Melissa may have been the perfect Supergirl. There was nothing about how she played the part that I had problems with. She kept me watching.
In the released ending we didn't even get some ephemeral "different timeline" happy ending for her either. She just dies.This times infinity -- mostly re: Kara/Calle, who was the movie's highlight for me. I was downright angered by the film's callously cruel treatment of her.
Melissa may have been the perfect Supergirl. There was nothing about how she played the part that I had problems with. She kept me watching.
Oh yeah, I'd say she's one of the all time best superhero casting.Benoist was one of those preternaturally perfect castings. I would rank it almost at Reeve-as-Superman level.
Respectfully disagree. The best of the CWDC stuff (including the better seasons of Supergirl) was thoroughly enjoyable pop entertainment, funny and emotional, with engaging characters. I'm not sure what exactly constitutes "awful writing" in your mind, but as long as I wasn't bored, laughed a few times, and had my heartstrings occasionally tugged, I was good. The funnybook storytelling baseline, in any medium, is not usually high art. Though the shows sometimes went a bit deeper than "mere" entertainment to explore socially relevant themes, as in season four of Supergirl and the entire run of Black Lightning, and did so quite successfully to my mind.I stopped watching Supergirl after season 2 - spent too long waiting for the writing to actually work out the kinks and get good until I finally realized the awful writing on Supergirl was almost exactly the same as the awful writing on the Flash and Legends of Tomorrow and Arrow and nobody had any interest in fixing it because that was just what the CWverse was.
Respectfully, and strongly, agree.But the thing that definitely did still make some of those shows much better than others was the quality of the casting, and Benoist was at the absolute top of that list, even above Gustin.
The Arrowverse was really popular at one time, but I feel like I see more frequent and harsher criticism of it these days. I think the fact that the quality of most of the series declined over time has left a sour taste in some people's mouths, such that they've forgotten how enjoyable it was in the beginning. Oversaturation was probably a factor as well; I winnowed down my own viewing to just my favorite shows several years before the end. Keeping up with them all was starting to feel like more of an obligation than a pleasure. But when it was just Arrow, The Flash, and Supergirl, all in their early, fresh, energetic years? Tons o' fun.
The beauty of owning Blu-rays is that you are not at the mercy of the streamers.![]()
(And for anyone who does still value physical media, it was just announced that the '90s Flash series is coming out on Blu.)
I love the entire Arrowverse, I'd put the shows right up there with the MCU as some of the my favorite superhero adaptations ever. Each of the series did have one or two bad seasons, but for me the hit or miss ratio tended to much more towards the hit than miss.
It still cracks me up that the Arrowverse started with the first few seasons of Arrow, where we had them going out of their way to keep things a grounded as possible, and ended up with things like Legends of Tomorrow and Crisis on Infinite Earths. But the way they eased into the bigger and crazier concepts was pretty smart.
I dunno if you could call Smallville grounded. (Apart from the awful pun of Clark not liking to fly.) In the first five eps you have a boy who turns into a million bugs, a girl who can shapeshift into anyone, and a boy who can siphon all heat from any source, both inanimate and biological. Smallville's whole MO in the early days was "meteor rocks cause almost uncountable changes in people".I forgot that Smallville and AoS started out more grounded, I was thinking they both jumped right into all the craziness.
I dunno if you could call Smallville grounded.
Since it was originally spun off from Supergirl, I tend to still consider it Arrowverse, just on another Earth.Since Superman and Lois was not part of the Arrowverse (despite the 1st season not doing much to clarify the separation), it cannot serve as a credit for the Arrowverse.
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