The Flash 2.21: The Runaway Dinosaur
Zack Stentz
Kevin Smith
I find it
fascinating (and something of an indictment on the core of the writers room)
that it took a pair of outsiders to craft what is arguably the best episode of The Flash in months. I would look at
this episode as the best the show's made since "Welcome to Earth-2,"
which says a lot about how blase the second season has been recently. It is a
bit of fan service just to put Kevin Smith's name as the director of a Flash episode, and so it's not hard to
keep wondering where he could stick his "influence" throughout the
episode. Thankfully, that doesn't really occur. This actually plays as a true
episode of The Flash through its
whole run.
I liked that
the episode doesn't immediately have Barry come back to life after all of his
friends and family saw him disappear. Even better is that the episode doesn't
provide a concrete explanation for what he experiences as the "Speed
Force." Within the Speed Force, he's given an omniscient "guide"
that takes the form of his loved ones in order to (sort of) explain his ordeal.
He's given a goal, which is to chase down this shadowy, speedy apparition, only
to be met with some opposition each time he encounters both the guide's bodily
form and the shadow itself.
It proceeds in a level sort of way, where
Barry has to defeat his inner demons before moving on. With Joe's form, he's
told about his goal, which is to catch the shadow and the Speed Force will give
him his powers back. All that Barry is concerned about is to get back to his
friends and save Central City. He gets that opportunity when met with Iris'
form. To keep things from being too repetitive, Barry gets to talk to each form
to the point of projecting all of his fears and anxieties with regard to what
that person represents. With Iris, he has always repressed his love for her in
some form or another, and the Speed Force beings understand that. All of the
forms are the parts that make Barry a true hero. Not his speed powers or the
abilities he's learned as a result of becoming the Flash. Barry gets the
opportunity to return to the real world, but he doesn't take it because a part
of him knows that he still has some things left to learn about why the Speed
Force brought him to that particular place.
Those lessons
don't really take hold of Barry until he reaches the forms of first his
biological father, Henry, who takes Barry to the gravesite of Nora to show that
he's never fully accepted his choice from "Fast Enough" to let his
mother die. I think the unspoken thing here is that it was always meant for
Nora to physically die, perhaps allowing her "spirit" or
"presence" to enter the Speed Force and lead to Barry's final lesson
in this episode. He learns to accept his mother's death as inevitable, thus
finally becoming at peace with the decision he made at the end of last season,
and that allows for the Speed Force to give him his powers back. As with the
sequence at the end of "Fast Enough" where Barry effectively says
goodbye to his mother in the past, both actors in this scene nail every one of
the emotional beats given to them. It's the kind of scene that The Flash does
consistently well, something that has been in short supply of late this season.
The fact that
the sequences in the Speed Force can be done to near perfection underlines the
degree to which the ones in STAR Labs couldn't quite match. It was prevalent
throughout much of its run. I wanted to know more about the Speed Force and to
spend time with Barry on his journey through his psyche or whatever you could
call that experience, and each time it went back to Earth, it felt like air was
slowly slipping out of the balloon. The concept of fighting Zombie Girder was
an interesting one, although they could have picked a more memorable Villain of
the Week to reanimate. What was really going in the show's wheelhouse was
showing the aftereffects of setting off the miniature particle explosion. It
looks like Wally and Jesse will have to take their time in terms of getting
their speed powers, which is right in line with what happened to Barry before
this series began. But the seeds for both Kid Flash and Jesse Quick have been
firmly planted here. Perhaps the explosion has awakened even more
previously-thought-to-be-dead metahumans.
- Barry’s “encounters” within the Speed Force are pitch-perfect
- The seeds for Kid Flash and Jessie Quick have been planted nicely
- Girder may not have been the most memorable choice