

Items in order will be sent via Express post as soon as they arrive in the warehouse. Order may come in multiple shipments, however you will only be charged a flat fee.Ģ-10 days after all items have arrived in the warehouse The Flash is all about the DC Multiverse - and the Flash himself has always been key to the DC Multiverse, since it was introduced.Items in order will be sent as soon as they arrive in the warehouse. That's the version that will be adapted into a movie as part of James Gunn and Peter Safran's new DC Studios, seemingly eschewing The Flash's alt-reality take on the character in the process.įor now, fans have an all new version of Kara Zor-El to look forward to in The Flash - and with so much still unknown about how the movie will affect the future of DC Films, it's not impossible we'll see Sasha Calle's version of Supergirl again someday. Most recently in comics, this dynamic has manifested in writer Tom King and artist Bilquest Evely's limited series Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow, in which Kara Zor-El must carve out her own path as a hero in the shadow of her more famous cousin. Helen Slater would later go on to guest star in the CW's now concluded Supergirl TV show, in which Melissa Benoist played the title character for six seasons between 20. Though that movie wasn't a hit, it's since become something of a cult classic. In 1984, amidst the success of Christopher Reeve's Superman films, Helen Slater was cast as Kara Zor-El in her own Supergirl spin-off film.

Supergirl has come to television and even movies before. This has resulted in a common aspect of her origin being that Kara only remembers Kal-El as an infant, expecting to mentor him to adulthood when she finally meets him - only to discover that because of Kal-El's time on Earth as Clark Kent, he's aged to adulthood while she's still a teenager, leading him to mentor her in the ways of being a superhero. In her most common origin, she's sent off in a survival pod much like Kal-El's own but already a teenager, rather than an infant.

Though this detail has more or less held true through most of Kara's incarnations, the circumstances of her meeting with Superman are a bit more fluid. Originally, Kara was a resident of Argo City, an entire Kryptonian city that had managed to break off from the dying planet and survive as its own self-sustaining colony through Kryptonian super-science. Just how Kara managed to survive Krypton exploding has changed over the years across different eras of DC continuity. Created by writer Otto Binder and Al Plastino (who had also previously created Shazam's superheroic sister Mary Marvel for then DC rival Fawcett Comics years prior), Kara was a Kryptonian who had survived the death of Krypton just like Superman, with all his powers to boot.
