The flash

  1. ‘The Flash’ Review: Ezra Miller as the DC Universe’s Fastest Man Alive – The Hollywood Reporter
  2. ‘The Flash’ Bids Farewell To Carlos Valdes’ Cisco Ramon – Deadline
  3. ‘The Flash’ Review: Ezra Miller And Michael Keaton Make This A Classic – Deadline
  4. 'The Flash' Review: The Final Nail in the DCEU's Coffin
  5. The Flash
  6. The Flash (2014 TV series)
  7. ‘The Flash’ TV Show Ending With Shorter Season 9 on The CW – The Hollywood Reporter


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‘The Flash’ Review: Ezra Miller as the DC Universe’s Fastest Man Alive – The Hollywood Reporter

That Miller manages to make such a funny, fully dimensional impression as Barry Allen, better known as the Flash, is no mean feat given the movie’s slavish devotion to nostalgic fan service. While the actor’s claim on the role started with Zack Snyder’s Superman v. Batman: Dawn of Justice and Suicide Squad, the filmmakers here go considerably further back, tipping their hats to Tim Burton’s original Batman movies and even to the towering heyday of Richard Donner’s Superman blockbusters. Release date: Friday, June 16 Cast: Ezra Miller, Director: Andy Muschietti Screenwriter: Christina Hodson Rated PG-13, 2 hours 24 minutes The biggest news on the retro front is the return of Michael Keaton, more than 30 years after he last squeezed into the Batsuit. The frisson that exhilarates the audience when he first appears as a long-retired, reclusive Bruce Wayne, and shortly thereafter as a reborn Batman, continues in waves as each of his iconic Bat-vehicles revs its engine. And The Flash takes a leaf out of the Spider-Man: No Way Home book by welcoming back multiple actors who have played the Caped Crusader. Spoiler avoidance makes it essential to keep the many cameos under wraps, but they pluck from both contemporary and vintage DC entries, even including one anticipated project that never came to fruition. The script by Birds of Prey writer Hodson is at its best in the early scenes establishing Barry as a virginal nerd who has gone through college without managing to acquire much ...

‘The Flash’ Bids Farewell To Carlos Valdes’ Cisco Ramon – Deadline

SPOILER ALERT: The following story contains details from Tuesday’s episode of It was the end of an era on Tuesday’s episode of The Flash, as At the beginning of the episode, titled “Good-Bye Vibrations,” Ramon arranges for a meeting with his Team Flash colleagues, Barry Allen (Grant Gustin) and Dr. Caitlin Snow (Danielle Panabaker), to announce that he and his girlfriend Kamilla (Victoria Park) will be leaving Central City. Both express their readiness, at this stage of their lives, for a new chapter. For Kamila, that means traveling to Miami to put on a gallery show. For Allen’s best friend Cisco, it means taking over Chip Cooper’s (Donny Lucas) job as the Director of Technology and Science of A.R.G.U.S., after Chip leaves to take another gig. Kamilla plans to reunite with Cisco in Star City once her exhibition is done. While Allen and Snow are clearly stunned following Cisco’s announcement, they suppress their emotions, given that they truly want what is best for him. But of course, their muted acknowledgement backfires, leading Cisco to believe that his friends don’t care he’s leaving. Related Story 'The Flash' Duo Jesse L. Martin & Michelle Harrison Set For Canadian Indie Feature 'Re: Uniting' Over the course of the episode, Cisco helps his friends solve one last case involving Carrie Bates, aka “Rainbow Rider 2.0” (Jona Xiao), who steals huge quantities of diamonds and cash and plans to drop them over Shark Stadium using a hijacked blimp. At one point, Cisco finds him...

‘The Flash’ Review: Ezra Miller And Michael Keaton Make This A Classic – Deadline

In fact, I would hesitate to even put this film on the same level as others in the increasingly tired genre that both Marvel and DC have run into the ground. This is a comic book movie for everyone, even if you aren’t inclined to like this kind of flick. If anything, it probably has more in common with the spirit of movies like Back to the Future– the 1985 hit that it hilariously references more than once – and in ways hard-core BTTF fans are going to go batsh*t crazy over. And speaking of winged creatures of the night (or one of them), Batman is back all the way from Tim Burton’s 1989 movie in the form of RELATED: Starting off with a bang, Allen stops in a coffee shop and while waiting for his order to come up gets an urgent call from Alfred (a cameo from Jeremy Irons) alerting him to a life-saving job he is needed for urgently. In no time he is in his red suit, transformed as The Flash and saving people from a collapsing hospital building, one where the entire the maternity ward flies out the windows with a babies raining over the street below until he manages to freeze the event in time, save all the babies and slip back into the coffee shop as Barry just in time to be handed his order. “I hope it didn’t take too long for you,” the clerk says to him. Barry finds himself back in his childhood home and having dinner with his parents, who notice he is a bit more mature now that he is back from his first semester in college. Barry discovers he has landed back when he was 18...

