The first reviews for “Supergirl” are in, and while Milly Alcock’s performance is earning praise, the movie’s Rotten Tomatoes score falls behind “Superman.”

Supergirl critic reviews are in, and its Rotten Tomatoes score is not what the DCU needs to see at this point in time.

"Supergirl," starring Milly Alcock in the title role, is getting mixed reviews from Rotten Tomatoes critics.

A punk-rock Supergirl is a welcome, jagged riff on more buttoned-up superheroes, and Milly Alcock is terrific in the role.

Milly Alcock and Jason Momoa bring big attitude to James Gunn's relaunched DC Universe.

Matthias Schoenaerts plays a vicious supervillain, with Eve Ridley as an orphaned teen out to avenge the killing of her family in Craig Gillespie’s interplanetary action saga.

Milly Alcock’s spirited performance makes this Superman spin-off just about tolerable. But it lacks a single fresh idea

“Supergirl” is the newest movie in the DCU, following Kara Zor-El, a hardened Kryptonian survivor as she journeys across space on a brutal revenge mission.

"Supergirl," in theaters Friday, offers a new take on the DC comics hero and overcomes some issues with Kara Zor-El's (Milly Alcock) scrappy sarcasm.

Hot on the heels of DC's hit \

Superman’s moody, punk-rock cousin is let down by a film that tries desperately to emulate the silly playfulness of producer James Gunn, only to fail miserably

Milly Alcock takes charge in a dystopian superhero movie with a terrible script and a "punk rock" attitude of corporate pretension.

Las primeras reseñas de Supergirl reflejan una respuesta dividida: elogios para Milly Alcock y cuestionamientos sobre la construcción de la historia

Supergirl's poor reviews and Rotten Tomatoes score have some questioning James Gunn's DCU judgement, even if he's an excellent filmmaker himself.

The first reviews for “Supergirl” are in, and while Milly Alcock’s performance is earning praise, the movie’s Rotten Tomatoes score falls behind “Superman.”