Movies about Teenage superheroine
Synopsis: Robin, Starfire, Raven, Beast Boy and Cyborg return in all-new, comedic adventures. They may be super heroes who save the world every day . but somebody still has to do the laundry!
Miraculous: Ladybug & Cat Noir, The Movie
Synopse: Život obyčejné pařížské teenagerky Marinette se stane nadlidským, když se z ní stane Beruška. Beruška, obdařená magickými schopnostmi stvoření, se musí spojit se svým protějškem, Cat Noir, aby zachránila Paříž, protože nový padouch rozpoutal ve městě chaos.
X-Men
Synopse: Dva mutanti, Rogue a Wolverine, přicházejí na soukromou akademii pro svůj druh, jehož rezidentní tým superhrdinů, X-Men, se musí postavit teroristické organizaci s podobnými pravomocemi.
Batman a Robin
Synopse: Batman a Robin řeší problémy ve vztazích a zároveň brání panu Freeze a Poison Ivy v útoku na Gotham City.
Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir
Synopsis: Normal high school kids by day, protectors of Paris by night! Miraculous follows the heroic adventures of Marinette and Adrien as they transform into Ladybug and Cat Noir and set out to capture akumas, creatures responsible for turning the people of Paris into villains. But neither hero knows the other’s true identity – or that they’re classmates!
DC hvězda
Synopsis: Courtney Whitmore, a smart, athletic and above all else kind girl, discovers her step-father has a secret: he used to be the sidekick to a superhero. «Borrowing» the long-lost hero’s cosmic staff, she becomes the unlikely inspiration for an entirely new generation of superheroes.
Turbo: Film Power Rangers
Synopsis: The legendary Power Rangers must stop the evil space pirate Divatox from releasing the powerful Maligore from his volcanic imprisonment on the island of Muranthias, where only the kindly wizard Lerigot has the key to release him. The hope of victory lies in the Ranger’s incredible new Turbo powers and powerful Turbo Zords.
Nové mutanty
Synopsis: Five young mutants, just discovering their abilities while held in a secret facility against their will, fight to escape their past sins and save themselves.
Úžasňákovi
Synopse: Bob Parr se vzdal svých superhrdinských dnů, aby se včas přihlásil jako likvidátor pojištění a vychovával své tři děti se svou dříve hrdinskou manželkou na předměstí. Ale když dostane záhadný úkol, je čas se vrátit do kostýmu.
Teen Titans Go! vs. Mladiství titáni
Synopsis: In Teen Titans Go! vs Teen Titans, the comedic modern-day quintet takes on their 2003 counterparts when villains from each of their worlds join forces to pit the two Titan teams against each other. They’ll need to set aside their differences and work together to combat Trigon, Hexagon, Santa Claus (that’s right, Santa!) and time itself in order to save the multiverse.
Teen Titans Go! Do filmů
Synopsis: All the major DC superheroes are starring in their own films, all but the Teen Titans, so Robin is determined to remedy this situation by getting over his role as a sidekick and becoming a movie star. Thus, with a few madcap ideas and an inspirational song in their hearts, the Teen Titans head to Hollywood to fulfill their dreams.
Power Rangers
Synopse: Saban’s Power Rangers sleduje pět obyčejných teenagerů, kteří se musí stát něčím výjimečným, když zjistí, že jejich městečko Angel Grove – a celý svět – je na pokraji zničení mimozemskou hrozbou. Naši hrdinové, vybraní osudem, rychle zjistí, že jsou jediní, kdo může zachránit planetu. Ale aby tak učinili, budou muset překonat své skutečné životní problémy a než bude příliš la…
Liga spravedlnosti vs. Mladiství titáni
Synopsis: Robin is sent by Batman to work with the Teen Titans after his volatile behavior botches up a Justice League mission. The Titans must then step up to face Trigon after he possesses the League and threatens to conquer the world.
Deadpool
Synopsis: Deadpool tells the origin story of former Special Forces operative turned mercenary Wade Wilson, who after being subjected to a rogue experiment that leaves him with accelerated healing powers, adopts the alter ego Deadpool. Armed with his new abilities and a dark, twisted sense of humor, Deadpool hunts down the man who nearly destroyed his life.