'The Flash' Review: The Final Nail in the DCEU's Coffin

There’s a scene in The Flash where a character is resurrected over and over, each return a little more hollow than the last. It’s a lost cause. Barry Allen (Ezra Miller) knows it. The audience knows it. And yet, this shambling corpse that wears the face of a character we once loved continues to live despite the pain of knowing we can never go back to how it was. That’s the gist of Andy Muschietti’s The Flash, a jumbled culmination of Hollywood’s obsession with IP and nostalgia masquerading as an earnest time-skipping adventure. There’s a good movie buried somewhere in there, and maybe if The Flash wasn’t propped up as a multiverse-spanning crossover event, that movie could’ve shined through. Instead, it limps over the finish line, a splashy but inconsequential end to Zack Snyder’s DC Extended Universe (barring the upcoming Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom). Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures™ & © DC Comics The Flash picks up some years after the events of Justice League. The League is now a well-oiled machine, but Barry Allen is mostly left clean up their messes. He even dubs himself “The Justice League’s janitor.” Even his greatest successes — like a bizarre opening scene where The Flash saves an entire hospital wing full of babies — barely earn him any appreciation. Throw in the pressures of his day job as a forensic investigator and dwindling personal funds, and Barry is feeling hopeless. And then there’s the upcoming appeal for his father Henry Allen (Ron Livingston, taking...

The Flash

The Flash Three men have held the title of "The Fastest Man Alive"—Jay Garrick, Barry Allen and Wally West. Each of them redefined the word "hero." The mysterious power known as the Speed Force is an energy field that has, over the centuries, granted incredible powers of velocity to certain heroes. The most famous of these is the Flash, also known as the Fastest Man Alive. Ever since the days of World War II, there has been a man clad in red who can run at impossible speeds, using his power to save lives and defend those who cannot defend themselves. All between the ticks of a second. In the 1940s, college student Jay Garrick acquired his super-speed abilities in a random lab accident and became the first DC Super Hero to go by the name the Flash. Years later, Jay was succeeded by police scientist Barry Allen, until Barry’s former kid partner Wally West took up the mantle at a time when Barry was considered dead. But, when Barry returned, he became the Flash once again. All three generations of speedsters have been cornerstone members of both the Justice Society and Justice League. The Flash has mastery over not just speed, but time itself, and he has often used his powers to travel though different eras and even into other dimensions. Although the Flash has not always been fast enough to outrun personal tragedy when it has come for him, he always does his best to prevent the same from happening to the people of Central City and Keystone City. In so doing, he's earned hims...

The Flash (2014 TV series)

• العربية • Avañe'ẽ • Azərbaycanca • Български • Català • Čeština • Deutsch • Ελληνικά • Español • Euskara • فارسی • Français • 한국어 • Հայերեն • हिन्दी • Hrvatski • Ido • Bahasa Indonesia • Íslenska • Italiano • עברית • ქართული • Қазақша • Kiswahili • Kreyòl ayisyen • Magyar • მარგალური • Bahasa Melayu • Nederlands • 日本語 • Norsk bokmål • Oʻzbekcha / ўзбекча • Polski • Português • Română • Русский • Simple English • Slovenčina • کوردی • Српски / srpski • Suomi • Svenska • Tagalog • ไทย • Türkçe • Українська • Tiếng Việt • 中文 • Bonanza Productions • • • Release Original network Picture format Audio format Original release October 7, 2014 ( 2014-10-07)– May 24, 2023 ( 2023-05-24) Related The Flash is an American Initially envisioned as a Arrow led to executives choosing to develop a full pilot to make use of a larger budget and help flesh out Barry's world in more detail. The series is primarily filmed in The Flash 's premiere on October 7, 2014 became the second-most watched pilot in the history of The CW, after Arrow, has spun characters out to their own show, The Flash series overview Season Episodes Originally aired Rank Average viewership (in millions) First aired Last aired 23 October7,2014 ( 2014-10-07) May19,2015 ( 2015-05-19) 118 4.62 23 October6,2015 ( 2015-10-06) May24,2016 ( 2016-05-24) 112 4.25 23 October4,2016 ( 2016-10-04) May23,2017 ( 2017-05-23) 120 3.50 23 October10,2017 ( 2017-10-10) May22,2018 ( 2018-05-22) 151 3.04 22 October9,2018 ( 2018-10-09) May14,2019...

‘The Flash’ TV Show Ending With Shorter Season 9 on The CW – The Hollywood Reporter

Logo text It’s official: “Nine seasons! Nine years of saving Central City while taking audiences on an emotional journey full of heart, humor and spectacle.And nowBarry Allen has reached the starting gate for his last race,” executive producer/showrunner Eric Wallace said in a statement Monday. “So many amazing people have given their talents, time and love to bring this wonderful show to life each week. So, as we get ready to honor the show’s incredible legacy with our exciting final chapter, I want to say thank you to our phenomenal cast, writers, producers and crew over the years who helped make The Flashsuch an unforgettable experience for audiences around the world.” News that The Flash is coming to its end has been widely speculated since before the ninth season was officially announced as part of The CW’s early renewals in March. The series was poised to end with season eight, but both the network and studio were able to ink leading man Gustin and co-stars including Candice Patton to new deals. That paved the way for a ninth season and Wallace and company to rework last season’s ending, which was initially scripted as a final season as rumors about the show’s conclusion had circulated for much of the past year. Season eight finished its run as one of The CW’s most watched shows of the past 2021-22 broadcast cycle, averaging north of 1 million viewers and ranking among its most streamed series on digital platforms. The Flash was among The CW’s early ventures into DC ...