Malcolm Merlyn
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Malcolm Merlyn | |
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Portrayed by | John Barrow (2012–2019) |
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Malcolm Merlyn, also known by his alter-egos Dark Archer, is a fictional character in The CW's Arrowverse franchise, first introduced in the fourth episode of the first season of the television series Arrow, going on to serve as the main villain of the season. He joined the cast of Legends of Tomorrow for its second season. The character is an an adaptation of the DC comics character of the same name, first appering in an episode written by Moria Kirland and Lana Cho.
John Barrowman has appeared as Malcolm Merlyn as well as his supervilian persona in crossovers with The Flash and Supergirl, as well as serving as one of the main villains of Legends of Tomorrow. Barrowman also co-wrote a comic series featuring the character titled, Arrow: The Dark Archer.
Appearances[edit]
Arrow[edit]
Season one[edit]
Malcolm Merlyn (born Arthur King) a wealthy businessman, a member of the League of Assassins, the father of Tommy Merlyn and Thea Queen. During season one, Malcolm plots the Undertaking, the destruction of the Glades using an earthquake device, after his wife Rebecca was murdered there. When Robert Queen earlier threatened the Undertaking, Malcolm arranged to destroy Robert's ship, Queen's Gambit, resulting in Robert's death and leading to Oliver Queen and Sara Lance becoming the Hood[note 1] and and the Canary. In the main story of season one, he uses Moira Queen to gain access to the resources needed for the Undertaking. He tries to reshape Tommy into a better person by cutting him off which works but causes tensions between them. When the Hood interferes with his plan, Malcolm becomes a vigilante called "Dark Archer" to oppose him and proves to be far more skilled. He suspects Oliver to be the oo and is proven right after defeating him a second time. In the season finale, Malcolm is seemingly killed by Oliver though he manages to destroy much of the Glades, inadvertently kills Tommy, and is publicly exposed for his crime by Moira.
Season two[edit]
In season two, Malcolm returns to suborn the jury in Moira's trial to find her innocent of the Undertaking. He discovers that he is Thea's biological father, following Adam Donner's discovery of Malcolm's affair with Moira. In an attempt to keep Malcolm from Thea, Moira informs Raʾs al Ghul of his survival, forcing Malcolm to flee Starling City. During Slade Wilson's attack on the city, Malcolm returns to save Thea from the Mirakuru soldiers and they leave the city.
Season three[edit]
In season three, Malcolm is revealed to have trained Thea to be a warrior in Corto Maltese. Despite being both the League's target and a fugitive of the law, Malcolm secretly returns to Starling City, using personal wealth and resources following the loss of his company. Under an alias, Malcolm purchases the foundry from Queen Consolidated, the site of Thea's nightclub, Verdant. It is revealed that his name in the League of Assassins is "Al Sa-Her" (الساحر), which translates to "The Magician". He continues to train Thea until she can defeat him in combat. Malcolm plots the death of Raʾs to eliminate his blood debt, and manipulates Thea into killing Sara so that Oliver will take the fall for her murder and challenge Raʾs to a duel; this plan fails and almost gets Oliver killed. Malcolm learns that crime lord Danny Brickwell was responsible for the murder of his wife, but Oliver persuades him to choose justice over vengeance for Thea's sake, allowing Brickwell to be tried for his crimes. Malcolm trains Oliver in swordplay in preparation of battling Raʾs together. When Oliver tells Thea that Malcolm brainwashed her into killing Sara, she betrays Malcolm to the League; he is captured and tortured but freed from Nanda Parbat when Oliver takes the place of Raʾs. After Thea is killed by Raʾs, Malcolm accompanies Oliver to Nanda Parbat to revive her but Oliver is forced to join the League. Malcolm secretly works with Oliver to cripple the League from within and stop the plan of Raʾs to unleash the Alpha/Omega bio-weapon on Starling City. Malcolm leads Team Arrow to save the city until Oliver's return. After Raʾs is killed by Oliver in a final sword fight, he passes leadership of the League to Malcolm, which Nyssa suspects had been Malcolm's scheme all along. Despite their renewed animosity, both Malcolm and Oliver harbor deep respect for each other: Malcolm regards Oliver as a surrogate son and Oliver himself remembers the man Malcolm was before the death of his wife.
