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Lanterns Will Run 2 Timelines: 2016 & 2026; Mundy Offers New Insights

Lanterns showrunner Chris Mundy shared new insights into the series, including how it runs on two timelines, Sinestro's role, and much more.



Article Summary

  • Lanterns unfolds across 2016 and 2026, with Hal and John chasing two linked mysteries over eight episodes.
  • Chris Mundy says Lanterns blends grounded True Detective-style noir with buddy-cop chemistry and DC mythos.
  • Lanterns explores Sinestro training Hal and Hal mentoring John, raising questions about legacy and influence.
  • Mundy promises Lanterns keeps its Green Lantern visuals, with practical realism, big constructs, and more green ahead.

As anticipation builds toward the August premiere of Chris Mundy (True Detective: Night Country), Damon Lindelof (Watchmen), and Tom King's (SupergirlAaron Pierre and Kyle Chandler-starring Lanterns, Mundy took some time to offer some very big intel on what viewers can expect from the upcoming DC Studios and HBO/HBO Max Series. The showrunner talks about two timelines, Sinestro, True Detective vibes, and much more.

Lanterns
Image: HBO Max/DC Studios

During an interview with EW, Mundy offered some very new and very interesting details on the upcoming series – here's a look:

"Lanterns" Will Run 2 Timelines: 2016 and 2026: The series kicks off in 2016, with a shooting in the town of Rushville, Neb. Having kept an eye on the town, Hal is certain that the incident was alien-related – but Sheriff Kerry (Kelly Macdonald) isn't convinced. But the series will also focus on "something else" that's going down in 2026. "That becomes a second mystery that we know is down the road for us. So eventually two different mysteries get worked out over the course of the show," Mundy shared. As we've heard in the past, Mundy makes a comparison to how HBO's True Detective was structured. "It was less of a whodunnit as much as like, what happened and why? We think of this as a relationship show between John and Hal, and there's a lot to unpack over the course of the eight episodes," the showrunner added.

In that ten-year gap, the events of DC Studios' Superman will have taken place, with Nathan Fillion's "fabulously obnoxious" Guy Gardner set to "be in the show a few different times." Mundy added, "There are a bunch of other people from the mythology, from the canon, but not the other Lanterns. We talk about them at different times, but they're not gonna interact with them in the course of this season."

Lanterns Will Run 2 Timelines: 2016 & 2026; Mundy Offers New Insights
Image: HBO/DC Studios

Mundy on Ulrich Thomsen's Sinestro Training Hal, Maybe Not Being the Big Bad: "Obviously in the canon, Sinestro's the big bad. The thing that interests us is this idea [that] Hal was trained by Sinestro, Hal is training John. In the coaching tree, we're very interested in what gets passed on, what doesn't, how much is human nature. We talked a lot about programming and parenting and training…What did Hal take away from Sinestro that was good or bad? It brings up a lot of interesting worries," Mundy noted.

Mundy: "It's a Green Lantern Show, So There's Green": Mundy made it clear that "there's plenty" of visual effects in the series, but the foundation is grounded. "There are a couple episodes where they're incredibly heavy, but from the jump, it's a much more boots-on-the-ground approach," Munday shared. "It's a Green Lantern show, so there's green."

"The aesthetic of the show – it's supposed to be very grounded and real, so we're shooting practically in places," the showrunner continued. "We're not heavily green-screened. It's not like day glow in its presentation of anything. I think Green Lantern fans will not feel like we've somehow made a brown show of their green comic at all. It's very much 'we're in the world,' and then when we use the constructs, they're what people would expect them to be."

Mundy on the "Not Enough Green" Teaser Complaint: "We could have put out a trailer that was tremendously green. So the fact that people are talking about it just means, to me, that they're excited about the show. We have a lot of respect for the source material, otherwise we wouldn't be doing this show. I think when people see it, it won't be a controversy."

Lanterns
Image: HBO/DC Studios

Here's a look back at the motion poster for DC Studios and HBO Max's Lanterns that was previously released, followed by some previous insights on the live-action DCU series:

Tom King on Kyle Chandler's Hal Jordan & Aaron Pierre's John Stewart

During an episode of Word Balloon, King offered insights into why Chandler and Pierre are perfect for the series and what each brings to the table. "Oh god, Kyle is so good," King shared in the episode above (beginning at around the 1:07:50 mark). "When he showed up and just… he got it. Just like the first day, you were like, 'Oh!'" King went on to explain that he wasn't sure what to expect based on Chandler's previous work and how King envisioned Hal Jordan. "You know, Kyle's got kind of a southern vibe, and I always think of Hal as kind of a California guy – being a California guy myself."

