Smallville Season 9 delivers classic superhero storytelling centered on Clark Kent's evolution toward becoming Superman, his romance with Lois Lane, battles against Zod and Doomsday, and teaming up with Justice League precursors like Aquaman. Casting remains faithful to source material with predominantly traditional white leads like Tom Welling as Clark and Erica Durance as Lois, alongside Cassidy Freeman as the cunning Tess Mercer and Callum Blue as Zod, without any race-swapping, gender-swapping, or forced diversity that clashes with the narrative or setting. Female characters like Chloe Sullivan (Allison Mack) exhibit strength and resourcefulness as journalists and allies, but these traits feel organic to the plot's demands for capable sidekicks rather than vehicles for feminist lectures or identity politics. Themes focus purely on personal growth, heroism, alien threats, and fated love, with no overt social justice messaging, critiques of systemic patriarchy, capitalism, or traditional norms. Creator interviews emphasize comic book fidelity and character arcs, not activist intent. Reception is nostalgic and positive, with fans praising entertainment value and no notable backlash decrying 'wokeness' or DEI intrusions; discussions even suggest the show holds up well compared to modern remakes that might inject such elements. This season exemplifies unadulterated escapist TV, prioritizing story and spectacle over ideological agendas.