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Arrow - Season 2 - Andrew Kreisberg and Marc Guggenheim Interview

Oct 8, 2013

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How is Starling City dealing in the aftermath of the Undertaking?
Kreisberg
: Not well. It took it on the chin in the finale. As bad as the city was in Season 1, it's even worse now. That's part of Oliver's journey this season. We always say, "So goes Oliver, so goes the city." He's in a very dark place and he really realizes in the premiere episode that he can't be the vigilante anymore. It's not enough to cross names off the list and target the one percent. That didn't work. He failed last year. This season really needs to be about something else. The city needs a hero. It needs a symbol of hope. That's why we titled Episode 1 "City of Heroes." That's our title for the season in an odd way, because it's really about heroes coming out of the woodwork like Oliver. Even the villains this season are going to view themselves as the hero.

Will Oliver be alone in his quest to save the city in Season 2?
Guggenheim
: One of the things that plays a big part in the first few episodes of Season 2 is the idea that when you basically launch into this crusade, you put on an outfit, you're using an exotic weapon and you are taking on the criminal element of the city, there's going to be a response. In fact, there's going to be a series of responses. Like Lance says in the first episode of Season 2, "Before the Hood came to town, we didn't have earthquake machines and Dark Archers." Arrow is basically like this stone has been dropped into this huge pond and the ripple effects are spreading out starting out in the premiere. Some of those ripples are good in the form of positive things — like Roy (Colton Haynes) adopts the Arrow's crusade and is trying to do a job of saving people in the city — but we'll also see the negatives to that, too.
Kreisberg: In the beginning, [the police] are overwhelmed. They're actually targeting the Arrow because there's a feeling amongst some of the characters that all of this insanity began when the Arrow showed up. For some people, he's become the symbol for what's wrong with this city. One of Oliver's missions this year is to change the way the police and the public feel about the vigilante.

What role will Felicity and Diggle (David Ramsey) play for Oliver this season?
Guggenheim:
Their roles on Team Arrow evolve, particularly with respect to Felicity. In Season 1, Felicity was girl Friday where she would do whatever Oliver asked her to do. In Season 2, she's developing — like Diggle — more of a voice in terms of how Oliver goes about his missions. She's definitely coming into scenes with more of a point of view. She's a lot more involved in telling Oliver what's on her mind and that makes her a stronger character.

Will Moira Queen (Susanna Thompson) stand trial for her involvement in the Undertaking?
Kreisberg:
Yes. There will be some courtroom scenes. Moira behaved very badly last year. Everybody is really dealing with the repercussions of that. This season, for Moira, a lot of it is about redemption. Oliver wasn't the only one who failed last year. Moira really failed. As much as this season is about Oliver stepping into the light, it's about Moira trying to find her way back and how that impacts her children and the company and herself is so much of her journey.

Will Laurel (Katie Cassidy) play into that storyline?
Kreisberg:
This season, Laurel is going to be joining the District Attorney's office, so she might have some dealings with that. Part of it is she's trying to stay out of it as much as she can, but as always with these things, bad stuff happens.

What's the state of Oliver and Laurel's relationship this season?
Guggenheim:
We said there would be all these different repercussions from Tommy's (Colin Donnell) death and we're being true to that. Every episode invokes Tommy or comes out of what happened in the finale to Tommy in a very specific way. At the core, there's always their love for each other because they are star-crossed lovers. That said, I have to say something to keep myself from getting yelled at by the people who are shipping Oliver and Felicity (Emily Bett Rickards). The relationship between Oliver and Felicity over the course of Season 2 will evolve and deepen. Their relationship by the end of the season won't be the same as it is at the beginning of the season.

Read full interview at TV Guide

11 comments:

  1. If Slade becomes Deathstroke what happens to Shado? I want more Island info! :)

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  2. I really like what they had to say about Laurel's direction and level of involvement this season. I'm also a little surprised (pleasantly so) that they've been seriously discussing Birds of Prey already.

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  3. I am also really interested in Shado's storyline.

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  4. Same here! I want to know more on her relationship with Oliver (I mean has to be pretty significant for him to have the same tattoo on his back). I wonder if we'll see her in present day too...

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  5. I still don't buy Oliver/Laurel as star-crossed lovers. I wish the writers would ease back on that a bit.

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  6. What do they mean with different between #olicity ? i want olicity happen !!!!!

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  7. As long as they stick to the actual definition of "star-crossed," I think the term fits them reasonably well.



    People all too often erroneously believe the term star-crossed means that two people are fated to be together, that it's written in the stars. The term actually means that the two people are destined for misfortune, that fate is against them, that no matter how hard they try they just can't seem to make it work.

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  8. The term stopped to fit the moment Oliver slept with Laurel's sister. It is not circumstances which keeps the two apart, it's their own decisions, decisions they wouldn't make if they were really that much in love with each other. Star-crossed would have been if Oliver had been alone on the boat and he came back to discover that Laurel is married to someone else, or at least in a very close relationship with someone, because in this case all the baggage between them would have been created by outside circumstances. But since this isn't the case, I simply don't buy the pairing...and I actually don't think that they HAVE to stick to it. It is not like the original Green Arrow and the Black Canary lived happily ever after.
    Honestly, it would be nice to see at least one Superhero show in which the Superhero actually does get some resemblance of happiness in his private life.

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  9. Is it me or does some of yhis sound an awful lot like the Nolan Batman movies? The stuff from Lance is almost like what Gordon said at the end of Batman Begins.

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  10. If Oliver's dalliance had stopped those two from gravitating back toward each other time and time again I'd agree with you but that's not the case. Therefore, I still maintain that the terms fits them reasonably well.

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