Season four[edit]
In season four, Malcolm helps Laurel Lance resurrect Sara in order to settle his family's blood debt with Laurel, and helps Thea control her bloodlust. He provides information to Oliver and Barry Allen about Vandal Savage. To keep Darhk from learning Oliver's secret, Malcolm masquerades as Green Arrow. However, despite occasionally helping Oliver, Malcolm remains an amoral man and is despised by Oliver's team and their allies. Malcolm's aid to Oliver is either for protecting Thea or for his own agendas. Malcolm ultimately loses both his left hand and his power after Nyssa wins the League's leadership with Oliver's help, leading Malcolm to align himself with Damien Darhk for revenge against Oliver. In the process, Malcolm reveals Oliver's secrets to Darhk. As a result, Darhk makes Malcolm a H.I.V.E. member and provides a cybernetic prosthesis. In order to protect himself and Thea from Damien's plans, Malcolm steals Damien's idol, working with Andy Diggle, which results in Laurel's death. Malcolm remains a leader to disbanded remnants of the League, and with them he forms its splinter faction the Thanatos Guild. Malcolm allies with Team Arrow again when Darhk tries to destroy the world without the means to survive it.
Season five[edit]
In season five, an illusion of Malcolm appears in the Dominators' dream world and opposes Oliver, Thea, John, Ray and Sara when they try to leave, but is swiftly killed by Thea. Malcolm appears in flashbacks working with Konstantin Kovar, giving him Sarin gas in exchange for the means to acquire information on Unidac Industries to build the earthquake device. Malcolm returns in the penultimate episode of season five, offering Oliver his assistance in saving his friends, most importantly Thea. After Malcolm frees Thea, Felicity, Curtis and Samantha, Thea accidentally steps on a landmine. As Digger Harkness approaches them, Malcolm takes Thea's place, telling the others to run. As they run, the landmine is seen exploding in the distance, killing both Malcolm and Harkness.
Legends of Tomorrow[edit]
Malcolm Merlyn first appears in the episode "The Chicago Way" where he is recruited into the Legion of Doom by Eobard Thawne and Damien Dahrk. Malcolm goes to Los Angles, California and kidnaps Rip Hunter to interrogate him for the location of the Spear of Destiny. However Rip had lost his memory so instead the Legion brainwash him corrupting him to their side. Malcolm along side the Legion went after the Spear of Destiny. Ultimately they were successful and rewrite reality creating Doomworld. However the Legends go back in time in an effort to stop the Legion, they succeed and Merlyn is returned to Star City.
Creation and development[edit]
On August 15, 2012 it was announced that John Barrowman would be playing an unspecified role in Arrow.[4] The character served as the main villain of Arrow season 1,[5] Barrowman played the character in a reoccuring role for the first two seasons before being promoted to a series regular for season 3 and 4.[6] Entering the fifth season of Arrow, Barrowman signed a deal allowing him to appear across all Arrowverse shows.[7] Through this deal he appeared as one of the main villains in Legends of Tomorrow season 2.[8] Malcolm Meryln was killed off in the Arrow season five finale, "Lian Yu", promting Barrowman to exit the show remaining absent in the sixth season.[9][10] He returned for a guest appearances in the final two seasons in the epsidoes "Elseworlds, Part 2" and "Starling City" respectively.[11][12]
Other versions[edit]
- In the season eight episode "Starling City", an Earth-2 version of Malcolm Merlyn appears also played by John Barrowman.[12] This version was married to Moira Queen.
Reception[edit]
Malcolm Merlyn is considered one of the best Arrowverse villains and was unimasly praised by both critics and fans. In a CBR ranking of all of Arrow's main vilians Matthew Sonnack placed Merlyn at 3,[13] while WhatCulture's Lee Clarke placed him higher at one. In a Screen Rant ranking of the top ten Arrowverse villains the character landed at number 9.[14]
When the character was killed off in the season five finale, "Lian Yu" there was speculation on how he could potentially return.[15][16]
In other media[edit]
- Malcolm Merlyn is an adaptation of an established comic character Merlyn.[17]
- Malcolm Merlyn also features in the tie-in novel Arrow: Vengeance and Arrow: Generation of Vipers which released on February 23, 2016 and March 28, 2017. respectively The novel focuses on events from the first, second, sixth and fifth seasons of Arrow.
- Malcolm Merlyn appears in Lego Batman 3: Beyond Gotham via the Arrow DLC[18][19] as well as its spin-off Lego DC Super Villains.The latter of which features John Barrowman reprising his role.[20] The character is part of the main story line of Lego DC Super Villains as a member of the the Legion of Doom.
- Malcolm Merlyn is the lead character of the supplementary comic book series, Arrow: The Dark Archer. The series was co-written by John Barrowman and his sister Carole Barrowman. The series focused on fleshing out the character and writing his backstory.[21]
Merchandise[edit]
Malcolm Merlyn has received a total of 5 figures.
- Two from DC Collectibles, with one as the Dark Archer and an unmasked variant.[22]
- One POP! vinyl from Funko released as a 2016 San Diego Comic-Con exclusive POP! vinyl figure.[23]
- One Gamestop exclusive Dorbz viynl figure, released October 9, 2016.[24]
Notes[edit]
- ↑ Oliver later renames himself to the Arrow and then the Green Arrow.
