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The Flash #2.7 “Gorilla Warfare” Recap & Review

Grodd’s return makes for a fun one-off and spotlight for Caitlin and Harry, but a pause in momentum and retread of stories for everyone else.

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GroddSummary: Grodd’s return makes for a fun one-off and spotlight for Caitlin and Harry, but a pause in momentum and retread of stories for everyone else.

Recap

Barry is healing from his spinal injury inflicted by Zoom, but is still having trouble getting his speed back, to everyone’s confusion. Harry believes his plan failed and decides to go back home, but Caitlin — knowing this is all about his daughter — convinces him that he is needed and he must stay. They realize that they can close all the rifts except for the one in STAR Labs, meaning Zoom only has one way to get to and from his world. Meanwhile, Grodd returns, mind-controlling scientists to deliver him certain serums and chemicals. The team realizes what they’re dealing with, but Grodd mind-controls Caitlin and has her come to him. Grodd tells her he wants her to help him create a serum to make other gorillas like him, and he trusts Caitlin because she was nice to him. Team Flash tries to figure out how to stop Grodd with Barry still depowered, and they decide to have Harry in the Reverse-Flash costume pretend to be the original Harrison Wells. After brief training from Cisco, Harry conducts the masquerade, and though Grodd doesn’t buy it, they’re given enough time to sedate Grodd and escape. They realize that he still needs to be stopped, though, and Barry needs to do it. Iris contacts Henry, who has been out and about fishing and camping, and Henry gives Barry a pep talk, equating Barry’s feelings of being “destroyed” by Zoom and humiliated in front of the city to Henry’s own trial and being framed for Nora’s murder. He tells Barry to use those feelings to drive him and overcome them, and with that, Barry is able to get his powers back. They use Caitlin to call Grodd out in the open, and then he chases Flash to one of the rifts, where Flash supersonic punches him into the rift. According to Harry, there are other genius gorillas on Earth-2, and that rift sent Grodd to a sanctuary — what we later see is Gorilla City. Patty figures out that Barry hasn’t been MIA because he was sick, and while he comes up with a worthwhile excuse in that his father was in town and he feels weird about telling people given his prison time, Patty still chastizes him for lying to her. Meanwhile, Cisco goes on a date with Kendra and vibes on her, seeing that she is some sort of winged metahuman.

Review

There really isn’t much bad to say when Grodd is on screen, is there? He’s a giant psychic gorilla, and one that continues to be remarkably well-rendered and interesting as a character. Grodd’s first appearance used him as a force for fear and horror, and appropriately so. This time around, he’s significantly more sympathetic, and manages to carry more depth and even a bit of an arc.

It’s not surprising, given that his intellect has been expanding. Grodd is more “human” now, for lack of a better term — he’s not a vicious thug following daddy’s orders like he was before. After spending time without guidance from a father and with an ever-growing sense of self, this is a Grodd on the verge of an existential crisis. He’s not quite there yet — his motivations are still very simple an animal-like, yearning to make more people like him so he’s no longer alone. And he even seems happy to obey “father” when Wells arrives, like a child happy to see a parent home. This is still not the fully-formed leader of armies we’ve seen in other media, which is totally fine — in a lot of ways, this steady evolution is far more interesting.

FLA207B_0006bGrodd’s face has changed substantially since we last saw him, with vividly heartbreaking expressions and eyes remarkably emotive eyes. Though there are certainly points where Grodd looks like a weightless CGI model, there’s considerably more detail in making him react in ways that illicit genuine empathy. The best part of Grodd’s emotional evolution is how this utilizes Caitlin, who smartly never interacted with Grodd in his first episode. We learn that Grodd still has affection for Caitlin, though it’s not the a King Kong/Faye Wray way the episode may have suggested at first. Caitlin was simply nicer to Grodd than everyone else, and he still has “love” in the same sense that any animal would for human companions. There’s a part of Grodd that still hasn’t changed from his genius intellect — and perhaps never will — and it goes a long way to keep him sympathetic even as he rampantly murders just about anyone that gets in his way. He still has the emotional complexity of a child, and that makes him more dangerous and functions as his weakness at the same time. It’s not easy to reason with him, but his weaknesses are easy to exploit, because they’re honest. We and Team Flash all feel really bad for betraying Grodd and tossing him into another dimension, because everything about him has been completely out of his control, from his own creation, to being manipulated into a raging beast by Wells. He’s a truly sympathetic villain, and that the show managed to sell that after his terrifying first appearance is a testament to The Flash‘s signature emotional core.

