FindKey

FindKeyは、100万件を超える映画・ドラマ作品、そして数百万人の人物データと独自の16類型CTI診断を統合した、日本初の感情特化型映画レコメンドエンジンです。

Find (見つける) + Key (鍵・正解)

映画に限らず、人生のヒントを見つける場所です。

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スーパーガール
スーパーガール

スーパーガール

20261h 48m★ 6.2アクションアドベンチャーサイエンスフィクション

あらすじ

ジェームズ・ガン監督による2025年公開の映画「スーパーマン」に続くDCユニバース作品で、スーパーマン/クラーク・ケントの従妹であるスーパーガール/カーラ・ゾー=エルを主人公に描いたヒーローアクション。 スーパーマンが地球を救った後の世界。故郷クリプトン星を失ったカーラ・ゾー=エルは、唯一の心の拠りどころである愛犬クリプトと静かに暮らしていた。そんなある日、突如として現れた謎の敵クレムの攻撃により、クリプトが毒に侵されてしまう。カーラは解毒剤を手に入れるべく、同じくクレムに家族を奪われた異星人の少女ルーシーや凶暴な賞金稼ぎロボとともに、宇宙規模の壮大な戦いに身を投じていく。

作品考察・見どころ

ミリー・オールコックが体現するカーラは、希望の象徴というよりは、喪失と怒りを背負った一人の戦士としての凄みに満ちています。過酷な運命を生き延びた者にしか出せない鋭い眼光と、弱者に寄り添う繊細な演技の対比は、本作最大の白眉と言えるでしょう。 原作が持つ叙情的な美学を、映画ならではの圧倒的なスケール感で拡張した点も見事です。静止画では描ききれなかった宇宙の広大さと、神のごとき力を持ちながらも泥臭く正義を問う彼女の葛藤が、映像によってより鮮烈に迫ります。単なる英雄譚を超えた、魂の救済を描く壮大な映像詩に、誰もが胸を熱くするはずです。

興行成績

製作費: $175,000,000 (263億円)

興行収入: $115,401,000 (173億円)

推定収支: $-59,599,000 (-89億円)

※製作費・興行収入はTMDBのデータを参照しています。収支は(興行収入 - 製作費)で算出したFindKey独自の推定値であり、広告宣伝費や諸経費は含まれません (1ドル=150円換算)。

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予告・トレイラー

キャスト

ミリー・オールコック
ミリー・オールコック
Supergirl / Kara Zor-El
Eve Ridley
Eve Ridley
Ruthye
マティアス・スーナールツ
マティアス・スーナールツ
Krem
ジェイソン・モモア
ジェイソン・モモア
Lobo
デヴィッド・クラムホルツ
デヴィッド・クラムホルツ
Zor-El
エミリー・ビーチャム
エミリー・ビーチャム
Alura In-Ze
デヴィッド・コレンスウェット
デヴィッド・コレンスウェット
Superman
カディフ・カーワン
カディフ・カーワン
Bomar Vran
Thalissa Teixeira
Thalissa Teixeira
Mareck Vran
フェルディナンド・キングズレー
フェルディナンド・キングズレー
Elias Knoll

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: クレイグ・ギレスピー

脚本: アナ・ノゲイラ / ジェリー・シーゲル / ジョー・シャスター

音楽: Claudia Sarne

制作: ジェームズ・ガン / マイケル・クリアー / Chantal Nong Vo

撮影監督: ロブ・ハーディ

制作会社: DC Studios / Troll Court Entertainment / The Safran Company / Domain Entertainment

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

Manuel São Bento
Manuel São Bento
★ 6

Check out my full review @ https://www.manuelsbento.com/supergirl-2026-a-fierce-gritty-cosmic-awakening-hampered-by-familiar-trimmings/ Rating: B- SUPERGIRL is a beautifully gritty, visually striking cosmic adventure anchored by a powerhouse performance from Milly Alcock, who perfectly captures the raw vulnerability and fierce strength of Kara Zor-El. While the film shines brightest when diving into the somber depths of survivor's guilt and features a scene-stealing Jason Momoa as Lobo, it gets dragged down by a bland villain, an inconsistent emotional anchor in Eve Ridley's Ruthye, and incredibly frustrating, mood-ruining needle drops. Still, I found it a highly personal origin story inserted in a space western worth experiencing on the big screen.