Velký Hero 6
Synopse: Mezi velkým nafukovacím robotem Baymaxem a zázračným dítětem Hiro Hamadou, kteří se spojili se skupinou přátel a vytvořili skupinu hrdinů z oblasti špičkových technologií, se rozvine zvláštní pouto.
‘Supergirl’ Film Will Be Origin Story Featuring Teen Superheroine
The DC films have been hit or miss since Man of Steel hit theaters back in 2013 and since the shakeup in leadership, several more films have been in development. Among these stories, is another famed Kryptonian by the name of Supergirl looks to be hitting the silver screen sooner than expected.
According to THR, Warner Brothers is shifting some of its focus onto the cousin of Superman. Actress Helen Slater first portrayed Supergirl on the big screen in 1984. Since then Melissa Benoist has donned the cape on The CW with the series looking to soon debut is 4th season. The success of the TV series along with a new demand for strong female heroes to get their own films sets Warner Brothers up for another hit franchise.
So far DC’s boys haven’t faired so well with critics or the box office. But the first lady of DC, Wonder Woman took audiences by storm and was arguably one of the best films of 2017. Director Patty Jenkins and actress Gal Gadot look to outdo themselves once again in Wonder Woman 1984 looking to release next year. Harley Quinn, who was introduced in the less than stellar suicide squad, is also getting a Birds of Prey film where she’ll be joined by other ladies of DC in a bold attempt to keep this cinematic universe at pace with Marvel’s. This definitely seems like perfect timing for the world to get Supergirl back on the big screen.
It was first reported last month that a Supergirl movie was in development at Warner Brothers. Oren Uziel, writer of 22 Jump Street and The Cloverfield Paradox, is penning the script for Kara Zor El’s solo endeavor. No one else has been attached so far but its safe to expect more names becoming available now that focus has shifted to bring this iconic hero back to the movies.
Are you excited to see a Supergirl film? Who do you think should play the titular character? Who should her first villain be? Please share your thoughts in the comments below.
Heroic Special Activities Division Agent Trainee Program
The Flash’s Supergirl is a perfect fit for a dying DC cinematic universe
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Supergirl has a timing issue. In her most commonly used modern backstory, Kara Zor-El is the teenage cousin of Kal-El (better known as Superman), and like him, she was sent to Earth from a rapidly dying Krypton. But Kara’s ship was thrown off course, and by the time she reached Earth, her once-younger super-cousin was a fully grown man, while she emerged from stasis still a teenage girl.
Her film appearances suffer from a similarly unfortunate tardiness: Super holka arrived in theaters on the heels of the ill-received Superman III, just in time to play as a cheesy, unwanted spinoff of a withering series. Now, DC’s 2023 movie Flash has introduced a new Supergirl — but after a decade-plus of development and delays, she’s hitting the screen right before a reboot of the whole DC cinematic universe. Once again, Supergirl showed up late. This time, though, she’s also right where she belongs.
[Ed. Poznámka: Significant spoilers ahead for Flash.]
To be fair, the 1984 Super holka wasn’t the kind of movie that could have set the world afire, no matter when it was released. Still, it’s more a victim of mistimed circumstances than an outright disaster. It isn’t appreciably worse than Superman III or Superman IV; it has some of their cornball-fantasy charm, and less of their disappointment. (It also has an unusual parallel with several Zack Snyder superhero movies, in that there’s a director’s cut that offers both a fuller experience and a test of viewers’ patience.)
In the 1984 movie, Helen Slater maintains a sweet gee-whiz energy as Kara, and she finds some charming notes to play, like the deep voice she winkingly affects when she’s telling a dopey love interest that yes, she can bend steel bars with her hands. Ultimately, though, she’s playing a more generic, retrograde version of Supergirl, released into the world not long before the comics version was killed off and removed from continuity via the “Crisis on Infinite Earths” storyline, suggesting that general interest in the character was at a low ebb.
The Kara iteration of Supergirl wasn’t really a going concern in comics for another 20 years, and the various comics tweaks she’s undergone since her introduction are reminiscent of the ever-shifting DCEU that’s now about to be abandoned, though possibly stripped for a few parts. The film series started out shepherded by Zack Snyder via Muž z oceli, his now decade-old take on Superman. Superman has been a notoriously difficult character to crack in movies (though plenty of comics writers seem to do just fine); Snyder focused on a vision of Kal-El conflicted over his godlike powers and his role on Earth.
