The Official Flash Thread Discussion

Yeah I can't even remember if I watched the last episode of last year

People need to remember.....

This episode was never meant to be a Season premiere .... this is technically the episode that was supposed to come after the episode that ended last season.

So this Season is going to start off kind of weird.

Makes sense! It felt like a filler episode.
 
The Flash: Kiersey Clemons Confirmed To Star As Iris West
By KOFI OUTLAW - March 11, 2021 01:26 pm EST

kiersey-clemons-dc-the-flash-movie-iris-west-confirmed-1260166.jpeg



Score one for all those Zack Snyder's Justice League and/or #RestoreTheSnyderverse fans out there: actress Keirsey Clemons is confirmed to star as Iris West in The Flash movie. The report comes from THR who got the exclusive word that Clemons has signed on with Warner Bros. and Flash director Andy Muschietti (IT) to play the love interest of Barry Allen/The Flash (Ezra Miller). Clemons made her debut as Iris in Zack Snyder's original cut of Justice League but saw her role cut from Joss Whedon's theatrical cut of the film. Fans will finally get to see her performance when Zack Snyder's Justice League debuts on HBO Max next week.


The Flash movie has quickly become a big multiverse event film for DC and Warner Bros. The film will see Michael Keaton return as Batman (the mentor to Ezra Miller's Flash) while also featuring Ben Affleck's Batman. Sasha Calle will play a new version of Supergirl in the film, The Flash concept art has further teased the kind of multiverse action and adventure DC fans are in for. According to Andy Muschietti, the film "will take you to a place where the DC Universe hasn't gone before, so it's very exciting."

The Flash is being looked at as the film that can finally put DC/WB's current continuity troubles to rest. The studio's interruption of Zack Snyder's vision for Justice League threw the proposed future for the DC Films Universe completely off track. Films like Aquaman, Shazam!, and Wonder Woman 1984 seem to be part of a post-Snyder DC universe, but now Zack Snyder's Justice League is back, bringing a lot of questions about what the future of the franchise looks like - and who will star in it.


The Flash will see the titular running across an entire DC multiverse (and causing some disastrous butterfly effect) and by the end, it seems as though any and every DC movie will be labeled as "official" parts of continuity:

READ MOREThe Falcon and the Winter Soldier’s Anthony MackieReveals Which Movie Helped Him Enter The MCU

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0COMMENTS
"This movie is a bit of a hinge in the sense that it presents a story that implies a unified universe where all the cinematic iterations that we've seen before are valid," Muschietti previously explained to Vanity Fair. "It's inclusive in the sense that it is saying all that you've seen exists, and everything that you will see exists, in the same unified multiverse."


The Flash is scheduled to begin filming in early 2021 for a theatrical release on November 4, 2022.
 


Upcoming DC projects:
  • Black Adam
  • Harley Quinn animated series
  • Superman & Lois
  • Static Shock
  • Blue Beetle
  • Batgirl
  • Peacemaker
  • Green Lantern
  • Aquaman 2
  • The Flash
  • Teen Titans Go!
  • Suicide Squad
  • Batwheels
  • The Batman
  • Zatanna
  • Supergirl
  • Shazam! Fury of the Gods
  • Batwoman
  • The Suicide Squad
  • GCPD
  • DMZ
  • Gotham Knights
  • Super Hero High
  • League of Super-Pets




 
The Flash: Kiersey Clemons Confirmed To Star As Iris West
By KOFI OUTLAW - March 11, 2021 01:26 pm EST

kiersey-clemons-dc-the-flash-movie-iris-west-confirmed-1260166.jpeg



Score one for all those Zack Snyder's Justice League and/or #RestoreTheSnyderverse fans out there: actress Keirsey Clemons is confirmed to star as Iris West in The Flash movie. The report comes from THR who got the exclusive word that Clemons has signed on with Warner Bros. and Flash director Andy Muschietti (IT) to play the love interest of Barry Allen/The Flash (Ezra Miller). Clemons made her debut as Iris in Zack Snyder's original cut of Justice League but saw her role cut from Joss Whedon's theatrical cut of the film. Fans will finally get to see her performance when Zack Snyder's Justice League debuts on HBO Max next week.


