THE CW’s „THE FLASH“ - PILOT REVIEW (Contains Spoilers!)
Premiere Date (Season
1): Oct., 07th
“My name isOliver QueenBarry Allen and I’ma hooded vigilantethe fastest man alive.Green ArrowA friend recently gave me the idea for a new name and something tells me it’s gonna catchfireon.”
Enter The
CW’s newest superhero to defend its city (which is located just some few miles
away from Starling City where his best mate, that green-hooded guy with bow and
arrow, lives): The Flash.
“The Flash”
was developed as a spin-off to that other popular The CW show “Arrow” starring
Stephen Amell.
After a few-episodes stint on “Arrow”, Barry Allen, a CSI guy on
Central City’s PD now has his own show. But because the pilot will not air
until Oct., 7th on The CW, I’ll give you the short premise.
“My name is
Barry Allen and I’m the fastest man alive. A friend recently gave me the idea
for a new name and something tells me it’s gonna catch on.” Enter the
Flash-logo. This is the show’s intro and pretty much summarizes the whole show.
Yeah, not quite.
As is the
case with Arrow, the lead character has big family issues (his father imprisoned
for his mother’s murder, falsely - Barry being struck by lightning and thus
becoming faster than light itself - a good girlfriend he has feelings for but
sadly she has some other shiny police dude as boyfriend, guess who I’d pick as
big end villain for season 1) and he is also a research object at S.T.A.R. Labs,
the very firm responsible for creating this madness by misusing a particle
accelerator. (Come on, how hard can that be?) And now, he’s a vigilante
hero who runs (quite literally) to save the day. Got everything? Good.
If not, don’t worry, this ends my satirical
take at the show and you can start again to get it. Ready? Okay, let’s go.
Many years
ago, Barry Allen’s mother was murdered in front of his eyes by a
someone/something he could not identify back then. His father was then
imprisoned for her murder and still serves his term at Iron Heights, that same
prison where Moira Queen served some time on “Arrow”. Barry however always knew
that his father was innocent but who would believe him saying that a bolt of
lightning killed her? Right, no one. Not even his good friend’s dad who after
the incident raised him until now. Some years in the future, the show starts
off. Barry is now working as a Crime Scene Investigator for Central City’s
Police Department and -again- arrives late at a scene. Det. Joe West (the
surrogate father) covers for him by taking away his snack on the way and eating
it himself.
Barry is no
ordinary CSI guy (and physics lover) though as shall be demonstrated almost immediately
and one will not come around noticing a distinct Sherlock look the show uses.
Same as BBC’s Sherlock, Barry just looks at evidence and in his mind (on the
screen) appears what are the clues he gets out of just looking at -and
smelling- it. Spot on. But let’s skip that discussion.
Barry is until
now portrayed as a sloppy guy like any other and it is actually quite
refreshing to see a stereotypical non-stereotypical guy as a lead character. I
mean, he is like me, probably like you, he is a normal guy who is not perfect
in at least one category (Oliver Queen was rich, Bruce Wayne was rich, Clark
Kent lived happily with his family on a farm, and so on), Barry’s just an
ordinary guy who, admittedly, has come through a troubled and tragic past. But
he is in need for job, doesn’t currently have the courage to confess his
feelings to the girl he loves and is friends with and is a little bit disorganized.
And that’s a fresh change for now.
Back to the
story: In his lab, Barry discovers new evidence that will ultimately be proven
right and be the cause for the death of West’s partner. And he is psyched about
S.T.A.R. Labs new project, the particle accelerator that is envisioned to
change physics and the world when it goes online this very night. Of course,
the big start into a new and better future for all goes horribly wrong,
resulting in 17 deaths, lots of injuries and “madness”. This madness being unknown
energy released into our world, transforming completely normal people into
so-called “meta-humans” (it’s simple, it’s catchy, it’s meta-human!) who now
own never-before-seen powers, like controlling the weather or running faster
than light.
The first one actually is the pilot’s bad guy
and he is someone West thought died in a plane crash after shooting his partner
while charmingly-bad shouting “I’ve got a plane to catch”, this being his most memorable
quote for the duration of the entire episode. Well, the moral of the story: if
you witness a plane crash while a crazy super-storm is being caused by an
explosion of a particle accelerator, you cannot be sure he did not live. Which
leaves the question: where is his brother who also was in the plane,
assumingly? Meta-humans, assemble.
At the same
time, back at Barry’s lab, he is struck by lightning (as already shown in his
Arrow stint) and has to be rushed into the hospital where he in the consecutive
days and weeks seemed to die on a regular basis. The complex explanation: His
heart rate was actually way too fast for any known tech to register it thereby
indicating he was flat-lining. A fact discovered shortly after by Dr. Wells,
ex-CEO and founder of S.T.A.R. Labs, now being forced into a wheelchair. The
simple explanation: not dead.
After some treatment and tests at his lab, it has become clear that Barry’s cells are regenerating at an insane speed so that if he gets hurt it will heal within minutes to hours. And he can clock over 700mph. Which is a lot.
After some treatment and tests at his lab, it has become clear that Barry’s cells are regenerating at an insane speed so that if he gets hurt it will heal within minutes to hours. And he can clock over 700mph. Which is a lot.
