The second episode of Netflixâs Supacell, âTazer,â explores the stress and anxiety some of the superheroes experience as they discover their powers and test their limits. While some superhero narratives follow characters who experience their powers in secret, Supacell shows what happens when the discovery takes place around loved ones, friends, foes, and observing strangers.
This is akin to how the Marvel Cinematic Universe films opened up during and after The Avengers. The stories became more interesting when we started to learn about how superheroes also affect everyday people, a crucial factor in creator Rapmanâs Supacell. I appreciate that Supacell went in this direction. It feels more realistic and grounded in the actual world.
Supacell and the internal narrative
This focus on the wider world contrasts with the internal feelings, secrets, and activities multiple characters feel, such as when Michael (Tosin Cole) keeps the secret of Dionne (Adelayo Adedayo)âs future death from her, though he shares with her the names he learned when visiting the future.
The theme of internal instinct versus external impact is also prominent in this episode. As Michael explores his powers, knowing they could save his fiancee, he has to decide whether he believes the truth about what he experienced and what Dionne saw, or his friendâs doubts about whether it was possibleâand therefore, whether those in the hood are coming after him.
Rodney (Calvin Demba) also faces doubt from his friend, who of course doesnât believe Rodneyâs run from London to Scotland and back. As he gains control of his abilities, however, his self-confidence remains undeterred (even though women arenât exactly interested in his rude catcalling, an action which makes him a bit difficult to like or empathize with).
Superpower as self-Defense and retribution
For Tazer (Josh Tedeku), who has already been injured and traumatized, his superpower of invisibility has become his self-defense. Not only can he move unseen to avoid recognition, he makes a power move that stops his enemies. He characterizes his goals as âmoney, power, respect.â His friends start calling him âThe Ghost.â He gets cocky quickly.

Sabrina (Nadine Mills) displays a reaction of fear and bewilderment after she uses her own powers. Speaking with her sister, she asks to be comforted while theyâre doing hair. Here, Sabrina talks about her oldest sibling role, which could be part of why her ability manifests as a force to physically defend herself and others. As that power increases, she needs to find comfort for balance.
Michael, like Sabrina, experiences some shock and a period of denial, also doing his best to convince Dionne that he doesnât have powers because he couldnât use them on demand. Understandably, he does not trust the police and doesnât want to go to them with this information.
âThese powers are upon meâ
Michael says this to Dionne when he describes the condition of having superpowersâbut sheâs convinced they have something to do with whatever happens when heâs around Tazer. Heâs also describing the weight of the responsibility he feels for preventing her murder. These layered statements appear more and more as the episode moves on. Itâs masterful writing to make the more cerebral Michael the first primary character introduced, because he brings layers to the mysterious connections the superheroes share.
Initially, I wasnât sure why each episode bears one characterâs name as its title when the episodes, in some instances, give equal time to each main character. However, it becomes evident at the close of episode 2: Michaelâs experience connects him to Tazer first, and Tazerâs the one making big moves that shake and move the narrative.
Again, the episode somewhat sidelined the stories of its women, which often center around what the male characters are doing. We see women cleaning up physical and emotional messes that men make, but we have yet to see a strong narrative for the women in this story. Hopefully Sabrinaâs episode will reveal something more complex and empowering for the sole main female character out of the four.