The Flash movie has quickly become a big multiverse event film for DC and Warner Bros. The film will see Michael Keaton return as Batman (the mentor to Ezra Miller's Flash) while also featuring Ben Affleck's Batman. Sasha Calle will play a new version of Supergirl in the film, The Flash concept art has further teased the kind of multiverse action and adventure DC fans are in for. According to Andy Muschietti, the film "will take you to a place where the DC Universe hasn't gone before, so it's very exciting."

The Flash is being looked at as the film that can finally put DC/WB's current continuity troubles to rest. The studio's interruption of Zack Snyder's vision for Justice League threw the proposed future for the DC Films Universe completely off track. Films like Aquaman, Shazam!, and Wonder Woman 1984 seem to be part of a post-Snyder DC universe, but now Zack Snyder's Justice League is back, bringing a lot of questions about what the future of the franchise looks like - and who will star in it.


The Flash will see the titular running across an entire DC multiverse (and causing some disastrous butterfly effect) and by the end, it seems as though any and every DC movie will be labeled as "official" parts of continuity:

READ MOREThe Falcon and the Winter Soldier’s Anthony MackieReveals Which Movie Helped Him Enter The MCU

SKIP AD

0COMMENTS
"This movie is a bit of a hinge in the sense that it presents a story that implies a unified universe where all the cinematic iterations that we've seen before are valid," Muschietti previously explained to Vanity Fair. "It's inclusive in the sense that it is saying all that you've seen exists, and everything that you will see exists, in the same unified multiverse."


The Flash is scheduled to begin filming in early 2021 for a theatrical release on November 4, 2022.
So they just copying the CW show by casting her :rolleyes:

Upcoming DC projects:
  • Black Adam
  • Harley Quinn animated series
  • Superman & Lois
  • Static Shock
  • Blue Beetle
  • Batgirl
  • Peacemaker
  • Green Lantern
  • Aquaman 2
  • The Flash
  • Teen Titans Go!
  • Suicide Squad
  • Batwheels
  • The Batman
  • Zatanna
  • Supergirl
  • Shazam! Fury of the Gods
  • Batwoman
  • The Suicide Squad
  • GCPD
  • DMZ
  • Gotham Knights
  • Super Hero High
  • League of Super-Pets
Wished SS wouldve appeared on Black Lightning..maybe he'll turn up on Painkiller if that goes to series

Gotham Knights-i assume theyre talking about the videogame

Batwheels,Super Hero High and League of Super Pets must be the kiddie shows..
 
David Ramsey is returning to the Arrowverse as both John Diggle and director

By Chancellor Agard December 01, 2020 at 01:14 PM EST


We definitely haven't seen the last of David Ramsey, or his on-screen Arrow persona John Diggle, in the Arrowverse: EW has confirmed that Ramsey is returning to the CW's shared superhero universe in 2021, juggling multiple commitments across the several of the shows.

First off, Ramsey will guest-star in five episodes in the Arrowverse. He's set to reprise the role of Diggle on Superman & Lois, Supergirl, The Flash, and Batwoman. When we last checked in with Diggle in the Arrow series finale, he was in the process of moving to Metropolis when he discovered a bright green object at meteor crash site, which was a nod to the prevailing fan theory that he was destined to become a Green Lantern (He later appeared in The Flash's first post-Crisis on Infinite Earths episode, "Marathon").

Ramsey will also appear on DC's Legends of Tomorrow; however, his role is currently being kept under wraps. Knowing Legends, it's probably safe to assume it'll be something very, well, Legends.

On top of all of that, though, the 49-year-old actor will also direct five episodes in the Arrowverse, including Superman & Lois and Supergirl. Ramsey made his directorial debut with the Arrow season 7 episode "Past Sins" and went on to helm season 8's "Reset," an emotional time-loop hour that was one of the best episodes of the final season (see EW's ranking of every Arrow episode).

