The lights have firmly gone out on Constantine, as showrunner Daniel Cerone has admitted the show is definitely not coming back.
Producers tried to find a new home for the show after NBC cancelled it after one season in May, but their efforts didn't pan out.
Cerone wrote the following message to Constantine fans on Sunday (June 7): "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 exceptionally talented crew that put unreal images on screen, to the original Hellblazer writers and artists who gifted us a universe."
He added: "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.
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"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."
The show's future was always surrounded by uncertainty, with the network only ordering 13 episodes for season one instead of 22.
Arrow's Stephen Amell tried to save the series by promising to make a guest appearance should it be picked up by another network.













