The Girl of Steel We Know
When you think of Supergirl, what comes to mind? For many, it’s a bright, optimistic hero, a beacon of hope not unlike her more famous cousin. Across film and television, from Helen Slater’s earnest portrayal to Melissa Benoist’s celebrated run on The
CW, Kara Zor-El has largely been defined by her struggle to find her place on Earth while living in Superman’s shadow. Her defining conflict is often external: fighting villains, protecting National City, and balancing a human life with a Kryptonian one. Her immense trauma—watching her home planet of Krypton shatter, being sent away in a ship, and arriving on a strange world years after her baby cousin has already grown up to become its greatest protector—is the inciting incident. It’s lore. It’s the ‘why’ she’s here, but it rarely feels like a persistent, internal 'what' that shapes her every action. Her grief is a fact stated in the prologue, not a ghost that haunts the narrative. We’re told she’s a survivor, but we rarely feel the crushing weight of what that truly means.
Enter the 'Woman of Tomorrow'
The upcoming DC Universe film, *Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow*, is poised to fundamentally shift this dynamic. The simple reason is its source material: the critically acclaimed 2021-2022 comic series of the same name by writer Tom King and artist Bilquis Evely. James Gunn, co-head of DC Studios, has described this version of Supergirl as “much more hardcore” and “not the Supergirl we’re used to seeing.” He’s not just talking about her fighting style. The comic opens on Kara’s 21st birthday. To celebrate, she flies to a distant planet with a red sun, which nullifies her powers. Her goal? To get legally drunk for the first time, away from the judgment of the Justice League, and try to forget the life she lost. This isn't a hero on patrol; this is a young woman wrestling with profound, unresolved pain. It's here that she meets a young alien girl named Ruthye, whose father has just been murdered, setting them both on a gritty, galaxy-spanning quest for vengeance and justice. The story isn't about saving Earth; it's about confronting the darkness of the universe, and the darkness within herself.
Pain as an Engine, Not a Backstory
This is the crucial difference. In *Woman of Tomorrow*, Kara’s trauma is no longer just lore; it's life. The story reframes her entire existence through the lens of survivorship. She wasn't a baby sent away from a dying world like Kal-El. She was a teenager who lived on Krypton, had friends, went to school, and watched it all burn. She remembers. And that memory fuels a simmering anger and a world-weariness that feels deeply earned. Throughout the comic, as she and Ruthye hunt the villain Krem, Kara’s narration contrasts the idyllic memories of her lost home with the brutal reality of the universe she now inhabits. She has seen civilizations rise and fall. She has fought cosmic horrors. Her hope isn't born of naivete; it's a conscious, difficult choice made in the face of overwhelming despair. Her pain isn't something she overcame in issue one. It's a constant companion, a source of both her cynicism and her incredible capacity for empathy toward others who have lost everything.
Moving Out of Superman's Shadow
By taking Kara off-world and pairing her with a non-superpowered companion, the story finally allows her to stand entirely on her own. She is no longer “Superman’s cousin.” She is Kara Zor-El, the last daughter of Argo City. Her perspective is unique. While Superman was raised by loving human parents and sees the best in humanity, Kara was raised in an advanced society and watched it turn to dust. She has every reason to be bitter, to see the universe as a cruel, random place. Her heroism, therefore, becomes more complex and arguably more potent. This is how the story makes her pain feel less like lore and more like life. It’s in the quiet moments: the way she talks about Kryptonian poetry, the bitterness in her voice when she discusses murderers, the fierce, almost terrifying protectiveness she feels for Ruthye. This is not a story about a god trying to be human. It’s about a refugee trying to find a reason to keep fighting in a universe that took everything from her.













