Fans Spot a Star Wars Alien Hiding in DC's Official $120 Supergirl Movie Artwork
Eagle-eyed fans have spotted Lexo Sooger, an obscure alien from Star Wars: The Last Jedi's deleted scenes, lurking in official DC Comics artwork for the 2026 Supergirl movie. The figure appears on a $119.95 metal print, and fans believe wrong reference material — not an official crossover — is to blame.

A piece of official DC Comics artwork for the upcoming Supergirl movie has accidentally smuggled a creature out of a galaxy far, far away. Eagle-eyed fans of both franchises spotted that a $119.95 metal print celebrating Kara Zor-El appears to feature Lexo Sooger — an obscure alien designed for Star Wars: The Last Jedi — standing right alongside the DC heroes.
The Buzz
- Official Supergirl (2026 Movie) artwork sold by the DC Comics Shop appears to include a recognizable Star Wars alien.
- The figure is widely identified as Lexo Sooger, a creature from The Last Jedi's deleted scenes.
- IGN reported on the mix-up, which fans believe stems from reference material rather than any official crossover.
- Neither artist Bilquis Evely nor DC has commented, and the print remains on sale.
The Artwork That Started It All
The item at the center of the buzz is the Supergirl (2026 Movie) Metal Print, an officially licensed collectible available through the DC Comics Shop for $119.95. Illustrated by acclaimed Brazilian comic book artist Bilquis Evely — who co-created the Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow comic the film is based on — the piece gathers Kara Zor-El and other characters from the movie into a single sweeping, cosmic composition.
Among that lineup, however, sits a hulking, long-necked alien that looks distinctly out of place in the DC Universe. Fans of Star Wars recognized it almost immediately as something that belonged on the other side of the licensing aisle.
Who Is Lexo Sooger?
The alien in question has been identified as Lexo Sooger, a deep-cut Star Wars character created for The Last Jedi. Sooger never made the theatrical cut of the 2017 film — the character was planned to appear in the Canto Bight casino sequence as a bathhouse masseur, and survives today only in the movie's deleted scenes on home release.
That obscurity is exactly what makes the slip-up so striking: this isn't a famous face like a Wookiee or a droid, but a blink-and-you'll-miss-it background creature that most casual viewers have never seen. Spotting it in DC artwork takes a serious eye for Star Wars lore.
How a Star Wars Alien Slipped Into DC Art
Rather than an official crossover, fans pieced together a more mundane — and more amusing — explanation. Supergirl does feature its own hulking, long-necked alien, and the two designs share a striking resemblance: similar physical builds, long flowing dress-like robes, and a large gold necklace. The leading theory is that the wrong reference image found its way into the production, whether sourced by the artist or handed to her by someone at DC, resulting in a Star Wars creature standing in for its DC look-alike.
As of now, neither Bilquis Evely nor DC Comics has addressed the mix-up, and the print is still listed for sale. How long it stays available remains to be seen.
The Movie Behind the Mix-Up
The error has put a spotlight on Supergirl itself, the next chapter in the rebooted DC Universe following last year's Superman. Milly Alcock returns as Kara Zor-El after her introduction in that film, with Jason Momoa — formerly Aquaman in the DCEU — joining as the interstellar bounty hunter Lobo, opposite Matthias Schoenaerts as the villainous Krem of the Yellow Hills. The story follows Kara as she fights to save Krypto the Superdog from a mysterious poison.
Why Fans Are Buzzing
For Star Wars fans, the appeal is irresistible: a creature so deep in the lore that it never even made the final film has resurfaced on official merchandise for an entirely different superhero universe. It's a reminder of how much hidden design work lives in the Star Wars archive, and how easily one stray reference can blur the line between Krypton and Canto Bight. Whether DC quietly swaps the art or lets Lexo Sooger live on as an accidental crossover, this is the kind of franchise-colliding curiosity fans will be talking about for a while.