Smallville has generated other media and spin-offs, from young-adult novels and comic books to Internet-based mini-episodes with characters from the series. It influenced the British TV series,
Merlin.
Literature Two series of novels have been published since
Smallvilles second season. A series of eight young-adult novels was published by
Aspect Publishing from October 2002 to March 2004, and a second series of ten young-adult novels was published by
Little, Brown Young Readers from October 2002 to April 2004. A bimonthly comic book series, which often tied into the series, was also published.
Young adult novels Three novels were published on October 1, 2002: one by Aspect and two by Little, Brown Young Readers. The Aspect novel (
Smallville: Strange Visitors) was written by
Roger Stern, with Clark and his friends trying to uncover the truth about two religious con men who set up shop in Smallville and use kryptonite in their spiritual seminars to rob the townspeople. Little, Brown Young Readers first published
Arrival by Michael Teitelbaum, chronicling the
series' pilot. The second novel (
See No Evil, by series writers
Cherie Bennett and
Jeff Gottesfeld) follows Dawn Mills, a young actress who wants to attend
Juilliard. Dawn, who can become invisible, wants to get revenge on the people who have been talking behind her back but is stopped by Clark.
See No Evil was one of the original storylines for season one's "Shimmer". On November 1, 2002, Aspect published
Alan Grant's Smallville: Dragon, about an ex-convict who assumes the abilities and appearance of a dragon after he is exposed to kryptonite in a cave; the mutation drives him to try to kill everyone who testified against him. In the novel, Clark is hypnotized into believing that he is a normal teenager with no special abilities. A month after the publication of Grant's novel, Bennett and Gottesfeld wrote Little, Brown Young Readers'
Flight, about a young girl (Tia) who Clark discovers has wings. He and his friends believe that Tia is being abused by her father, and teach her to overcome her fear of flying so she can find her mother.
Flight (like
See No Evil) was a planned episode, but the crew was uncertain that they could get the flying effects right and the idea was scrapped. Nancy Holder wrote the third novel in the Aspect series. Published on January 1, 2003,
Hauntings follows Clark and his friends as they investigate a ghostly presence in a Smallville house. Little, Brown Young Readers then published
Animal Rage by David Cody Weiss and Bobbi Weiss, about animal-rights activist Heather Fox (who can change into any animal she touches). Heather uses this ability to harm people who hurt animals until Clark discovers it and stops her. Aspect published
Dean Wesley Smith's
Whodunit, in which Clark, Chloe, Lana and Pete investigate the murder of a boy and his sister while Lex tries to decide whether to ransom his kidnapped father or try rescuing Lionel himself. Little, Brown Young Readers published the next two books in April and June 2003. The first,
Speed, was written by Cherie Bennett and Jeff Gottesfeld. In it, a boy uses an hourglass his father gave him for his birthday to stop time and commit hate crimes without being caught. Clark stops him before he disrupts a local multicultural festival. The second,
Buried Secrets, was written by Suzan Colón. In it, Clark and Lex fall in love with a mind-reading substitute Spanish teacher, jeopardizing their friendship. On September 9, 2003, Aspect published
Diana G. Gallagher's
Shadows, about a girl and her father who move to Smallville; the father creates murderous monsters. Jonathan assumes that the deaths are related to LuthorCorp, creating tension with his son. Clark discovers the truth to prove Lex's innocence, stopping the creatures before they can kill again. Colón returned to write
Runaway, in which Clark runs away to the city and lives with other homeless teenagers; he falls in love with one of the girls before returning home. In
Smallville: Silence by Nancy Holder, the characters investigate zombies in town. Little, Brown Young Readers published its eighth book,
Greed, by Bennett and Gottesfeld in which Clark and his friends take summer jobs as counselors at a camp for disadvantaged youths. When a boy falls into Crater Lake, he develops the ability to foretell the future and Lionel tries to exploit this. Pete also tries to exploit Clark's abilities by tricking him into playing in a basketball game and betting on the outcome. Alan Grant returned to write
Curse, about a gravedigger who unleashes a 150-year-old curse onto Smallville and Clark's attempts to put things right. On February 1, 2004 Little, Brown Young Readers published Suzan Colón's
Temptation, where Clark uses red kryptonite in an attempt to impress Lana and Chloe when they are infatuated with a French exchange student. Aspect published its final novel on March 1, 2004. Written by
Devin K. Grayson,
City follows Clark and Lex on a trip to Metropolis. In the city, they are caught between the Japanese Yakuza and a secret agent who thinks he has found an alien. In Little, Brown Young Readers' final novel, "Sparks" by Cherie Bennett and Jeff Gottesfeld, Chloe is hit by kryptonite sparks from a fireworks display. The sparks make Chloe the desire of every man, but when they wear off an admirer kidnaps her and she is rescued by Clark.
