic", where she had to hang 500 feet (150 m) above the river. Her willingness to perform her own stunts saved the team money on greenscreen effects, or stunt doubles that would have been used in her place. Though the cost of using a greenscreen was saved, Entity FX still had to digitally remove all the wire harnesses from the scene, which is an effect that goes unnoticed in the final product of the majority of episodes.[34]

The team had two effects with vehicles that did not perform as originally planned. The first, in "Rush", involved a scene where Pete and Chloe intentionally drive their car off a cliff and Clark speeds in to catch it before it hits the ground. To attain the shot of Clark catching Pete's car required the crew to suspend the car from a crane with Sam Jones III and Allison Mack inside the car. The scene was filmed in a rock quarry, as there are not many cliffs in the Vancouver area, with segments of the scene created digitally. The car was then filmed as it was being pulled into the air backwards—the footage was then reverse to give the impression that it was falling. Initially, Mike Walls and his crew tried to pull the car straight up, but it was not working. The movement of the car had to be tweaked to give a sense of reality.[22] In the season finale, Jonathan and Martha crash their truck on their way home after an EMP blast, which Clark caused, sends a shock wave out that downs a telephone pole and their truck hits it. In order to get the Kent truck to roll for the moment where Jonathan and Martha encounter the wave of EMP, two stunt drivers drove the truck toward a collapsed telephone pole, skidding into it. Then, with mannequins in the truck for safety, the effects team wrapped some cables around the truck and launched it off a ratchet to make it roll. This did not go as smoothly as planned the first time, as the telephone pole did not fall when they set off the explosive charge to break it. Since it would be too hard to strap John Schneider and Annette O'Toole into the truck while it is upside down, and too dangerous to flip the truck with them already in it, Mike Walls and his team built a rotating truck seat, which allowed them to strap Schneider and O'Toole in, then rotate the seat so that they are upside down and slide that into the overturned truck.[18]

Tie-in edit

Beginning during this season, Allison Mack's character, Chloe Sullivan, starred in a promotional tie-in series, Smallville: Chloe Chronicles. An internet based mini-episode, which wrapped up "unfinished business" from the television series.[42] In this first volume, Chloe investigates events which led to the death of Earl Jenkins, who held Chloe and her friends hostage at the LuthorCorp plant in the first-season episode "Jitters". It aired between April 29 and May 20, 2003, and was exclusive to AOL subscribers.[43]

Reception edit

Ratings for Smallvilles second season were up 23% from the same point last year. It also surpassed 7th Heaven as The WB's most popular show. Gough contributes much of the second season's success to the family dynamic between Clark and his parents, whose emotional core provided a large part of the appeal, as was the move away from the overused "freak of the week" story lines. Gough stated: "Most of the time (on TV), the kids are smart, the parents are clueless and they never talk to each other. Ours is the antithesis of that. He turns to them and relies on their guidance".[44] Smallville's adjustment proved successful, as the second season averaged 6.3 million viewers, up from 5.9 million viewers in season one. That was also a move to #113 overall in the Nielsen ratings, up from #115 the year before.[2][3] The season's fourth episode, "Red", the season's seventeenth episode "Rosetta", and the season finale, "Exodus", were selected in The Futon Critic's 50 best episodes of 2002 and 2003, respectively. "Red" placed 9th,[45] while "Rosetta" placed 22nd,[46] and "Exodus" placed 35th.[47]

The season received mostly favorable reviews. IGN's Jeremy Conrad, gave the second season a score of 8.0/10, stating it was "a clear improvement over season [one]... This season has better pacing, more interesting story arcs, better special effects, and more importantly, better episodes". When referring to Christopher Reeve's guest appearance on the show, the review went as far as calling it "the best [episode] the show has delivered in its current lifespan... Reeve is the best special guest star yet".[48] Another review called the show "excellent" and called the acting of Tom Welling, Michael Rosenbaum and Kristin Kreuk "phenomenal".[49] Jennifer Contino from Sequential Tart, a comic-book website, observed that the season was more about "the characters and their relationships", rather than the show's reputable "villain-of-the-week" style. She complimented the red kryptonite that the season introduced into the series, saying that it was fun to see heroes turn bad or see the good guy become a little tarnished or confused.[50] In 2009, TV Guide ranked "Rosetta" 81st on its list of the 100 Greatest Episodes.[51]

Awards edit

The visual effects team was recognized by the Visual Effects Society with a 2004 VES Award for Outstanding Compositing in a Televised Program, Music Video or Commercial, for the work they did on "Accelerate". That same year, they won the Outstanding Matte Painting in a Televised Program, Music Video, or Commercial award for "Insurgence".[52] In the 2003 Teen Choice Awards, Tom Welling and Kristin Kreuk were nominated for Choice TV Actor and Actress; Allison Mack and Michael Rosenbaum were both nominated for Choice Sidekick, and the series was nominated for Choice TV – Action/Adventure.[53] In 2004, "Rosetta" was nominated for a Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation,[54] and actress Jodelle Ferland was nominated for a Young Artist Award for her portrayal of Emily Dinsmore in "Accelerate".[55] For the 29th Annual Saturn Awards, Tom Welling and Kristin Kreuk received nominations for Best Actor/Actress, Michael Rosenbaum and John Glover both received a nomination for Best Supporting Actor, and the second season was nominated for Best Network Television Series.[56] The DVD release won the Saturn Award for Best DVD Television Release.[57]

Home media release edit

The complete second season of Smallville was released on May 18, 2004, in North America.[58] Additional releases in region 2 and region 4 took place on September 17, 2004, and January 1, 2005, respectively.[59][60] The DVD box set included various special features, including episode commentary, The Chloe Chronicles, a featurette on the special effects of Smallville, and a documentary on Christopher Reeve's involvement this season.[61] On October 16, 2021, for the 20th anniversary, the complete series was released for the first time on Blu-ray.[62] The Blu-ray release marks the first time when season 2 was released in its native high-definition resolution.[63]

References edit

  1. ^ "Smallville Episodes". TV Guide. Retrieved July 9, 2007.
  2. ^ a b "Nielsen's TOP 156 Shows for 2002–03". Google. May 20, 2003. Retrieved May 25, 2007.
  3. ^ a b "How did your favorite show rate". USA Today. May 28, 2002. Retrieved May 25, 2007.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Episode List: Smallville – Season 2". TV Tango. Retrieved May 17, 2014.
  5. ^ "National Nielsen Viewership (Oct. 21-27)". The Los Angeles Times. October 30, 2002. Retrieved November 1, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. 
  6. ^ "National Nielsen Viewership (Nov. 18-24)". The Los Angeles Times. November 27, 2002. Retrieved November 1, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. 
  7. ^ "National Nielsen Viewership (Nov. 25-Dec. 1)". The Los Angeles Times. December 4, 2002. Retrieved November 1, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. 
  8. ^ "National Nielsen Viewership (Jan. 20-26)". The Los Angeles Times. January 29, 2003. Retrieved November 1, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. 
  9. ^ "National Nielsen Viewership (Feb. 17-23)". The Los Angeles Times. February 26, 2003. Retrieved November 1, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. 
  10. ^ "National Nielsen Viewership (April 14–20)". The Los Angeles Times. April 23, 2003. Retrieved November 1, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. 
  11. ^ "National Nielsen Viewership (May 12–18)". The Los Angeles Times. May 21, 2003. Retrieved November 1, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. 
  12. ^ "National Nielsen Viewership (May 19–25)". The Los Angeles Times. May 29, 2003. Retrieved November 1, 2022 – via Newspapers.com. 
  13. ^ a b c d Simpson, Paul (March 2004). Smallville: The Official Companion Season 2. London: Titan Books. pp. 10–11. ISBN 1-84023-947-6.
  14. ^ a b c d e Simpson, Paul, pp.22–25
  15. ^ a b c d e Simpson, Paul, pp.8–9
  16. ^ a b c Simpson, Paul, pp.50–53
  17. ^ a b c d Simpson, Paul, pp.78–81
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i Simpson, Paul, pp.102–115
  19. ^ a b c d e f Simpson, Paul, pp.58–61
  20. ^ a b c d Simpson, Paul, pp.26–29
  21. ^ Simpson, Paul (March 1, 2005). Smallville: The Official Companion Season 2. Titan Books. pp. 116–119. ISBN 1-84023-947-6.
  22. ^ a b c Simpson, Paul, pp.66–69
  23. ^ a b Simpson, Paul, pp.14–17
  24. ^ a b c d e Simpson, Paul, pp.30–33
  25. ^ Spelling, Ian (May 20, 2003). "Smallville's Kristin Kreuk stays tight lipped on Lana and Clark's relationship". Chicago Tribune. Tribune Company.
  26. ^ a b c Simpson, Paul, pp.54–57
  27. ^ a b Simpson, Paul, pp.62–65
  28. ^ a b Simpson, Paul, pp.86–89
  29. ^ a b c d e Simpson, Paul, pp.18–21
  30. ^ a b Simpson, Paul, pp.42–45
  31. ^ a b c Simpson, Paul, pp. 38–41
  32. ^ a b Simpson, Paul, pp.82–85
  33. ^ a b Simpson, Paul, pp.90–93
  34. ^ a b c Simpson, Paul, pp.46–49
  35. ^ Simpson, Paul, pp.98–101
  36. ^ Simpson, Paul, pp.34–37
  37. ^ a b Simpson, Paul, pp.94–97
  38. ^ Simpson, Paul, (Season 1 Companion) pp.40–43
  39. ^ Sheinkopf, Evelyn (April 2003). "Smallville: Visual Effects Fit for a Superhero". Animation Magazine. 17 (3): 17.
