This
week's episode sees the return of the Reverse Flash/Eobard Thawne, a character I really thought we'd never see again, considering he was erased from the
timeline at the end of last season. But hey, this is a comic book show,
so it takes more than being wiped out of existence to keep a good
villain down!
It
seems a bit odd to bring the Reverse Flash back for an encore,
especially since the cast already has their hands full dealing with this
season's evil speedster Zoom, but hey, what do I know?
The
writers do a valiant job trying to explain how Eobard Thawne can still
exist after his distant ancestor Eddie Thawne killed himself last year.
See, the Flash spent all of last year battling the time-traveling Eobard Thawne. But from Eobard's point of
view, this episode was the first time he ever met the Flash. Supposedly when
the Reverse Flash was erased, this earlier version of him was "outside
the time stream," or something, which somehow preserved him. As with
many time travel stories, the explanation doesn't make a lick of sense,
but I give them credit for at least trying to deal with it.
The other big revelation in this episode is the identity of Jay Garrick's Earth-1 counterpart, who may or may not have something to do with Zoom. More on that below.
SPOILERS!
The Plot:
The
Flash saves the city from disaster by stopping a runaway chemical
track, as the Reverse Flash, who recently arrived in our time period, looks on. Back at STAR Labs, the Gang
discovers the Turtle is dead. Jay suspects Harry's responsible. Harry
lies and denies any involvement, and that's apparently the end of the matter. Tidy!
The
Reverse Flash then goes to Mercury Labs, where he forces Dr. Tina McGee
to help him get back to his own time by using her tachyon generator.
Cisco
asks Harry for help in controlling his vibe power, figuring it could
help them locate Zoom. They determine that Cisco's power is triggered by
fear. Harry whips up a pair of high-tech goggles that stimulate Cisco's
fear response. He puts them on and immediately begins "vibing." He sees
a vision of the Eobard Thawne, aka the Reverse Flash, killing Tina
McGee.
The
Gang meets to try and understand how the Reverse Flash can still exist after Eddie Thawne's suicide wiped him from existence.
Harry says this version of Eobard is from a point in time before he
killed Barry's mother. He says he must have been traveling through the
time stream when Eddie died, which protected him, causing him to become a
"time remnant." I know, it doesn't make any sense, but let's just go with it or we'll be here all day.
Thanks
to Cisco's vision, Barry is able to track down the Reverse Flash and
prevent him from killing McGee. He sabotages the tachyon generator to
prevent him returning to his own time. He throws Thawne into the STAR
Labs Secret Jail. Cisco and Barry both visit Thawne to gloat, telling
him they've prevented him from doing all the evil things he did last
season (or will do, from his point of view).
Unfortunately
Cisco begins having nosebleeds, and eventually collapses. Caitlin
examines him and determines he's dying. She says that imprisoning
the Reverse Flash is disrupting the timeline, which is somehow killing
Cisco. The only way to save him is to free the Reverse Flash, but that
also means freeing him to repeat all of last season's actions.
Unfortunately
Thawne can't get back to his own time by himself. Barry's forced to
help him mortal enemy by adding his speed to Thawne's, running fast enough to open a
breach in time and then literally tossing him through it. Cisco's saved!
In
other developments, Francine's condition is worsening, so Iris visits
and forgives her. Iris also talks Wally into visiting his mother one
last time, before it's too late. Meanwhile Caitlin isn't having much
luck coming up with a cure for Jay's mysterious condition. She says if
they could find his Earth-1 counterpart, she might be able to take some
of his "cells" and transfer them to Jay. She searches, but can't seem to
find the Earth-1 Jay. Earth-2 Jay tells her he really does have a
counterpart, but his name is Hunter Zoloman, a revelation which causes
much head exploding throughout fandom. Unfortunately Zoloman's
non-mutated cells are unusable.
Things
also aren't going well for Barry and Patty. He still refuses to tell her he's the Flash, because he doesn't want to endanger her life,
which by this point is one of the oldest superhero cliches in the book.
He also tells her he doesn't want to get close to her because everyone
he loves ends up leaving him (except for Joe, Iris, Cisco, Caitlin, etc).
Eventually Patty uses her detective skills and figures out that Barry's
the Flash. Even after she fools him into revealing his identity, he
still won't admit it to her. Fed up, she leaves for Midway City.
Thoughts:
•
Let's see if we can figure out all this Reverse Flash business. At the
end of last season, Eddie Thawne discovered he was Eobard Thawne's great-great-great (infinity) grandpa. So he killed himself to prevent Eobard,
aka the Reverse Flash, from ever being born. One would think that would
have erased everything the Reverse Flash did in our time period. He would never have murdered Barry's mom. Henry Allen would never have been wrongly imprisoned for her death. He would never have killed the real Harrison Wells or built the particle accelerator. And the accelerator would never have exploded and turned Barry into the Flash.
Obviously
all of those things somehow still happened. Other than Eobard Thawne fading
away, Eddie's sacrifice didn't seem to have any effect at all.
