Showing posts with label The Flash. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Flash. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 5, 2016

"The Flash" Season 3 Premiere Recap: Point Break


The Flash | Flashpoint Scene 1 | The CW

Grant Gustin as The Flash and Keiynan Lonsdale as Kid Flash.

Theres only one thing I know about life, Barry Allen says in the opening voice-over of The Flashs season 3 premiere. I know some things happen by chance. And some things happen because we make them happen.

Now, theres a couple problems here, the first being that those are two things, Barry. But the second, far more all-encompassing issueis that its true, some things in life really dont happen unless we force the issue. Asking your childhood crush on a date in a coffee shop is one example. Running backwards in time to stop your mothers murder, therefore altering the trajectory of all time and space as we know it is another example. And therein lies the issue; Barry Allen is equating one with the other. The first half of Flashpoint is concerned with watching Barry, who we know to be very, very smart, trying his darndest to justify what is clearly a very, very selfish decision.

I mean, I suppose it could be worse. Geoff JohnssFlashpoint event of the comic books was so catastrophic it altered the DC Universe for years, gave way to the across the board moody New 52, and the publisher had to drag Alan Moores omnipotent Doctor Manhattan into the fray just to explain the dang thing (for his part, Alan Moore responded by angrily casting a spell in a cottage outside Northampton, England).Episode writer Brooke Roberts, playing off a story by exec-producers Greg Berlanti and Andrew Kreisberg, does the exact opposite; Flashpoint, for the most part, is a return to the lighthearted jauntiness that was season ones trademark, that the show largely lost in Season 2: Arrow But With Lightning Bolts. Yes, this comes along with the layers of cheese The Flash so often melts over painfullyon-the-nose dialogue (over-under on how many iterations of Some people are just meant to meet we get in an hour). But story issues asideand oh boy, are there issues, and well get to thattheres a lot of fun to be had in this alternate timeline while it still exists.

Case in point: Carlos Valdes is having the time of his d**n life playing Cisco as the tech-billionaire owner of Ramon Industries. Think Jesse Eisenbergs Lex Luthor from Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, but entertaining instead of the absolute worst. The moment Cisco testily misses a layup is one I will treasure for years to come:

Then theres Wally West as dont-call-me-Kid Flash and his ongoing feud with Edward Clariss, a speedster who labelled himself The Rival to prove he has no rival, which doesnt make a ton of sense. But thats okay! Keiynan Lonsdale is charming as h**l as Wally, and sells the fact that an inexperienced, hotheaded Flash wouldnt do much more than blaze around with one enemy in a super-powered game of one-upmanship (although I did laugh when someone in the police department yelled for, like, the third time Ohhhh Kid Flash and Rival are at it again!).

But again, this all blur-circles back to Barry, who is navigating this with the optimism of a dog in a burning house. Which is why when the premiere turns dark real fast, its jarring. I mean, theres no way around it this episode effectively ends with Barry murdering his own mother. Its Eobard Thawne who holds the knife, as it was the first time and always will be, but Barry course-corrects from Flashpoint by letting it happen.The path Barry takes to that decision is so quick, though, it almost doesnt feel earned. To be fair, he says it himself: Speed has always been my problem.

But this is a problem. True, the universe kind of forced Barrys handWally was on his deathbed after the climactic battle with Rival, and Barry was losing all memory of his former self, powers includedbecause of course of you f**k with time, time f***s with you back. I learned that from James Franco. But thats a momentous choice to make, to willingly stand there as your greatest enemy kills your mother, that Barry processes and decides over the course of about three scenes and a few hugs.

Of course, Barry and Thawne dont return to a completely unchanged timeline. For one, we get a brief, faceless introduction to season 3 big bad, Doctor Alchemy, voiced by Jigsaw himself, Tobin Bell.

Completely unrelated to this episode, but in the earliest appearances of Doctor Alchemy he used a magnetic light called Elemento to send The Flash into space, a plot point I fully support The Flash copying with minimum to zero changes.

But the real changes here are more emotional than grandiose; Wally is alive, Joe and Barry are back on speaking terms, but for some yet-unknown reason, Iris and Joe arent on speaking terms. Thats a small change that effectively shatters the universe of both The Flash and The Flash. Barry ended season 2 by changing the entire world, by creating Flash Point, all because of a parental connection he never had. Now he not only understands that he could alter time itself and still not have that connection, but in trying hes doomed Iris to that same burden.Make no mistake,I do not want a return to the brooding of The Flash at its doom-and-gloomiest last season, I do have to give kudos to the weight Grant Gustin puts into Barrys final line here: Oh Godwhat have I done?

I know two things about life, and its that what Barry did was mess up very, very badly.