  40. ^ Simpson, Paul, pp.70–73
  41. ^ a b Simpson, Paul, pp.74–77
  42. ^ Simpson, Paul, (Season 2 Companion) pp.154—155
  43. ^ . BBC. April 29, 2003. Archived from the original on March 16, 2005. Retrieved March 23, 2008.
  44. ^ Levin, Gary (November 25, 2002). "'Smallville' is super for WB". Usatoday.Com. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  45. ^ "Rants & Reviews – The 50 Best Episodes of 2002 – #10–1". TheFutonCritic.com. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  46. ^ "Rants & Reviews – The 50 Best Episodes of 2003: #30–21". TheFutonCritic.com. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  47. ^ "Rants & Reviews – The 50 Best Episodes of 2003: #40–31". TheFutonCritic.com. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  48. ^ FredySego (March 11, 2008). . Readerreviews.ign.com. Archived from the original on December 22, 2010. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  49. ^ . TVShowsOnDVD.com. May 31, 2004. Archived from the original on December 21, 2010. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  50. ^ "A Comics Industry Web Zine – The Report Card". Sequential Tart. August 1, 2004. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  51. ^ "TV Guide's Top 100 Episodes". Rev/Views. Retrieved July 4, 2016.
  52. ^ . VESAwards.com. Archived from the original on February 10, 2008. Retrieved August 23, 2007.
  53. ^ "America Online and TEEN PEOPLE Announce Nominees for THE 2003 TEEN CHOICE AWARDS on FOX (page 2)". Business Wire. June 17, 2003. Retrieved September 11, 2007.
  54. ^ "2004 Hugo Awards". Award Web. Retrieved September 11, 2007.
  55. ^ . Young Artist Awards. Archived from the original on August 2, 2011. Retrieved September 10, 2007.
  56. ^ Eric Moro (March 5, 2005). . Mania.com. Archived from the original on October 12, 2007. Retrieved September 12, 2007.
  57. ^ Sue Schneider (May 17, 2005). . Mania.com. Archived from the original on December 12, 2007. Retrieved January 11, 2008.
  58. ^ "Season 2 (Region 1)". Amazon. Retrieved October 15, 2006.
  59. ^ "Season 2 (Region 2)". Amazon. Retrieved December 13, 2006.
  60. ^ "Season 2 (Region 4)". jbhifionline.com. Retrieved January 12, 2007.
  61. ^ Details from the back of the DVD box set.
  62. ^ Tingley, Anna (October 19, 2021). "'Smallville' Celebrates 20th Anniversary With Complete Blu-Ray Collection". Variety. Retrieved March 31, 2022.
  63. ^ "'Smallville: The Complete Second Season Blu-ray". Blu-ray.com. Retrieved January 1, 2024.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Smallville at IMDb
  • List of Smallville season 2 episodes at Wikia
  • Smallville at epguides.com
  • List of Smallville season 2 guide at kryptonsite.com

smallville, season, second, season, smallville, american, television, series, developed, alfred, gough, miles, millar, began, airing, september, 2002, television, network, series, recounts, early, adventures, kryptonian, clark, kent, adjusts, life, fictional, . The second season of Smallville an American television series developed by Alfred Gough and Miles Millar began airing on September 24 2002 on The WB television network The series recounts the early adventures of Kryptonian Clark Kent as he adjusts to life in the fictional town of Smallville Kansas during the years before he becomes Superman The second season comprises 23 episodes and concluded its initial airing on May 20 2003 1 Regular cast members during season two include Tom Welling Kristin Kreuk Michael Rosenbaum Sam Jones III Allison Mack John Glover Annette O Toole and John Schneider Glover who was a recurring guest in season one was promoted to regular for season two At the end of season one Eric Johnson who portrayed Whitney Fordman had left the series SmallvilleSeason 2DVD coverStarringTom Welling Kristin Kreuk Michael Rosenbaum Sam Jones III Allison Mack John Glover Annette O Toole John SchneiderNo of episodes23ReleaseOriginal networkThe WBOriginal releaseSeptember 24 2002 2002 09 24 May 20 2003 2003 05 20 Season chronology PreviousSeason 1Next Season 3List of episodes Season two picks up directly where season one ended with Clark Welling dealing with the aftermath of the tornadoes that hit Smallville This season Clark finally learns who he is and where he comes from but must also acknowledge a potential destiny set into motion by his biological father that could change his life and the lives of those around him forever Clark s relationship with Lana Lang Kreuk becomes increasingly closer straining his friendship with Chloe Sullivan Mack Clark s best friend Pete Ross Jones III learns Clark s secret this season Before the start of the second season Gough and Millar established a writing staff to help develop episode stories for the show which eventually saw the introduction of two characters that would shape Clark s life Dr Virgil Swann and Clark s biological father Jor El These roles were filled by Christopher Reeve and Terence Stamp respectively who were previously known for their respective roles as Superman and his nemesis General Zod in the Superman film series Special effects company Entity FX became the primary effects unit for the show this season winning awards for two of the episodes they worked on Apart from the digital effects team the series and its actors were nominated for and won various awards as well Season two performed better than the previous season averaging 6 3 million viewers a week and placed 113 in the Nielsen ratings 2 up from 115 the year before 3 Contents 1 Episodes 2 Production 2 1 Writing 2 1 1 Superman mythology 2 1 2 Characters 2 1 3 Episode development 2 2 Filming 2 3 Digital effects 2 4 Physical effects 3 Tie in 4 Reception 5 Awards 6 Home media release 7 References 8 External linksEpisodes editSee also List of Smallville episodes No overallNo inseasonTitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateProd codeU S viewers millions 221 Vortex Greg BeemanStory by Alfred Gough amp Miles MillarTeleplay by Philip LevensSeptember 24 2002 2002 09 24 1750518 66 4 Clark rescues Lana from the giant tornado which she was pulled into and takes her to the hospital When he returns home Clark learns that his ship is gone and that his father chased Roger Nixon Tom O Brien into the storm for attempting to expose Clark s secret Lex is wracked with guilt over not helping his father sooner when the mansion ceiling collapses Lex makes a decision to rush his father into surgery in an attempt to prevent him from becoming paralyzed The surgery is successful but results in the loss of Lionel s eyesight Jonathan and Nixon attempt to dig themselves out of the crypt they fell into after a mobile home dropped out of the sky on top of them Clark and friends search for Jonathan When Clark finds out that Lex knows Nixon he starts to doubt Lex s intentions Clark uses his X Ray vision and spots the crypt He shows up before the two men lose all oxygen but the meteor rocks in the crypt weaken him Nixon takes advantage of the situation and kidnaps Clark Jonathan chases him but Nixon gets the upper hand Lex shows up and saves Jonathan s life by shooting Nixon before he can kill Jonathan 232 Heat James MarshallMark VerheidenOctober 1 2002 2002 10 01 1750528 07 4 During a record heat wave Clark develops a new ability heat vision which causes him to have uncontrollable bursts of heat from his eyes Clark quickly learns that his flare ups are based on a state of sexual arousal having started a fire at school and the local coffee shop while with Lana With Jonathan s help Clark is able to gain control over his new ability Meanwhile Lex marries Desiree Atkins Krista Allen a woman he barely knows and Clark s new biology teacher Desiree has the ability to control men with pheromones enhanced by meteor rock Desiree attempts to use her pheromones on Clark but he is resistant As a result Desiree uses her abilities on Jonathan convincing him to kill Lex so that she can inherit his fortune Clark manages to save Lex before either Jonathan or Desiree can kill him 243 Duplicity Steve MinerTodd Slavkin amp Darren SwimmerOctober 8 2002 2002 10 08 1750538 82 4 Pete unknowingly discovers Clark s spaceship in a cornfield and makes plans to sell the story to the media Against his parents wishes Clark decides to tell Pete the truth about his alien origins in an effort to keep Pete from telling anyone about the ship Pete more upset over Clark s dishonesty than the fact that he is an alien leaves Dr Steven Hamilton Joe Morton suffering from overexposure to the meteor rocks steals the spaceship When Lex refuses to believe his rants about a ship Dr Hamilton seeks support from Lionel Luthor After realizing that the ship requires a key to open it Dr Hamilton kidnaps Pete in an effort to find out where the key is Dr Hamilton threatens Pete s life before Clark arrives and rescues Pete In the process Dr Hamilton has a violent convulsion as a result of his condition and dies After returning the ship to the Kent farm Pete and Clark reconcile 254 Red Jeff WoolnoughJeph LoebOctober 15 2002 2002 10 15 1750548 89 4 Clark goes against his father s wishes and purchases an expensive Class ring Unbeknownst to him the ring contains a red meteor rock something he had previously never seen The red meteor rock affects Clark mentally stripping away his inhibitions With his restraint gone Clark begins to act out of character Clark asks Lana out on a date but ditches her in the middle for another girl when Lana does not like how he is acting Showing resentment toward his parents for forcing him to live the life of a farm boy Clark decides to use his abilities to become rich and leave Smallville Pete and Jonathan must work together to stop Clark who goes after a young girl and her father who are on the run from mobsters Using green meteor rock to weaken Clark Jonathan smashes the ring with a sledgehammer Later Clark tries to apologize to his parents but Jonathan suspects that Clark was expressing his true feelings 265 Nocturne Rick WallaceBrian Peterson amp Kelly SoudersOctober 22 2002 2002 10 22 1750558 29 5 While visiting her parents grave Lana finds a love poem left for her The poem was written by a boy named Byron Moore Sean Faris whose parents Richard Moll and Gwynyth Walsh never allowed him to leave the house Clark and Lana suspect that Byron is being abused but when the police investigate Byron s parents they say he died years earlier Clark and Pete break into the home the next day and find Byron locked in the basement When Byron is brought into the sunlight he starts to act like a beast with superhuman strength It is revealed that Byron had a deadly disease and was a test subject for one of LuthorCorp s projects run by Lionel Luthor Byron goes after Lionel but Clark tracks him down and slams him into a well shaft and out of the sunlight The darkness returns Byron to normal long enough for Clark with Lex s help to get Byron to the hospital where he is placed under special lights Meanwhile Martha takes a position as Lionel s personal assistant much to the dismay of Jonathan and Clark 276 Redux Chris LongRussel Friend amp Garrett LernerOctober 