Superman Stuff #24: My Adventures With Superman is back for Season Three

The Adult Swim animated series My Adventures With Superman is back for its third season, so this week I wanted to take a look at the season premiere. I only touched on this series briefly during the Year of Superman, so before I get into it, I wanted to talk about some of my overall feelings. These will include spoilers for the first two seasons, so if you haven’t watched it, you may want to skip this week.

It took me some time to get into this show, I admit. The characters are very young – Clark and Jimmy are straight out of college getting jobs at the Daily Planet, where Lois Lane is already employed. I didn’t mind the characters being young, but there’s an energy to this show (more prominent in the earlier episodes) that I can only describe as “anime-esque.” That is intentional, no doubt. The character designs evoke anime and there are bits where they zip around and have quick anime-style non sequiturs. This isn’t to say that it wasn’t done well, it’s just…I’m not much of an anime fan. If you are, hey, that’s cool. But not everything is for everybody and, with rare exceptions, I’ve found that anime is not for me. The good news is that sort of stuff has been downplayed after the first half of the first season, making the whole thing more palatable to me. 

That said, it took me a few episodes to really get into the show, and I think the exact moment it happened was the episode (episode four, I think, but I don’t remember for certain) where Lois figured out that Clark was Superman. There are a lot of continuities now where Lois is in on Clark’s secret, but in most of them either he revealed the truth to her or (such as in Man of Steel) she knew him before he “became” Superman and thus there was never any secret between them in the first place. I really like Lois solving the mystery on her own, though. She’s supposed to be the most brilliant investigative reporter in the world, after all – let her investigate this in a brilliant way. Once we hit that point, I grew an appreciation for the show and their portrayal of the characters and I enjoyed it much more. And the voice cast is wonderful too, particularly Jack Quaid as a young, inexperienced Superman.

If there’s one thing I’m NOT wild about, it’s the costume. They tweaked it in season two and it looks like it’s been tweaked again in season three, with more piping and unnecessary details. I’m a purist, I guess, the simpler the costume the better, but if that’s the biggest complaint about this show, I can live with it. 

The premiere of Season Three, “Into the New World,” begins with Superman taking Supergirl to the newly-upgraded Fortress of Solitude, where she’s interring the captured Brainiac module from last season, and Clark gets warnings from the Fortresses’s new robots about the many, many crises he’s going to face soon. I’m sure none of those are going to come back and be significant in the rest of the season. Back in Kansas, it’s Halloween, and the group heads to the Kent Farm to help set up the corn maze and hand out candy. While Jimmy and Kara bounce around their awkwardness surrounding their mutual attraction, Lois freaks out as she realizes that Clark is thinking about their future WAY more than she is. She escapes the uncomfortable conversation when her father gives her a tip about a nearby abandoned biotech facility. The group investigates and finds a project dedicated to cloning Kryptonians, including an entire arboretum full of Kryptonian plant life, several genetic monsters, robot guards, and a strange young man who seems to have lived his entire life there. 

I’m really glad that they’ve upgraded Kara to the main cast this season, adding her to the opening credits and integrating her into the (former) trio. She brings a different energy to the group – as bold and fearless as Lois, but with an added naivete stemming from her ignorance of Earth, and just a TINY air of superior arrogance that’s amusing. It’s a new angle to the dynamic that I really like.

If you’ve paid any attention to the casting announcements or pre-season buzz, you already know who the boy they find in the lab is destined to be, but even if you haven’t, it’s probably not too hard to figure out where they’re going with him. That said, I like the way they’re bringing in elements of the Superman mythos in different ways. This is a new version of Superboy, one who has elements of the Conner Kent version from the comics, but who isn’t EXACTLY the same. The same can be said for most of the main characters, both heroes and villains (including the villain teased in the final scene) – they’re familiar enough that you have the flavor of who they are, but different enough that the show feels like its own thing. It’s less an adaptation of the classic stories and more a new mythology that’s built on the DNA of the older one.

It’s a little thing, but the show does the usual comic book trope of dropping in references to the larger stories that inspired them – references to lesser-known characters, name-dropping Supergirl’s creator, and sneaking in Superman’s old-fashioned catch phrase. And I may be reading too much into it, but you can’t convince me that the guy wearing a Star Trek uniform in the middle of a Halloween crowd isn’t a tongue-in-cheek reference to Jack Quaid’s role on the best Trek series of the modern era, Lower Decks

Like most shows these days, My Adventures With Superman is episodic. The first episode of a season is less of a story on its own and more of the first chapter in a season-long arc. As such it’s successful, setting a lot of elements into play, introducing two new major characters, and establishing what appear to be the emotional arcs for our main characters for the next nine episodes. I enjoyed it, I’m glad the show is back, and I’m quite excited to see how they’re planning to set up Jessica Cruz for the My Adventures With Green Lantern spinoff before the end of the season. 

Blake M. Petit is a writer, teacher, and dad from Ama, Louisiana. His most recent writing project is the superhero adventure series Other People’s Heroes: Little Stars, volume one of which is now available on Amazon. Don’t forget, you can check out earlier blogs in the Year of Superman/Superman Stuff Archive! Got a request for a future “Superman Stuff”? Drop it in the comments!

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