Creative differences reportedly led James Gunn and Peter Safran’s DC Studios to test competing Supergirl cuts – one from director Craig Gillespie and one from the studio – just months before its release.
Behind-the-scenes details from the latest DCU movie suggest creative differences had the crew battling to choose a direction for Milly Alcock’s standalone superhero debut, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Updates on the flick’s development follow a week of negative reactions from fans hoping Supergirl would have taken flight before it bombed during its opening weekend at the box office.
The site says “numerous sources” reported creative differences between Gunn and Gillespie, specifically, with the film pulling test scores that struggled to break 70 out of a possible 100 points. While some said DC Studios and the director had a normal amount of friction during Supergirl, another said a polite way to describe the dissonance would be to say they were “not creatively aligned.”
DC Studios had allegedly known Supergirl would face issues as early as fall of 2025, just a few months after filming finished that May. Gunn and Safran’s DC film wing jumped in after a so-so screening aired in December 2025, with the studio then creating its own cut of the film with the aid of Mortal Kombat 2 and Moon Knight writer Jeremy Slater.
At least four test screenings aired throughout December 2025, February 2026, and March 2026. Although some winter screenings returned test scores in the low 70s, DC Studios called for two cuts to be made: one from Gillespie and one from the studio. The exact differences between the two are unclear, but as previously rumored, the director’s is said to have been about 11 minutes longer and featured a greater emphasis on Matthias Schoenaerts’ antagonist, Krem.
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