Superman and Supergirl are having some of their best adventures on TV right now
And their current big-screen counterparts can't keep up.
2025’s Summer Of Superman got an unofficial sequel this year, with the Man Of Steel popping up in his cousin Supergirl’s not-quite-standalone film and returning for a new batch of adventures on Adult Swim. There are even more Super-related projects coming to theaters soon enough, but the return of My Adventures With Superman, which is halfway through its third season, makes one thing very clear: Right now, the small-screen takes on these particular superheroes have their big-screen counterparts beat.
My Adventures With Superman premiered in 2023, nearly two years before James Gunn launched a new DC cinematic universe. Season one was as charming a showcase for Clark Kent (Jack Quaid), Lois Lane (Alice Lee), Jimmy Olsen (Ishmel Said), and other Metropolis residents as it was for Superman (also Quaid), who was still fairly green, despite regularly defending the city from all manner of threats. Showrunners Jake Wyatt, Brendan Clougher, and Josie Campbell showed us the iconic hero through the eyes of those closest to—and most envious of—the Man Of Steel, but their biggest ambition early on was depicting Superman, one of the oldest and “squarest” superheroes, through the lens of shōnen anime.
Quaid, who was pulling double comics-series duty as a series regular on The Boys, was able to make both Clark and Superman his own, in part by making them so similar to each other. At this point in his life—their lives?—Superman is the alter ego, and Clark is still very much figuring out how to be a hero while also trying to make it as a journalist, maybe even have a girlfriend. The line between the two is a lot more blurry; there’s no moment quite like this one, where Christopher Reeve effortlessly shifts from mild-mannered to awe-inspiring. That might be why Lois and Jimmy are able to crack Supes’ secret so quickly, but instead of robbing season one of tension, this development just opens up new storytelling avenues. Lois, one of the most driven characters in this world, struggles with feelings of inadequacy in “Kiss Kiss Fall In Portal.” She’s just starting to make a name for herself as a journalist, and dating the competition—who also happens to be a god among men, though she obviously can’t talk about that—quite understandably messes with her head. Jimmy is able to be much more public about his friendship with Superman, but that leads to its own set of issues.
When the show returned in 2024, it was with a more assured second season, one that greatly expanded its world. The first episode pulls back the curtain on Task Force X and Amanda Waller (Debra Wilson), who deposed Lois’ dad General Sam Lane (Joel de la Fuente) as the division’s leader. We learn more about life in the Lane household, and why Lois feels she can only rely on herself. Lex Luthor (Max Mittelman) rears his head (which is still covered in hair), making all sorts of trouble, to say the least, for Superman and his pals. Jimmy squanders a fortune while also confirming more than one of his crackpot theories, befriending a talking gorilla in love with a brain along the way. But the real lightning rod is the arrival of Kara Zor-El a.k.a. Supergirl (Kiana Madeira), who was raised by her “Father,” Brainiac (Michael Emerson), to revive the Kryptonian empire, i.e., conquer worlds, including Earth.