When heroes alone are not enough ... the world needs legends. Having seen the future, one he will desperately try to prevent from happening, time-traveling rogue Rip Hunter is tasked with assembling a disparate group of both heroes and villains to confront an unstoppable threat — one in which not only is the planet at stake, but all of time itself. Can this ragtag team defeat an immortal threat unlike anything they have ever known?
This tv show contains 47 potentially triggering events.
Notably in this episode where a bunch of Vikings worship a toy accidentally sent back in time as their God. One noteworthy thing that might raise some eyebrows is that they technically convert said Vikings to Christianity if only did the sake of keeping the timeline consistent…which is ironically not historically accurate as Christmas was originally a pagan holiday that was commodified by the church
In one episode, Snart describes how his father started abusing him, his sister, and his mother. We don't see the abuse, and it is not the first time this character discusses his abusive father in the Flash/DC's Legends universe.
There is no shown abuse, however it is implied that one character was, and another goes back in time to warn his past self about his father abusing him, and to stay strong. He also makes attempts to stop his father from abusing his child self.
One of the main characters is drinking beer more often than not. He will drink other alcoholic drinks, too. There is some casual drinking on the ship as well. An underaged character (<21) is served one drink of vodka (or similar liquor) under the justification of "the drinking age here is 12". In the first episode, this character is also roofied with a drug (that we don't see put in the drink, but it immediately knocks him out) in a brown (supposedly) liquor.
No - in fact, we see a dragon hatch and grow up! In early scenes the baby dragon is playing around, later the dragon is ordered around by an evil witch but refuses to harm the person who hatched and raised it.
Not in the usual sense, but [SPOILERS] in season 4 Ray is possessed by Neron, who while trying to torture Constantine, attempts to slit Ray’s wrist. When Constantine stops him, Neron slashes Ray’s throat, but it is quickly healed. Additionally, in season 1 a character cuts a message into themselves in order for it to appear in his counter-parts body.
A character is a "burning man" who is on fire. He sprays fire at opponents, and while we don't see them graphically burning, it is assumed that they are burned.
In episode nine of season one Mr Snark, one of the main characters, freezes his hand to then breaks it off to get away from cuffs. The hand is restored later in the episode though you can see the stump. The restoration is detailed and takes time.
In episode six of season one there's a character with their arm completely cut off, but it happened a long time ago and off screen.
In the wild west, an outlaw/bounty hunter the team met in previous episodes is being hanged. He survives when someone shoots the rope and he falls out of the tree.
We see an unobstructed view of all of a character's hand bones (NOT an x-ray). He freezes off the hand and gets it regenerated. We see a close-up of the hand being "rebuilt" starting with a skeleton hand coming out of his flesh-arm and muscles/sinew is layered on top of it until the hand is completely regenerated.
A main character is kidnapped by an evil organisation and they attempt to brainwash him. Torture is used here. There are also many other occasions, such as a scene where guards torture main characters in a gulag.
In the first season, a flashback is often shown of the ship's captain's son and wife being killed/him sitting with their bodies. This is the motivation behind his actions.
In the first season, a flashback is often shown of the ship's captain's son and wife being killed/him sitting with their bodies. This is the motivation behind his actions. The mother dies while trying to protect her son.
The first episode opens with someone drugging and kidnapping his superhero partner and bringing him on the time ship when he said he didn't want to go. In a different episode, they kidnap a child who is destined to grow up to be evil. They don't physically harm him but talk of killing him. He is eventually returned to his father unharmed. In a sperate episode, they kidnap the villains adult daughter in an attempt to use her for information. In yet another episode, a main character takes his best friend into the woods against his will to kill him. We don't see him die, but it heavily suggested he is killed. In still another episode, a bounty hunter kidnaps a main character and threatens to kill his sister. So, yes - there is a lot of kidnapping.
In Amazing Grace in season 3 a death totem brings the dead out of their graves as ghosts, including Micks pet rat. These ghosts are real, unlike in another episode that season in which crew members think they are seeing ghosts of people they feel guilt about their deaths, but it is a trick and they aren't real.
Multiple characters are possessed throughout the show. [SPOILERS], Nora in s3, Sara in s3, Constantine is fairly regularly possessed as he works with the occult, Ray in s4, briefly Mick in s4, etc
A main character burns his own skin. This is discussed with another character in an episode, and he gives the other charcter the lighter he uses to do so. This is not discussed beyond the one episode.
Spoilers, of course:
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A character is stuck in a time loop and (after many times around and is mentally exhausted) puts a gun to her head and pulls the trigger, though the gun is empty.
No, but one character sacrifices himself to save his best friend, and other characters try to do this too, which would involve their death, but to stop the deaths of their team mates
In one episode, a character has just swallowed a vocal translator and to others, it appears he's speaking Russian. When they zoom in on his face to show that, to him, it sounds like he's speaking English, his face is blown-up and the background gets distorted. While the camera isn't shaking per se, it has a similar effect.
There are suggestive scenes in some of the episodes that involve people kissing on a bed. Intimate contact is implied, but not shown. More graphically, in a later season, one of the characters "creates" a three-breasted orc to have sex with on a Japanese film-set. By the reaction of the other people in the room, we can assume it's graphic and they run away in disgust.
S5, EP12: Charlie says something along the lines of “[whatever item they were talking about] is as real as Santa” and Nate says, “sh, Gary’s in the room.”
There's a car crash in episode 8 of season 1. Group of teenagers is having drunk car race. A wheel breaks and one of the cars runs off the road. Everybody lives, minor injuries.
The team accidentally activates a nuclear bomb after buying it in a terrorist action. One character flies it to a safe distance to absorb the explosion. In another episode, a n**i nuke sinks the team's ship. We see this in flashbacks at the start of one of the seasons.