
"introduced us to a new Clark Kent, played by David Corenswet. He's got a mild-mannered personality, complicated feelings about his birth parents, and a love for punk music, kindness, and protecting Earth. But there's one last thing we learned about him in the final moments of the movie: he's also a great dogsitter, watching over Krypto for his cousin Kara Zor-El (Milly Alcock) while she was partying under a red sun."
"The trailer opens with Krypto back in Kara's care as she wakes up to him peeing all over newspapers lauding Superman's success. To the pounding rhythms of Blondie's "Call Me," we see her getting in a spaceship and partying once again, and fighting various aliens. But then we see Kara with Ruthye Marye Knoll (Eve Ridley), who asks Kara what it's like to see her entire planet destroyed - a sore point that brings back Kara's trauma (just as we see shots of Krypton exploding)."
Clark Kent appears as a mild-mannered, punk-loving protector with complicated feelings about his birth parents and a knack for dogsitting Krypto. Kara Zor-El takes center stage in a solo Supergirl movie that injects a Guardians-style tone into the DC Universe. The trailer shows Krypto in Kara's care, Blondie's "Call Me" scoring spaceship partying and alien-fighting sequences, and a focus on Kara's trauma linked to Krypton's destruction. Ruthye Marye Knoll emerges as a key figure drawn from Tom King's Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow, with Kara positioned as Ruthye's protector and the film centering on that relationship.
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