"Who does your hair?" |
Wow; I’ve let this one drag on, haven’t I? Well, I blame NaNoWriMo.
Also, you may note that, due to the significant limits on co-watching time,
Hanna and I have not progressed with Arrow
this past month.
Supergirl moves onto more
familiar territory as Kara gets her shit a little more together in the wake of
Mon-el’s departure, with a quartet of episodes balancing monster of the week
face puncher with arc plot and personal development. ‘Triggered’(1) sees Supergirl
go up against a metahuman psychic who immobilises people with their own worst
fears, forcing Kara to confront both a lingering claustrophobia resulting from her
long trip through space in a flying coffin and her dread that she has doomed
Mon-el by condemning him to the same or a similar fate. The villain of the piece, Psi, is an interesting take; a metahuman who has weaponised her own pathological fears to attack others. Sadly, she doesn't have a chance to develop much more personality than that.
When Martian was in Egypt land, Let my Martian go. |
Then in ‘Far From the Tree’,
Kara accompanies J’onn back to Mars, where the Staff of Kolar, a religious artefact of stupendous
power, is about to be used by the White Martian authorities to eradicate the rebels within their own ranks. In order to
locate this artefact and keep it from the hands of the White Martian
authorities, J’onn has to reconnect with a man - well, a Martian - that he thought was long dead: His
father, the Green Martian scholar-priest M’yrnn J’onzz (played by animated Martian Manhunter Carl Lumbly.) While
J’onn tries to convince his father of his true identity, M’gann struggles to
control her rebels, some of whom wish to use a forbidden process to force the
knowledge from the mind of even one as powerful as M’yrnn, at the risk of fatal
damage to the subject.
"All you need to do is accept Supergirl as your personal saviour." |
‘The Faithful’ examines the messiah complex so beloved of Zack Snyder,
but with a far more critical eye. A man in crisis faces death in a plane crash,
but this is the plane that Kara saved to protect Alex, beginning her career as
Supergirl. Collecting Kryptonian artefacts, he stumbles on a holy text and forms
a cult, worshipping the Kryptonian god Rau and his emissary, Supergirl, and
planning on detonating a Kryptonian obelisk as part of a plan to reveal
Supergirl’s miraculous nature to more people. Finally, in ‘Damage’, Morgan Edge
reveals that National City’s children are suffering from lead poisoning as a
result of Lena’s anti-Daxamite bomb. Lena succumbs to guilt, but Kara and
L-Corp CFO Sam – more on her below – trace the poisoning to deliberate
contamination of a children’s swimming pool. Lena confronts Edge, but before
she can ‘be a Luthor’ and shoot him, a goon knocks her out and she is trapped
in a plane with barrels of the deadly chemical, heading for a reservoir. Cue
Supergirl.
Cross now. |
We also get to know Sam – a talented orphan and third member of Kara
and Lena’s sisterhood – and her daughter Ruby. Sam may have superpowers and
shares dreams with Kara, and after the Kryptonian pod explodes, rousing someone
from stasis elsewhere, Sam begins having visions of script written all over her skin and a creepy robed figure
telling her she will soon Reign (so, that’s not good.) Morgan Edge reappears, and affirms that he is not just powerful and ruthless, but actually amoral to the point of being a psychopath, willing to poison literally hundreds of children to get at Lena.
Finally, these episodes give us a rare religious focus, with the
worship of Rau, and of the Martian god Kolar and his two sons – Deimos and
Phobos, one the culture-bearing father of all Green Martians, the other the
weapon-obsessed progenitor of the White Martians – each getting a fair chunk of
an episode. Perhaps unsurprisingly given its politics, the show comes down in
favour of personal piety, but sceptical of organised religion and dogma.