As plenty of people have pointed out over the past decade, MCU movies are often about the dilemma of how best to use superpowers to do good, while DCEU movies are often about whether it’s possible to do good at all, a concern raised early and often by Muž z oceli. At its best, this idea infuses some dramatic tension into characters who might otherwise feel remote in their strength. But it’s also an odd fit for the touching idealism of Superman, who appeared to settle into his adopted home at the end of the uneven Muž z oceli. “Welcome to the Planet,” Lois says to Clark Kent on his first day in the Daily Planet newsroom. “Glad to be here, Lois,” he says with a smile. It’s a perfect Superman ending, muddled by the weird pivots of Snyder’s subsequent films, including an abrupt, eventized death and equally sloppy resurrection.
But the inner conflict that Batman v. Superman: Úsvit spravedlnosti metastasizes into seething alienation actually works pretty well for Supergirl. Flash zips back to Muž z oceli for a quasi-do-over: Barry Allen (Ezra Miller) gets stuck in a time-travel-generated alternate timeline where General Zod (Michael Shannon) still arrives to demand Superman’s surrender. Only now, the rogue Kryptonian hiding out on Earth is Kara Zor-El — and she hasn’t been adopted by a kind Kansas couple, or traveled the country as a do-gooder hobo, like her cousin in Muž z oceli. The Flash and an alternate Batman must rescue her from a black site where she’s being held prisoner. Sure, it’s an excuse for an action set-piece, but it’s also a fitting introduction to Supergirl’s divided loyalties.
There are plenty of modern comics where Supergirl shares some of Superman’s optimism and goodness. But more often, her equivalent of Superman’s moral center is appropriately more of a cousin than a duplicate. Kara has a greater sense of loss — she remembers Krypton, her parents, and everything else that was taken away from her. (In some 2000s-era stories, where New Krypton is established and we see plenty of Kara’s Kryptonian family, she eventually loses her parents again.) In post-Silver Age comics, Kara is more of a genuine alien than Clark Kent. She saves people, but she doesn’t always feel accepted on their planet. She’s torn between worlds. Her power set is as vast as Superman’s, but there’s a sense that she still has to work more at heroism.
This is the version of Supergirl who emerges in Flash, in a form that’s even rawer and less cheerful. Sasha Calle’s Supergirl seemingly never had the chance to establish a real human life before her capture, and Calle sells Kara’s wounded determination with her body language. Though she isn’t given enough screen time or enough lines, Flash zeroes in on a moment of softening for Kara: her emotional reaction, starting with genuine confusion, when she realizes that Flash stuck his neck out to save her. (He thinks he needs her to defeat Zod, but even so, he expresses an authentic kindness toward her, even though she’s a complete stranger.) This gives her the ember of hope in humanity that becomes a raging fire in her big battle sequence.
Making a superhero character angrier, more jaded, and more violent is a tired comics trope that Snyder tried translating to the screen, but it’s the perfect multiverse variation for this particular Kryptonian. The way Kara is characterized in The Flash pushes back against a de facto wholesome-young-lady image, and infuses her with a sense of genuine righteousness. In this case, watching Supergirl do something Superman already did — punch the holy hell out of General Zod — is satisfying, rather than secondhand. The Superman-versus-Zod fight in Muž z oceli is an endless, overwrought slog. Calle’s Supergirl takes on the properties of a sleek, vengeful bullet with a broken heart beneath the casing.
Unfortunately, the story Flash is telling doesn’t have room for a Supergirl who lives to fight another day. By design, the Flash must learn that no amount of time-travel tinkering can save this particular version of Supergirl from dying at Zod’s hands — at least, not without wreaking havoc on the whole damn multiverse. (A heartbreaking-bordering-on-misguided moment in the movie leaves the audience watching as Kara dies over and over.) The disappointment of this Supergirl’s inevitable demise, though, fits with Flash’s conception of past cinematic superheroes, a topic it’s oddly but interestingly fixated on.
