Lois and Clark clash with Jordan over his carelessness around using his powers in public. And finally, after seventeen years behind bars, Lex Luthor is set to be released from prison.Lois and Clark clash with Jordan over his carelessness around using his powers in public. And finally, after seventeen years behind bars, Lex Luthor is set to be released from prison.Lois and Clark clash with Jordan over his carelessness around using his powers in public. And finally, after seventeen years behind bars, Lex Luthor is set to be released from prison.
Photos
- John Henry Irons
- (credit only)
- Natalie Irons
- (credit only)
- Chrissy Beppo
- (credit only)
- Bruno Mannheim
- (credit only)
- Otis
- (as Ryan Booth)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWhen the tornado approaches, several people seek refuge under an overpass. Mostly due to footage from a 1991 Wichita tornado, many believe an overpass can provide protection, but an overpass is actually one of the worst places to seek shelter from a tornado. One reason is that the narrow passage underneath can actually intensify the speed of tornadic winds.
- GoofsLois is seen looking at the article she wrote for "The Smallville Gazette" about Mannheim confessing to his crimes. In the article, it's mentioned that he "revealed himself to be the leader the criminal organization known as Intergang." A reporter who is highly experienced and professional such as Lois Lane wouldn't make such a simple grammatical error. Even if she didn't catch it herself, Chrissy should have noticed it, and it should have been highlighted by the software she used to write the article. (For those not seeing the mistake, the word "of" is missing in "the leader [of] the criminal organization.")
- Quotes
Lois Lane: They say time heals all wounds. It's a nice idea. At least I used to think so. The truth is a little more complicated. Healing is a full-time job, and throughout the process, you're never quite yourself. All you want is to be better, but that will only come once you pay the price: time. What no one tells you, though, is how much time it's going to take. How long until you heal. How long until you feel normal again, until you get your confidence back. You're not sure you ever will, fully. And it feels like an injustice. But at some point, you have to decide that who you are now, it's gonna have to be enough.
- SoundtracksDark Entries
Written by Daniel Ash, David J, Kevin Haskins, Peter Murphy
Performed by Bauhaus
The reason I rate this episode as high as I do is because everything else about it is stellar. Seeing Luthor again, for the first time. Sam Lane being an involved family member who is as hurt as Clark and Lois to see Jordan becoming the attention grabber that he is. Wally West over in CW Central City was never this much of a showboat but even when he was a little bit he wised up pretty fast. And to have Jordan basically oozing disdain and callousness seems... like Jordan isn't the person on drugs to have taken the show down this particularly dark rabbit hole. I say it that way because he's giving a more convincing portrayal of being 'on drugs' than Tom Welling's Clark Kent did when he discovered Red Kryptonite. A substance that by its nature removes Kryptonian inhibitions and promotes aggressiveness.
"Mr. And Mrs. Kent are calling my house. They're really worried. It's like, they think he's on drugs or something." "Clark would have to BE on drugs to be on drugs." ...Chloe and Pete in a season 2 episode Smallville noticing Clark on Red-K. The class ring that was supposedly a ruby was a red meteor rock. It was a pretty cool way for Tom Welling to shed Clark's upstanding morality for an episode. But this is 4 episodes in a row without any apparent explanation whatsoever. It's exhausting.
- sophiejensen-13063
- Jun 22, 2023