Supergirl Season 4 Episode 4 Review: Ahimsa
Alex finds her footing and James becomes a symbol on Supergirl.
ThisĀ SupergirlĀ review contains spoilers.
Supergirl Season 4 Episode 4
This week,Ā SupergirlĀ was framed around nonviolence and rules.
Karaās armor looked a bit too much like Iron Manās for my liking, but the bigger problem was that once again, someone had a giant face covering when what we really needed was to see their emotions. Kara and Alexās conflict was initially framed around Karaās struggle with being sidelined by her health issues. I was happy to see Alex assert her authority to keep Kara safe. The show may be called Supergirl, but Alex is the one whoās Director of the DEO, and sometimes Kara needs to learn to take orders.
Oddly, halfway through the episode the writing changed tack and made this plot about following the new presidentās rules or not, and Alexās insecurities around leading and keeping everyone safe. Thatās also a worthwhile narrative, but it was hard for that lesson to come through clearly, since those dynamics werenāt present until most of the way through that story.
Brainyās emotional development continues to be one of my favorite minor story lines, allowing Jesse Rath to show off more of his range, and I hope he revisits the concept of compartmentalization. Itās no surprise that Lena compartmentalizes to a disturbing degree, given all that sheās been through. But I want better coping mechanisms for both of them, so I hope Brainy lets something about this slip in front of Alex, who is generally more in touch with her feelings.
I wanted so, so much better for Fiona. Manchester Black is a fun character and Iām looking forward to getting to know him (and his interesting, nonviolent fighting style) better, but did we really have to lose Fiona to do so? I love Supergirl but they send women characters of color packing far too often.
Manchester Black provides a potential way forward for Jāonn, who was dealing with some guilt this week. Itās hard to go from being a law enforcement official one week to practicing nonviolence the next, so Iām glad heās backtracking a bit to tack more of an emotional journey to figure out what his next move will be.
This episode left us with a few intense revelations as a send off to next week. Part of what makes this season much stronger than the previous one is the way it is broken ā that is, the parceling out of various stories for each episode over the course of the season. Certain episodes are always supposed to be intense, like mid-season finales, and shows do their best to avoid filler, but itās hard to keep up a consistently high caliber of show for 18-24 episodes like the CW does. Itās still incredibly early, but so far we still have a ton of mileage left forĀ Liberty and the Earth First movement, Brainy, our new character Nia, Lena and Supergirlās conflict, Alex with her new role, which is a good sign for the rest of the season.
James got a costly lesson in what happens when you go from writing the news to being the news, one Iām looking forward to seeing him unpack next week. The previous episode made a point of sprinkling in Libertyās interactions with Lena Luthor and James Olsen as well as Supergirl, the DEO, and aliens more generally, and Liberty even complimented James/Guardian. Mercy did say that Liberty had a skill for communications, and spinning Guardian as a symbol of the Earth First movement is brilliant. It also offers a devastating insight as to why James is not only safe from prosecution, but potentially going to be deputized by the police department.
LibertyĀ isnāt done, though. He also put a parasite in a humanās ear, because this seems like a great time to start experimenting with powered people. Itās interesting that Supergirl has handled the inherent power imbalance in the Earth First versus aliens conflict by always ensuring the humans have powered people on their side. It might make better television, but I do wonder if there isnāt another, more realistic way.
Alex has to face the music ā a colonel has arrived to supervise her since she disobeyed direct orders. After seeing her grow as a leader, though, Iām not worried. As Director Danvers said, ābeing a leader means doing what needs to get done and taking the consequences.ā And not to sound too much like Eliza Danvers, but that Colonel was pretty cuteā¦
Oh and remember that Soviet Supergirl? She was affected by the Kryptonite in the atmosphere too. No clues as to who sheās working with, other than the language theyāre speaking and the government-y look to their compound, but this was a great time to remind us that sheās here too. Is she Bizarro Supergirl? Is she from another Earth? Is there some other explanation? Whoās running her, and what are their goals? Weāll have to wait and see, and thatās a good thing.
A few observations:
Shout out to Streaky in the Mind Palace!
Both Brainy and Jāonn echoed what itās been like in the US recently: āDo humans feel like this all the time? Its intense and disruptive. How do you get anything done.ā āMy mind is hijacked with angerā
I love Brainy: āThese are tears of logic.ā
Manchester Black clearly shops at the CW store, with that long, black (crocodile?) jacket
Did Kara think about what would happen when her enemies figured out she was weak?
āWas that Supergirl, or one of the blokes from daft punk?ā
The mind control of powered people and duplicating powered person in this episode had me thinking of The Gifted.