  • If theres one solid rule of TV Critiquing 101, its dont nitpick. Unfortunately, I skipped that class in college to get high and watch The Flash, plus if its any form of storytelling that practically begsto be nitpicked, its time travel. With that said: If Barry is losing his memories of the former timeline completely, how does he know hes forgetting? Wouldnt the only way to know youre forgetting be toremember?
  • Nitpicking Part 2: Barry asks to leave work early to bring Thawne dinner. Assuming he feeds him every day, wouldnt that mean Barry has to leave work earlyevery day?
  • Caitlin: Excuse me, have I been kidnapped? Wally: Unclear.Danielle Panabaker was wasted in Caitlins short, super nonessential appearance here, but this exchange was gold. As was billionaire-douche Cisco referring to Caitlin as Kitty Eye Docs.
  • Man, Wally was really thrilled to explain in deep, expository detail his Flash origin story to a dude he literally just met while lying in a dumpster.
  • Cisco: This guys like a weather wizard or something. Its nice to know some habits defy the laws of time and space.

Source: http://observer.com/2016/10/the-flash-season-3-premiere-recap-point-break/

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Wednesday, May 20, 2015

The Flash Holds Steady In Ratings, As iZombie Rises



While The Flashs season finale sped past most critics and fans expectations last night, it held a fairly steady pace in the ratings race.

The dramatic season finale, Fast Enough, earned 3.71 million viewers in the Live & SD category last night. Of those viewers, 1.4 million were in the key demographic of 18-49 year-olds. The 1.4 score was a slight 7% drop from last weeks episode, Rogue Air.

While the Flash held firm, The CWs other DC series, iZombie, saw a decent spike in viewership. The new series scored 1.76 million viewers overall last night, 0.7 of which were in the 18-49 year-old demographic. Thats a nice 17% uptick in the demo from last weeks episode.

The Flash returns to the CW this Fall, while iZombie airs on Tuesdays at 9:00 p.m. on The CW.

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Source: http://comicbook.com/2015/05/20/the-flash-holds-steady-in-ratings-as-izombie-rises/



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Thursday, April 2, 2015

Arrow and The Flash Stars: It's Time for a Gay Superhero on TV (Video)



The casts and creators of The Flash and Arrow speak with The Advocate about the ways these shows are changing the face of television in this episode of Advocate Spotlight.

The cast and creators from The Flash and Arrow weigh in on their shows' inclusion of people of color, out actors, and LGBT characters.

Posted by Advocate Spotlight on Monday, March 30, 2015

By including LGBT characters and filling roles with people of color and out gay actors, the CW networksArrowandThe Flashhave set a new standard for the way superheroes are depicted on TV.

The casts and creators from each series spoke with The Advocate earlier this month at Paleyfest, the annual festival that salutes creative excellence in television, and shared why they're proud to be a part of shows that are models for greater diversity in the genre.

Its great, says Grant Gustin,the actor who brings DCs Scarlet Speedster to life on the small screen, adding, Thats just kind of how TV should be now in 2015, to be honest.

The Flashmade history earlier this year when it introduced views to Pied Piper, the first gay supervillain to ever appear in a TV series based on a mainstream comic book. I love when they brought Pied Piper along, says Danielle Panabacker, who plays Dr. Caitlin Snow onThe Flash. Its sad to me that it has to be a brave thing to bring a character like that on television, but I love that were doing it.

Panabackers sentiments are echoed byArrowactor Paul Blackthorne (Quentin Lance) when he is asked about an historic moment on his show just one year earlier, when Sara Lance/Black Canary was introduced as TVs first bisexual superhero. Its nice that they put that stuff in the show and if thats helping to sort of ground break in any way then thats great, he says. G*d bless the bisexuals of this world, I say, and everyone in between and beyond.

In addition to enriching each series with a diverse range of characters, these shows are also changing the genre from the inside by expanding the pool of actors who play them. Hearing from fans, especially blerds black nerds and fans of color, its really important for them to see themselves represented in comic books, says Candice Patton, who play Iris West on The Flash a character previously depicted onlyas a white female. Comic books are beloved by so many, and so I think were finally seeing more and more ethnicity in these shows, and for me to be a part of that, its not lost on me.

Its blind casting, and weve been waiting for it for a long, long time. And thank G*d its here, adds out actor John Barrowman, the man who has been making bad look oh-so-good as Oliver Queens nemesis Malcolm Merlyn/The Dark Archer since the first season ofArrow.

But while these strides are changing the way audiences see the never-ending battle between good and evil depicted on TV, Barrowman says hed like to see LGBT representation in a superhero series leap even taller obstacles in a single bound.

When asked if he thought American audiences were ready to see a gay superhero like Flash or Arrow in a series of their own, he replies, Personally, I dont care if they are, or not. Its time we had one.

Read More: Arrow and The Flash Creator Greg Berlanti Aims to Make TV Superheroes "Look Like America"

Source: http://www.advocate.com/arts-entertainment/television/2015/03/31/arrow-and-flash-stars-its-time-gay-superhero-tv-video



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