ScreenSpy is a BOX20 Media Company

Home Articles TV Features The Top 5 Best Moments of SUPERGIRL Season One

The Top 5 Best Moments of SUPERGIRL Season One

BY Matthew Guerruckey

Published 9 years ago

The Top 5 Best Moments of SUPERGIRL Season One

On Monday night, Supergirl will air the final episode of its first season, a season that has deeply divided fans and critics alike. Many who tuned into the pilot episode, which premiered on October 26th 2015, thought the show was weak, with unconvincing action and stock characters. And they weren’t wrong. If anything, Supergirl’s first season has shown just how quickly, and dramatically, a series can improve from its initial episodes.

Supergirl’s saving grace, even in that clunky pilot episode, was its lead, Melissa Benoist. Benoist lends Kara Zor-El a charm and charisma that buoys the show through occasionally bad dialogue cheesy, plot devices, and lame supervillains.

So, appropriately, this list of the Top 5 best moments from Supergirl Season One showcases the wide range of what Benoist brings to the series. She’s alternatingly charming, funny, and emotionally resonant in ways that are surprising for a superhero series. That emotion has set Supergirl above the other Greg Berlanti superhero series, Arrow and The Flash. Those series have been more consistent than Supergirl, but they’ve never been as moving as Supergirl at its peak.

But, in answer to those who have not yet been won over by Benoist’s charm, it’s interesting to note what I have not listed here. There will be no mention in the list of the love triangle between Kara, Jimmy Olsen, and Winn—the least intriguing storyline of the series. Also, there are precious few appearances from the Rogue’s Gallery here, and that’s because Supergirl has been unable to produce many truly memorable villains for Kara to battle against. Of the recurring villains, only Astra brought real emotional heft to the series, because of her family connection to Kara. But Non, Indigo, Livewire, and Silver Banshee are all underwhelming, and action sequences continue to be the weakest element of the series.

Additionally, I should mention that the much-hyped (and well-rated) cross-over episode that brought the CW’s The Flash to National City didn’t work for me, so that doesn’t make an official appearance on the Top 5 either, but it would be foolish not to mention it at all, since it’s the one thing that comic fans would remember about Supergirl should it fail to be picked up for a second season.

I’ll say this about the episode—both Benoist and Grant Gustin, who plays The Flash, were having an infectious amount of fun. If only the episode hadn’t become bogged down in unconvincing stunt work and bad speed-related puns, it might very well have topped the list.

But, for the strengths that the episode did have, I’ll include an honorable mention—call it moment 5.1—the moment where Jimmy and Winn meet Barry for the first time, and he zips out of the room and and returns in an instant, depositing fresh ice cream cones in Kara and Jimmy’s hands, as Kara nerdishly exclaims, “Yesss!” It’s a prime example of Supergirl at its best, having fun with its outlandish concept, and showcasing Kara at her most adorkable.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7dc46DPEymA

Episode 6, “Red Faced”: Kara Unleashes Her Fury on the Red Tornado

“Supergirl, are you okay?”

It’s never been a problem to believe that Melissa Benoist is Kara Danvers, beautiful and charming assistant at Catco Worldwide Media, or a loving sister to Alex. But for the first few episodes, it was a little harder to believe that she was Kara Zor-El, aka “Supergirl”, an alien with inhuman strength and abilities. This wasn’t really Benoist’s fault—in the pilot episode and the early run of the series, the action just looked silly, a lot of unconvincing shots of Benoist against a green screen, matched with stunt work and cheesy CGI.

But in the sixth episode, when Kara finds herself facing an unstoppable enemy, one that can’t disable, but must actually kill, the show made the wise decision to focus more on the emotion of the fight than the mechanics of the fight itself. As the Red Tornado charges towards her, Kara unleashes a fury that’s been building throughout the episode, a fury, as shown through well-timed flashbacks, informed by the loss of her family and her home world. The editing is brilliant, cutting between Kara saying goodbye to her mother, Krypton exploding, and Kara’s screaming face, jaw unhinged, intent on destruction. Music swells over the scene, and under it we hear only the distant echo of Kara’s scream, until the android finally explodes and she sinks to the ground, spent.

It’s the moment where Supergirl found its identity. This would not be a superhero series defined by action, but by emotion and performance. Any lingering doubts about either Benoist as an actress or Kara as a character were obliterated along with the Red Tornado.

Whatever the fate of Supergirl (and, somewhat surprisingly, it’s not been guaranteed a second season yet), this first season has been filled with great promise and astonishing moments, only a few of which are listed here. Hopefully, Monday’s finale will add even more memorable moments and finally win over the haters, because it would be a shame for a series this fun, intelligent, and charming to fly away.

Prev5 of 5Next

TERI REEVES, JAMIE CHUNG, MEGHAN ORY ONCE UPON A TIME: “Ruby Slippers” Find Their Way Back to Oz

READ NEXT 

You May Like

More