29 2002 2002 10 29 2276218 22 4 When a student is pulled out of the school pool having aged 60 years in a few seconds Clark and Chloe decide to investigate They discover an 80 year trail of similar events left behind by Chrissy Parker Maggie Lawson another student at Smallville High and deduce that she is draining the life force from her victims in order to stay young Chrissy goes after the new school principal but Clark manages to get there in time to stop her Without a fresh victim Chrissy s body begins to age rapidly until she deteriorates into dust Meanwhile Lana discovers a photo of her mother in a romantic pose with an unidentified man during a period of time when she believed her parents were happily married Lana asks Lex to investigate who the man is and she eventually learns that her parents were legally separated at the time of the photo and that the man in the photo could be her biological father 287 Lineage Greg BeemanStory by Alfred Gough amp Miles MillarTeleplay by Kenneth BillerNovember 5 2002 2002 11 05 1750569 38 4 A woman named Rachel Dunleavy Blair Brown shows up claiming to be Clark s biological mother and that Lionel was his biological father Clark finds the truth about his adoption Clark dismisses her claims but Rachel files a court order to have a DNA test performed Clark and Pete sneak into the testing labs and Clark swaps his DNA for Pete s so that the technicians do not figure out that he is not human When the results come back negative Rachel kidnaps Lex in an effort to force Lionel to admit that he fathered a child with her and that Clark is their son Rachel witnesses Clark using his abilities when he rescues Lex and realizes that he is not her son Lionel later admits to Lex that he did father another child but that it died as an infant Later Lionel is seen with a locket and a picture of a young boy Meanwhile Lana finds the man from the photo Henry Small who eventually agrees to do a DNA test to determine if he is her father 298 Ryan Terrence O HaraPhilip LevensNovember 12 2002 2002 11 12 1750577 35 4 After his aunt abandons him because she can t handle his secret Ryan Ryan Kelley phones Clark for help Clark rescues Ryan from the Summerholt facility where the boy was being held an unwilling subject of experimentation by Dr Lawrence Garner Martin Cummins and brings him back to Smallville He soon finds out that Ryan has a tumor in his brain and that he only has a couple days left to live 309 Dichotic Craig ZiskMark VerheidenNovember 19 2002 2002 11 19 1750588 26 6 Ian Randall Jonathan Taylor Thomas a straight A student has the ability to duplicate himself He uses his power to take extra classes and to date Lana and Chloe at the same time Clark and Pete reveal Ian s secret which induces Ian to try to kill both girls Meanwhile Lex attends an anger management session where he meets Dr Helen Bryce 3110 Skinwalker Marita GrabiakStory by Mark WarshawTeleplay by Brian Peterson amp Kelly SoudersNovember 26 2002 2002 11 26 1750598 55 7 Clark stumbles into a local Native American cave located below a new LuthorCorp construction site and discovers symbols in an alien language on the cave walls A local Native American Joseph Willowbrook Gordon Tootoosis and his granddaughter Kyla Tamara Feldman recount a story that reflects Clark s life In an effort to save the land Kyla tries to scare the Luthors away using her ability of skin walking but she is mortally injured during her attack on Lionel and later dies in the woods in Clark s arms 3211 Visage William GereghtyTodd Slavkin amp Darren SwimmerJanuary 14 2003 2003 01 14 1750607 27 4 Whitney Fordman returns from overseas claiming to have lost some of his memory during battle Clark discovers that Whitney is actually Tina Greer Lizzy Caplan Tina immobilizes Clark using green meteor rock in the storm cellar and his spaceship saves him During a later confrontation with Clark Tina impales herself and dies It s later revealed that the real Whitney was killed in action 3312 Insurgence James MarshallKenneth Biller amp Jeph LoebJanuary 21 2003 2003 01 21 1750626 62 8 After Lex loses a 150 million dollar contract he discovers that his mansion is full of listening devices planted by Lionel Lex starts a plan to bug LuthorCorp s headquarters but aborts when he finds out that Martha and Lionel are headed there The abort is botched when the workers want to steal from the LuthorCorp vault While held hostage Martha learns that Lionel has files on Clark and bars of refined meteor rock She also retrieves the octagonal disc and stores it in a flour jar in the kitchen 3413 Suspect Kenneth BillerMark Verheiden amp Philip LevensJanuary 28 2003 2003 01 28 1750617 46 4 Lionel is mysteriously shot at the Luthor mansion leaving behind a huge list of suspects with various motives to want him dead Jonathan who is found unconscious in his truck with a bottle of tequila and a gun in his hand is arrested as the prime suspect Clark and Pete investigate and discover an elaborate plan orchestrated by Sheriff Ethan to get revenge on Lionel for the bad things that LuthorCorp did 3514 Rush Rick RosenthalTodd Slavkin amp Darren SwimmerFebruary 4 2003 2003 02 04 1750638 14 4 Pete and Chloe are infected by bug like creatures that burrow into the necks of those who get close enough The bugs cause people to engage in extremely risky behavior Meanwhile Clark finally asks Lana on a date This infuriates a jealous Chloe who tells Clark that she wants him and kisses him in front of Lana Pete uses a red meteor rock to get Clark to join them in their adrenaline rushing behavior Chloe tries to seduce Clark and the rock is incidentally removed restoring Clark to his normal self Clark manages to get both his friends to the hospital but he ruins his evening with Lana Lex hires Dr Frederick Walden Rob LaBelle an expert in ancient glyphs to try to translate the language found on the walls of the Kawatche Caves 3615 Prodigal Greg BeemanBrian Peterson amp Kelly SoudersFebruary 11 2003 2003 02 11 1750647 43 4 Lex discovers that his half brother Lucas Paul Wasilewski is still alive Lionel has been looking after Lucas and he uses him to steal Lex s inheritance so he cannot buy out LuthorCorp Penniless Lex moves in with the Kents Lucas dissatisfied with Lionel s plans for him discovers that Lionel has been faking blindness for a while An elaborate scheme with Lex reveals Lionel s lie and Lex secures his inheritance 3716 Fever Bill GereghtyMatthew OkumuraFebruary 18 2003 2003 02 18 1750657 85 9 Martha who has been hiding the key to the spaceship becomes extremely sick from inhaling the dust of green meteor rock that was underground The Kent farm is quarantined and the key discovered Clark who inhaled the meteor dust as well falls sick too While Clark is unconscious Chloe reads him a note describing her love for him only to have him mumble Lana s name in his sleep After testing his blood Dr Helen Bryce realizes that Clark is different Martha is revealed to be pregnant after the ship removes her poisoning 3817 Rosetta James MarshallAlfred Gough amp Miles MillarFebruary 25 2003 2003 02 25 1750668 72 4 Clark decides to place the key into a slot in the cave wall Upon inserting the key the wall instills him with the language of the cave Dr Walden discovers the key and uses it himself but the information overload puts him in a coma At home Clark s heat vision forces him to etch a symbol onto the barn door He is contacted by Dr Virgil Swann Christopher Reeve who educates Clark about Krypton his home planet Using the key on the ship he uncovers a hidden message from his biological father stating that his destiny is to conquer Earth 3918 Visitor Rick RosenthalPhilip LevensApril 15 2003 2003 04 15 1750675 91 10 A classmate at school Cyrus Krupp Jer Adrianne Lelliott displays special healing abilities Clark discovers that Cyrus believes he is an alien who arrived during the meteor shower leading him to believe Dr Swann was wrong when he told Clark he was the only Kryptonian on Earth Cyrus shows Clark the transmission tower he is building to contact his alien parents but evidence surfaces that proves that Cyrus is human 4019 Precipice Thomas J WrightClint CarpenterApril 22 2003 2003 04 22 1750686 70 4 After Lana is assaulted by a college student Andy Conners Michael Adamthwaite Clark loses control and seems to injure the boy When the Kents are sued for punitive damages Clark begins to question his powers while trying to find a way out of the lawsuit It is later revealed that Andy was faking his injuries and thanks to a plan concocted by Lana Clark and Chloe he is exposed Meanwhile Helen s ex boyfriend Paul Hayden Anson Mount arrives in town intent on winning her back When she turns him down he stabs her prompting Lex to take the law into his own hands 4120 Witness Rick WallaceMark VerheidenApril 29 2003 2003 04 29 1750696 50 4 Eric Marsh Zachery Ty Bryan a baseball player at Smallville High hijacks a LuthorCorp van along with two other thieves and steals a shipment of refined green meteor rock Clark stumbles upon the robbery but is no match for them It turns out that Eric and his crew are manufacturing and inhaling liquid kryptonite which leads to enhanced strength which rivals that of Clark Eventually however Jonathan reminds a discouraged Clark that although Eric s gang has strength they don t have any of Clark s other powers As a result Clark is able to subdue the trio of thieves and prevent them from pulling another job Meanwhile Lionel offers to fund the Torch and a position at the Daily Planet to Chloe 4221 Accelerate James MarshallStory by Todd Slavkin amp Darren SwimmerTeleplay by Brian Peterson amp Kelly SoudersMay 6 2003 2003 05 06 1750707 03 4 Lana thinks she is seeing ghosts when an old childhood friend Emily Eve Dinsmore Jodelle Ferland who died six years earlier appears Clark discovers that the child is indeed real By moving extremely fast the girl seems to disappear and walk through walls Clark learns that Emily s father has been cloning her with the help of green meteor rock The flaw with the Emily clone is that she has no sense of morality which eventually puts Lana in danger Meanwhile Lex prepares for his wedding with Helen 4322 Calling Terrence O HaraKenneth BillerMay 13 2003 2003 05 13 1750717 06 11 Dr Walden wakes up from his coma and tells Lex and Lionel that Clark is an alien that must be destroyed A romantic encounter between Clark and Lana is quickly dismissed when Chloe finds out they are together During a rehearsal for Lex and Helen s wedding Clark hears a strange voice calling from the storm cellar 4423 Exodus Greg BeemanAlfred Gough amp Miles MillarMay 20 2003 2003 05 20 1750727 53 12 The will of Clark s biological father Jor El voiced by Terence Stamp informs Clark he must leave Smallville Not wanting to leave his family and friends Clark steals Lionel s copy of the spaceship key made out of refined green meteor rock and sticks it into the ship destroying it The blast from the explosion causes Martha to lose her baby Grief stricken Clark starts using red kryptonite and decides to leave Smallville as Jor El s voice is