So, the rest of the episode is short-told:
Barry faces off with the bad guy during a car accident/fog show that really had
some fun and action in it, if you count fog as action. Which in this
case, would not be wrong, let me tell you. He discovers that his girlfriend now
has a boyfriend (his surrogate father’s cop partner) who seems to be perfect in
every way which makes him highly likely to turn out to have sinister plans
under his blond hair after all, but let’s wait and see if I picked that one
right.
SPOILER! SPOILER!
And to
anyone who has read some of the earlier comics, he will not be unknown as he is
The Flash’s most agonizing adversary of the last century. And one of Professor
Zoom’s aliases is a guy named Thawne (along with Reverse-Flash).
SPOILER END!
Well, then,
the last act of the pilot: West, his partner (whose name I constantly tend to
forget, hehe, but he is named Thawne) travel out to the farm where West and his
old partner already cornered the same bad guy and can now again corner that
same bad guy. And behold, the bad guy has discovered he is “God”. To which,
West replies, “why does God need to rob banks?” Good question which motivates “BadGuy”
(sorry, I can’t remember his name, that one brother dude) to wreak harvoc on
Central City with his tornado skills. Enter Barry AKA The Flash who outruns his
tornado and stops him just for him to be shot by Det. West who now knows what Barry’s
capable of and that he is the red lightning that will at some point in the
series become known as The Flash. But his daughter may not know any of it, he
asks of Barry who did not appear to have ever had other plans concerning that.
SPOILER! SPOILER!
As known,
Isis was the name of The Flash’s first wife so we can assume it will eventually
work out, if they stick to that. But why not try something new, I’d be up for
that as well but the two of them do have great chemistry on screen, so, let’s
wait up and see.
SPOILER END!
But wait, there’s also a cliffhanger! Dr. Wells
is not truly handicapped to a wheelchair (or at least in this hidden room, he
isn’t) and he has access to newspapers from the future! The newspaper in
question refers to April 25, 2024 and declares “Flash Missing - Vanishes In
Crisis” while on a side-note on page 1 also reading that the Wayne Tech and
Queen Inc. merger is complete. Justice League, here we come.
Fade to black.
So, while
this pilot stayed true to what everyone expected: a light-hearted show that
packs some action and witty one-liners, it also features an intriguing
backstory and a great cast that from the first second on feels right where it
should be. While I could without any problem overcome a departure from Cisco
Ramon (the nerd guy who tries to be funny but is over-the-top comic relief and
who designs Barry’s sleeper costume), which is not happening, don’t get
the wrong impression here (as SPOILER!:
he might become another superhero called Vibe, if you -again- have read some of
the comics - SPOILER END!), the rest
of the cast I already love and they do a great job that actually works better
for me than the over-acting in Arrow’s first season (which has gotten way
better after that, thankfully). A big shoutout to the cast who in my opinion did
their job really well and convincingly!
Also, the
pilot was fun to watch and I didn’t realize that 45 minutes could be so short.
Which is an accomplishment, citing that “The Flash” did miss great storytelling
(standard stuff here), great surprises (I did not see the future newspaper
coming, I admit, but the rest was pretty obvious) and the CGI was not as good
as on “Arrow”.
Yet, I
truly had one hell of an enjoyable time watching the pilot and I cracked up
more than I could count (which is not solely the episode’s achievement but it
was laughter in good favour after all). And that is everything a good TV show
must do for me to work.
What I
really liked about this episode was that David Nutter, the director, really
knows how to direct an episode. I enjoyed every scene, every progression from
one to another and the flawless entertainment resulting out of this
presentation. The story however has its flaws which should have become clear by
now and the show is CW-like relying heavily on stereotypes both for its
characters and stories. But, due to the good plain fun it is to watch the show,
it doesn’t matter as greatly as it would otherwise. (And one should not forget
that the pilot has been shot months before the series went into production,
therefore it deserves some good-favour leeway here as well.)
If you
haven’t watched the episode yet, then do not worry, that I have spoiled
everything for you. I have not (despite this being a review)! If you stick with
episode you will be rewarded with a short appearance by none other than… Oliver
Queen AKA Arrow (as seen in one of the early trailers, I think)!
Therefore, “The
Flash” earns for its pilot a solid 3/5 rating, which I will boost up immensely
just because the viewing experience was so great that I enjoyed it to such
extent that I did not mind the mistakes made by the episode. The final score
reads as follow: 4/5. Congratulations.
So, if you
liked “Arrow” but disliked the realism fact or disliked the fact that the show
tried to sell “fake realism” as realism and you are into superhero stuff or
just like funny shows, try this one, I did not feel sorry later on and I
absolutely love the show now. Despite its flaws.
“My name is EagleLeaf and I’m the craziest reviewer alive. A trailer recently gave me the idea to check out a new TV show and something tells me it’s gonna catch on.” Enjoy the run!
Note: This episode is scheduled to air on Oct., 7th
on The CW. So, check it out after having read our review.
Fun Fact: My word counter tells me, I have written 2024
words for this review, maybe I know the future all too well like Dr. Wells? ;)
To clarify my decision to give 4 instead of 3 stars: The Episode left me feeling good, cheerish and happy which for some awkward reason is not achieved by many TV shows. This is why I warrant this Pilot an extra star, raising the overall rating to 4 stars. If it hadn't be clear already... ;)
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