But it didn't take long for Chandler to win him over with his take on the ring-slinging hero, with King sharing, "he [Chandler] fit it so perfectly, that kind of that that combination of arrogance and yet like a grounded arrogance, that's how Jordan is." King compared his vision of Hal Jordan as someone who's "got that sort of Captain Kirk in him. He's got that fearlessness. He asks if God needs a starship. Like, that's who Hal Jordan is. It's no fear, you know? It's 'no fear, all sky," [which] was what I put in my book. And Kyle just immediately got it and occupied that and had that kind of cockiness, but like an everyday cocky; that kind of Harrison Ford cockiness, you know, like that movie star, that is just perfect."

"Aaron Pierre is just, you know, he's a rocket ship. He's launching. He's the next… You know, he's going to be on every billboard in our lives [for the] next 20 years. He's a huge movie star. He's in the he's in the new 'Star Wars' movie, if people don't know. And he's just… he is John Stewart," King added about Pierre. "When I first time I met him, I was like, 'Oh my god, you're a superhero.' When you look him in the face, you're like, 'That is a superhero. I'm meeting a superhero in person.' That's what it's like to meet him – and the nicest guy in the world. Both of them are just very down-to-earth and had no airs at all, even though they're huge stars, and treated this little nerdy comic book person with such kindness. I was very grateful." Make sure to check out the entire episode above, with King also discussing what it was like working with television heavy-hitters Mundy and Lindelof and what he learned from the experience.

Lanterns: Hawes on "True Detective" Talk, Aaron Pierre & DC Studios

Speaking with The Hollywood Reporter in support of his feature film, The Amateur, Hawes addressed the True Detective comparisons, what Pierre brings to the series, and how it's been (so far) working with DC Studios:

Hawes on How "Lanterns" Compares In Tone to "True Detective": "Talking tone, it looks and feels rooted. You meet two guys, but there is wit and comedy to it that you would not expect in 'True Detective.' It is, in many ways, a buddy cop structure with travel in the story time, to and fro, that is really sophisticated. Chris Mundy has done the most amazing job with the team there, and so I think [the 'True Detective' comparison] is valid. People will still go, 'What were you talking about?' to some extent, but I would also bring in 'No Country for Old Men,' 'Fargo,' and things that have that Americana heart to them. There's a wry humor, and so there definitely is more wit and humor than there is in 'True Detective.'"

Hawes on Aaron Pierre Having a "Magnificent Presence": "I honestly think he did it totally individually in the room. With some chemistry castings and the like, it just felt like he would inhabit the role. He has such a magnificent presence. He feels so forceful, so cool, so understated. Again, I wanted this world to be rooted, and while there's only so far you can go with rooting characters in a show about Green Lantern, they are. This is a world where we accept that the Green Lanterns exist and aliens exist. So the rest of it is played straight and in the world as we know it."

Hawes on Working with DC Studios: "Well, I can only tell you from my experience, which is that it has been inspiring and supportive and truly thrilling. I will know more in a few months' time, but right now, [Lanterns] just felt like a real burst of creative energy.

The series spotlights new recruit John Stewart (Pierre) and legendary Lantern Hal Jordan (Chandler), two intergalactic cops drawn into a dark, Earth-based mystery as they investigate a murder in the American heartland. Along with Pierre and Chandler, the DC Studios series stars Garret Dillahunt (Fear The Walking Dead), Kelly Macdonald (Boardwalk Empire, In the Line of Duty), Poorna Jagannathan (Never Have I Ever, Deli Boys), Ulrich Thomsen (Counterpart, The Blacklist), Nicole Ari Parker (And Just Like That), Jason Ritter (Matlock), J. Alphonse Nicholson (P-Valley), Sherman Augustus (Stranger Things), Jasmine Cephas Jones (Blindspotting), Chris Coy (Bass Reeves), Paul Ben-Victor (Nobody Wants This), and Cary Christopher (Days of Our Lives). In addition, Nathan Fillion will be reprising his Superman role as Green Lantern Guy Gardner for the series. Helming the series are directors James Hawes, Stephen Williams, Geeta Vasant Patel, and Alik Sakharov. Based on the DC Comics Green Lantern, the series is executive produced by Mundy, Lindelof, Gunn, Safran, King, Hawes, and Ron Schmidt.


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Ray FlookAbout Ray Flook

Serving as Television Editor since 2018, Ray began five years earlier as a contributing writer/photographer before being brought onto the core BC team in 2017.
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