heard stating to Clark that he can t avoid his destiny During his honeymoon flight Lex wakes to find the plane going down and Helen and the pilot missing Production editWriting edit As a writer you only have so many tricks in your bag It s always about expanding the world and deepening the relationships Gough on having a writing staff 13 At the start of the second season Al Gough and Miles Millar brought in Ken Biller to run the newly formed writers room For the first season Gough and Millar usually wrote the final draft of every episode because they were still seeking the show s voice The pair understood that a writing staff would help expand the show As part of their expanding they also brought in comic book writer Jeph Loeb who spent his first two weeks seeking fresh ideas for new episodes 13 One of the decisions the new writing team came up with was letting Pete in on Clark s secret The decision to let Pete learn Clark s secret was a choice made so that the character would have a function on the show and allow Clark someone who was not one of his parents 14 It was also a way to examine the power of friendship and loyalty and the price of having to keep a secret 15 Not all of Smallville s stories this season came from the writing staff Mark Warshaw who was head of the internet team that wrote the online Smallville articles for the Ledger and Torch which interwove the television episodes with online fictional newspapers that continued the stories from the show was the one that came up with the idea behind Skinwalker Warshaw s story was about a Native American girl who falls in love with Clark while at the same time revealing Clark s destiny to him The story was bought and given to Kelly Souders and Brian Peterson on the writing staff to work on a screenplay The episode had a significant role in the series as it introduced the Kawatche caves which held the Kryptonian language written on its walls and explored Clark s origins while at the same time posing the question that people from Clark s homeworld may have visited Smallville before Clark arrived on the planet 16 Superman mythology edit This season Gough and Millar brought in Christopher Reeve who portrayed Superman in four feature films as a guest star for a pivotal role in Clark s life that of Dr Virgil Swann The pair always had intentions of bringing Christopher Reeve onto the show and when they found out that he enjoyed watching the show himself Gough and Millar decided that they were going to bring him on for season two They had already crafted a character Dr Virgil Swann they knew would reveal the truth about Krypton to Clark and they decided that Reeve would be perfect for the part 17 Gough and Millar believed it was natural for Reeve to be the one to educate Clark about his past and help him see his future 15 and the scenes between Reeve and Welling have been described as a passing of the torch moment for the series 17 Along with Reeve another actor from the Superman films to be brought into the show was Terence Stamp who portrayed General Zod in the first two Superman films Stamp s role as Zod in the films coupled with how the writing team portrayed Jor El s early appearances giving Clark a message that he will rule Earth with strength led to fan theories that Jor El was in fact General Zod at the ComicCon that met two months after the episode aired Gough assured the ComicCon audience that the character was Jor El and not Zod in disguise 18 In addition Jeph Loeb requested the introduction of Superman s future ally Metropolis Police Lieutenant Maggie Sawyer for the episode Insurgence As Loeb recalls Ken Biller had written a hard bitten crusty kind of cop I asked him if he minded if it was a woman and explained who Maggie Sawyer was and the role she would play in the future 19 The concept for Insurgence also developed from an aspect of the Superman mythology that stemmed back to Superman s original incarnation which was his ability to leap tall buildings in a single bound After their Thanksgiving break the Smallville writers were in the writers room when Miles Millar walked in and exclaimed I think it s time for Clark to leap a tall building Jeph Loeb and the other writers had already been trying to develop a story that involved a hostage situation and after Millar made his announcement the team suggested that they also pay homage to the Bruce Willis action film Die Hard The setting for the hostage situation was LuthorCorp Plaza the team introduced the Daily Planet another pivotal piece of Superman lore that would one day employ Clark Kent and his alternate identity of Superman by using it as the building that Clark uses to execute his first leap 19 Insurgence was actually written before Visage and Suspect but not filmed until after both of those episodes because the team was having difficulty figuring out the logistics of producing the episode Afterward the episode would be scheduled to air between Visage and Suspect 19 This season also saw the introduction of red kryptonite In the fourth episode of the second season titled Red Clark buys a high school ring that contains a red kryptonite gem The effects of the kryptonite were meant to act as a metaphor for drugs Loeb was given the task of writing Red by Gough and Millar and one of the things he decided on was that the ultimate pay off with the kryptonite would be Clark finally kissing Lana 20 As Tom Welling describes it With Red Clark he s completely aware of the consequences of his actions at the time but he doesn t care He doesn t care what happens to you and he certainly doesn t care what happens to himself because he probably realizes that nothing can happen to him It s always fun to be that way even in real life because we re not allowed to be that way all too often 21 One of the concerns for the episode was whether the audience would embrace the idea of a bad Clark as Ken Biller knew that Clark would have to be the villain of the story 20 Fortunately audiences did embrace the idea and after the good ratings Red received the WB requested more episodes with red kryptonite In contrast Gough and the crew did not like using it because of the idea of Clark turning bad but the team asked themselves what if a friend slips something in your drink and you don t know it This became the basis in Rush where Pete slips a shard of red kryptonite into Clark s pocket it also gave the network what they wanted but in the form of a single act instead of the entire episode 22 This element would show up again in the season finale when Clark slips on another red kryptonite ring before riding out of Smallville on a motorcycle According to Ken Biller the moment Clark goes searching for the kryptonite is the payoff they had wanted with that piece of Superman mythology The show had established that red kryptonite removes Clark s inhibitions and in the season finale Clark is to the point that he is willing to go on drugs to solve his own pain and guilt about what he s done 18 Apart from the classical Superman mythology the creative team developed more of the show s take on Superman lore In this instance the Smallville team wanted to get rid of Clark s spaceship in the finale because they felt that the characters would not realistically travel to the storm cellar that often With the introduction of the Kawatche caves in season two the creative team had the Kryptonian connection they needed in order to safely rid themselves of the spaceship 18 Rush provided an expansion on the mythology within the show as well by explaining that Kryptonians had been to Smallville before Clark 22 Characters edit Season two expanded the lives and relationships of the main characters Gough and Millar used the season opener Vortex to establish multiple dynamics for the seasons including Lana s distrust of Clark what happened to the spaceship which developed into Clark looking into his origins Lex protecting Clark and killing the reporter and the Lex Lionel dynamic with Lionel being blind 23 A second development for the show was the relationship between Lionel and Martha Kent As part of season two was about expanding the lives of the adults away from Clark Nocturne saw the beginning of the Lionel Martha relationship This relationship allowed for more situations of Schneider and O Toole doing scenes together that were not about the kids 24 By the end of the season each of the main characters reach turning points in their lives Welling also commented on his character s development over the course of the season specifically on Clark meeting his biological father and how that affects his life To have two very strong father figures telling you different things is a lot to handle and Clark has to take this information put it to the test and come to his own conclusion and it s not an easy one 18 You ve got Clark dealing with his father and his destiny and trying to overcome it He s trying to continue to be who he believes himself to be Then you ve got Lex and Helen and their problems Lana and Clark are dealing with their issues too She s watching him fall apart and that s really difficult for her because he never tells her what s going on Kristin Kreuk on where the characters ended up by the season finale 25 According to Gough they had a specific intention for the ending of the second season Season one ended with the height of heroism with Clark running into a tornado to save Lana For season two we wanted to see the nadir of that which is Clark running away from his problems Gough likens the finale to the ending of The Empire Strikes Back in that Clark leaves Smallville and everyone he loves because he is scared According to Gough in order to do the character justice they have to take his journey through the darkness with him failing along the way 18 The lives of multiple characters changed during season two including that of Whitney Fordman who left Smallville in season one Whitney would return in season two s Visage when the creative team decided to combine two of their favorite characters from season one the series regular Whitney Fordman and Tina Greer the shape shifting teenager with a fixation on Lana The result was Whitney s return from war with amnesia and subsequent revealing that Whitney died overseas and that Tina Greer has been impersonating him since his return The episode also held lesbian undertones between the characters of Tina and Lana as well as with Tina and Chloe As Greg Beeman points out Tina s ultimate goal was to take over Whitney s life and live forever with Lana the character also lusted over Chloe during a portion of the episode 26 Whitney was not the only character whose fate was met with demise Suspect became the show s first cracking the mystery episode which revolved with the attempted murder of Lionel Luthor by a mysterious assailant it was influenced by the Japanese film Rashomon just like season one s episode Zero which is told from different people s perspective of the same event It was originally decided that Lionel s assistant Dominic Santori was going to be the person who attempted to kill Lionel but ultimately it was decided that Sheriff