Harrison said Reverse
It's so clear to me.
Harrison is Eobard Thawne
Eddie Thawne is Cobalt Blue
I guess revealing that there are several individuals in the city that have powers, could maybe cause panic? Also not everyone who has powers becomes immediately evil. So it might not be a great idea to start a witch hunt on metahumans.
Two things that bug the heck outta me...
He's The FLASH, not The STREAK! Dammitt!
and
Stop removing the cowl!
Other than those nitpicks, the show is fun.
Wonder if he will ever be faster than a speeding bullet?
It's kinda like what Perry White said in Man of Steel when Lois wanted to publish an article about Superman, which was the first time I really saw the question addressed in live action, which is how would the world truly react to someone with superhuman powers. Sure there would be marvel and awe, but imagine how many people would freak out and fear for their safety by seeing someone who can do things that the law can't catch or contain.I guess revealing that there are several individuals in the city that have powers, could maybe cause panic? Also not everyone who has powers becomes immediately evil. So it might not be a great idea to start a witch hunt on metahumans.
It's kinda like what Perry White said in Man of Steel when Lois wanted to publish an article about Superman, which was the first time I really saw the question addressed in live action, which is how would the world truly react to someone with superhuman powers. Sure there would be marvel and awe, but imagine how many people would freak out and fear for their safety by seeing someone who can do things that the law can't catch or contain.
Yeah, but at the same time maybe if they had known, then they could have been more prepared once General Zod decided to launch his attack. There's no point in keeping secrets if it's going to get people killed unnecessarily.
And the reaction of the citizens in the MCU to the existence of superheroes hasn't exactly been fear and panic.
Nobody knew that aliens were going to invade them, so from Clark/Jonathan/Perry's perspective, letting the truth out would have got people killed unnecessarily.
Well that's a different story that chose not to go that route (well...other than SHIELD creating powerful weapons in response to Thor's existence and giant warships they used to target any possible superhuman threat which almost ended up killing thousands)
But there are other stories, like Watchmen, which showed how there could be a lot of fear, panic, escalation, and retaliation to the existence of individuals with unchecked power (Dr Manhattan).
But anyways, for Flash, I just want them to say 'why' they want to keep Flash a secret. I guess we can assume it's for the same MOS/Watchmen-esque reasons, I just find it strange that the show hasn't gotten into any of this yet, despite hinging so much drama on the fact that he's trying to remain a secret.
I still think Harrison is Hunter Zolomon and Eddie Thawne is Eobard Thawne.
They've got the names flipped.
It's kinda like what Perry White said in Man of Steel when Lois wanted to publish an article about Superman, which was the first time I really saw the question addressed in live action, which is how would the world truly react to someone with superhuman powers. Sure there would be marvel and awe, but imagine how many people would freak out and fear for their safety by seeing someone who can do things that the law can't catch or contain.
The other side of the coin is the public's reaction to Superman's reveal in STM, and it's that side of the coin I joyfully embrace.
There certainly is a place in super-hero lore to portray public mistrust, Batman being the best example, but it should never be major part of Superman, or The Flash, IMO!
Well, that pretty much confirms it?
Sunday, 19 October 2014
The Flash episode 2 - Multiplex
In the second episode of The Flash, Flash faces a villain whose power is the ability to multiply himself. Cisco Ramon made up the name Captain Clone for him half way through the episode and at the end he gave him a name that are more familiar to the comic book fans - Multiplex. He was the the first character I got to worked on for The Flash. Like the first season of Arrow, the villains are not quite villainy yet and stilll very grounded visually.