"Marbles. My only weakness." |
In ‘Mixed Signals’, Barry’s day job leads to the trail of a software designer turned remote control assassin Kilg%re. Then, in ‘Luck be a Lady’, the Flash goes up against Hazard, a woman who can manipulate chance. Realising that neither of these metahumans was in Central City for the accelerator meltdown, Team Flash track them to an intersection where a bus was confronted by Barry exiting the Speed Force, bringing a wash of Dark Matter with him. In other news, Barry and Iris work through some issues(2) regarding his departure into the Speed Force(3), and Cisco’s relationship with Gypsy progresses. Also, Harry Wells returns to bring Wally a ‘breakup cube’ from Jesse, prompting Kid Flash to decide that he will walk the Earth, like Kane in Kung Fu.
TFW your girl's dad is pissed at you, and he's Danny Trejo. |
Finally, ‘Girl’s Night Out’ brings us to the stag and hen(4) parties for
the West Allen wedding. Dibney crashes the former and turns a quiet night out
into an evening of steak and strippers, enlivened by a phial of ‘get the Flash
drunk’ potion, Cecile’s daughter appearing on stage as part of her research
into the authentic female experience for her novel, and a bar fight. The real
action, as the title implies, is with the hens, as Caitlin’s former boss
Amunet(5) tries to rope her back in to help market the tears of one of the bus
metas, triggering the return of Killer Frost. Iris, Cecile and Felicity Smoak (yay!)
throw in to help defeat the metal-slinging mobster, and Iris is able to help
the Caitlin and Frost personae to find some kind of a balance.
Hey, evil British goth Starbuck! |
‘Freakshow’ takes the Legends to the early days of PT Barnum’s
travelling show, where they accidentally release a sabre-toothed tiger thanks
to a failure of Ray’s new shrink ray, and Barnum tries to deploy them as freaks
instead. This leads to another run-in with Agent Stick-Up-Her-Butt, and I swear
she and Sara will either kill each other or shag by the end of this series;
possibly both(7). ‘Zari’ takes the crew into a near-future in which ARGUS
brutally enforces a series of metahuman control laws, to rescue a woman named
Zari Tomaz from a water-wielding sorceress named Kuasa. Zari, a super-hacker as
well as the inheritor of an amulet which allows her to control winds, is
initially reluctant to accept the Legends help, but warms up to them and
eventually accepts an offer to travel on the Waverider instead of staying in her particular temporal shithole.
"Well, this will be embarrassing in the morning." |
For all its flaws, the show does a splendid job of making Ray both a tragic and a heroic figure. |
Finally, for this time, ‘Return of the Mack’ brings Rip Hunter back to
the Waverider, hunting for a vampire.
His real quarry, however, is Mollus, a vast transtemporal evil, who is
manipulating a cult run by Stein’s identical ancestor, Sir Henry Stein(8) and a
dubious medium who seems to channel Zari’s brother despite him not being dead
yet. The cult aim to resurrect Damien Darhk, and do so after Rip uses a
security protocol to prevent the Legends interfering(9) and so removing the
possibility of Mollus showing his face(10). In the resulting brawl Zari owns her
power, a bunch of Time Bureau agents are killed, and Sara rats out Rip’s
unauthorised investigation.
"Just in case." |
Rip and Nate have both turned into tools. Not sure what’s up with that.
(1) This is Supergirl, so I doubt it is coincidence that the title is a term misused to label feminist responses as emotional outbursts.
(2) I was amused to note that their therapist had a magazine on the
table featuring Oliver’s outing as Green Arrow.
(3) Although it seems a little harsh for Iris to call going into the
Speed Force to save all of creation including her ‘abandonment.’
(4) Batchelor and batchelorette, I suppose.
(5) Mad props for a never-caught crime boss using the name of the ‘Hidden
One’, incidentally.
(6) And he is very Davros.
(7) While the conflict is more professional and less lethal, I get the
same feeling with James and Lena in Supergirl.
(8) Well, he says he’s a knight, but since he wants to attach the ‘sir’
to his surname, I don’t believe him.
(9) He accuses Sara of lacking perspective, which is pretty classic pot
and kettle.
(10) Which he doesn’t, instead possessing his agent, the time-travelling
medium.