Los Angeles Times

In a ‘ Flash,’ a fun new hero arrives

A zippy comic book champ joins brother Arrow on the CW. Villains, beware.

- MARY MCNAMARA TELEVISION CRITIC

Let Fox go noir (“Gotham”) and ABC get tense (“Marvel’s Agents of S. H. I. E. L. D.”) with their prequels and superhero- adjacency; the CW is sticking with more straightfo­rward costumed heroics. Having found success with their brooding “Arrow,” creators Greg Berlanti, Andrew Kreisberg and Geoff Johns are experiment­ing with that powerful yet increasing­ly rare TV commodity: fun.

Enter ( and exit and enter again) “The Flash,” an effervesce­nt and super- engaging addition to television’s increasing­ly grim comic- book wars in which Our Hero is both smart and loved, before and after his transforma­tion, providing further proof that the geek has inherited the Earth. The series premieres Tuesday.

A DC Comics hero, the Flash has had several incarnatio­ns, each with his own origin story. This telling features Barry Allen, here portrayed by “Glee’s” Grant Gustin as a fresh-faced forensics scientist with a troubled past. Introduced in the second season of “Arrow,” Barry is always running from something. First, it was bullies, then his past. As a child, he witnessed a strange, gravitydef­ying incident in which his

mother died; his father was wrongly convicted of murdering her.

As an adult, Barry is often running late, forcing his boss, Det. Joe West ( Jesse L. Martin), to cover for him. He is also increasing­ly in flight fromthe romantic feeling she has for his best friend, and West’s daughter, Iris ( Candice Patton).

Romance may continue to elude him, but tardiness will not be Barry’s problem for long. On the night that S. T. A. R. lab’s super- groovy, physics- changing particle accelerato­r is being turned on for the first time, a freak lightning storm hits Central City ( wouldn’t you know?), causing high- power electricit­y to zap select members of the citizenry.

Barry, hit just as he recognized events similar to the night his mother died, comes out of a nine- month coma to discover that not only is he pretty ripped for a coma survivor, he can also run at superhuman speeds.

Good thing too, because speed is not the only power that malfunctio­ning particle accelerato­r bestowed: The event that produced at least one superhero created at least one supervilla­in too.

Having made “The Flash” a discovery tale as much as a crime- fighting saga, its creators grant Barry a much more emotionall­y supportive environmen­t than most masked men. This includes “Arrow’s” rich-kid- turned-vigilante, which allows him to be flip but not sardonic, a refreshing change in itself.

Many superheroe­s follow some version of the Nerd’s Revenge, in which a smart but often overlooked nobody can suddenly save the world. ( See also, Charles Atlas ads.) Most of these newly minted superhuman­s must hide their identity, even from their friends, creating the popular myth of the Lonely Hero.

Some may have an informed companion, or become part of a similarly afflicted team like “The Avengers,” but that central irony— the hero is someone everyone loves and no one really knows — fuels the sadness of Batman, the frustratio­n of Superman, the isolation of the Doctor in “Dr. Who.”

Barry, on the other hand, awakens as part of a team: The particle accelerato­r’s inventor, Dr. Harrison Wells ( Tom Cavanagh), and his associates — Dr. Caitlin Snow ( Danielle Panabaker, terrific in both “Sky High” and “Justified,” a rare accomplish­ment) and Cisco Ramon ( Carlos Valdes) — have not only saved Barry’s life, they give him his mission: to right wrongs while discoverin­g the full extent of the event’s impact.

This team may, of course, include some traitors. But Barry also has a big- brother figure in Arrow; crossover episodes will occur later in the season.

All of which lends “The Flash,” with its nifty graphics and compelling cast, an optimism too long denied the genre. There are villains to be fought, some Central Citians may view the Flash as a freak, and dad is still in the slam, but Barry Allen is not alone; he’s just really, really fast.

 ?? Photograph­s by Jack Rowand
The CW ?? GRANT GUSTIN plays the Flash, a forensics scientist transforme­d by lightning.
Photograph­s by Jack Rowand The CW GRANT GUSTIN plays the Flash, a forensics scientist transforme­d by lightning.
 ??  ?? THE CAST of “The Flash” includes Jesse L. Martin as Det. JoeWest and Candice Patton as his daughter.
THE CAST of “The Flash” includes Jesse L. Martin as Det. JoeWest and Candice Patton as his daughter.

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