"I remain in awe of the imprint these shows have had on television and I've been blessed for the better part of a decade to be a part of them both in front of and behind the camera," said Ramsey in a statement obtained by EW. "To say I'm excited beyond belief to return to the Berlantiverse would be an understatement. I can't wait to continue telling these stories."

It's not entirely surprising that Ramsey is returning to the Arrowverse, given what co-creator Marc Guggenheim told reporters at a screening of Arrow's series finale last January. "David and I have actually talked a lot about Diggle’s and David’s post Arrow future. We’ve got some really good ideas, and I’m going to stand pat on that," said Guggenheim. "I will also say David has become a remarkable director, so we’re as interested in him behind the cameras as we are in front."

Deadline was the first to break the news.

The CW's Arrowverse shows return with new episodes in 2021, starting with Batwoman on Jan. 17, followed by Black Lightning on Feb. 8, and The Flash and Superman & Lois on Feb. 23. Supergirl and DC's Legends of Tomorrow are being held for midseason.

arrow-series-finale-green-lantern.jpg
 
Very funny to hear Frost ask the girl if she is avoiding Iris...

When rumors are iris and frost can't stand each other in real life.
 
The Flash star Brandon McKnight unpacks Chester's emotional breakthrough with
By Chancellor Agard
April 06, 2021 at 09:00 PM EDT
Warning: This article contains spoilers for Tuesday's The Flash, "The One with the Nineties."

Chester P. Runk's future is looking even brighter on The Flash.

When Brandon McKnight's cheery scientist and Cisco (Carlos Valdes) got stuck in a time loop in the year 1998 in Tuesday's episode, Chester had to reckon with his difficult relationship with his father, Quincy (Milton Barnes), an inventor, because it was the key to their freedom. Growing up, Chester believed his dad didn't like him because he was always on the road, but this trip to the '90s helped Chester discover that wasn't the case and save the day.

After realizing Quincy had a computer part they needed to defeat the episode's villain, Chester approached his father, who revealed that he worked so hard for his son and even though he wasn't around much, he took every opportunity to teach him important lessons for the future. For example, Quincy bought and then threw out a part young Chester needed for a project so his son would eventually find it in the trash after his father left. "It's my way of teaching him how to be resourceful and a problem solver," Quincy said. "Chester is worth any sacrifice I have to make… When it comes to him, I don't believe in quitting."

"I remember reading the episode and calling [showrunner] Eric Wallace and thanking him for this episode," McKnight tells EW. "Not just because Chester is the focal point of the episode, but also for [depicting] that side of the father-son relationship between Black men, and being a Black father and how you have to [prepare] your son for a world that a lot of it looks down on you. He has to not just be smart, he has to be smart in a way that nobody else is smart. He has to learn how to take trash and make gold out of it. I thought this relationship was so [symbolic] of what that relationship is like and what preparing your son kind of has to be."

image


That said, McKnight appreciates how the story line also addressed the limits of that tough-love approach. "You can raise somebody with tough love, but there's always a gap left for the gentle love as well," he says. "How do you create a balance? That's something I don't think anybody really knows how to perfect. There's always going to be flaws in it, and there's always going to be issues. I think that specific scene where he meets his father touches all of those things."

Having that breakthrough with Quincy reinvigorated Chester and gave him confidence when it came time for him and Cisco to face Deon (Christian Magby), who became a conduit for the Still Force, the latest cosmic energy terrorizing the city, and used that power to create the time loop because he hated his future and wanted to relive his best day. Rather than defeating Di\eon with punches, Chester talked him down and made him see he had the power to change his future —— which, ultimately, may not be a good thing because Dion took that to mean he could control everyone's future before he disappeared. Nevertheless, Chester's '90s adventure will have a profound effect on him moving forward as he decides to finish one of his father's projects.

"It changes Chester immensely," McKnight says. "Chester grew up not really having a figure to aspire to, not really having a person to look up to other than the superheroes zipping around the city and all the stuff he loves. Now he actually realizes he has a real figure to look towards… So now Chester realizes, 'I am a product of my father, so I have that in myself as well,' which then translates to him confronting Dion. That only goes into other episodes where he really finds his confidence and realizes that 'I can do this stuff and I am capable of this stuff because I am a product of this man who did all these things.'"

