Wednesday, April 23, 2014

The Flash #30 Review




Out of time.


I’m making a habit of giving new teams a chance on books I once picked up and then left due to less than good qualities. Flash is up next with Vendetti (Green Lantern) and Jensen (Green Lantern Corps) on the job and this is a good intro with equal amounts of reflection on the past and premonitions for the future.

Speedsters and time travels aren’t a new concept but it is something that I know has been fairly neglected in the New 52 (Future’s End may sadly overcompensate on that aspect).

But what’s the best portion of this issue is how Vendetti handles Barry. Having now got the rein of best buddies Flash and GL, it’s intriguing for me how he differentiates Barry and Hal.

Hal is the slacker while Barry is the workaholic. And after what the Syndicate did, these are harrowing times for Barry.

SPOILERS FOLLOW…………….

The issue shifts between present, 5 years later and 20 years later. The present though is the main meat of this book with both future deaths serving as bookends, one at the start and the other at the end.


Five years from now, the doctors take away Iris (who seems to be suffering from multiple injuries) while a second person, a teenager, lies dead even as Captain Daryl Flynn (his ‘step-dad’) berates him for not being there to help.

Coming back to the present, Central City Police Station is in shambles. Graffiti is sprayed all over and doors and furniture are thrown about. As Barry takes a nap in the Records Room, Patty comes in to inform him of his meeting with the psychologist.


There's a well handed 'good' moment as Patty is able to finish Barry’s sentences even though he’s going at record speed trying to straighten up the room. When Barry finally stops, Patty gives him a present – a watch that will always make him be on time.

At the doctor’s, Barry meets up with Peter Forrest, fellow forensic and trauma victim. Peter puts up a brave front as he relates him extended meeting with the psychologist.


Barry, on the other hand, has much on his mind. After the doctor gets the basics down (murdered mother, convicted father, step dad, his lateness yet good record as forensic), Barry’s mind and body wanders as we see him going into costume and rushing through the streets helping through sentences with the doc.

We see him rescue a lost dog and give it to Forrest so he can return it to it’s owner, rebuild a section of Iron Heights prison, rescue people off a collapsing bridge – in all, a regular day.


But the theme gets stressed upon that even someone like Barry can break, with the Doctor saying she is going to monitor his performance for breakdown symptoms and Barry losing two minutes on his new watch.


We then flash to the future, twenty years in, as he sits in the records room with reports of him missing and the city in flames. He counts the time he’s lost on the watch – over two years. In a new blue costume, he takes the report of the previously shown teenager’s funeral and promises Wally that he’ll never be late again.

So, Wally’s back and black? I was a great fan of the ginger back in Justice League and the Young Justice shows, and his rise from sidekick to hero is probably one of the best done evolutions in the DC universe (alongside close friend Dick Grayson) who was undone by the New 52.

Now about the changes, I’m not sure how I feel. Change isn’t something I feel particularly too fond about, especially when it’s a favorite character who’s going through the wringer. But I’m willing to give them a chance. Wow me, Vendetti and Jensen.

Someone who’s handled expertly is Barry. He’s totally in character and everything about him screams desperate which it needs to in the fallout from Forever Evil.

SPOILERS END………………

I’m a little divided on how they handled a loved character’s return, but overall this was a good start to Vendetti’s run on Flash as he handles one of the character’s core attributes deftly, mixing in time travel without disturbing the flow of the book.

The artwork is competent but nothing special as Brett brings him pros and cons with him on this book. Most of the facials work, but some problems stick out like a sore thumb.

So, I give it 8.0 out of 10.

+Excellent character work on Barry
+Mostly good artwork
+Some nice interactions, especially with supporting character Patty and Forrest.

-Divided on the introduction of a character to the New 52
-Theme is a little overstated

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