Totenkindly
@.~*virinaĉo*~.@
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Supergirl pilot leaks, good news! | Polygon
This is supposed to come out in November on CBS.
A copy of it "leaked" last week onto the Internet (it isn't clear whether it was a true leak or a purposeful promotional stunt by the studio), so I happened to watch that over the weekend.
Overall, I liked it.
It's not quite as serious / intent as Game of Thrones or Daredevil, but not quite as cheesy like Hercules/Xena. It operates somewhere in-between the two, on a more casual level.
I think Melissa Benoist does a decent job in the title role, as a young woman who means well but doesn't necessarily have it all together. It does seem to VERY MUCH target the teen girl and young adult women viewer market (to me).
I think one thing that works is that it brings more light and positive into a superhero genre that is dominated by grit and darkness at the moment. I appreciate this darker shift when it occurred, but it's still okay to have more positive/upbeat movies and shows as well. "Man of Steel" took a lot of complaints in this regard, and I think Supergirl actually is one attempt to take things in a brighter direction as far as orphans of Krypton go.
The pilot doesn't really get hung up on backstory much. Kara knows who she is, and we SEE who she is in the first five minutes and then the show just keeps moving right along.
I thought the special effects and fights were pretty decent for network TV, tbh. And she does get tossed around. That's another angle that we often don't see. Yeah, she's pretty invulnerable, and she's really strong, but she lacks any real fighting experience... so once she starts tangling with someone who knows what he's doing, she just gets trounced pretty badly. She needs to hone her skills, versus just relying on innate ability.
(... and yes, she does save a plane... but considering she didn't know what the heck she was doing, it was pretty cool.)
I'm not sure how the show will pan out long-term. It depends on the direction they take it and the tone they persist with. The current high-concept plot involves
Superman doesn't really appear, but he's mentioned multiple times as if he is part of the continuity.
This is supposed to come out in November on CBS.
A copy of it "leaked" last week onto the Internet (it isn't clear whether it was a true leak or a purposeful promotional stunt by the studio), so I happened to watch that over the weekend.
Overall, I liked it.
It's not quite as serious / intent as Game of Thrones or Daredevil, but not quite as cheesy like Hercules/Xena. It operates somewhere in-between the two, on a more casual level.
I think Melissa Benoist does a decent job in the title role, as a young woman who means well but doesn't necessarily have it all together. It does seem to VERY MUCH target the teen girl and young adult women viewer market (to me).
I think one thing that works is that it brings more light and positive into a superhero genre that is dominated by grit and darkness at the moment. I appreciate this darker shift when it occurred, but it's still okay to have more positive/upbeat movies and shows as well. "Man of Steel" took a lot of complaints in this regard, and I think Supergirl actually is one attempt to take things in a brighter direction as far as orphans of Krypton go.
The pilot doesn't really get hung up on backstory much. Kara knows who she is, and we SEE who she is in the first five minutes and then the show just keeps moving right along.
I thought the special effects and fights were pretty decent for network TV, tbh. And she does get tossed around. That's another angle that we often don't see. Yeah, she's pretty invulnerable, and she's really strong, but she lacks any real fighting experience... so once she starts tangling with someone who knows what he's doing, she just gets trounced pretty badly. She needs to hone her skills, versus just relying on innate ability.
(... and yes, she does save a plane... but considering she didn't know what the heck she was doing, it was pretty cool.)
I'm not sure how the show will pan out long-term. It depends on the direction they take it and the tone they persist with. The current high-concept plot involves
a bunch of criminals having escaped from the Phantom Zone along with Kara, when her ship got free, and as it turns out her mom was the judge who put them away, so as part of their vengeance on her dead mother, they would like to punish her. And there's also the issue of a particular relative who apparently is still alive as well and is a criminal...
Superman doesn't really appear, but he's mentioned multiple times as if he is part of the continuity.
