Tag Archives: Flash

Review: The Flash – Fallout

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In just its debut season, The Flash has managed to not only build its characters into fully realized ideas, but has done so with amazing storytelling, fun, and classic comic book leaps of logic that leave us yearning for more.

“Fallout” picked up literally right where last week’s “The Nuclear Man” left off, with Barry (holding Caitlin) running from a nuclear explosion, and my God, did that look pretty. And looking back, when the Flash running from a mushroom cloud isn’t the highlight of your episode, you know we’re in for a ride.

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Review: The Flash – The Nuclear Man

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Going full steam ahead in the hunt for Ronnie/Dr. Stein, and Detective West’s secret investigation into the murder of Barry’s mom, “The Nuclear Man” proved to be yet another strong entry for The Flash, with some missteps around the Barry/Linda/Iris love triangle.

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Review – The Flash: The Sound and the Fury

flash

The fun thing about watching The Flash is that whenever they introduce a new rogue, I know pretty much nothing about them. Unlike the rogues galleries of, say, Superman or Batman, I’m aware of some of the names of Flash’s villains, but aside from that, who they are, their motivations, I don’t know anything aside from the Rogues’ code they have in the comics (no drugs, no killing women and children).

And that’s what makes each new episode of this series different from Smallville or even some episodes of Arrow. I don’t take any knowledge into the episode, so I just get to judge whether or not the rogue works. While some have been pretty “meh,” like Multiplex or that gas-cloud guy, others, like Captain Cold and even Girder in his final moments, have shown that they can be fun, interesting characters to watch. Thankfully, Pied Piper falls into the latter category.

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Young Justice Review: Downtime

-Comic Vine

A homesick Aqualad ventures back to Atlantis to reconnect with his people and his girl in order to definitively decide whether he wants to stay with the group on land or return to the ocean. The premise of the episode is on shaky ground:  Are we, as viewers, supposed to empathize with Aqualad (whose Atlantean name I absolutely will not Google to learn to spell; it’s Aqualad, and that’s how it is) as he reconnects with home? Or are we, as viewers, supposed to seriously wonder if a new show is going to get rid of its leader in the first view episodes of the season?

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