References[edit]
- ↑ Stome, Sam (October 2015). "No. Always 'The Canary'". CBR. Retrieved June 11, 2023. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ Renaud, Jeffrey (2016-01-14). "John & Carole Barrowman Target Merlyn's Past in "Arrow: Dark Archer" and "The Magician" Comic". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on April 16, 2016. Retrieved 2023-06-11. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ Rullo, Sam (2015-05-15). "Malcolm Merlyn Gets A Scary New Role On 'Arrow'". Bustle. Retrieved June 11, 2023. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ "'Torchwood' Star Joins 'Arrow'... as Count Vertigo?". ScreenRant. 2012-08-16. Retrieved 2023-06-11.
- ↑ "The 4: Season 1 'Arrow' Villains". www.cbsnews.com. 2013-08-01. Retrieved 2023-06-11.
- ↑ Ng, Philiana (2014-05-15). "'Arrow': John Barrowman Promoted to Series Regular for Season 3". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2023-06-11.
- ↑ Mitovich, Matt Webb (2016-07-08). "Arrow's John Barrowman Now a Series Regular Across All CW/DC Shows". TVLine. Retrieved 2023-06-11.
- ↑ Chrysostomou, George (2021-06-05). "Legends of Tomorrow: Every Main Villain, Ranked By Power". ScreenRant. Retrieved 2023-06-11.
- ↑ Orquiola, John (2017-05-26). "What [SPOILER]'s Death Means For Arrow Season 6". ScreenRant. Retrieved 2023-06-11.
- ↑ "What Really Happened To Malcolm Merlyn In The 'Arrow' Season 5 Finale?". Geeks. Retrieved 2023-06-11.
- ↑ published, Mick Joest (2018-11-11). "John Barrowman Confirms Return In Arrow Season 7". CINEMABLEND. Retrieved 2023-06-11.
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 Atkinson, John (2019-08-19). "Arrow Season 8: John Barrowman Reprising Dark Archer Role". ScreenRant. Retrieved 2023-06-11.
- ↑ Sonnack, Matthew (2022-01-01). "Arrow's Main Villains, Ranked From Worst to Best". CBR. Retrieved 2023-06-13.
- ↑ "Arrowverse: 10 Best Villains Ranked". ScreenRant. 2019-12-15. Retrieved 2023-06-13.
- ↑ Fransico, Eric (2018-11-12). "'Arrow' Season 7 Spoilers: 3 Ways Malcolm Merlyn/John Barrowman May Return". Inverse. Retrieved 2023-06-13.
- ↑ Kelly, Autumn Noel (2018-11-12). "Six Ways Malcolm Merlyn Could Return to 'Arrow'". Newsweek. Retrieved 2023-06-13.
- ↑ Mitovich, Matt Webb (2012-12-05). "Arrow's Stephen Amell on the 'Most Nefarious' Malcolm Merlyn, Meeting the Real Deathstroke". TVLine. Retrieved 2023-06-13.
- ↑ "Arrow DLC For Lego Batman 3 Gets A Cute Trailer That Stars Stephen Amell". 14 January 2015. Retrieved 30 March 2018.
- ↑ @LEGODCGame (11 October 2014). "Proudly introducing the @CW_Arrow DLC pack with Stephen Amell! @amellywood #LEGOBatmanGame" (Tweet). Retrieved 30 March 2018 – via Twitter.
- ↑ @JoeWritesThis (22 July 2018). "Special thanks to the super-awesome @JohnBarrowman for providing the voice of Malcolm Merlyn in @LEGODCGame. ^_^ #LEGODCSuperVillains" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ↑ Towers, Andrea (2016-01-13). "'Arrow' star tackles Malcolm Merlyn's story in new comic". EW.com. Retrieved 2023-06-13. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ Steinbeiser, Andrew (July 8, 2015). "New Arrow and Flash Action Figures Revealed". Comicbook.com. Retrieved 2023-06-11.
- ↑ "Funko Pop TV: Arrow - Malcolm Merlyn 2016 SDCC Exclusive Vinyl Figure". Amazon. Retrieved 2023-06-11. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ "Dorbz Arrow Malcolm Merlyn GameStop Exclusive #199". Amazon. Retrieved 2023-06-11.
Further reading[edit]
- Garbio, Amber (2015-06-15). "Malcolm Merlyn". Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - D'Andria, Nicole (2015-10-09). "Arrow: 15 Facts You Didn't Know About Malcolm Merlyn". ScreenRant. Retrieved 2023-06-13. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help)
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