Brent Marchant
Brent Marchant
★ 3

When one watches a movie and leaves the theater wondering who the picture was supposed to be made for, it doesn’t bode well for the film. Unfortunately, that’s very much the case for one of this summer’s most anticipated blockbusters, the latest effort from director Craig Gillespie. So why the confusion over the target audience? It’s simple: this action-adventure superhero release is all over the map, an offering that decidedly feels like it was put together by committee (and probably a marketing/product development committee at that). The picture includes a little of this, a little of that, and, ultimately, a whole lot of nothing. “Supergirl” plays like yet another cookie-cutter release in this genre, except that it also can’t really decide what it wants to be. From what I could tell, this is supposed to be an introduction/origin story (told in flashbacks) about Kara Zor-El (better known as the film’s title character) (Milly Alcock), a refugee from the doomed planet Krypton. She makes her way to Earth with her beloved pooch, Krypto, where she makes contact with her cousin, Kal-El (aka Clark Kent), better known to the residents of his adopted world as Superman (David Corenswet), subject of a 2025 release by the same name. However, despite the reunion with her cousin and living on a planet whose yellow sun has imbued her with an array of fantastic superpowers, our heroine laments the loss of her home world and subsequently leaves Earth to roam the galaxy with her unruly canine sidekick in search of a new home, answers and herself. She spends much of her time hanging out in dive bars, usually three sheets to the solar wind, and in the company of unsavory characters when not cleaning up the messes created by her dog. Her odyssey eventually leads to a chance off-world encounter with a zealous, articulate would-be teenage warrior, Ruthye Knoll (Eve Ridley), who seeks revenge against the evil Krem (Matthias Schoenaerts), a marauding villain who murdered her family in cold blood. But, given Ruthye’s limited combat experience, she needs help in taking him on, so Kara comes to her rescue but pays a big price for doing so – Krypto is shot with a poison arrow and only has three days to live. Consequently, Kara and Ruthye team up to exact revenge against Krem and to procure from him an antidote to save the pup’s life. Sadly, though, the execution of this adventure leaves much to be desired. For starters, the narrative is simplistic and not particularly compelling, meandering from fight scene to fight scene with action that’s pretty generic, punctuated with some incredibly cheesy special effects and trite cinematography. The story is often derivative, too, tapping many other movie franchises to move the picture forward, including elements reminiscent of the “Star Wars,” “Road Warrior” and “John Wick” films. Furthermore, several brief appearances by Superman and by Jason Momoa as Lobo, one of Kara’s colorful brawling allies, serve as little more than shameless visual marketing plugs for the respective existing and upcoming cinematic franchises of these characters. But perhaps the biggest problem is the character development, especially that of Supergirl herself. She’s definitely not someone made for kids, what with her frequently inebriated behavior, salty language, repeated graphically violent encounters and questionable cohorts, but she’s also not someone who’s going to appeal much to adults, either (and it doesn’t help that Alcock seems wrong for the part and that her character development is wildly uneven at times). And all of this leads back to the question I rhetorically asked at the beginning: Who is this movie supposed to be made for? I’ll admit I found Schoenaerts to be a surprisingly convincing villain. I also thought the idea of taking Supergirl’s character in an unexpectedly dark direction to be an inspired (albeit risky) choice. But the clumsy handling of this decision (among many others) undermines whatever value it may have otherwise added. In short, there’s nothing especially “super” about this release, something that the creators should have more consciously borne in mind when bringing this project to life in light of its title.

