Summary
- Lanterns is HBO’s fifth project in James Gunn’s DC Universe, starring Kyle Chandler and Aaron Pierre.
- Nathan Fillion joins Lanterns as Guy Gardner, adding mystery to his role in the Earth-based murder mystery plot.
- Lanterns’ grounded tone and lack of sci-fi elements may disappoint fans, but James Gunn’s endorsement promises quality.
Lanterns is more than a month into production, progressing smoothly and right on schedule. But the latest star to join the HBO series should hardly be surprising to anyone tracking the developments of Superman and James Gunn’s wider DC Universe.
HBO’s Lanterns, based on DC’s Green Lantern lore, will be the fifth project in James Gunn’s newly christened DC Universe, and the third TV show after Creature Commandos and Peacemaker Season 2. Lanterns stars Kyle Chandler’s Hal Jordan as a veteran member of the intergalactic force, Green Lantern Corps, and recruit John Stewart (played by Aaron Pierre) in what showrunners describe to be an Earth-based murder mystery “in the American heartland” of Nebraska.

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Nathan Fillion’s Guy Gardner is Lanterns’ Newest Addition
The Scale of His Involvement Remains A Mystery
Nathan Fillion’s sharp-tongued Guy Gardner (another Green Lantern who features in the upcoming Superman movie) was hitherto omitted from any mention in the HBO TV show. But, according to The Hollywood Reporter, that mystery is now crystal clear: Nathan Fillion’s Guy Gardner will indeed be appearing in Lanterns although the nature and scale of his involvement remains undisclosed.
Fillion joins a steadily growing cast who have joined the show in the past month, including Nicole Ari Parker as John Stewart’s mother, Bernadette; Jasmine Cephas as younger Bernadette; Jason Ritter as Billy Macon and Garret Dillahunt as Billy’s father. Following his addition, fans quickly opened their theory books on how Gardner fits into the Lanterns story. Some theories even suggest that he could be the murder victim that precipitated the whole investigation by Jordan and Stewart — possibly murdered by Ulrich Thomsen’s Sinestro. Fillion’s inclusion is also noteworthy for two reasons. First, Gardner’s quirky and eccentric persona — evident in the clips of the Superman trailer — is an outlier in a Lanterns show expected to be dark and gritty. Second, it raises questions about the show’s place within the broader DCU, especially given showrunner Chris Mundy’s previous statements of the show not being a part of the DCU’s “larger storytelling plan” and that Season 1 was designed to be a self-contained and standalone story, devoid of any traces of universe-building.
Talk of universe interconnectivity is moot if the show’s story and tone don’t align with DC fans. And that’s the elephant in the room when it comes to Lanterns. Filmmaker James Hawes, who directs the first two episodes, recently spurred the Green Lantern community with his comments to Collider about the show not “needing that extra sprinkle of sci-fi fairy dust,” instead taking place in a more physical realm. The series’ promised grounded tone, already visually confirmed by a first-look image of the Lantern duo in casual dressing, doesn’t sit well with some fans. Any optimism of Lanterns being the same inter-galactic adventures akin to 2011’s Green Lantern and the Guardians of the Galaxy films, seems to have been quashed by Hawes’ comments.
Lanterns’ quality, though, is a different discourse. That Gunn, a lover of the intergalactic with his Guardians of the Galaxy films, greenlit the show and called it a solid script should speak volumes to anyone concerned that less space fights in a Green Lantern project equates to sour quality.
Lanterns has not announced an official release window at the time of writing.

- Network
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HBO
- Directors
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James Hawes
- Writers
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Tom King, Chris Munday
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Aaron Pierre
John Stewart
Source: The Hollywood Reporter

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