![]() ![]() A man wanting to change his past speaking to a friend who knows what it means to be haunted by it. To put off flinging us into the plot in favour of a conversation with a mentor. He speaks to Bruce Wayne, his only friend, about his new abilities. He breaks the time barrier and realises he can travel to, and perhaps change, the past.Ĭuriously, instead of instinctively deciding to go back to save his mother as you might expect, Barry first returns to his present. While speaking to his incarcerated father on the phone, overcome with missing both his parents, Barry runs. With his father’s appeal hearing just around the corner, Barry’s past is plaguing him now more than ever. Understandable, considering his mother was murdered when he was just a boy, with his father getting falsely accused and put behind bars for it. ![]() The Flash review: Ezra Miller in a still from the latest DC movie.įorever in search of connection, this take on Barry is awkward, socially stunted, and uncomfortable in his own skin. He’s relishing his newfound Justice League friends, as we see in the fun opening set piece where Barry is called away to Gotham to help Batman (Ben Affleck) with some bad guys. ![]() Barry Allen (an inimitable Ezra Miller offering perhaps the most affecting DC hero performance since Henry Cavill in Man of Steel) is getting used to the new superhero life. The Flash is essentially a sequel to Snyder’s Justice League. This interpretation of Alfred, Bruce Wayne, the Batcave, and beyond. Not just because of the merits of Andres Muschietti’s The Flash, but also the feeling and familiarity of returning to this world. I didn’t expect to feel this delighted stepping back into Zack Snyder’s DC Universe. ![]()
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