When they discussed (a few episodes ago) that the Phantom Zone was fractured after Crisis, it makes me wonder - do we even know if the Zor-El that Kara is interacting with is her Zor-El (from the Earth-38 reality)?
That new opening did have Erica Durance as Alura. Also Erica is Canadian. I would imagine she would have a different quarantine time than American guest stars?? Probably easier to get her to appear. I expect some type of family reunion.
I was aware it was footage from an old episode. But I just meant they are reminding the audience what she looks like. If there was no plan or possibility of her return this last it would have been easy not to show her at all in that intro. Maybe it means nothing. We will see,
Can't say I'd mind that; Sergeant's been a highlight of this generally lackluster run of episodes.So Nyxly turns out to be evil after all. And probably indestructible. I guess now we know why Peta Sergeant is credited as a regular instead of a guest star. Is she the season's big bad?
I'm surprised they brought back the "My name is Kara Zor-El" opening sequence. We haven't seen that in quite some time, though they updated it with new images. I wonder if the episode ran short.
I wonder if the intro was partially to reassure casual viewers this is still Melissa Benoist’s show? With her limited screen time now those not aware of her pregnancy might feel the show has changed too much. So it was an attempt to make the episode closer to old format?? Total speculation here. I know networks are infamous for making suggestions and demands that show runners think are unnecessary.The runtime was only 38 minutes and change, instead of the normal 42. It's certainly possible they ran tried to do some padding but still came up short and decided to just sell another eight commercials. It was weird the updated intro didn't mention Kara's current status quo; at first I thought the CW people had uploaded the wrong episode to iTunes until I started recognizing recent clips, then I thought that it was some sort of metafictional mind-screw leading into a dream or illusion sequence where Kara was tricked into thinking she'd made it home.
Until Benoist is back working full time again, the whole show is basically padding.
That's the problem--audiences were going to know its padding, so the showrunners had a job to write a B plot that was good enough to take audience's minds away from Benoist's reason for not being in many episodes going forward.
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