Ethan would be villain of the episode Although Jonathan Kent was also a suspect it was clear to at least Greg Beeman that they could not pin the crime on a series regular so they decided to try to surprise the audience by making it Ethan Mitchell Kosterman who plays Sheriff Ethan was a little distraught over his character s fate having grown comfortable with his place on the show The original ending of the episode featured Ethan taking a nurse hostage which Kosterman felt was out of character subsequently the final version had Ethan giving up the second it is revealed that he was caught To Kosterman this ending allows the character to stay sympathetic by showing that he was pushed to a bad place because Kosterman feels that whole dynamic of good people being pushed to do the wrong thing by bad people like Lionel Luthor is a pervading theme in the whole show 27 The fate of Dr Helen Bryce who would marry Lex in the season two finale was already established by the time the creative team was working on Precipice the season s nineteenth episode though it did change from the writers original intentions Initially the character was to be killed off at the end of the season on her wedding day but the quality of Emmanuelle Vaugier s performances and her chemistry with Michael Rosenbaum inspired the creative staff to keep her around until the start of the third season 28 Episode development edit Although the majority of the season two episodes were conceived during pre production as well as during the filming of the second season other episode ideas or scenes were originally intended to be scripted for the first season A scene involving Clark inadvertently using heat vision in his sexual education class was originally scripted for the pilot but was cut when the budget became too large That scene would become the inspiration for the season two episode Heat 15 29 Since his initial performance as Ryan in season one s Stray Gough and Millar had hoped to be able to bring Ryan Kelley back to Smallville In season two they got their chance with the intention to kill off the character who was suffering from a brain tumor Gough and Millar were initially apprehensive about how audiences would react to the death of a young teenager whose age was representative of the target demographic For the episode Ryan the creative team wanted to show that Clark even with all his powers cannot save everyone in this case Clark s speed and strength are no help against the tumor growing in Ryan s brain The episode is about Clark s trials of learning that life is not easy and how those trials change him 30 Lineage was one of the original stories Gough and Millar pitched to the studio when they were first trying to get Smallville off the ground The episode was designed to explain why Jonathan hated Lionel Luthor having made a deal with him in order to be able to adopt Clark as well as set up the character of Lex s half brother Lucas in the forthcoming episode Prodigal As he wrote the episode per Millar s suggestion Biller drew inspiration from John Sayles s Lone Star when writing the flashback scenes In Lone Star to illustrate the moment of flashback the camera would pan around until it revealed the past 31 As with season one the writing team came up with more what if episodes for the series like season two s Visitor which came from the idea of what if someone showed up and Clark began to believe that he wasn t the last person from his planet 32 In the case of Nocturne what if Clark had been brought up by different parents With Nocturne the episode is meant to be an extreme version of the Clark story As Gough explained Here s a kid with a condition whose parents literally lock him in the basement It s an extreme parenting episode contrasting how these parents deal with Byron and how the Kents deal with Clark The episode also dealt with Clark s fallibility in the fact that Clark is only a teenager and he does not always have all of the facts just because he thinks he is doing the right thing does not necessarily mean that he is In this case Clark believes that he is saving Byron from his abusive parents Gough clarified Clark s doing what he thinks is right but ultimately unleashes the kid and Byron causes damage Just because you have the power and you think you re right doesn t always mean you re taking the right course of action 24 Another what if episode was Witness which originally came from the concept what if Clark witnessed a crime and had to testify in court as to why he was standing in the middle of the road at 2 o clock in the morning In the end the court angle was dropped from the storyline with Clark making an anonymous phone call to the Sheriff and eventually having to battle the three kryptonite powered thieves that he had witnessed stealing 33 Witness is not the only episode to be altered from its original concept Dichotic began in its early stages as a story about a news reporter who had the ability thanks to kryptonite to split himself in half The reporter would create the news at the same time that he was filming it Ken Biller and Mark Verheiden discussed a teaser that involved the reporter pushing someone out of a window and as the body plummeted to the ground the audience saw the same person reporting the news as it happened The main story would focus on the reporter attempting to assassinate Lex Luthor but it eventually evolved into what Biller refers to as a metaphor on trying to super achieve at high school In the revamped version a high school student uses his ability to duplicate himself so that he can take classes in high school and at the community college at the same time in an effort to win a LuthorCorp scholarship and go to the university of his dreams With Jonathan Taylor Thomas playing the over achieving student the character of Ian Randall was also used to stir up the Lana Clark Chloe triangle Beeman explained that a problem exists in developing new storylines involving the characters We want the characters we re familiar with and on the other hand you have to search for ways to change them up Even the ending was altered during filming as both copies of Ian were to fall over the edge of a bridge then as the two Ians fall they touch each other s fingers slowly fusing together before hitting the ground The team was so impressed with Thomas s performance they opted to keep the character alive 34 The twenty second episode of the season Calling initially had a different opening sequence involving Clark and Lana In the original version Clark and Lana were staying up late to watch a comet through Clark s telescope Through the dialogue exchange between Clark and Lana there was supposed to be a correlation between the arrival of the comet and Clark and Lana s relationship status The comet also signified the arrival of Jor El Clark s biological father and Clark s departure from Smallville However the effect for the comet was expensive and if they cut the comet they had to cut the dialogue because it would have made no sense if you could not see the comet Instead the scene was rewritten to be about Lana visiting Clark at midnight to celebrate his birthday 35 Filming edit The first episodes filmed for season two was actually the sixth episode aired Redux finished principal photography shortly after filming for Tempest ended which was just before the crew went on their summer break 13 With Redux filming directly after the season one finale the cast and crew were required to forgo the immediateness of their summer break so they could film it was not aired in season two until the sixth scheduled airdate because of complications that arose after filming had ended During the summer hiatus after director Chris Long finished working on his cut of the film it was decided the episode needed more visual effects Since the shots were not originally planned Entity FX the show s special effects contractor had to create completely new shots In season two s Redux the idea wasn t to do something soap opera y As Clark was finding out about his origins Lana was finding out about hers and trying to forge connections with her father And what would that be like That was another storyline where there were several episodes where we shot three or four scenes and by the time it was cut for time there d be one scene that might seem to come out of nowhere That can be frustrating That s just the limitations of TV If an episode comes in at fifty four minutes and it s got to be forty two minutes you end up chopping lots out particularly character stuff that focuses on guest characters we always keep the Clark Lana scenes Ken Biller on television limitations 36 The production crew attempted to use money saving techniques when it came time to film scenes in locations other than the usual spots the Kent farm Luthor mansion Smallville High and the Talon For instance the Kent barn was redesigned as Dr Hamilton s lab for the final climax in Duplicity 14 When it came time to create the Kawatche caves for Skinwalker the production crew built on a sound stage in Vancouver The team created movable pieces which allowed them to rearrange the set and give the effect that it was larger than it really was The production team also used sandstone to give the impression that the caves may have once been a riverbed and thus allowing the crew to not have to worry about putting a ceiling on the set 16 When the crew cannot get away with using a sound stage they have to scout actual locations that reflect a similar look to what needs to be filmed sometimes those on location shots create problems for the crew Pitt Meadows in the Fraser Valley east of Vancouver subbed for the Indonesian landscape the crew needed for the sequence of Whitney Fordman s ultimate demise during battle Visage This location presented its own problems for the crew as the swampy waters of the river slowed production as well as the limited daylight available in November there is only six hours of daylight in the Pitt Meadow s region The crew had to return eight days before the scheduled airdate for the episode in order to shoot close ups of Whitney and the rest of the soldiers 26 The location that was scouted for the river scene where Emily Dinsmore pushes Lana off a bridge and into a river became problematic on the first day of shooting The river had become too dangerous to shoot the water scenes so they simply tied Kreuk to a safety line and had Jodelle Micah Ferland Emily push her over the edge but without her actually going into the water They moved the set to a sound stage where they filmed Kreuk s remaining scenes where Tom Welling dives into the river to save her in a water tank 37 nbsp Christopher Reeve speaking at an MIT event In order to accommodate the necessary assistance Reeve required for his paralysis the Smallville crew met him in New York to film his scenes for the show For season two s Rosetta the crew was presented with a dilemma that required the help of television producer John Wells that was the guest starring of Christopher Reeve Because of the expense of flying Reeve to Vancouver Greg Beeman and Tom Welling flew to