In the movie’s big climactic fan-service montage, we peek into other variants of the DC universe, and it’s the perfect opportunity to pause for a series of applause breaks as past superheroes are briefly resurrected or created via CG. Surprisingly, this includes a version of Helen Slater from 1984, flying alongside Christopher Reeve’s Superman. (As morally dicey as it was to pull him in posthumously, at least he doesn’t speak any AI-generated lines, which leaves this cameo as more of an uncanny-looking reuse of old footage than a ghoulish resurrection.) These versions of Superman and Supergirl did technically occupy the same universe, but Reeve famously declined to appear in the Supergirl movie, so the major connection between his Superman movies and Super holka is a creepy version of Jimmy Olsen (Marc McClure) hanging out with Kara and her teenage friends (including Lois Lane’s younger sister!).
In Flash, though, Reeve and Slater are paired together as icons of the past, restoring some luster to Slater’s tarnished rep. And given Flash’s actual themes, there’s a wistful awareness of both the eternity and the limits of these characters’ cinematic incarnations. Flash writers Christina Hodson and Joby Harold and director Andy Muschietti seem to understand that big movie series do end, in some form or another, even when it seems like they’re in a constant comeback cycle. Christopher Reeve is gone. Helen Slater will not be playing Supergirl again in any meaningful way. And that makes their brief visual cameo as much of an acknowledgement of cinema history as the shot of George Reeves in his own Superman role.
Sasha Calle may not be playing Supergirl again in a meaningful way, either. Some fans may yearn for revivals of all these past incarnations of beloved characters. Some may even see such dreams briefly realized, in an age where Tobey Maguire and Andrew Garfield get to play Spider-Man again and Michael Keaton returns as Batman.
But there’s no real way to go back and fix curtailed series or compromised movies without also changing them. Flash spends much of its last hour seemingly coming to terms with both the infinite recombinations of superheroes and the finite nature of life, as the DCEU slips away, on track for disappearance no matter how well Flash does in the long term. The DCEU never found consistent footing with audiences — it produced some terrific and popular movies, and some embarrassing flops. James Gunn’s incarnation of the DCU could eventually produce another Aquaman or Wonder Woman movie with the DCEU stars, or they could be washed away. Supergirl is a great fit for the Muž z oceli moment, but that moment has passed.
And missing that moment does feel weirdly true to the character. In addition to being a strong and (in the best stories) complicated woman, Supergirl is also a symbol of the sometimes undignified flexibility of so many second-tier superheroes. On the comics page, she lacks a Superman-style clean, instantly recognizable, rarely altered backstory that almost everyone knows and can understand. There have been so many comics versions of Supergirl that even purported fans like me have trouble keeping them straight; I own half a dozen Supergirl trades whose proper reading order I have to check constantly.
Even in a property as simple and direct as the kid-targeted DC Super Hero Girls books and shows, Supergirl is still the core hero whose personality changed the most — from sweet naïf to punk-rock bruiser — when the franchise switched up its stylistic approach. She’s never been especially popular on the big screen, only really hitting on a CW TV series.
It makes sense. Supergirl is a cynical knockoff character, first introduced at a time when seemingly every superhero had to have, at minimum, three sidekick equivalents — a woman, a young boy, and an animal. She’s simultaneously a figure of great resilience, occasionally starring in great stories that work within her bizarre Superman-derivative constraints.
The most recent of these was Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow, the Tom King/Bilquis Evely miniseries that reimagines Supergirl as a Rooster Cogburn figure in a kind of intergalactic riff on Opravdová kuráž. It was earmarked for adaptation in the first round of DC’s new James Gunn regime, and Sasha Calle has already expressed her interest. (Not surprising to hear that an actor would like to hang on to a role in the face of a reboot.) It would be great to see Calle afforded more room to flex in a leading role, rather than being limited to service as a cog in the Flash’s story. It’d also be great to see any Supergirl starring in a big, successful movie. (We’ve certainly given Batman near-infinite variations, now sometimes within the same movie.)
Supergirl fans deserve more of her than 30 or 40 minutes in a Flash movie that half-sunsets the DCEU. But anyone paying close attention to the Girl of Steel should understand how fleeting those opportunities can be.
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