Supergirl 3.02: Triggers
Gabriel Llanas and Anna Musky-Goldwyn
David McWhirter
This was a definite letdown after some of the
fun to be had in "Girl of Steel". The episode's main plot does
continue to focus on the titular heroine, only this time, it's a different area
to mine for drama. Instead of shutting down her human emotions and focusing on
her Supergirl duties, her worst fears manifest due to the presence of this
week's villain, Psi (Yael Grobglas of Jane
The Virgin). Psi has psychic abilities that unlock the worst fears of any
person she is around. Humans succumb to their fears, which allow her to walk
into any bank she wants and take the money without fuss.
The concept works only to highlight Supergirl's
various fears, which start at a mild case of claustrophobia, then escalate to
the fear that she sent Mon-El to his death. The show tries to make that fact
more convincing by mixing up first-person viewpoints from Kara witnessing the
destruction of Krypton, then floating in space for twelve years, to a psychic
projection of Mon-El in his pod. The pod explodes, but I feel like that's a
piece of misdirection by the writers. Mon-El will obviously return to Earth at
some point later this season. He's too big a character (and too important to
Supergirl and the narrative) to be featured as a part of the narrative of the
first two episodes, then dismissed out of hand.
As is, Psi is arresting from a visual
standpoint (Grobglas is gorgeous, and her simple black leather outfit makes her
look like an obvious villain), but the series can't show off its dynamic action
sequences with a villain who uses her mind instead of her physicality. The show
does traffic a lot in villains who fight Supergirl on an entirely physical
level so using mental tricks is a definite change-up, but outside of strange
psychic projection waves, it's not that exciting to watch.
The disproportionate balance in the main plot
doesn't leak into the other subplots, but they aren't able to pick up the
slack. Lena Luthor is on her first day working at CatCo after buying it to keep
from the clutches of Morgan Edge last episode, and the changes are immediate.
She has a freer, less autocratic style than Cat Grant, which does benefit the
underlings at the organization (although I definitely would have thought it was
strange that Kara keeps straying away from the central meetings if I were in
Lena's place), but rubs James the wrong way throughout the episode.
The friction between the two characters do give
James more to do outside of being Guardian than much of last season. Here's
hoping that Lena continues to challenge James and keep the others in CatCo on
their toes. It's already rather surprising to me that the show is still
striving to maintain a balance between the superhero hijinx and what's
happening in CatCo and L-Corp.
Speaking of L-Corp, Lena's having to take a bigger
role in CatCo's operations means that there's a hole to fill at the top of her
family namesake's company. Somehow, the episode dovetails the subplot involving
Samantha Arias with this one (and I saw it coming). It doesn't quite make
sense, but the show does well to cover the breadcrumbs leading up to the end
reveal. There's something else going on behind the scenes here, and I think it
has to do with the fact that Lena might actually know that Samantha has super
strength powers. The episode plays the slow burn with this fact, having
Samantha's kid stupidly walk right into life-threatening danger so that she
could somehow goad her mother into showing her powers.
It's essentially the same plot as the one with Bruce Willis and his eager son in the movie Unbreakable, although it's condensed for time here. Lena wouldn't put Samantha in so visible a position as the head of L-Corp without some sort of ulterior motive. And her last name gives away the potential direction that plot might take. It's worth keeping an eye on as the season progresses because there is no clear Big Bad for this season if judged only by these two episodes. That could be Lena Luthor.
- The "psionic cuffs" put onto Psi's head at the end made for an interesting visual
- Kara’s memories of Krypton and invoking her heritage were effective moments
- The visual of Psi's psychic projectile waves looked ridiculous
- The show isn't particularly subtle about the eventual fact that Maggie will break up with Alex