The Source Material’s Quiet Power
To understand the challenge, you have to understand the source: Tom King and Bilquis Evely's comic series, *Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow*. This isn't the story of a cheerful, perpetually optimistic Girl of Steel. This Kara Zor-El is jaded, turning 21
on a remote alien planet and drinking herself into oblivion, tired of living in her famous cousin’s shadow. Her life is violently interrupted by Ruthye, a small, formal alien girl who wants to hire Supergirl to help her hunt down the man who murdered her father. The story that follows is a space western road trip, but its engine isn't action; it's the slow, reluctant, and deeply moving bond that forms between the broken hero and the determined child. Their conversations aren't about trading quips. They’re about grief, justice, purpose, and the weight of legacy. Ruthye isn't a plucky sidekick; she’s the story’s narrator and its moral compass. The entire emotional payload of the narrative rests on their strange, evolving partnership.
The Modern Blockbuster’s Banter Trap
Now, contrast that with the prevailing winds of modern superhero cinema. For the last fifteen years, the Marvel Cinematic Universe has perfected a highly successful and endlessly imitated formula built on fast-paced, quippy banter. It’s fun, it’s charming, and it’s incredibly effective at keeping audiences entertained between action set-pieces. Characters like Tony Stark and Peter Parker, or the Guardians of the Galaxy, built their chemistry on a foundation of witty retorts and pop-culture references. The problem is that this style, while successful, can become a crutch. It’s a way to generate the *illusion* of a relationship without doing the harder work of building genuine emotional intimacy. When every character is a comedian, real vulnerability can get lost in the noise. We’ve seen this pattern create diminishing returns, where interactions feel less like character development and more like a competition for the best one-liner. Applying this model to the Kara-Ruthye dynamic would be a catastrophic miscalculation. It would strip the story of its unique, somber power and turn a meditation on trauma into just another buddy-cop adventure in space.
The True Test for the New DCU
This is precisely why *Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow* is such a fascinating test for James Gunn and the new DCU. Gunn, as the architect of the *Guardians of the Galaxy* films, is a master of the banter-fueled found-family story. He knows how to make you laugh with a talking raccoon and then break your heart with his tragic backstory. But the Kara-Ruthye relationship requires a different touch. It’s quieter, more subtle, and less reliant on gags. The film's hardest job will be resisting the temptation to “punch it up” with jokes or to make Ruthye a more conventionally sassy kid sidekick. It needs to trust its audience to invest in a relationship built on shared silence, mutual respect, and painful understanding. For the DCU to truly distinguish itself from its primary competitor, it needs to demonstrate a different emotional vocabulary. It has to prove it can do more than just the loud, fun stuff. It has to nail the quiet, devastating stuff, too. The success of this movie isn’t about how high Supergirl can fly, but how deep her connection with Ruthye can feel.













