Well, that was watchable, but had some plot holes. Like, where was Ryan all this time? We learned two weeks ago that she was missing, now she shows up as Batwoman in the climax, but we never found out what happened to her.
Also, Joe taking Jenna to the country and leaving Cecile behind doesn't really feel like it makes sense for the characters. It feels more like something contrived to justify writing Jesse L. Martin out of the show. And why bother when there are so few episodes left anyway?
So Khione clearly has some kind of connection to life, and apparently the power to heal with a kiss, unless that was some kind of residual bit of Frost passing into Mark, which might be the case given the cloudy effect and Khione mentioning the cold.
The thing about Grodd's Earth-2 gorillas losing their sentience in the Crisis is a retcon, since Cisco's map post-Crisis established that Gorilla City now existed on Earth-Prime. (Plus, in real life, gorillas and other great apes are already sentient, just not on quite the same level as adult humans.)
I was thinking at first that scenes of speedsters racing around the city had gotten old by this point, but they managed to work in some new moves with the use of speed lightning.
Ryan said at the end that she has weekly get-togethers with Kara, Alex, and Nia, the first mention we've gotten of the Supergirl team since that show ended. Isn't Nia going to show up later in the season? I kind of wish she'd mentioned Lena Luthor, whom she met and befriended in the theoretically canonical Earth-Prime comics miniseries last year.
Can anyone remind me where they got those cloud-of-smoke teleportation gadgets? I'm totally blanking. They seem like something from Abra Kadabra's arsenal, but I don't think we've seen him in a long time.
Incidentally, I noticed there's a writers' assistant in the credits named Zach Speed. A guy named Speed working on The Flash. That's like something out of a comic book.
Also, Joe taking Jenna to the country and leaving Cecile behind doesn't really feel like it makes sense for the characters. It feels more like something contrived to justify writing Jesse L. Martin out of the show. And why bother when there are so few episodes left anyway?
So Khione clearly has some kind of connection to life, and apparently the power to heal with a kiss, unless that was some kind of residual bit of Frost passing into Mark, which might be the case given the cloudy effect and Khione mentioning the cold.
The thing about Grodd's Earth-2 gorillas losing their sentience in the Crisis is a retcon, since Cisco's map post-Crisis established that Gorilla City now existed on Earth-Prime. (Plus, in real life, gorillas and other great apes are already sentient, just not on quite the same level as adult humans.)
I was thinking at first that scenes of speedsters racing around the city had gotten old by this point, but they managed to work in some new moves with the use of speed lightning.
Ryan said at the end that she has weekly get-togethers with Kara, Alex, and Nia, the first mention we've gotten of the Supergirl team since that show ended. Isn't Nia going to show up later in the season? I kind of wish she'd mentioned Lena Luthor, whom she met and befriended in the theoretically canonical Earth-Prime comics miniseries last year.
Can anyone remind me where they got those cloud-of-smoke teleportation gadgets? I'm totally blanking. They seem like something from Abra Kadabra's arsenal, but I don't think we've seen him in a long time.
Incidentally, I noticed there's a writers' assistant in the credits named Zach Speed. A guy named Speed working on The Flash. That's like something out of a comic book.