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Constantine

I think they were just explaining those things as a bit of heavyhanded foreshadowing, since both the card and the nails played a role in the later events of the episode. Not the most subtle setup in the world, but at least they are trying. I'd like to see them tone down the number of instances every episode where Constantine has to remind people he's an asshole. It's a bit much.
 
I think this was the best episode yet. Parts of it were almost too gross for me!
 
Yeah, she acts real flaky and spaced out. I guess they're trying to make sure we know AT ALL TIMES that she has psychic abilities or some shit.
 
The ending of "A Feast of Friends" ripped my heart out and stomped all over it. It's not often a horror show will make me cry but that one sure as hell did.
 
The guy that played the New Orleans detective that they're setting up to play The Spectre is freakin' gorgeous. Good episode but he was the icing on my pretend boyfriend cake.
 
Somebody said he's an "heroic ghost" or something. Naked would be better though.

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I love Hellblazer and I think the guy they have playing Constantine is great. Totally nailed it on that front. The show is clearly finding it's ground as well and improving steadily. We all know that first seasons are tricky but this one has so much potential I feel that if it can start getting a proper arc going before getting canned it has legs to it.
 
Well they've cut the number of episodes so it doens't seem like it's going to get a proper chance. I'll only watch it if it gets a second season and if at least three people assure me I should watch it.
 
RIP for real


Cancelled ‘Constantine’ Abandons Rescue Efforts, Co-Creator Pens Letter To Fans

by Nellie Andreeva
June 8, 2015 7:39am

After some encouraging early signs that cancelled NBC drama Constantine could beat the odds and find a new home, hope has faded for the DC comic-based series starring Matt Ryan, which ended its 13-episode first and now only season in February. In a note to fans posted this past weekend, executive producer Daniel Cerone, who developed Constantine with David S. Goyer and ran the series, announced the show’s official end and thanked for the support. Constantine producer Warner Bros. TV tried hard to keep the show alive, pitching it to a number of networks, including the CW and Fox, but it didn’t work. Here is Cerone’s letter in its entirety:

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I promised I’d share news when I had it — sadly, that news is not good. The cast and writers of Constantine are being released from their contracts. The studio tried to find a new home for the show, for which we’re forever grateful, but those efforts didn’t pan out. I’m sorry, I wasn’t provided any information on the attempts to sell the show elsewhere. All I can report is that the show is over.

Many ingredients went into this TV series. From the dedicated cast that breathed these characters to life, led by Matt Ryan as the comic-made-flesh embodiment of John Constantine, to the exceptionality talented crew that put unreal images on screen, to the original Hellblazer writers and artists who gifted us a universe.

As a general principle, writers don’t choose a writing career to achieve stardom. Whatever demons or insecurities drove them to find freedom of expression through written words generally keeps writers comfortably obscure behind their words. Nor do people choose writing as a means to financial freedom. I’d venture to guess that most who set out to write professionally never receive a paycheck for their hopeful scribbles or key strokes.

In fact, nobody I know ever chose a writing career — it chose them. You write because that’s what you do. Like breathing, it just happens and you have to do it and you just hope that someday somebody out there notices what you’re trying to say.

If that’s the dream of writers, than the writers of Constantine lived the dream, because we’re leaving behind wild and passionate fans who believe in and were moved by what we tried to do. To leave such a significant, dedicated and active fan base on the table — that’s the real sadness. You all deserve many years of the series we set out to make, and we’re disappointed that we couldn’t deliver that to you. The good news is that Constantine will live on for years in many more forms. But our time as caretakers has ended.

Thank you for letting us in.

Daniel Cerone
 
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