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Supergirl Episode 16 “Falling” Review

Louis Rabinowitz reviews the Supergirl episode “Falling”

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Verdict: Supergirl is firing on all cylinders with Falling, an excellent episode that carves a gripping, emotionally resonant slice of superhero TV out of a well-trodden comic-book premise.

Review

I’ve been hesitant to use the term ‘best episode yet’ in these reviews so far. That’s partially because there hasn’t been a clear singular front-runner in Supergirl’s first season (rather a handful of very good episodes that are hard to separate in terms of quality) but also because the term is somewhat unreliable, especially with a series as variable as Supergirl that’s still in its first season. After all, the show’s writers are still getting a feel for what works and what doesn’t, so there’s every chance that an even better episode will come along next week and entirely invalidate that claim. Falling, however, is the first episode that really earns that title – it’s the best-constructed episode in that it coherently ties together all the separate parts of the show, grounds its story of the week in meaningful character development and sustains a remarkably intense pace after the opening title flashes up.

The story of the week in question was Kara’s infection by Red Kryptonite, a substance that unearthed her darkest impulses. This is another concept ripped from the classic book of superhero tropes, and it’s been executed in a shallow and unintentionally amusing manner before (Spider-Man 3, ahem). Falling, however, nails this concept for a multitude of reasons, but primarily because it gives the idea the focus and breadth it needs. Red Kryptonite affects every aspect of Kara’s life, not just a section, and provides at least some kind of shift in just about all of her important personal relationships, alongside a substantial change in the city’s opinion of Supergirl – and, crucially, it lets these changes stick, making it abundantly clear that the status quo has genuinely been changed across the board for Kara thanks to Red Kryptonite.

The hero changing his/her personality is often played for comedy (again, that’s you, Spider-Man 3), and Falling does engage in a bit of that, particularly in the early sections – but, to its credit, this comedy is restrained and confined to the more light-hearted first act, complementing rather than jarring with the more serious material later on. Ultimately, the lack of comedy is mostly due to the encouraging fact that Falling is far more interested in using Red Kryptonite as a substantial means of exploring the dark secrets that lurk beneath Kara’s personal relationships rather than using it for fun but cheap gimmicks.

This exploration of Kara’s relationships is extremely effective because everything Kara does to alienate and upset her friends and family comes with a distinct element of truth to it, one that forces Kara and co to confront the dark realities that they previously could cover up and ignore. This really allows Falling to flesh out these relationships in a way that allows shock value to stem from genuine character insights that logically build from previous episodes’ development rather than the other way around. It’s shocking to see Kara to come onto James in an unusually aggressive manner, or angrily tell Alex that she hates Kara, but these moments are shocking and emotionally resonant because all of the evidence needed to support these revelations can be found in previous episodes (Alex’s lingering resentment of Kara has been substantially covered, and Lucy did always seem like a bit of a barrier for the pining Kara); it’s all stemming from what Supergirl has done before as opposed to random conflict plucked simply created for the sake of it, making this conflict feel organic and satisfying to watch.

Falling Supergirl Melissa BenoistThe other strength of Falling’s usage of Red Kryptonite is the way that Kara’s actions under the influence of the substance have a substantial and noticeable impact that will clearly reverberate well beyond this episode (it’s notable that the promo for next week’s Manhunter-centric episode focuses entirely on Kara’s efforts to rehabilitate her image). The headline example of this is the public outing of Hank Henshaw as the Martian Manhunter – it’s certainly the biggest long-term twist of the episode, and it’s the development that’s likely to alter the status quo the most. And while that twist was laudable in its audacity in how it completely upends the DEO dynamic to the point where it’s uncertain just what the new status quo will be, it’s just one example of many within Falling.

For instance, there’s the matter of the city turning on Supergirl after she’s seen publicly committing crimes. While this happens all the time in superhero shows, Falling handles this development in a pleasingly mature way that doesn’t oversimplify the situation into a false ‘love/hate’ dichotomy. Falling settles into an intriguing middle ground at the end of the day; the city doesn’t suddenly forgive Supergirl for everything when she’s back to her normal self, but there’s no indication that she’s become a public enemy of any sort – indeed, the woman whose condemnation had a considerable influence over the population does forgive Supergirl at the end. It’s a really great take on this traditional idea, taking something that’s often cleanly wrapped up with no further repercussions and complicating it a great deal, emphasising that while the wounds inflicted by Supergirl’s actions will heal, that process is long, arduous and doesn’t just happen with no effort. Almost everything in Falling feels like a considered and organic development, and it’s particularly with the idea of the city turning against Supergirl where the episode’s admirable refusal to implement cheap and easy shortcuts, instead taking a longer and more patient path, is particularly visible.

