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Season Three is the third season of the CW television series The 100. It consisted of sixteen episodes. It premiered on January 21, 2016 and concluded on May 19, 2016. It was announced on January 11, 2015[1]. Filming started on July 15, 2015[2]. The first episode of the season was "Wanheda (Part 1)." The season finale was "Perverse Instantiation (Part 2)."

Synopsis

For two seasons, the refugees of The 100 sent to Earth have been at war. First with themselves, then with the Grounders, and finally with Mount Weather. Many have lost their lives along the way. All have lost their innocence. They have learned the hard way that in the fight for survival, there are no heroes and no villains. There is only the living and the dead. But now the war is over. The battle against Mount Weather has been won. The prisoners have returned home to a world seemingly at peace, but can they find peace within themselves after what they had to do to escape? And is there more to life than just surviving? Unfortunately, their newfound sense of normalcy will be short-lived, and their lives will be changed forever, as threats both old and new test their loyalties, push them past their limits, and make them question what it truly means to be human. First, they fought to survive. Then, they fought for their friends. Now, they will fight for the human race.[3]

Cast and Characters

Main article: Character Appearances

Starring

Guest Starring

Episodes

Main article: Episode Guide

Body Count

Main article: Body Count

Note: The total body count for the season cannot be determined. The following information is only what has been confirmed. For a more accurate and specific representation of the season's body count, see the Body Count article.

Episode Body Count
"Wanheda (Part 1)" 3
"Wanheda (Part 2)" 5
"Ye Who Enter Here" 42
"Watch the Thrones" 1
"Hakeldama" 300+
"Bitter Harvest" 2
"Thirteen" 7,000,000,002
"Terms and Conditions" 2
"Stealing Fire" 9
"Fallen" 4
"Nevermore" 1
"Demons" 2
"Join or Die" TBD
"Red Sky at Morning" 8
"Perverse Instantiation (Part 1)" 9
"Perverse Instantiation (Part 2)" TBD

Air Dates

Country Channel Premiere Finale
United States The CW January 21, 2016 (9/8c PM) May 19, 2016
Spain Syfy Spain January 28, 2016 May 27, 2016
United Kingdom E4 February 17, 2016 (9 PM) June 3, 2016 
Australia Fox 8 February 3, 2016 (8:30 PM) May 18, 2016
Germany ProSieben July 27, 2016 (10:30 PM) November 9, 2016 
France Syfy France November 15, 2016 March 8, 2017

Promotional

Pictures

Note: This section is meant for anything but episode stills. Please check out the episode page's gallery to see episode stills and screencaps.

Video

Comic-Con

The 100 appeared in a panel in Comic-Con 2015. The following people were in attendance:


Videos from Comic-Con:

Notes and Trivia

  • Julia Benson and Shawna Benson joined the writing staff.[4]
    • Layne Morgan also joined the writing staff.[citation needed]
  • April 6, 2015 was the first day of writing Season Three.[5]
    • Episode 3x02 was being written on June 19, 2015.[citation needed]
  • On May 12, 2015, it was announced that Richard Harmon will return as series regular.[6]
  • July 15, 2015 was the first day of production for Season Three.[7] They finished on January 29, 2016.[8]
  • Season 3 premiered on American Netflix on November 16, 2016.
  • Season 3 was initially supposed to be 13 episodes. However, partially through filming the crew found out it would be 16 episodes, thus a lot needed to be rewritten.[9]
  • After the finale, there were 44 deliquents remaining. 2 deliquents died during season 3.
  • As of "Terms and Conditions" there is not one star on the show to be in every episode.
  • Clarke Griffin is the only one main character to seen in Season 3 poster.
  • This is first season where Eliza Taylor (Clarke Griffin), Bob Morley (Bellamy Blake), and Marie Avgeropoulos (Octavia Blake) did not appear in every episode. Bob was absent from "Thirteen", while Eliza and Marie were absent from "Terms and Conditions".
  • This season has the highest number of deaths in the series. A flashback in "Thirteen" shows the first nuclear apocalypse which killed approximately 6.5 billion people.

See Also

References

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