Comic books Seasonal extensions Smallvilles first venture into comics was "Elemental", a one-off story by Gough and Millar which appeared in
TV Guide during the series' first season and set in that period. Before the start of season two,
DC Comics published a one-off comic based on the series. Titled
Smallville: The Comic, it has two stories. The first, "Raptor" by
Mark Verheiden and Roy Martinez, is about an abused boy who mutates into a
velociraptor (thanks to kryptonite) and tries to get revenge on the Luthor family.
Michael Green and
John Paul Leon wrote "Exile and The Kingdom", with insight into why Lex remains in Smallville after his father offers him a position in Metropolis at the end of season one. DC Comics then began publishing a bimonthly comic with stories about
Smallville characters. Writer and script coordinator Clint Carpenter called the comic a companion to the series rather than a non-canonical version. According to Carpenter, the series expands on events in the series (such as season-ending cliffhangers) and gives "additional depth" to characters with limited screen time on the series or whose storylines needed additional explanation. Carpenter was not the first person asked to oversee the comic; Mark Verheiden, who co-wrote the one-off comic, was originally intended to be in charge of the bimonthly series. Verheiden's commitment to the TV series kept him from working on the comic books, so he asked Carpenter to take them on. Although the comic book was intended to expand on the TV series, there was an occasional continuity overlap because of differences in production schedule between the comic and the series. In one instance, the comic book showed Clark robbing an ATM and the season-three premiere showed him robbing multiple ATMs. and
Smallville-related webpages, The comic series ended in January 2005 with #11, with no comics published until the Season Eleven series debut.
Smallville Season Eleven The first digital issue of a
Smallville Season Eleven comic book was released on April 13, 2012; the first print issue was published on May 2. In the comic book (written by
Smallville executive story editor
Bryan Q. Miller), set six months after Darkseid's attack, Clark no longer fights crime as "The Blur" but as "Superman". Although Clark is generally accepted by the public, some distrust him (including Lex Luthor, despite his memory loss after his encounter with Tess Mercer), and this worsens when he reveals himself as extraterrestrial. "Detective", a new series of adventures paralleling the TV series and the comic series' second arc, was published digitally on the title's off-week beginning January 4, 2013. A new arc, "Effigy", features a team-up of recurring character
John Jones and
Batman. DC Comics cancelled the series after nineteen issues at the end of the "Olympus" story arc, with the rest of the season-eleven story continuing as miniseries under the
Season Eleven banner. In November 2014,
Season Eleven concluded with the story arc "Continuity".
Main series Interlude series Chloe Chronicles Allison Mack's character, Chloe Sullivan, has starred in two promotional tie-in series:
Smallville: Chloe Chronicles, and
Vengeance Chronicles. Two volumes of
Chloe Chronicles totaled eleven mini-episodes. In the first volume Chloe investigated events leading to the death of Earl Jenkins, who held Chloe and her friends hostage at the LuthorCorp plant in the first-season episode "
Jitters". It aired from April 29 to May 20, 2003 to AOL subscribers. The later series,
Vengeance Chronicles, is a spin-off of the fifth-season episode "
Vengeance". In this series Chloe joins a costumed vigilante, whom she calls the "
Angel of Vengeance", to expose Lex Luthor's Level 33.1 experiments on meteor-infected people. The idea for an online show about Chloe originated with Mark Warshaw, who ran the show's website and was in charge of the DVDs. The series intended to wrap up "unfinished business" from the television show. Allison Mack described the show as "very
Nancy Drew and mysterious": "I think it's a bit more like
The X-Files or
NYPD Blue. The
Chronicles are like a detective story, with Chloe following clues and interviewing people, going from spot to spot, figuring things out". The scripts were written by Brice Tidwell; Mack was given script approval for the series, allowing her to review and make changes to the script. Warshaw communicated with Gough and Millar to expand
Smallville stories in ''Chloe's Chronicles
. Smallville Legends: The Oliver Queen Chronicles
, a six-episode CGI series which chronicled the early life of Oliver Queen/Green Arrow, was released in a promotional tie-in with Sprint. According to Warner Bros. Television Group executive vice-president of worldwide marketing Lisa Gregorian, the promotional tie-ins got fans more connected to the show. In April 2007 a tie-in with Toyota promoting the Toyota Yaris featured an online comic strip, Smallville Legends: Justice & Doom
, as an interstitial program during new Smallville
episodes. The interactive comic was based on the "Justice" episode, which follows Oliver Queen, Bart Allen, Victor Stone and Arthur Curry (the initial members of the "Justice League" in Smallville'') as they seek to destroy LuthorCorp's secret experimental labs. The online series allowed viewers to investigate with the fictional team to win prizes. Stephan Nilson wrote all five episodes, working with a team of artists on the illustrations. Nilson received the plot for each comic episode as
Smallvilles production crew was filming its current television episode. Artist
Steve Scott drew comic book panels which were sent to Motherland, a consulting group. Motherland reviewed the drawings, telling Scott which images to draw on a separate overlay; this allowed objects to be moved in and out of a frame. In 2008 The CW joined the manufacturers of
Stride gum to give viewers an opportunity to create their own
Smallville digital comic,
Smallville: Visions. The writers and producers developed the comic's beginning and end, allowing viewers to provide the middle. The CW began its tie-in campaign with the March 13, 2008 episode "
Hero", where Pete develops superhuman elasticity after chewing kryptonite-infused Stride gum. On The CW's website, viewers voted on one of two options (each adding four pages to the comic) every Tuesday and Thursday until the campaign ended on April 7. In
season seven Smallville again worked with Sprint, bringing its customers "mobisodes" titled
Smallville Legends: Kara and the Chronicles of Krypton with Clark's cousin Kara.