There’s a lot to love about Caitlin’s involvement, particularly that her feelings never ring false. While the show has addressed her sometimes privileged attitude and short-sightedness when it comes to people she falls for, she’s never been one to be emotionally dishonest. It makes sense that she’d never move past a raw, rather motherly connection to Grodd — again, the same kind of connection any human with a heart would have with an animal that becomes part of their family, of sorts. But we also see the human extent of this in her relationship with another monster-with-a-heart (sort of) in Harry. This season has seen Caitlin fleshed out through relationships far better than the fairly one-dimensional romance with Ronnie last season, as she’s proven to be capable of seeing through the facades people around her erect. More importantly, she has no qualms about calling them out on it, and doing it passionately enough that it makes a dent. She got through to Jay when he was in a pit of despair, she gets through to Grodd to an extent, and she is the only person to break through Harry’s tough exterior.

While this episode doesn’t directly reference it, a lot of this can be traced back to her arc in the premiere, which had she and Barry dig their way out of their respective guilt, despair, and the new cold exteriors they’d crafted. So it makes sense that she’d be capable of connecting with the darker sides of characters now, because she’s personally been there herself. Danielle Panabaker has a great hour this time around, working well with the likes of CGI and against the always-stellar Tom Cavanaugh, and comes out with far more depth than just a damsel in distress plot device. It helps that, like Cisco at the end of last season and Iris at the beginning of this season, we’re seeing Caitlin really flourish and find a place as a unique character.

FLA207B_0178bThis opens up Harry to be a bigger player, and boy is that entertaining. What needs to be said? Tom Cavanaugh playing Harry playing Eobard playing Harrison. “Up the creep factor, make it more sincere, like you really love me but you’re gonna have to kill me,” followed by a repeat of season 1’s epic gut-punch of a line over and over and over. Seeing Harry in the Reverse-Flash suit. This whole situation is a love letter to Cavanaugh’s previous character, and while it’s a bit self-indulgent, it also serves as a farewell to that version of sorts. We have room to welcome Harry — who Cavanaugh has competently made into a completely new, different, and equally compelling character — while giving Reverse-Flash an appropriate little swan song. There’s nothing to complain about here.

What there is to complain about, though, is Barry’s thoroughly rushed recovery. This episode excels at giving supporting characters the spotlight while Barry sits most of it out, but the material Barry gets isn’t quite up-to-par with his usual character stories. On one hand, seeing Barry go through a grueling physical therapy process doesn’t really fit the show, and there’s in-story precedent for a speedy recovery given his healing factor. But much of last week’s cliffhanger is deflated right from the beginning of the episode, where Barry’s back has mostly healed. It’s to make room for a psychological arc for him rather than a physical one, where he’s mentally stopping himself from walking, but it turns out to be far less interesting.

Having Barry face his failure and overcome a mental block is not an unwarranted story at all, so the fault isn’t in whether or not it’s organic. But it’s an arc we’ve seen for him before, at least in pieces – his fear held him back when facing Reverse-Flash, we’ve seen him shut down after feeling he’d failed, and he had almost the exact same mental block stopping him from using his speed the first time he lost his powers. “Gorilla Warfare” basically glues all of these character bits together and reuses them as a smoother, but still wholly recycled arc. Yes, there’s precedent for the situation, but it also means this is still technically an arc we’ve already seen before, even if piecemeal, and this particular version of it still doesn’t offer enough that’s different. As a result, it’s just another story about a hero feeling bad about messing up and then having to believe in himself again. Henry literally tells Barry “believe in yourself” verbatim, so the episode is even aware of how derivative the story is, but goes through with it anyway.

