The initial excitement over "Heroes Reborn" had not sustained for the remainder of the season. However, despite NBC's cancellation of the series, reports surfaced that Heroes creator Tim Kring had plans on ready for "Heroes Reborn" Season 2. Now, with NBC's discontinued hosting, Heroes Reborn Season 2 may find its way in a non-television platform.
Digital Spy reports that Sendhil Ramamurthy, who played Dr Mohinder Suresh in "Heroes Reborn," had a few things to say about where "Heroes Reborn" Season 2 would have gone had NBC kept the series. Ramamurthy revealed that that his character, which he reprised from the original Heroes series and which appeared to have been killed off in Heroes Reborn Season 1, was slated to return in "Heroes Reborn Season 2." Ramamurthy also said that Kring may still keep Heroes Reborn alive even without NBC.
"I think if it had done amazingly well, he would've tried to come up with some more story - but I think he has other plans for it now," Ramamurthy related "Not necessarily on television, but using different platforms. I'm not quite sure where he's heading with all that."
Ramamurthy, who has been cast for Stan Lee's "Lucky Man," had had to juggle filming between "Heroes Reborn" and "Lucky Man." TV Series Finale reports that because of the limitations this imposed on Ramamurthy's time, Dr. Mohinder Suresh had to be relegated to a smaller appearances.
"I had signed on for 'Lucky Man' already and they had this quite big arc written for me - Tim Kring had pitched this huge big arc for my character on 'Heroes Reborn,' so I was a little bit heartbroken," Ramamurthy said. "They worked it out so I was flying back and forth between London and Toronto for the entire summer - shooting two TV series at the same time!"
"I flew back and forth three times to shoot my little... extended cameos, really, is what we were able to work out, time-wise," Ramamurthy continued. "So it wasn't the arc that was planned for Dr Suresh to come back to Heroes, but I was just really grateful to be able to be a part of it at all."