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Greetings again from the darkness. Craig Gillespie previously directed I, TONYA (2017) and LARS AND THE REAL GIRL (2007), among other projects, and it’s perhaps those two films – both featuring odd outsiders – that motivated producer James Gunn to choose him to helm the feature film that brings DC’s Supergirl back to the big screen. The screenplay is by Ana Nogueira, and of course features characters originated by Jerry Siegel and Joel Shuster, with the key source material being the comic, “Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow”.
Seeing as I’m neither a comic book fanatic nor a fan of the 1984 SUPERGIRL film starring Helen Slater (with the exception of Brenda Vaccaro’s performance), it’s safe to say I carried no heightened expectations into the theater. On the bright side, it’s quite entertaining to see Milly Alcock (“Sirens”, “House of the Dragon”) play Kara Zor-El as a not-so-Super girl trying to numb the pain of the tragedy that took her parents and home planet, Krypton. We see her younger days via periodic flashbacks with David Krumholtz and Emily Beecham as her parents. We also learn why they shipped her and her pet dog Krypto off to Earth to meet her cousin, Superman (David Corenswet) aka Clark Kent. He, of course, was raised in Kansas, creating the contrast between the two characters.
The one bit of advice mom gave Kara was to “be nice” and help others. That’s not so easy to do whilst on an intergalactic mind-numbing bender, but Kara continually rises to the occasion. The different effects of red sun and yellow sun become quite obvious, and it’s crossing paths with Ruthye (Eve Ridley) that drives the key story lines. An actor I’ve always admired, Matthias Schoenaerts, plays the face-studded vile villain Krem – the vicious dude who slaughtered Ruthye’s family, setting her off on a revenge mission, armed only with a prized sword handcrafted by her slain father. On this interplanetary road trip, Kara and Ruthye encounter a slew of aliens who all look like castoffs from the Star Wars casino … but also with Lobo, an immortal intergalactic bounty hunter and stogie smoking hog rider. Lobo is played by Jason Mamoa, and the character seems forcibly wedged into the story for the sole purpose of having Mr. Mamoa on a poster. He makes an excellent bad boy, even if he doesn’t really fit here.
Krypto the superdog plays near-dead for most of the film, but does have some excitable moments … creating an excellent ‘pink eye’ joke. Some may compare this to CAPTAIN MARVEL (2019) or the most recent SUPERMAN (2025), but the messy CGI fight scenes and weak story prevent this one from reaching those levels. Milly Alcock’s take on Supergirl gets too few chances to play against Corenswet’s Superman, and the film suffers because of it. Composer Claudia Sarne (THE BOOK OF ELI, 2010) delivers a fitting electronic score, but the needle drops seem to be trying too hard. It’s likely huge comic book fans will have a different take on the film, and that’s as it should be.
In theaters beginning June 26, 2026
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