New York City to bring Smallville to him This is where Wells lent his hand as he allowed the Smallville crew to film Reeve s scenes on the set of NBC s Third Watch 15 similar to how he allowed them to use his West Wing set for season one s Hourglass 38 The decision to go to New York was also made because Reeve used a wheelchair and required much assistance when he traveled Although James Marshall directed the episode for Reeve s scenes in New York the Smallville crew sent Greg Beeman as a stand in director Beeman was accompanied by Al Gough Tom Welling and Mat Beck 17 There was initial concern about Reeve s stamina for shooting the scenes as his particular scene with Welling was six pages long which translates to approximately twelve hours of work day Beeman tried to design everything so that it was as simple as possible but Reeve quickly readjusted the scene Beeman originally had Welling walk into frame and stand in front of Reeve and then make a single move behind Reeve Beeman was told by Reeve that the scene needed more dynamic between the characters and if Welling only made a single move then the dynamic would be lost According to Reeve Tom moving around me will hide the fact that I m unable to move Beeman s fear of overstretching Reeve s stamina because of the added shots to the scene were put to rest when Reeve himself stated that it did not matter how long it took to finish the scene as long as it turned out great 17 Reeve filmed all twelve hours in one stretch and then went on to hold a press conference as well as a public service announcement following his scenes 15 nbsp The Vancouver Marine Building had always been Al Gough and Miles Millar s ideal location to be the series Daily Planet which would make its first appearance in season two s Insurgence At times production designer David Willson has to build entire sets or props for sets from scratch instead of finding an available alternative For Witness David Willson found an abandoned warehouse to use for the scene where Clark is thrown into a furnace by the three kryptonite powered thieves In the warehouse Willson built a 40 foot square 12 m 30 foot tall 9 1 m blast furnace 33 In Visitor David Willson and his production crew built a practical functioning tower for the scene in the woods where Cyrus attempts to call for his alien transport Willson s inspiration came while working on Love Field starring Denzel Washington and Michelle Pfeiffer While working on the project Willson met a man named Bowler Simpson who had built a 10 acre 40 000 m2 memorial to his deceased daughter out of old license plates and STOP signs Willson used this image when constructing Cyrus s tower Even though the tower was physically built Entity FX still stepped in to create 2 D light beams located on the tower 32 Willson also likes to add elements to his sets that correlate thematically with the episode like in Red where Clark is exposed to red kryptonite Here Willson emphasized the red theme working with director Jeff Woolnough Willson tried to make sure there was something red popping out to catch the audiences attention in each scene This would include red objects in the foreground and background as well as red lenses added to the cameras 20 Going along with the theme of colors in the show Metropolis was given a glass and steel and blue wash of color for the look of the city The crew found a new building in Vancouver which was not yet occupied and turned it into LuthorCorp plaza By coincidence the building sat neighboring the Marine Building which Gough and Millar had always seen as becoming the Daily Planet building for the series as the Marine Building held an art deco structure from the 1930s they felt embodied what their version of the Daily Planet would look like 19 Flashback sequences became an important element in two episodes this season Lineage and Suspect Greg Beeman who directed Lineage worked off the same inspiration as Ken Biller who used John Sayles Lone Star when writing the flashback sequences for the episode Beeman tried to visually shift from the present to past without any effects shots this included changing night to day in the same shot and removing inserting actors from shots when they were out of the view of the camera 31 In his directorial debut Ken Biller was met with the challenge of creating flashbacks for all the scenes that retold the event of the attack on Lionel Biller had already seen Beeman s take on flashback scenes from his work on Lineage but Biller wanted to do something different Alongside director of photography Glen Winter Biller opted to shoot all the flashback sequences on 16 mm color reversal film which would give the flashbacks a grainy dirty look that Biller thought gave an interesting quality to the flashback scenes 27 Digital effects edit A big part of the Smallville series relies on the effects it delivers whether digital CGI physical or special make up effects The effects shots part of the post production work were originally developed and added in Los Angeles 39 At the start of season two Entity FX which is based in Santa Monica California became the primary special effects team 13 One of the first jobs the team had was creating the tornado that would suck up Lana in the season two opener as well as creating the truck that would disintegrate around her as the winds from the tornado pulled it apart Mat Beck the visual effects supervisor describes the effects used to create the tornado as being similar to the techniques used to create the Balrog in The Lord of the Rings trilogy For the scene of Lana s truck spinning around in the tornado Mat Beck used animated sprites of real smoke that flew around following particles Visual effects supervisor John Wash filmed debris hanging from a green screen like loose straw and mailboxes which he would swirl around the stage The truck was then built on a computer by Jon Han who created individual pieces engine block fenders and other similar parts that he would rip off to give the appearance of the truck breaking apart Welling and Kreuk were filmed with tracking marks which the computer used to line up the digital truck around them 23 nbsp Upper Clark s heat vision begins with a flare up in his irisLower Going against the previous laser vision looks of heat vision Gough and Millar chose to use a heat ripple effect 29 When Entity FX took over the duties of creating the digital effects for the series they also took over the challenge of crafting effects that would illustrate Clark s super powered abilities including the new heat vision that was introduced this season The visual effects for heat vision evolved over the course of the first season until Gough and Millar agreed on one that reflected their image of what heat vision should look like they did not want the usual red beams or laser vision The visuals developed from the idea that they wanted Clark to be able to use it in front of people without them being able to see it What emerged was a heat ripple from distorting the frame 29 John Wash explained what the creators were looking for Gough and Millar wanted to be fairly accurate in terms of what you might see from something that was searingly hot traveling through the air like a disturbance of the atmosphere We keyed our research off the little ripples that you see if a light goes past a hotplate and reflects on a wall We used a computer to create a conical version of that effect that could emanate from Clark s eyes in combination with a little effect 29 They used blobs of heat vision instead of constant rays for the first instances of Clark using his ability in an effort to simulate Clark s attempts to control it 29 A couple of episodes later in Red the special effects team would use similar techniques for red kryptonite To illustrate red kryptonite s effect on Clark and it releasing his inhibitions the special effects team crafted digital effects in his eyes Brian Harding tweaked the effects they were already using for Clark s heat vision giving them a little devilish hellish red flicker in Clark s iris 20 To help illustrate Clark s super speed Mat Beck and his team would slow down and speed up background settings in a single shot For example in Ryan when Clark speeds up to the camera everything else slows to a stop leaves stop blowing and birds are frozen in mid flight then everything begins moving normally as Clark races away from the camera Entity FX also adds a blurring effect to Clark s body as well as a distortion to the background to help further illustrate the speed at which Clark travels 30 In Accelerate Entity FX was able to create a visual effect of Clark superspeeding through the rain something Gough and Millar had wanted to see since season one that eventually won them a Visual Effects Society award Gough and Millar had always wanted to see Clark superspeeding through a rain shower but the opportunity and money never presented itself until now Entity FX had an extended period of time to research the kinetics of the cemetery scene where Clark would speed through rain drops because there were limited effects done for the episodes Precipice and Witness Using HoudiniTM Mat Beck and his team began creating their digital raindrops Each raindrop can be thought of as a lens as a mirror and an object in itself The entire backdrop is refracted through it like a lens and the area behind the camera is being reflected in it By adjusting those parameters we were able to give it a brilliant jewel like magical quality When trying to decide on the shape of the raindrops Beck explained We figured that round drops weren t that interesting and teardrop ones looked a little silly and over the top so we settled on this round diamond shape Entity FX created collision events as Clark ran through the raindrops breaking them up Beck remembered watching the cars on the freeway during a rainstorm throwing up these loose trails of spray Eli Jarra added a similar mist trail to Clark as he ran through the cemetery to give a more realistic effect although Beck admits to taking a few liberties with the final look of the mist 37 Occasionally Mat Beck and his team have to stretch the limits of the realistic physics they try and create when illustrating Clark s abilities While creating the alley scene in Prodigal where Lucas Luthor is attacked by an assassin with an Uzi 9mm Mat Beck had to cheat the realism on the special effects used First the length of the alley is exaggerated in order to create enough time to show Clark stopping the bullets from hitting Lucas Based on the calculations of how fast an Uzi 9 mm fires and the muzzle velocity they estimated that the bullets would be approximately twenty to thirty feet apart four alleys would have been needed for Clark to catch up to all of the bullets in time Second the bullets themselves were enlarged so that audiences would be able to see them 40 Apart from creating the effects for Clark s powers Entity FX also has the responsibility of dressing up the backgrounds of location shoots For instance in a flashback sequence from Lineage where Lionel finds his son in a field of flattened