Alas, the threat of Dion and the other cosmic forces — the Strength Force, a.k.a. Fuerza, and the Sage Force, a.k.a. Psych — still looms over Team Flash and the Speed Force (Michelle Harrison) as the episode ends. In fact, McKnight warns that we shouldn't necessarily trust the Speed Force either: "I would say be wary of everything and everyone."
 
The Flash star Brandon McKnight unpacks Chester's emotional breakthrough with
By Chancellor Agard
April 06, 2021 at 09:00 PM EDT
Warning: This article contains spoilers for Tuesday's The Flash, "The One with the Nineties."

Chester P. Runk's future is looking even brighter on The Flash.

When Brandon McKnight's cheery scientist and Cisco (Carlos Valdes) got stuck in a time loop in the year 1998 in Tuesday's episode, Chester had to reckon with his difficult relationship with his father, Quincy (Milton Barnes), an inventor, because it was the key to their freedom. Growing up, Chester believed his dad didn't like him because he was always on the road, but this trip to the '90s helped Chester discover that wasn't the case and save the day.

After realizing Quincy had a computer part they needed to defeat the episode's villain, Chester approached his father, who revealed that he worked so hard for his son and even though he wasn't around much, he took every opportunity to teach him important lessons for the future. For example, Quincy bought and then threw out a part young Chester needed for a project so his son would eventually find it in the trash after his father left. "It's my way of teaching him how to be resourceful and a problem solver," Quincy said. "Chester is worth any sacrifice I have to make… When it comes to him, I don't believe in quitting."

"I remember reading the episode and calling [showrunner] Eric Wallace and thanking him for this episode," McKnight tells EW. "Not just because Chester is the focal point of the episode, but also for [depicting] that side of the father-son relationship between Black men, and being a Black father and how you have to [prepare] your son for a world that a lot of it looks down on you. He has to not just be smart, he has to be smart in a way that nobody else is smart. He has to learn how to take trash and make gold out of it. I thought this relationship was so [symbolic] of what that relationship is like and what preparing your son kind of has to be."

image


That said, McKnight appreciates how the story line also addressed the limits of that tough-love approach. "You can raise somebody with tough love, but there's always a gap left for the gentle love as well," he says. "How do you create a balance? That's something I don't think anybody really knows how to perfect. There's always going to be flaws in it, and there's always going to be issues. I think that specific scene where he meets his father touches all of those things."

Having that breakthrough with Quincy reinvigorated Chester and gave him confidence when it came time for him and Cisco to face Deon (Christian Magby), who became a conduit for the Still Force, the latest cosmic energy terrorizing the city, and used that power to create the time loop because he hated his future and wanted to relive his best day. Rather than defeating Di\eon with punches, Chester talked him down and made him see he had the power to change his future —— which, ultimately, may not be a good thing because Dion took that to mean he could control everyone's future before he disappeared. Nevertheless, Chester's '90s adventure will have a profound effect on him moving forward as he decides to finish one of his father's projects.

"It changes Chester immensely," McKnight says. "Chester grew up not really having a figure to aspire to, not really having a person to look up to other than the superheroes zipping around the city and all the stuff he loves. Now he actually realizes he has a real figure to look towards… So now Chester realizes, 'I am a product of my father, so I have that in myself as well,' which then translates to him confronting Dion. That only goes into other episodes where he really finds his confidence and realizes that 'I can do this stuff and I am capable of this stuff because I am a product of this man who did all these things.'"

Alas, the threat of Dion and the other cosmic forces — the Strength Force, a.k.a. Fuerza, and the Sage Force, a.k.a. Psych — still looms over Team Flash and the Speed Force (Michelle Harrison) as the episode ends. In fact, McKnight warns that we shouldn't necessarily trust the Speed Force either: "I would say be wary of everything and everyone."
I actually really enjoyed his performance last night!

:cheers:
 
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