And then there’s the personal consequences of Kara’s actions – which are varied and complicated, with every person Kara interacted with under the influence reacting in different ways, from betrayed and alienated to instantly forgiving to acknowledging that further discussion may be needed. It’s good to see Falling opt for a complicated gamut of reactions that feel true to the characters rather than just universal forgiving or condemnation, but the most notable aspect of these reactions is every character acknowledges the limited truth behind Kara’s harsh words and has to re-consider everything about their relationship with Kara with these revelations in mind. Next week could easily miss the mark, but it certainly looks as if the revelations here have provided substantial and long-lasting changes by unearthing previously unspoken truths that could transform the meaning of Kara’s relationships – for Kara’s budding romance with James, Kara’s vitriol clearly grounds this previously innocent flirtation in cynical and petty jealousy that somewhat taints the relationship as a whole. It’s hard to see every relationship changing to the degree of Kara and James’ given the generally milder reactions all round, but there’s a definite sense nonetheless that Falling has re-contextualised what these characters mean to each other on a long-term basis, and that’s certainly encouraging.

At the centre of Falling, however, there’s a central figure holding it all together. Just about none of the Red Kryptonite material would work without Melissa Benoist, who was handed one hell of a challenge by the constant and often major shifts in personality across the episode that Kara experiences. It’s arguably Benoist’s best work on the series yet, as she handles all these personality shifts with aplomb – there’s a real sense of an escalation of the effects on Kara in Benoist’s performance, as she seamlessly and compellingly shifts from petty to cruel to outright villainous. It’s impressive enough that Benoist can credibly play both innocent, all-loving hero who saves little girls from bullies and cackling super-villain who blows up cop cars in the same episode, but it’s also the way that she handles all the smaller, subtler intermediary shifts between those two extremes that really acts as a testament to her considerable talent. Many will disagree on the quality of the show itself, but it’s hard to deny that Melissa Benoist’s casting was one hell of a move on the part of the casting directors, and it’s a decision that continues to pay dividends for Supergirl week after week.

It feels churlish and pedantic to nitpick such a strong episode, but there are some flaws to be considered here. The substance of the episode is almost entirely excellent, but the framework behind it all is undoubtedly a little rickety. The excuses for Kara’s infection and subsequent curing of Red Kryptonite are extremely thin, grounded in dubious logic and credulity-breaking technobabble (comic-book nonsense science has never been much of a big deal for me, but Max’s instant cure feels cheap considering how difficult it is to assuage the impacts of Red Kryptonite elsewhere), and the speed of the city’s betrayal of Supergirl, although handled well, feels rushed. These are simple errors of logic, something a quick rewrite could have fixed rather than major issues with the story itself – it’s just that Falling could have been a little tighter-scripted in some areas.

On the whole, however, this was exemplary stuff – an episode that stands tall as the best episode of Supergirl thus far. It’s thoughtfully written, exploring the consequences of its central plot device in a broad and compelling way that doesn’t cheaply wrap everything up within the hour, progresses almost every major relationship on the show to a significant degree and possesses one hell of a versatile central performance from Melissa Benoist. Falling makes a very compelling case indeed for Supergirl to continue and keep improving – because if this is the type of episode the show can crank out when it’s on the top of its game, it’s hard to say that Supergirl doesn’t at least deserve a second season.

Odds & Ends

  • Non watch: he plays into the reasoning behind Red Kryptonite, but season one’s central villain doesn’t appear here. Number of appearances from the villain: Non.
  • Maxwell Lord’s involvement in the episode is… odd. He plays a major role in the plot, but Peter Facinelli only briefly appears, and he’s given barely any dialogue – the dialogue he does get is wholly exposition.
  • Siobhan looks like she’s on the road to becoming Silver Banshee after getting fired – will the transformation happen next episode?
  • The opening scene set on The Talk was a thinly veiled bit of corporate synergy, but I liked it all the same – an effective, if cynical opening scene.
  • As a side note, the poster for the Flash crossover looks fantastic. My money’s on the Flash to win that foot race, for the record.
  • Next Monday’s episode is titled Manhunter, and it looks like it’ll flashback to the real Hank Henshaw’s sacrifice for J’onn. Considering how good the previous Manhunter-centric episode was, this looks like an exciting prospect.

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2 Comments

2 Comments

  1. Matthew Raydor

    March 16, 2016 at 4:51 pm

    Siobhan Smythe definitely needs to transform next episode because the one after that is the FLASH visit and she is full blown SILVER BANSHEE. Hope she has the Banshee scream down.
    The ‘real’ Hank didn’t sacrifice himself he was killed by Jeremiah Danvers to save Jonn Jonzz. Loved “SOLITUTE” more than “FALLING” but it was close.