FLA207B_0052bThat said, having a reason to bring Henry back into the picture is probably where this arc was supposed to differ from the past. And yes, it’s nice to have John Wesley Shipp back giving heroic fatherly advice in a way only he can deliver. But even then, his role — giving Barry advice that no one else can — is exactly the same role he had from prison in the first season. The only difference here is he can talk to Barry during the actual battle with his calm, sage advice — a nice throwback to Barry’s first fight with Grodd, where newly-christened team member Iris similarly calmed Barry over the comm (and she was the one to bring Henry over, too.) And admittedly, Barry and Henry form a nice connection over Henry’s false imprisonment, particularly having your reputation and sense of self “destroyed” by no fault of your own. That conversation is the best part of Barry’s arc, and Shipp delivers a heartbreaking, personal explanation of his very specific but not uncommon situation, which deepens his character. So it’s not as if this storyline is a complete loss, but in an episode that excels at expanding and evolving past storylines to move past them, this just seems like a retread.

The other retread is Patty and Barry, whose relationship has to be put on pause due to Barry’s injury. Again, we have the hero lying to the girlfriend (I assume they’re officially a couple now, and not just in the “going on dates” stage?) and the girlfriend picking up on it and getting annoyed. We had the keeping secrets stuff with Iris last season, which at points nearly ran the show and the Iris character into the ground. So it’s frustrating for the show to go at this type of tried-and-not-true storyline again, comic book staple or not. But, in its defense, Patty’s detective skills are far better than anyone else he’s ever dated, and the show has tried very hard to make her catch onto things easily and quickly, as she does here. I postulated that Patty’s story might be a tragic one, as she has the potential to uncover Barry’s secret herself very soon and might find herself in the danger everyone expected Iris to be in. That’s still possible, and these recycled relationship troubles might be justified if the story moves in an unexpected direction. But until then, it’s hard to root for Barry and Patty together if it doesn’t feel like anything new.

It’s also hard to be totally on board with the Cisco/Kendra stuff, mostly based on what we know. Like Patty, Kendra is played by a charismatic actress and seems genuinely likeable. But it’s hard enough to do proper reveals of characters’ identities on comic book shows when we know the source material, and it’s even harder when this episode’s big reveal — that Kendra is some sort of hawk-like girl — has been majorly advertised for a while. So it’s inevitable, but also makes it hard to get invested when it all hinges on being set-up and hype for the upcoming spin-off. We know Kendra is going to jet off doing bigger things than dating Cisco, and she’ll doing it far too soon for there to be a dramatic oomph when she leaves. It’s a careful balance these shows have to make when crafting spin-off material, but between this and Firestorm, so far they’ve felt more like diversions for The Flash rather than integral parts of the full universe. That said, Cisco and Kendra’s first date(s) are cute, for what it’s worth, and The Princess Bride is a perfect date movie for Cisco to pick out.

“Gorilla Warfare” is a far from perfect installment of the show, lots of highs in the Grodd storyline but yawns at just about everything else, thanks to a lot of story beat recycling. The best parts of “Gorilla Warfare” are the ones with the titular gorilla, and this time it’s less because of geeky excitement and more because Grodd is actually an interesting character with an intriguing story. Though, that’s not to say it’s not without any geeky excitement — we have our first glimpse of Gorilla City, after all. And a psychic gorilla had to be supersonic-punched into a rip in space-time to get there. Can’t really complain about that.

Odds & Ends

  • Unless I completely spaced for part of the episode, I’m guessing there was a flashback between Caitlin and Grodd cut, considering one of the better promotional images (used above) looks to be pre-season 1 Caitlin and Grodd.
  • Henry’s return makes his abrupt exit in the premiere even more baffling, given that he was apparently fairly easy to find and admits he was just fishing and camping. He could have easily said he was just going to take a long vacation after he was released from prison with less fanfare, rather than the melodramatic conversation about leaving Barry to be a hero and whatnot.
  • The bit with Iris and Barry fake-grilling Cisco to elaborate about his date is weird, but kind of funny.
  • Jesse L. Martin absolutely sells how terrified Joe is about Grodd’s return. This guy was truly traumatized.
  • Hey, the not-Watchtower makes another appearance! The interior even looks a little bit like Smallville‘s version.
  • I completely forgot that Henry was a doctor. You’d think he’d be helpful to keep around. Maybe he’ll find a role in the DCwU as sort of a superhero-focused doctor? One who can treat them and keep their secrets, a la Marvel’s Night Nurse or DC’s Dr. Emil Hamilton.
  • Nice to see the West and Allen clan hanging out — it seems Iris and Henry have a mutual father/daughter relationship now, and the fusion of families is very sweet.
  • “Father never ask, father take!”
  • “You got talking gorillas on your earth too?”
    “Oh yeah.”
    “Remind me to never go there.”

