House of the Dragon alumna Milly Alcock made her debut as the "Maid of Steel" in a brief cameo at the end of last year’s Superman reboot, drunkenly reclaiming her caped superdog, Krypto, before staggering off stage right.
However, the ability to get sozzled on her intergalactic pub crawl is only effective on worlds without the yellow sun that provides her superpowers, so when she gets roughed up while reluctantly protecting orphaned alien girl Ruthye (Eve Ridley, in her feature debut), she’s not best pleased.
Nor is she keen to be involved with Ruthye’s desire for revenge against ferocious brigands led by the vicious Krem of the Yellow Hills (Matthias Schoenaerts, taking facial pin-studs a tad too far).
Scattered flashbacks to Kara growing up with her parents (played by David Krumholtz and Emily Beecham) after surviving the destruction of Krypton on the domed city of Argo, her arrival on Earth and first meeting with Superman, and dislike of Metropolis life go some way to explaining the grouchiness.
However, it’s the race-against-time mission to catch up with Krem (and the antidote) that soon drags Kara and Ruthye into dark corners of the DC Universe where space pirates and extraterrestrial lowlifes run riot. Plenty of work for the prosthetics department, here!
First played by MobLand’s Emmett J Scanlan in the 2018 Krypton TV series, here it’s Jason Momoa debuting the character on the big screen. Already a stalwart of DC movies thanks to his role as Aquaman in the now-defunct DC Extended Universe franchise, Momoa certainly gets his teeth into his bad-boy-biker role by delivering bone-crushing mayhem and sardonic one-liners.
On the other hand, Alcock does a decent job playing a Supergirl a million miles away from Helen Slater’s 1984 iteration or Melissa Benoist in the long-running TV show. All grunge aesthetic and attitude, she rises above the underwhelming script and direction.
Hopefully next year’s Superman sequel Man of Tomorrow directed by Gunn and with Alcock in the cast will be able to see her fly higher.
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