Season 1 | Smallville
But the show’s secret weapon was Michael Rosenbaum as Lex Luthor. In any other iteration, Lex is a megalomaniacal businessman. In Smallville Season 1, he is a lonely, wealthy outcast who sees a kindred spirit in the farm boy who saved his life. Their friendship—built on lies, secrets, and genuine affection—is the tragic engine that drives the entire season. Watching Lex and Clark play chess in the mansion’s living room is more compelling than most superhero fight scenes. The plot engine of Season 1 is deliberately absurd—and wonderfully ’00s. When Clark’s spaceship crashed, it rained kryptonite-infused meteorites onto the town. For the next 21 episodes, every single week, a high school student or townsperson gets exposed to the rocks and develops a specific superpower. You get a human bug zapper. You get a girl who controls fog. You get a living magnet.
That changed on October 16, 2001. When Smallville premiered on The WB, it made a radical promise: “No flights, no tights.” For ten seasons, the show would ignore the cape and the city skyline, focusing instead on the teenage angst of a lonely alien hiding in plain sight. Season 1, however, remains the most fascinating experiment of the series—a strange, beautiful, and often melodramatic hybrid of Buffy the Vampire Slayer , Dawson’s Creek , and X-Files-style “freak of the week.” smallville season 1
Today, the Lana-obsession feels dated. The “will they/won’t they” drags. Kreuk does her best with material that often asks her to be a prize rather than a person. However, when the show lets her be angry—particularly regarding the secret of her parents’ death—she shines. Still, for every good Lana scene, there are three shots of Clark sighing in a loft. What elevates Season 1 above standard teen drama is its willingness to get dark. John Glover’s Lionel Luthor is a monstrous patriarch who chews scenery and destroys his son’s soul piece by piece. Annette O’Toole and John Schneider as Martha and Jonathan Kent provide the moral spine; they are the best parents in superhero fiction, offering tough love and unconditional acceptance. But the show’s secret weapon was Michael Rosenbaum
The season finale, Tempest , is a masterclass in escalation. A tornado, a betrayal, a secret revealed, and Lex walking away from his father’s corruption only to walk into the darkness of his own making. It ends not with a flight, but with a father’s desperate prayer: “I need you to trust me, son.” It’s raw, emotional, and utterly human. Does Smallville Season 1 hold up? Not entirely. The CGI is laughable (the tornado looks like a screen saver). The slow-motion football scenes are cheesy. The early 2000s soundtrack—filled with Creed, Eve 6, and Remy Zero’s iconic “Save Me”—is a time capsule. It’s the birth of a hero
For that reason alone, Season 1 is essential viewing. It’s the birth of a hero, one meteor freak at a time.