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Blu-ray Review: The Flash: The Complete Sixth Season

Review of The Flash Season 6 Blu-ray set from Warner Bros. Home Entertainment

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The Flash: The Complete Sixth Season is now available on Blu-ray, DVD, and Digital from Warner Bros. Home Entertainment, and we have been provided with a copy of the set to review on the site!

The set features all 19 episodes of The Flash Season 6 plus extras — the Blu-ray includes all of the Crisis on Infinite Earths crossover!

Here’s what’s up:

Packaging & Design: Starting with this because it’s probably the first thing you’ll notice. The box art for this set has changed since the original press release — the fired Hartley Sawyer’s Ralph Dibny is no longer on the packaging. While I understand the show distancing themselves — Ralph was indeed an important part of Season 6, with his Sue Dearbon story, and I’m not 100% sure how I think they should have handled it. As it is, it looks odd with just the other four members of Team Flash on it. Though, to be fair, Nash Wells isn’t on the cover either.

With that said, The Flash sets usually have some of the best designed packaging and menu art and this set is no exception.

The Episodes: Also seems I am repeating myself but the Blu-ray presentation on The Flash is loads better than what we see on TV and is pretty cinematic. All 19 episodes of Season 6 are here, and — spoiler warning — because of COVID-19, they were cut off at 19 episodes, so that means some storylines aren’t completely wrapped. With that said, this season saw Eric Wallace taking over as showrunner, and with him came a new tactic that he referred to as “graphic novels.” The first “graphic novel” included the character Bloodwork (Sendhil Ramamurthy) as characters are facing death, and the second, after Crisis, dealt with a new “Mirror Master.”

I will say that The Flash under Eric Wallace has a great vision and I love his enthusiasm, which you can actually hear on the “Kiss Kiss Breach Breach” commentary. He’s as big of a geek as we are, and I mean that in the absolute best way. The only thing I’d have to say negative about Season 6 is that the mirror storyline has gone on way too long — and I wonder, if they had known all along that we’d end with 19 episodes (an impossibility, because who would?), it might have been a bit shorter.

This “graphic novel” set-up, however, does offer the chance to binge the season in parts, which is pretty cool, and the Blu-ray bonus disc of all of Crisis on Infinite Earths is a good thing to throw in the middle to tee up Graphic Novel #2.

The other thing I will say about Season 6 is that I really liked some of the new characters that are set up. Chester P. Runk, Sue Dearbon, Kamilla, and Allegra — all fun characters that add to rather than detract from the series.

The Extras: The set includes a bonus black and white noir version of “Kiss Kiss Breach Breach” with commentary by Eric Wallace. Commentaries don’t happen too often these days, so I’m so glad they put something on this set. There is also a gag reel and deleted scenes. And, of course, all of Crisis which has a lot of great Flash content!

Is It Worth It? If you’re a Flash completist or want to see the most recent season in high definition, sure. You might want to start at the very beginning, though. Still, I think The Flash is on its way back to its former glory and Season 6 is the start of that journey. Can’t wait for Season 7, and for now, this set will be revisited often.

Get your copy of the Blu-ray from Amazon.com at a discounted price and support FlashTVNews!

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Blu-ray Review: The Flash: The Complete Fifth Season

Review of the Flash Season 5 Blu-ray set.

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Disclaimer: Warner Bros. Home Entertainment provided FlashTVNews with a free copy of this set for review in this post. The opinions shared are my own.

The Flash: The Complete Fifth Season hits Blu-ray and DVD this week, containing all 22 episodes of Season 5 plus bonus episodes from the Elseworlds crossover. In addition to the entire season, there are few extra features for all to enjoy, though some are duplicated from other sets that were made available this year. Here’s the review.