corn Entity FX had to step in and adjust the scene based on executive producer Ken Horton s request The script called for corn flattened as far as the eye could see but Horton wanted a defined stopping point for all the destruction a wall of corn was digitally erected surrounding the area of trammeled corn stalks 31 For the final shot of the season finale where Clark is on a motorcycle heading toward Metropolis Entity FX had to remove the forests and mountains that occupy the Vancouver landscape and digitally insert hills extend the road into the distance and create a digital version of Metropolis in the background 18 In the episode Insurgence during the moment when Clark is about to make his leap from the Daily Planet to LuthorCorp the camera pans around the Daily Planet globe revealing Metropolis in its reflection before shifting down to the roof as Clark walks out Entity FX created the image of Metropolis by using a computer to combine CG buildings matte paintings and real elements from the Vancouver streets The company also took over the rest of the visual elements for the shot of Clark s actual leap After Welling was shot on a green screen performing the leap from the Daily Planet Entity FX performed their usual slowing and quickening of the timing elements to give the effect of Clark s speed as well as added a reflected version of Clark in the LuthorCorp building to illustrate Clark s impending crash through the glass 19 Sometimes the cleanup is a last minute job that could not be completed during production In Fever time constraints forced the production team to rely on Entity FX to create the Talon marquee that hangs outside of the building something that they typically do not do 41 While filming the shots in Hamilton s lab that involved kryptonite the special effects team had to go in during post production for Duplicity and make the kryptonite glow because the material used in production to make the kryptonite glow did not photograph well 14 A last minute change in the storyline for Skinwalker required Entity FX to digitally adjust the opening teaser In the original scene that was filmed a wolf watched the aftermath of an explosion at the LuthorCorp construction site It was decided that the wolf would watch the explosion as it happened so Entity FX had to go back to the scene and recompose it Hiding the head of the trainer who was holding onto the wolf Entity FX digitally corrected the color composition and the lighting around the wolf so that it appears as though the explosion was occurring right in front of the wolf 16 We couldn t track it to the exact action of his hands on the live action footage I guess he doesn t have a lot of experience hanging onto a Bell Jet Ranger Mat Beck on tracking Faris hands for the CGI shots 24 For the episode Nocturne Entity FX ran into a snag when it came time to create the image of the episode s villain grabbing hold of a LuthorCorp helicopter Mat Beck did not want to cheat the audience by using a cut technique to show Byron holding the helicopter instead Entity FX used CGI to create an entire helicopter From there they decided they wanted the helicopter blades to cut up the hedges The special effects team tried to track Sean Faris hands as he was holding onto a crossbar that represented the helicopter s skid to find a spot where they could make the helicopter roll toward the hedge However Faris did not move in a manner that they could use so the effects team created a pair of CGI hands on the skid and performed the action they needed with the computer model 24 In Dichotic guest star Jonathan Taylor Thomas plays Ian Randall a high school student who can duplicate himself To create the effect of Ian splitting himself Entity FX used three difference techniques First the primary shot of a CGI face pushing its way through a digital image of Thomas back in three dimension second the team used shadowplay which is a two dimensional shot appearing on a wall as though the audience is seeing Ian s shadow as he splits himself last the team applied another two dimensional effect to the final moment of separation when strands of CGI flesh snap back to each body 34 Entity FX worked on the scene in Fever where the audience follows kryptonite particles down into Martha s lungs Mat Beck and his team wanted to be as realistic as possible when digitally crafting the anatomy of the lungs but they also decided to take certain liberties with the structures in order to make them look cool The camera follows the green kryptonite particles down Martha s throat until they attack the alveoli which subsequently begin turning green 41 nbsp Entity FX illustrated the destruction of Clark s spaceship by crafting the scene to look as if the ship was decaying from the touch of the kryptonite key placed in its slot The season finale required numerous computer generated imagery At the start of the episode Jor El s disembodied voice talks to Clark through the spaceship For this scene Entity FX created a completely computer generated model of the ship because the ship had to transform into multiple objects as the scene progressed creating it digitally was the best option Later in the episode when Clark refuses to leave Smallville Jor El brands him with a Kryptonian tattoo Brian Harding worked on the tattoo that is placed on Clark s chest creating an effect based on the idea that it appeared to burn from the inside For the same scene Beck and his team had to digitally create a bare chest for Welling s stunt double who had to wear a shirt to hide the safety harness he was wearing when they dropped him in the moment Clark is released from the ship s hold 18 In order to escape his father Clark decides to use a kryptonite key to destroy his spaceship When Clark puts the kryptonite key into the spaceship Beck and his FX team tried to create a virus fungus growth from the key slot to simulate some sort of fractal decay Mike McCormick worked specifically on the process of destroying the ship giving the ship the appearance that it has a nasty skin infection that is spreading as if it is caught in the circulatory system Next Beck had to tackle the problem of the ship s final destruction Originally it was intended to have the ship explode but no one wanted to have to rebuild the Kent farm Instead they settled on a giant EMP wave given off by the ship the moment it is destroyed Entity FX created a beam of light that shot vertically up from the ship s location and then fell back down expanding into a ripple that spread across the land This beam of light would create a crater where the storm cellar was which was dug prior to filming and digitally covered up so as to keep the illusion One of the final shots of the episode was of Lex watching as his plane crashed into the ocean In a homage to Robert Zemeckis s Cast Away Entity FX crafted a digital effect of the ocean water flooding Lex s plane as it hits the ocean The scene is reminiscent of the same scene in Cast Away where Tom Hanks s character also watches as the ocean water floods his plane as he crash lands in the ocean 18 Physical effects edit Sometimes the digital effects are not necessary even when they are expected For the scene where Joe Morton suffers a fatal seizure the crew used an under crank shooting technique to speed up the movements of Morton s character coupled with Morton s own shaking 14 In Precipice John Wash assisted the digital effects team when the production crew was filming a scene that was going to involve Clark X raying a car with a group of teenagers in it To achieve the effect of Clark X raying a SUV John Wash had all the actors in the SUV sit on apple boxes to get them at the representative height they would be in the SUV The actors then went through all the motions they needed in order to sell the X ray effect 28 For season two John Wash added prosthetic veins to Welling s hands which would move when he moved to help simulate the kryptonite poisoning his character would undergo Then in post production Entity FX would add a green hue to them and digitally hide the prosthetics when Clark was not affected by the kryptonite in the first season there were no physical prosthetics and all effects were done digitally 14 Apart from digital the physical effects performed in Smallville are key especially when dealing with the villains that Clark must fight in each episode In Nocturne a teenage boy named Byron is transformed into a monster with superhuman strength To demonstrate Byron s strength the stunt team did a fifty five foot chuck where Bryon throws Clark across the front lawn To accomplish the task they connected a wire to the stunt man s back so when Bryon hits Clark they can use a crane and hydraulic system positioned one hundred feet in the air to pull the stunt man Twenty five feet into the pull the wire is released and the stunt man flies the rest of the distance to the landing pad 24 In Visage the bone morphing Tina Greer returns disguised as Whitney Fordman When she learns that Lana wants Clark she decides to become Clark The real Clark confronts Tina which results in a physical fight between the two Clarks The fight sequence between the two Clarks originally had more choreographed shots but had to be cut down to five actions as the fight sequence was pushing twenty minutes For the scene Welling performed all of his stunts alongside his usual stunt double Christopher Sayour who doubled as the second Clark in the sequence 26 For the actual stunt of leaping from the Daily Planet to the LuthorCorp building the production team hooked Welling to a parallelogram on the studio greenscreen stage and then filmed him running across a platform and leaping into the air The parallelogram rig floated him in midair as he went over the building sill and began his downward trajectory Although Welling did the initial stunt his stunt double took over the chore of sliding through the glass as it explodes on contact 19 Welling is not the only actor to perform his own stunts Kristin Kreuk performed her own stunts for the bridge scene in Dichotic where she had to hang 500 feet 150 m above the river Her willingness to perform her own stunts saved the team money on greenscreen effects or stunt doubles that would have been used in her place Though the cost of using a greenscreen was saved Entity FX still had to digitally remove all the wire harnesses from the scene which is an effect that goes unnoticed in the final product of the majority of episodes 34 The team had two effects with vehicles that did not perform as originally planned The first in Rush involved a scene where Pete and Chloe intentionally drive their car off a cliff and Clark speeds in to catch it before it hits the ground To attain the shot of Clark catching Pete s car required the crew to suspend the car from a crane with Sam Jones III and Allison Mack inside the car The scene was filmed in a rock quarry as there are not many cliffs in the Vancouver area with segments of the scene created digitally The car was then filmed as it was being pulled into the air backwards the footage was then reverse to give the impression