Current:Home > StocksEven heroes feel helpless sometimes — and 'Superman & Lois' is stronger for it -CapitalWay
Even heroes feel helpless sometimes — and 'Superman & Lois' is stronger for it
View
Date:2025-04-14 16:24:26
When considering why I've fallen in love with The CW's series Superman & Lois, my thoughts turn to something I've started calling The Superman Paradox.
It's embodied in a passage I read many years ago from science fiction writer David Gerrold (Star Trek's "The Trouble with Tribbles" episode), who once wrote — and I'm paraphrasing here: Watching a superhuman tackle problems isn't interesting, because, well, Superman always wins. But watching a regular guy tackle a superhuman problem — that's where really great stories are found.
I bring this up because Superman & Lois has offered one of the most compelling solutions to The Superman Paradox this year. And as the show airs its season finale Tuesday night, the series has given its superhero star a massive challenge — revealing the program's beating heart while turning him into an average guy with a battleship-size nemesis.
The Man of Steel made helpless
The show centers on Superman/Clark Kent and Lois Lane as parents. They have two teenage sons in high school, and before the current season, they were negotiating sibling rivalry (one inherited dad's powers and the other didn't), dating and absent father issues while juggling world-threatening supervillains. You know, typical stuff for The CW's superhero series.
But this season, Elizabeth Tulloch's no-nonsense Lois Lane was diagnosed with cancer. And suddenly, a man who never gets ill and rarely feels pain has to try helping the person he loves most survive a life-threatening illness.
In one episode, called "The Dress," Lois wants to throw out a treasured garment Tyler Hoechlin's Clark Kent bought for her to attend a special event. Eventually, she explains that the double mastectomy she will have to undergo has left her wondering if she'll ever be interested in sex again.
"Sex is a big part of our marriage," she says firmly to Clark, dropping a line I've never seen in a comic book. (He assures her they will figure it out, somehow.)
Another episode, "Of Sound Mind," finds Clark avoiding a therapy group with relatives of patients fighting cancer, because it is so difficult for him to admit that Lois might die. After rushing into a confrontation with a supervillain that nearly kills him and his superpowered son, Clark has to admit his inability to process his helplessness — which every relative of a person fighting serious disease feels intensely — is throwing him off.
"I realize I've been so obsessed with keeping [our son] safe, because for the first time I can't keep you safe," he tells Lois, tears filling his eyes. "I feel really powerless."
Which is kind of the point.
Reinventing the model comic book couple
Watching Hoechlin and Tulloch together reminds me of the romance between an earlier Clark/Lois duo I also loved: Dean Cain and Teri Hatcher, who starred in the 1990s-era ABC series Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman.
Back then, the show toggled between more cartoonish action sequences and grown-up emotional conflicts, with Hatcher's Lois figuring out Clark's secret identity before he could tell her, raising issues of trust among two characters who always served as the model comic book couple.
To their credit, producers on The CW's Superman & Lois leaned into an even more realistic and emotive approach in their cancer storyline, stretching the arc of Lois' illness across most of the 13-episode season.
I already loved the way this Clark and Lois parent; they're way more involved and authoritative than many TV parents who tolerate theatrical rebellion from bratty kids. This season, we also got to see how the couple's connection to each other could move metaphorical mountains.
Loving the human more than the superhuman
All this brought a surprising change in this 50-something comic-book-nerd-turned-critic — watching Superman & Lois, I'm often much more interested in the human moments between characters than anything that happens when Clark puts on the red cape and soars into the skies.
Beyond Lois' cancer fight, there's local firefighter Kyle Cushing, who blew up his marriage by cheating and now is trying to build a new life. Clark's friend Lana Lang — Cushing's cheated-on wife — gets divorced and wins election as mayor of Smallville. And Lois' father, Sam Lane, is a workaholic general trying to rebuild relationships with his daughter and grandkids that he was too busy to develop when they were younger.
Yeah, they've got a lot going on.
As the season ends, a new Big Bad for the show has emerged in Lex Luthor, played by character actor extraordinaire Michael Cudlitz (The Walking Dead, Southland). Of course, Luthor is Superman's classic nemesis, but he hasn't shown up in person on Superman & Lois until Cudlitz stepped onscreen, carrying himself like a cross between Vincent D'Onofrio's Kingpin character and one of Clint Eastwood's laconic Western tough guys.
But the biggest challenges facing the series may come offscreen. Nexstar Media Group, which owns nearly 200 TV stations across the nation, bought The CW last year and canceled many of its original series, while brutally slashing production budgets on others. Superman & Lois was renewed for a shortened, 10-episode season, and seven regular cast members got axed — including the performers who play Sam Lane and Lana Lang, and all the nonwhite characters on the series.
So this year's season finale may be the last time viewers can enjoy Superman & Lois at its full power, depicting a couple whose superheroic status doesn't come from any amazing powers or abilities. Instead, they're sustained by an enduring love that conquers all — even foes beyond the powers of the Man of Steel.
veryGood! (28749)
Related
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- This meteorite is 4.6 billion years old. Here's what it could reveal about Earth's creation
- Australian police allege a man killed a work colleague before shooting himself
- Australian minister says invasive examinations were part of reason Qatar Airways was refused flights
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Three 15-year-olds die when car crashes into vacant home in suburban St. Louis
- Maui beckons tourists, and their dollars, to stave off economic disaster after wildfires
- New Rules Help to Answer Whether Clean Energy Jobs Will Also Be Good Jobs
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Alabama doctor who fled police before crash that killed her daughter now facing charges, police say
Ranking
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- Investigators say a blocked radio transmission led to a June close call between planes in San Diego
- ‘That ‘70s Show’ actor Danny Masterson could get decades in prison at sentencing for 2 rapes
- Investigative genetic genealogy links man to series of sexual assaults in Northern California
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- The Riskiest Looks in MTV VMAs History Will Make Your Jaw Drop
- Poland’s opposition accuses the government of allowing large numbers of migrants, corruption
- Film festival season carries on in Toronto, despite a star-power outage
Recommendation
'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
Accidentally throw away a conversation? Recover deleted messages on your iPhone easily.
Man charged with aiding Whitmer kidnap plot testifies in own defense
4 Roman-era swords discovered after 1,900 years in Dead Sea cave: Almost in mint condition
$73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
Pratt Industries plans a $120M box factory in Georgia, with the Australian-owned firm hiring 125
Boy band talent agency's new president faces abuse allegations after founder's sexual assault scandal
Deion Sanders, Colorado start fast with rebuild challenging college football establishment