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Supergirl (Cir-El)


FieldValue
imageSupergirl (Cir-El).png
image_size200
captionCir-El as appeared as the character's debut in Superman: The 10¢ Adventure #1 (2003)
Art by Scott McDaniel
character_nameSupergirl
real_nameMia (Human persona)
Cir-El (Kryptonian persona)
speciesHuman/Kryptonian hybrid
publisherDC Comics
debutSuperman: The 10¢ Adventure #1 (2003)
creatorsSteven Seagle
Scott McDaniel (based upon the Kara Zor-El created by Otto Binder and Al Plastino)
powers*Superhuman strength, durability, speed, and hearing

Art by Scott McDaniel Cir-El (Kryptonian persona) Scott McDaniel (based upon the Kara Zor-El created by Otto Binder and Al Plastino)

  • Flight
  • Solar manipulation

Supergirl (also known as Cir-El or Mia) is a superheroine appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. Created by writer Steven Seagle and artist Scott McDaniel, she first appeared in Superman: The 10¢ Adventure #1 (2003) as the alleged daughter of Superman. She is later found to be a human girl who was genetically altered by the villain Brainiac to appear Kryptonian.

The character apparently disappears from the present when she enters a time stream, traveling to another timeline, to thwart a plot involving Brainiac 13. Although after her disappearance Cir-El has subsequently appeared in other stories set in the main timeline, even meeting the other Supergirls in Superman/Batman (vol. 1) #24, proving that she is still alive. Later DC events that restore the concept of an infinite multiverse and different universes and timelines coexisting at the same time, such as Dark Nights: Death Metal and Dark Crisis, seemingly prove this.

Fictional character biography

''Superman: The 10¢ Adventure''

When a crazed villain named Radion attacks Metropolis, a young girl in a costume leaps into battle and throws the villain into a nuclear reactor. The girl identifies herself as Supergirl, Superman's daughter. When Superman confronts the girl, she claims to be Cir-El, the daughter of Superman and Lois Lane, who originates from the future and was brought to the past by the Futuresmiths. When Superman encounters the Futuresmiths, they show him a future dominated by robotic monsters and a cybernetic version of Superman, which they claim will only be prevented by Cir-El's death. As the Futuresmiths turn to attack Cir-El, Superman flies her to safety. robot Kelex subsequently confirms that Cir-El is a human-Kryptonian hybrid who is not related to Superman.

Rewritten history

Disaster strikes when a future Superman appears and shows Superman a future where Lois Lane is killed, Wonder Woman and Batman are turned into cyborgs by a nano-tech virus, and Cir-El is trapped in a Brainiac robot. Brainiac reveals that he created Cir-El by grafting Kryptonian DNA onto a human body, gave her false memories, and made her a carrier of the nano-virus. Horrified, Cir-El throws herself into a time portal to prevent herself from being born and alter the future.

The return of Cir-El

Thanks to the time-traveling efforts of Bizarro in Superman/Batman #24, Cir-El returns and joins Linda Danvers, Kara Zor-El, and Power Girl to rescue Superman from the Source. However, Superman does not recognize Cir-El due to her originating from an erased timeline.

Powers and abilities

A hybrid of human/Kryptonian origin, Cir-El possesses the standard abilities of Kryptonians, including immense strength, durability, speed, hearing, and flight. She can release stored energy from her hands as blasts of red solar radiation that generate intense heat and force.

References

References

  1. (2010). "The Essential Superman Encyclopedia". Del Rey.
  2. Allan, Scoot. (April 19, 2023). "8 Best Versions Of Supergirl".
  3. Donohoo, Timothy Blake. (May 30, 2021). "Supergirl: Who Was Cir-El, Superman's Imposter Daughter?".
  4. Donohoo, Timothy Blake. (February 17, 2023). "DC's Most Underrated Supergirl Deserves a Second Chance".
  5. McKay, Faith. (May 24, 2021). "First Look At Sasha Calle As The New Supergirl In The Flash".
  6. ''[[Superman (comic book). Superman]]'' (vol. 2) #195 (September 2003)
  7. ''Superman'' (vol. 2) #198 (December 2003)
  8. Sharma, Abhishek. (May 24, 2021). "New Supergirl Sasha Calle Teases Cir-El's Debut in The Flash Movie?".
  9. ''Superman'' (vol. 2) #200 (February 2004)
  10. ''[[Superman/Batman]]'' #24 (January 2006)
  11. ''Superman/Batman'' #5 (February 2004)
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