that it was falling Initially Mike Walls and his crew tried to pull the car straight up but it was not working The movement of the car had to be tweaked to give a sense of reality 22 In the season finale Jonathan and Martha crash their truck on their way home after an EMP blast which Clark caused sends a shock wave out that downs a telephone pole and their truck hits it In order to get the Kent truck to roll for the moment where Jonathan and Martha encounter the wave of EMP two stunt drivers drove the truck toward a collapsed telephone pole skidding into it Then with mannequins in the truck for safety the effects team wrapped some cables around the truck and launched it off a ratchet to make it roll This did not go as smoothly as planned the first time as the telephone pole did not fall when they set off the explosive charge to break it Since it would be too hard to strap John Schneider and Annette O Toole into the truck while it is upside down and too dangerous to flip the truck with them already in it Mike Walls and his team built a rotating truck seat which allowed them to strap Schneider and O Toole in then rotate the seat so that they are upside down and slide that into the overturned truck 18 Tie in editBeginning during this season Allison Mack s character Chloe Sullivan starred in a promotional tie in series Smallville Chloe Chronicles An internet based mini episode which wrapped up unfinished business from the television series 42 In this first volume Chloe investigates events which led to the death of Earl Jenkins who held Chloe and her friends hostage at the LuthorCorp plant in the first season episode Jitters It aired between April 29 and May 20 2003 and was exclusive to AOL subscribers 43 Reception editRatings for Smallvilles second season were up 23 from the same point last year It also surpassed 7th Heaven as The WB s most popular show Gough contributes much of the second season s success to the family dynamic between Clark and his parents whose emotional core provided a large part of the appeal as was the move away from the overused freak of the week story lines Gough stated Most of the time on TV the kids are smart the parents are clueless and they never talk to each other Ours is the antithesis of that He turns to them and relies on their guidance 44 Smallville s adjustment proved successful as the second season averaged 6 3 million viewers up from 5 9 million viewers in season one That was also a move to 113 overall in the Nielsen ratings up from 115 the year before 2 3 The season s fourth episode Red the season s seventeenth episode Rosetta and the season finale Exodus were selected in The Futon Critic s 50 best episodes of 2002 and 2003 respectively Red placed 9th 45 while Rosetta placed 22nd 46 and Exodus placed 35th 47 The season received mostly favorable reviews IGN s Jeremy Conrad gave the second season a score of 8 0 10 stating it was a clear improvement over season one This season has better pacing more interesting story arcs better special effects and more importantly better episodes When referring to Christopher Reeve s guest appearance on the show the review went as far as calling it the best episode the show has delivered in its current lifespan Reeve is the best special guest star yet 48 Another review called the show excellent and called the acting of Tom Welling Michael Rosenbaum and Kristin Kreuk phenomenal 49 Jennifer Contino from Sequential Tart a comic book website observed that the season was more about the characters and their relationships rather than the show s reputable villain of the week style She complimented the red kryptonite that the season introduced into the series saying that it was fun to see heroes turn bad or see the good guy become a little tarnished or confused 50 In 2009 TV Guide ranked Rosetta 81st on its list of the 100 Greatest Episodes 51 Awards editThe visual effects team was recognized by the Visual Effects Society with a 2004 VES Award for Outstanding Compositing in a Televised Program Music Video or Commercial for the work they did on Accelerate That same year they won the Outstanding Matte Painting in a Televised Program Music Video or Commercial award for Insurgence 52 In the 2003 Teen Choice Awards Tom Welling and Kristin Kreuk were nominated for Choice TV Actor and Actress Allison Mack and Michael Rosenbaum were both nominated for Choice Sidekick and the series was nominated for Choice TV Action Adventure 53 In 2004 Rosetta was nominated for a Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation 54 and actress Jodelle Ferland was nominated for a Young Artist Award for her portrayal of Emily Dinsmore in Accelerate 55 For the 29th Annual Saturn Awards Tom Welling and Kristin Kreuk received nominations for Best Actor Actress Michael Rosenbaum and John Glover both received a nomination for Best Supporting Actor and the second season was nominated for Best Network Television Series 56 The DVD release won the Saturn Award for Best DVD Television Release 57 Home media release editThe complete second season of Smallville was released on May 18 2004 in North America 58 Additional releases in region 2 and region 4 took place on September 17 2004 and January 1 2005 respectively 59 60 The DVD box set included various special features including episode commentary The Chloe Chronicles a featurette on the special effects of Smallville and a documentary on Christopher Reeve s involvement this season 61 On October 16 2021 for the 20th anniversary the complete series was released for the first time on Blu ray 62 The Blu ray release marks the first time when season 2 was released in its native high definition resolution 63 References edit Smallville Episodes TV Guide Retrieved July 9 2007 a b Nielsen s TOP 156 Shows for 2002 03 Google May 20 2003 Retrieved May 25 2007 a b How did your favorite show rate USA Today May 28 2002 Retrieved May 25 2007 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Episode List Smallville Season 2 TV Tango Retrieved May 17 2014 National Nielsen Viewership Oct 21 27 The Los Angeles Times October 30 2002 Retrieved November 1 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp National Nielsen Viewership Nov 18 24 The Los Angeles Times November 27 2002 Retrieved November 1 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp National Nielsen Viewership Nov 25 Dec 1 The Los Angeles Times December 4 2002 Retrieved November 1 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp National Nielsen Viewership Jan 20 26 The Los Angeles Times January 29 2003 Retrieved November 1 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp National Nielsen Viewership Feb 17 23 The Los Angeles Times February 26 2003 Retrieved November 1 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp National Nielsen Viewership April 14 20 The Los Angeles Times April 23 2003 Retrieved November 1 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp National Nielsen Viewership May 12 18 The Los Angeles Times May 21 2003 Retrieved November 1 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp National Nielsen Viewership May 19 25 The Los Angeles Times May 29 2003 Retrieved November 1 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp a b c d Simpson Paul March 2004 Smallville The Official Companion Season 2 London Titan Books pp 10 11 ISBN 1 84023 947 6 a b c d e Simpson Paul pp 22 25 a b c d e Simpson Paul pp 8 9 a b c Simpson Paul pp 50 53 a b c d Simpson Paul pp 78 81 a b c d e f g h i Simpson Paul pp 102 115 a b c d e f Simpson Paul pp 58 61 a b c d Simpson Paul pp 26 29 Simpson Paul March 1 2005 Smallville The Official Companion Season 2 Titan Books pp 116 119 ISBN 1 84023 947 6 a b c Simpson Paul pp 66 69 a b Simpson Paul pp 14 17 a b c d e Simpson Paul pp 30 33 Spelling Ian May 20 2003 Smallville s Kristin Kreuk stays tight lipped on Lana and Clark s relationship Chicago Tribune Tribune Company a b c Simpson Paul pp 54 57 a b Simpson Paul pp 62 65 a b Simpson Paul pp 86 89 a b c d e Simpson Paul pp 18 21 a b Simpson Paul pp 42 45 a b c Simpson Paul pp 38 41 a b Simpson Paul pp 82 85 a b Simpson Paul pp 90 93 a b c Simpson Paul pp 46 49 Simpson Paul pp 98 101 Simpson Paul pp 34 37 a b Simpson Paul pp 94 97 Simpson Paul Season 1 Companion pp 40 43 Sheinkopf Evelyn April 2003 Smallville Visual Effects Fit for a Superhero Animation Magazine 17 3 17 Simpson Paul pp 70 73 a b Simpson Paul pp 74 77 Simpson Paul Season 2 Companion pp 154 155 America Online has teamed up with Warner Bros Television and The WB Television Network to produce new mini dramas to publicise Smallville BBC April 29 2003 Archived from the original on March 16 2005 Retrieved March 23 2008 Levin Gary November 25 2002 Smallville is super for WB Usatoday Com Retrieved July 30 2010 Rants amp Reviews The 50 Best Episodes of 2002 10 1 TheFutonCritic com Retrieved July 30 2010 Rants amp Reviews The 50 Best Episodes of 2003 30 21 TheFutonCritic com Retrieved July 30 2010 Rants amp Reviews The 50 Best Episodes of 2003 40 31 TheFutonCritic com Retrieved July 30 2010 FredySego March 11 2008 IGN category Reader Review username Readerreviews ign com Archived from the original on December 22 2010 Retrieved July 30 2010 Smallville The Complete 2nd Season Review TVShowsOnDVD com May 31 2004 Archived from the original on December 21 2010 Retrieved July 30 2010 A Comics Industry Web Zine The Report Card Sequential Tart August 1 2004 Retrieved July 30 2010 TV Guide s Top 100 Episodes Rev Views Retrieved July 4 2016 Visual Effects Society Awards VESAwards com Archived from the original on February 10 2008 Retrieved August 23 2007 America Online and TEEN PEOPLE Announce Nominees for THE 2003 TEEN CHOICE AWARDS on FOX page 2 Business Wire June 17 2003 Retrieved September 11 2007 2004 Hugo Awards Award Web Retrieved September 11 2007 25th Annual Young Artist Awards Young Artist Awards Archived from the original on August 2 2011 Retrieved September 10 2007 Eric Moro March 5 2005 2003 Saturn Awards Mania com Archived from the original on October 12 2007 Retrieved September 12 2007 Sue Schneider May 17 2005 31st Annual Saturn Award Winners Mania com Archived from the original on December 12 2007 Retrieved January 11 2008 Season 2 Region 1 Amazon Retrieved October 15 2006 Season 2 Region 2 Amazon Retrieved December 13 2006 Season 2 Region 4 jbhifionline com Retrieved January 12 2007 Details from the back of the DVD box set Tingley Anna October 19 2021 Smallville Celebrates 20th Anniversary With Complete Blu Ray Collection Variety Retrieved March 31 2022 Smallville The Complete Second Season Blu ray Blu ray com Retrieved January 1 2024 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Smallville nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Smallville Official website Smallville at IMDb List of Smallville season 2 episodes at Wikia Smallville at epguides com List of Smallville season 2 guide at kryptonsite com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Smallville season 2 amp oldid 1225394376, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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