So
what the heck's going on? Harry tries to explain in this episode
(complete with diagrams) that Eobard is a "time remnant." Even though
Eobard was erased, the events he caused weren't affected because they
already happened, and nothing can change that. He even says the death of
Barry's mom is a "fixed point in time," which tells me someone on the writing staff is a Doctor Who fan!
As I said before, none of it makes any sense, but it's starting to make my brain hurt, so I'm just going to roll with it.
• So I guess Harry's off the hook for murdering the Turtle last week. The
STAR Labs Gang discovers the Turtle dead in his cell, Caitlin says he appears
to have died of a brain aneurysm, and that's the last we hear of the
matter. Eh, it's just a dead body in your secret illegal jail, guys. I'm sure the authorities wouldn't be interested.
•
I'm struggling to understand how the Reverse Flash's yellow
costume still exists, and why his secret time room is still inside STAR
Labs. I guess they're also "time remnants."
Speaking of the Revere Flash's suit, I'm still puzzled as to why it has veins
sculpted into it. Or are those supposed to be Eobard Thawne's distended
arteries pushing up from beneath the suit? Ewww!
•
This week Cisco takes one step closer to becoming Vibe when he dons
his special high-tech goggles. Surely they're not going to have him
start wearing Vibe's comic book costume?
That
particular time is most likely another 52 reference. The New
52 was a year long event that rebooted DC's comic universe a while back. All the various DC
shows are lousy with 52s.
• After the Reverse Flash is captured, Harry warns Barry not to let him find out his secret identity, or he'll try and destroy his life. When Barry's in the STAR Labs Secret Super Jail taunting Eobard, Caitlin pages him on the intercom by saying, "We need you in the cortex." Hmm. Good thing she didn't start that sentence with "Barry" like a normal human would have, or she'd have blown his cover!
• Caitlin believes she can cure Jay's mystery illness by taking "cells" from his Earth-1 counterpart and transplanting them into him. She's very vague about what type of cells she's after though. Blood cells? Brain cells? Stem cells?
• Caitlin believes she can cure Jay's mystery illness by taking "cells" from his Earth-1 counterpart and transplanting them into him. She's very vague about what type of cells she's after though. Blood cells? Brain cells? Stem cells?
It
almost sounds like she wants to cut a hunk of tissue out of Earth-1 Jay
and stick it into a corresponding hole in the Earth-2 version.
•
Caitlin and Barry try to find Jay's Earth-1 doppelganger, but he
doesn't show up in any database. Barry says Caitlin should just ask Jay
if he knows where his counterpart is.
•
Jay tells Caitlin he does indeed have an Earth-1 counterpart. The
reason they couldn't find him is because he has a different name— Hunter Zoloman.
That
name probably sailed far over the head of the general audience, but no
doubt caused much squeeing from comic fans. It would take 20,000 words
to fully explain Zoloman's backstory, so I'll be as brief as possible.
There have been several Reverse Flashes in the comics, and Hunter Zoloman was
one of them. Unfortunately he was paralyzed after an attack by Gorilla
Grodd (!). He tried using the Flash's cosmic treadmill to restore his
mobility, but it exploded, transforming him into Zoom. As Zoom he
wasn't a speedster, but could instead alter the speed in which he moves
through time.
The
comic version of Zoloman had absolutely no relation to Jay Garrick, so
I'm not quite sure where they're going here. I have a feeling his name
is more than just a shout out to the fanboys though. Maybe this version
of Hunter Zoloman has something to do with the Zoom of Earth-2?
• By the way, Jay tells Caitlin that Zolomon's non-mutated cells would be useless to him. Um… how does Jay know Zoloman doesn't have mutated cells and isn't a speedster like him? If Zolomon did have super speed, he'd most likely be hiding it from the public.
•
Jesus Christ, Barry Allen is such an idiot, it's downright painful to
watch. Once again he has several chances to tell Patty his secret
identity and salvage their relationship, and then stands there like a
stammering dolt. He's a dumbass and he doesn't deserve her.
His
main reason for not telling her— that he wants to protect her from his
enemies— is getting really old at this point, and doesn't even make
any sense. Pretty much everyone on the show— heck, everyone in Central
City— knows he's the Flash at this point, and they're all still alive.
Last
week I said I didn't see why Patty moving to Midway City would be such a
big deal. Barry has super speed. He can move faster than the human eye
can see. Patty could call him up and invite him to her Midway City
apartment, and he dash over there before she hung up the phone.
He even proves my point in this episode. Patty calls him from a moving train, tells him she's in trouble, and five seconds later he appears. So however far away
Midway City may be, it's not a problem for him. There's no such thing as
a long distance relationship with the Flash.
And how about those commuters on the train? The Flash appears in the middle of their train car, talks to Patty for a minute or two, then zips away again. None of the other passengers seem to think this is out of the ordinary. Most of them don't even look up from their phones! I guess this kind of thing happens so much in Central City and the surrounding area that no one pays any attention to it anymore.
I'm hopeful we've not seen the last of Patty, and they'll eventually patch things up.
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