  2. Eric

    March 17, 2016 at 10:17 pm

    My biggest problem with this episode actually it that it ignores it’s foundation. Remember, this is supposed to be a world where Superman already exists. Don’t you think that 1- Jimmy would have contacted Supes as soon as he new what was going on, and 2- even if he didn’t Superman would have dropped everything for his cousin after seeing Cat’s broadcast. The show doesn’t need to focus on Superman, but for us fans of the original, they do need to have believable reasons for him not to show up when major things like this (and a hostile force of kryptonians) happen.

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Smallville

New Supergirl Featurette Includes Laura Vandervoort, Melissa Benoist & More

Supergirl actresses Laura Vandervoort, Melissa Benoist, Sasha Calle, and Helen Slater are included in a retrospective featurette on The Flash Blu-ray.

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One of the rare good elements from the recent Flash movie was the inclusion of Sasha Calle as Supergirl, and now, we can revisit her and a few old Supergirl favorites, as Laura Vandervoort (Smallville), Melissa Benoist (Supergirl TV series from The CW & CBS), and Helen Slater (movies’ original Supergirl) are all included on a featurette on The Flash movie home release. These are all new interviews with the actresses, and in some cases, these are their first interviews about the character in years. The title of the featurette is “Supergirl: The Last Daughter of Krypton.”

Although a Twitter/X report from “Sennaverse” on Twitter notes that the documentary can be found on the MAX streaming service, we have had no luck finding it there so far. The featurette is included, however, with purchase of The Flash movie on 4K UHD, Blu-ray and DVD. The set is due for release on Tuesday, August 29. You can purchase that here and support KryptonSite if you wish! 

We’re looking forward to seeing these new interviews and spotlight on the Woman of Tomorrow!

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Supergirl

New Superman & Supergirl Movies Announced

James Gunn and Peter Safran have announced new Supergirl and Superman movie projects.

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New DC Studios heads James Gunn and Peter Safran have announced two new movies that will make Super-fans take notice. One is a new Superman film titled Superman: Legacy and it will be out in 2025; the other is based on Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow comic book series.

Scheduled for July 11, 2025, Superman: Legacy will be written by James Gunn and the hope is that he will also direct it. “t’s not an origin story. It focuses on Superman balancing his Kryptonian heritage with his human upbringing. Superman represents truth, justice and the American way. He is kindness in a world that thinks of kindness as old fashioned,” Peter Safran said during the announcement.

“With our stories, we want to take it away from good guy vs. bad guy. There are really good—almost saintly—people and Superman is among them. There are really terrible villains like Gorilla Grodd or the Joker. And then there’s everybody in between them, so there are all these shades of gray which allow us to tell complex stories,” Gunn added.

Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow is based on the comic book miniseries by Tom King. “In our story, we have Superman who was sent to Earth and raised by incredibly loving parents. Kara was on Krypton. She was on a piece of Krypton that drifted away from the planet and she lived there for the first fourteen years of her life in a horrible situation where she watched everyone around her die. So, she’s a much harsher and more f*cked up Supergirl than you’ve been used to thus far,” Gunn promises.

No word yet on if the movie projects will affect TV, but they have expressed a desire to fully tie in the TV and the movies. See DC Studios’ TV plans here.

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Comics

Nicole Maines Is Introducing Dreamer To Superman: Son of Kal-El

Supergirl actress Nicole Maines is introducing Dreamer in a Superman: Son of Kal-El comic book she is writing

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The Supergirl character of Nia Nal a.k.a. “Dreamer” has appeared in a DC Pride comic before, but now she is coming to the DC Universe proper with a special upcoming issue of the acclaimed Superman: Son of Kal-El comic book with a particularly special co-writer: Nicole Maines herself!

Maines will be co-writing Superman: Son of Kal-El #13 with series writer Tom Taylor. The issue hits comic book stores on July 12, 2022.

“I’m so excited to work with Nicole Maines to bring Dreamer from the screen to the pages of Superman: Son of Kal-El and to the DC Comics Universe,” said Tom Taylor. “I want to thank all the people at DC who have championed Dreamer and who recognize the importance of this powerful trans superhero in this time.”

“Jon Kent and Nia Nal are two characters that have a lot in common, both as superheroes with the weight of the world on their shoulders, and as young people with impossibly big shoes to fill,” Nicole Maines added. “Weaving their stories together for Superman: Son of Kal-El with Tom was a complete pleasure, and there is only a little pun intended when I say that Superman and Dreamer make for a brilliant new Dream-Team.”

Here’s a teaser for the issue:

It’s the dramatic DC Universe debut of Dreamer! When every hero on Earth is threatened by Henry Bendix’s machinations, it’s a race against time for Dreamer to warn Superman before it happens! But will this mysterious new ally’s premonition become a nightmare for Jonathan Kent?

Superman: Son of Kal-El #13 will be available at local comic shops on July 12, 2022.

 

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