Spin-offs Gough and Millar developed an
Aquaman pilot for the WB, with
Justin Hartley as
Aquaman (Arthur Curry). As work progressed on the
Smallville season-five episode "Aqua", although the episode was not intended as a
backdoor pilot for an
Aquaman spin-off the character was seen as having potential for his own series. Although the pilot was given a good chance of being picked up, when the WB and
UPN merged into The CW the new network passed on the show. During the sixth season there was talk of spinning off the
Green Arrow into his own series, but Hartley refused to talk about the possibility of a spin-off because of his role on
Smallville. The actor felt it his duty to respect what the show had accomplished in five seasons, and not "steal the spotlight" because there was "talk" of a spin-off after his two appearances. According to Hartley, "talking" was as far as the spin-off idea ever got. Steven DeKnight revealed that a spin-off Justice League series was expected to happen after the episode "Justice", and would have continued the story of Oliver and his new team.
Arrowverse Tom Welling and Erica Durance reprised their roles as Clark Kent and Lois Lane for the
Arrowverse crossover event "
Crisis on Infinite Earths". The crossover retroactively establishes the events of
Smallville as taking place on Earth-167 and depicts a Clark who has given up his powers and taken over the Kent farm, where he and Lois raise their two daughters. While discussing the
Smallville episode "Persona" in 2025, Welling provided some context to Clark's powerless state in the crossover. According to him, Clark was using Blue Kryptonite, like Dax-Ur in "Persona". Within the context of
Smallville, Blue Kryptonite strips a Kryptonian of their powers as long as they are exposed to it. In "Persona", Dax-Ur wore a piece of Blue Kryptonite in a bracelet. If the bracelet was removed, his powers would instantly return. In the
Crisis Aftermath aftershow,
Marc Guggenheim describes the scene as ten years after the viewers last saw Welling's Clark and Durance's Lois. Chronologically, the last appearance of them had been in 2018 in the series finale. Michael Rosenbaum was approached about reprising his role as Lex Luthor, but he declined when Warner Bros. did not show him a script, tell him what his character was going to do, nor let him know when he was going to film (it was referred in the scene that Lex was President). Alan Ritchson, who played Arthur Curry / Aquaman on the series, was also approached to reprise his role in the crossover but turned it down due to scheduling commitments with
Titans. Despite this, Ritchson did make an uncredited cameo appearance in the crossover as his
Titans character,
Hank Hall / Hawk, through archival footage from that series. In the
Titans episode "Dude, Where's My Gar?",
Gar Logan (Beast Boy) travels this new multiverse. After briefly visiting Earth-2 (the universe of
Stargirl), he continues traveling the multiverse, where he sees or hears different universes (represented by archival footage or audio) inhabited by
Christopher Reeve's
Superman,
Adam West's
Batman, the
DC Extended Universe,
Swamp Thing (2019),
Smallville, among others. With
Smallville, no footage is shown. Only the voice of Dr. Fate saying that Clark's fate is "binding."
Possible animated series revival In 2021, Tom Welling and his
Smallville co-star Michael Rosenbaum were developing an animated series revival to the series and hoped to "use as many of the original cast members as possible". He and Rosenbaum were preparing a pitch of the series for Warner Bros., and they delivered to them in January 2022. John Glover, Sam Jones III, Kristin Kreuk and Erica Durance, and original series showrunners, Gough and Millar, were said to return, with the exception of Allison Mack due to sex trafficking charges made against her for which she was convicted and imprisoned. The series was said to be in some stage of pre-production or production, but still alive, according to Durance. ==Home media==