She has powers. She has rage. But she has no home.
DC Studios has finally dropped a striking new trailer for Supergirl, and this isn’t the polished, perfect superhero story fans are used to -- this is something far more fractured, and far more human.
Milky Alcock returns as Kara Zor-El after her brief appearance in last year’s Superman, but this time, she’s front and center -- raw, restless, and searching.
The trailer opens not with action, but with absence.
“I’m worried you’re not gonna find your people,” Clark Kent tells her gently.
Kara’s reply cuts deeper than any villain ever could: “I have no people.”
That loneliness becomes the film’s heartbeat.
Her only anchor? Krypto -- the loyal superdog who, in a cruel twist, is poisoned by the ruthless Krem of the Yellow Hills.
Suddenly, the stakes turn painfully personal. With just three days to save him, Kara isn’t just fighting enemies -- she’s fighting time itself.
“Home is wherever you are,” she whispers to Krypto.
And just like that, the galaxy feels smaller -- and the loss, heavier.
But this is not a solo journey.
Enter Jason Momoa’s Lobo -- loud, dangerous, and wildly unpredictable.
An unlikely alliance forms, injecting the film with chaotic energy as the two charge across space in a high-stakes mission of vengeance and justice.
Directed by Craig Gillespie, Supergirl leans into a darker, more complex narrative.
“This is really an anti-hero story,” he revealed. “She’s got a lot of demons… very different from Superman.”
DC chief James Gunn echoes that shift, breaking away from the flawless female superhero trope.
“She’s not perfect at all,” he said -- and that imperfection might be her greatest strength.
Because this Supergirl isn’t here to inspire from a distance.
She’s here to break, to rage, and to rebuild.
Supergirl lands in theatres on June 26 -- carrying not just superpowers, but scars.


