DC has dropped another trailer for the Supergirl movie, and if you were hoping for something wildly new, well manage your expectations. The film, starring Milly Alcock (House of the Dragon) as Kara Zor-El, involves space bars, emotional trauma, and a dog in peril. Supergirl hits theaters on June 26, 2026, directed by Craig Gillespie (I, Tonya) with a screenplay by Ana Nogueira (The Vampire Diaries).
Krypto gets shot and Supergirl goes full scorched earth heres the trailer breakdown
The new trailer wastes no time laying out its premise, and the source material is doing a lot of heavy lifting. Supergirl is a live-action adaptation of Tom King and artist Bilquis Evelys critically acclaimed 2022 comic Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow. The story setup echoes the comic closely, with Supergirl (Kara) traveling across space on a revenge-driven journey, accompanied by Krypto, her loyal dog.
Recommended Videos Kara Zor-El, played by Alcock, crosses paths with Ruthye (Eve Ridley), an alien girl on a mission to get revenge on Krem of the Yellow Hills (Matthias Schoenaerts), a villainous pirate-assassin who murdered her father. Their first run-in with Krem doesnt go great as he shoots Krypto with a poison dart, giving the beloved super-dog only three days to live unless Kara can track down the antidote.
So yes, this is essentially a John Wick situation. Krypto isnt just there for emotional support. He is the emotional trigger. Someone hurt the dog, and now the entire galaxy is about to regret it. Kara and Ruthye team up, bounce between planets, clash with space pirates, and cross paths with Jason Momoas Lobo a loud, reckless, motorcycle-riding bounty hunter who wasnt in the original comic but honestly looks like the most fun addition here.
The cast rounds out with David Krumholtz as Karas father Zor-El, Emily Beecham as her mother, Alura In-Ze, and a cameo from David Corenswet returning as Superman/Kal-El. The trailer sells the action well. The scale feels big, the vibe is punchy, and Alcock clearly has the chops to carry a film like this. But once the excitement fades a little, a nagging question creeps in.
Wait, is this Guardians of the Galaxy again?
Heres where things get a bit awkward. While the trailer looks good, it doesnt look new.
Supergirl is the first major DCU movie that James Gunn isnt directing. The problem is that it looks like the first MCU film that Gunn actually directed. From the jump, the vibe screams Guardians of the Galaxy. So, Gillespies vision for Kara Zor-El looks less like the DCU staking new ground and more like a greatest-hits shuffle of Gunns back catalog.
Lets start with the obvious: Supergirl struts around in a trench coat, orange headphones in, carrying the emotional weight of a lost homeworld. Sound familiar? Star-Lord called, and he wants his character arc back! Both protagonists are emotionally stunted by childhood tragedy Kryptons destruction for Kara, his mothers death for Peter Quill and both cope by being the coolest person in whatever alien dive bar theyre standing in.
Then there are the alien worlds themselves. You have the scrappy space setting, neon-lit alien bars, messy worlds that look like junkyards, and a soundtrack that feels like it raided someones retro playlist. The aesthetic has that same lovable messiness that made Guardians feel so distinct back in 2014.
Funnily enough, whats quietly getting lost is what made Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow so visually striking in the comics. Bilquis Evelys artwork had a sharp, jagged energy, and Matheus Lopes bold color palette with vivid oranges, teal greens, sickly golds, and pronounced pinks gave it a look unlike anything else. The film nods at that palette but keeps things muted and murky. Visually, it ends up looking more like a Guardians sequel than an adaptation of one of the most beautiful comics of the past decade.
There is also the matter of a CGI animal companion, because apparently, no space adventure is complete without one. Rocket had his moment. Now it is Kryptos turn. The addition of Lobos character only deepens the GOTG energy. A ragtag crew, a found-family dynamic, a CGI animal at the emotional center; its a formula that worked brilliantly for Gunn in 2014. Using it again this early in his DCU career is a bit of a gamble.
And yes, the whole go to the ends of the world to save your dog premise is unambiguously John Wick in space. Which is fun! But its borrowed fun.
Maybe itll surprise us when Supergirl actually lands
To be fair, this is just a trailer. And trailers are very good at selling vibes, not depth. Supergirl doesnt hit theaters until June 26, so theres still plenty of time for it to carve out an identity that goes beyond what two-minute edits can capture.
Gillespie is a genuinely creative director with a track record of making films that subvert expectations (I, Tonya being the obvious example), and Alcock has the star power to make Kara feel distinct. The bones of a great movie are clearly here because the comic it draws from is strong. And sometimes, familiar ingredients can still lead to a great final product if the execution is right. So heres hoping the full movie shows us something the trailer wasnt willing to.