RoyMcKenzie
RoyMcKenzie
★ 1

A frustrating mess of a movie that never figures out what it wants to be or who it’s for. The story is paper‑thin and strangely unfocused, drifting from one generic fight scene to the next without any real emotional weight or clear narrative purpose. For a supposed origin film, it does a poor job making Kara Zor‑El feel compelling, coherent, or even particularly likable. Milly Alcock’s take on Supergirl is part of the problem. Instead of giving us a hero with depth or charisma, the film leans into a moody, often inebriated drifter who spends more time sulking in space dive bars and cleaning up after her chaotic dog than actually growing as a character. The attempt to make her “edgy” ends up making her feel shallow and oddly off putting. It doesn’t help that Alcock has publicly gone out of her way to antagonize the very demographic most likely to show up for this movie 13 to 17 year old boys. It’s hard to get invested in a character when the actor seems to hold a visible contempt for a big portion of the fans. Visually, the movie has its moments, it occasionally looks slick and colorful—but that only underscores how empty it is underneath. It borrows ideas and vibes from better franchises, as Brent Marchant indicated (you can see traces of “Star Wars,” “Mad Max,” and “John Wick” all over it), yet never builds an identity of its own. The cameos from Superman and Lobo feel less like organic storytelling and more like clumsy ads for other projects. The biggest issue is that Supergirl herself is written in a way that alienates almost everyone. She’s too foul‑mouthed, violent, and hard drinking for kids, but too thinly sketched and erratic to resonate with adults. The film flirts with an interesting darker angle for the character, then bungles it with inconsistent writing and tonal whiplash. By the end, you’re left asking the same question over and over: Who was this movie actually made for? There are tiny bright spots—a surprisingly solid villain turn and the occasional cool visual—but they’re buried under weak storytelling, uneven characterization, and a lead performance that never clicks. For a film called “Supergirl,” there’s nothing particularly super about it, and even less reason to care about where this version of the character goes next.

UnkleBubbie
UnkleBubbie
★ 10

The online manosphere was attacking this movie online well before it was ever released in theaters. Feels like there is probably significant crossover with the people who bemoaned Barbie & The Little Mermaid. It's an action packed movie with a lot of heart. If this same plot was a Superman movie the dude-bros would be praising it... Don't listen to the chatter. Embrace your individuality and check it out for yourself.

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 6

"Kara" (Milly Alcock) is an unfulfilled soul who revels in a bottle and a battle in equal measure - despite the more restraining attempts at influence from her more famously caped cousin (David Corenswet). That explains why she isn't so very interested in getting involved with "Ruthye" (Eve Ridley) who is on a quest to avenge her murdered family at the hands of the mighty "Krem" (Matthias Schoenaerts). It seems, though, that try as she might she can't shake off this pesky brat and after an altercation of her own with this man as he pinches her spaceship and puts a dart into her beloved pooch "Krypto", she is soon embroiled in a series of escapades across the galaxy seeking the antidote that hangs in an amulet around his neck. All the while, "Lobo" (Jason Momoa) on an huge motor cycle that might ask some very personal questions about this bounty hunter's inadequacy complex is also seeking "Krem" and so works alongside, if not exactly in tandem, with the pair as they constantly manage to escape from the frying pan into the fire against seemingly overwhelming odds, a green sun and even some injectable kryptonite. Sadly, no, there is very little original in this film aside from some flashbacks to fill us in on how she escaped from the doomed "Krypton" in the first place, but I did enjoy Alcock's charismatically enthusiastic and laissez-faire characterisation: a girl with attitude who knows how to kick ass but really just wants to be left in peace to meander the galaxy's yellow suns with her mischievous super-mutt. There is plenty of action and it's quite an enjoyable accompaniment to the rather sacharin-like Corenswet's efforts as "Superman" - but will you ever remember it? Hmmm, I doubt it.

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