A Necessary Contrast to Superman
For decades, Supergirl has often been framed simply as “Superman’s cousin” — a slightly younger, female version of the Man of Steel, sharing his powers and his fundamental optimism. But this framing misses the crucial, devastating difference in their
backstories. Clark Kent was an infant when Krypton exploded; his connection to his homeworld is one of abstract heritage. He was raised on Earth, imbued with Midwestern kindness. Kara Zor-El, on the other hand, was a teenager. She remembers Krypton. She had friends, a family, and a life that was violently ripped away. She watched her world die. For the new DCU to succeed, it needs textural variety. If Superman is the universe’s symbol of unwavering hope and aspirational goodness, then Supergirl should be its symbol of survival. She is a refugee in the most visceral sense of the word, haunted by a loss her famous cousin can never truly comprehend. Making her emotionally volatile isn’t about making her “dark” for the sake of it; it’s about making her an authentic foil to Clark. His strength is his restraint; hers can be her fire, born from grief and a lingering sense of injustice.
Following the Perfect Blueprint
This isn’t a radical, fan-fiction reinvention. It’s an idea deeply rooted in one of the character’s most acclaimed modern comics: Tom King and Bilquis Evely’s *Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow*. DC Studios co-head James Gunn has already confirmed this very series is the primary inspiration for the upcoming *Supergirl* film. In that story, Kara is adrift, hardened, and grappling with her trauma. She drinks, she fights with a brutal efficiency, and she carries a profound sadness beneath a cynical exterior. She isn't a villain, nor is she an anti-hero. She is a hero who is fundamentally, believably broken by her past. The comic demonstrates that this volatility is a source of immense narrative power. It allows her to connect with others who have suffered loss, and it gives her journey a clear, compelling arc: learning to find hope again, not as an inherited ideal from her cousin, but as something she has to fight for and earn herself. By leaning into this established, celebrated take, the DCU wouldn't be inventing a new Supergirl but finally doing justice to the most compelling version of her.
Drama Comes from Flaws, Not Powers
The problem with many on-screen Kryptonians is that they are, by definition, almost infinitely powerful. This makes creating genuine stakes difficult. How do you challenge a character who can fly, move planets, and shoot lasers from their eyes? The answer is internal conflict. A Supergirl who is her own worst enemy is infinitely more interesting than one who just needs to punch a bigger, stronger alien. Imagine a Kara Zor-El who struggles to control her immense power because her rage and grief are always simmering just below the surface. A moment of emotional distress could level a city block. This creates immediate, personal stakes in every single conflict. Her greatest battle isn’t against Brainiac or Lex Luthor; it’s against the voice in her head telling her that everyone she loves will eventually be taken from her. This positions her less like a god and more like a human being saddled with divine power and unbearable pain—a far more relatable and dramatically fertile ground for storytelling.
Breaking the Mold of the 'Nice' Heroine
Too often, female superheroes are sanded down for mass appeal. They are expected to be perpetually nurturing, inspiring, and emotionally stable, serving as the moral compass for their male counterparts. Allowing Supergirl to be difficult, angry, and complicated is a powerful statement. It acknowledges that trauma isn't pretty or easily managed, and that a woman’s strength doesn’t have to be quiet or gentle. An emotionally volatile Kara is not a “damsel in distress” or a “hysterical woman” trope. She is a survivor whose scars are part of her identity. In an era where audiences crave complex characters like *The Bear*'s Carmy Berzatto or *Succession*'s Shiv Roy, a one-dimensionally cheerful Supergirl would feel like a relic. The DCU has a chance to give us a major female hero who is messy, formidable, and fiercely, unapologetically human in her pain. Her journey to becoming the hero she's meant to be would be all the more triumphant because of the darkness she had to overcome within herself.