The Episodes: As mentioned, all 22 episodes plus extras are on this set. And as I tend to write every year, the show isn’t quite at the high level it was in its first season, but there are definitely standouts in Season 5. A big theme for the season is family, and the conflicts between parents and their children. Caitlin and her parents are a part of that. The season’s villain is a part of that. And the biggest part of that is Nora West-Allen (Jessica Parker Kennedy), the daughter of Barry and Iris brought back from the future. Kennedy is fantastic in the role, though it is at times disappointing to see so much attention on a new character when we are here for the ones we’ve seen for 100+ episodes.

The Flash Season 5 contains the series’ 100th episode which is a great journey through the five years of the show. Sadly absent from Episode 100, though, is Joe West (Jesse L. Martin) who was recovering from an injury for a good part of the season. Martin’s presence was certainly missed though it is nice that the show upgraded Danielle Nicolet (Cecile) to series regular this year.

I’ll be honest: I wasn’t very invested in the Cicada story, at least not as much as I probably should have been. And I was even less into the latest Wells, “Sherloque,” which was a joke that stopped being funny within about 2 minutes, with no offense meant to the writers or Tom Cavanagh. It was nice to see the talented Cavanagh in another role, though part of me still is wondering why it was not Matt Letscher, though I’m forgiving that because, again, Tom Cavanagh.

I’m also not sure what to make of Vibe’s eventual fate, unless it is a way to make things less easy for next year’s crossover. In any event, watching these episodes still has me excited for Season 6, and The Flash is certainly a series that is worth the Blu-Ray upgrade.

The Extras: There’s a fantastic featurette about the origins of Killer Frost which is really well put together. I was, however, surprised that such attention wasn’t paid to XS/Nora as she was also a major arc for Season 5. Was there only room to cover one story? I’m also surprised there wasn’t some kind of 100th episode spotlight, especially since Warner Bros. did have press kit people on the line interviewing the cast.

There are Elseworlds, villains, and Comic-Con featurettes that you can find on the other DC TV shows this year, which I can only imagine is a cost-cutting measure to include them everywhere.

The set also has deleted scenes, with the most notable being Superman running with Oliver Queen from “Elseworlds Part 1.” It’s a shame that was cut. There was also a “My Name Is Barry Allen” from “Elseworlds” with Stephen Amell replacing Grant Gustin as Grant replaced him in the aired Part 2 — this was surely cut and unfinished so as to not blow the reveal that Oliver was Barry in Part 1. It’s still really cute and fun.

Finally, there’s a gag reel. While they are introduced with credits like The Office, they’re still a bit… meh.

Packaging and Design: Seeing Barry and Nora running side by side is the perfect way to sell this. Very nice looking.

Is It Worth It? I’ll always recommend picking up Flash Blu-Rays from the beginning, but this is certainly worthwhile, especially to prepare for Season 6 to premiere on October 8. You can purchase this set (and support this site!) here.

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Blu-ray Review: The Flash: The Complete Fourth Season

Review of the Blu-ray set for The Flash: The Complete Fourth Season

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The Complete Fourth Season of The Flash hits Blu-ray and DVD this week (Tuesday, August 28), and we’ve got our hands on a review copy!

Before we get to the review, here’s how the season is described:

In Season Four, the mission of Barry Allen, aka The Flash (Grant Gustin), is once more to protect Central City from metahuman threats. First, he’ll have to escape the Speed Force. With Barry trapped, the job of protecting Central City falls to his family – Detective Joe West (Jesse L. Martin); his fiancée, Iris West (Candice Patton); and Wally West/Kid Flash (Keiynan Lonsdale) – and the team at S.T.A.R. Labs – Dr. Caitlin Snow/Killer Frost (Danielle Panabaker), Cisco Ramon/Vibe (Carlos Valdes) and brilliant scientist Harrison Wells (Tom Cavanagh). When a powerful villain threatens to level the city if The Flash doesn’t appear, Cisco risks everything to break Barry out of the Speed Force. But this is only the first move of a life-or-death chess game with Clifford DeVoe aka The Thinker (Neil Sandilands), a mastermind who’s always ten steps ahead of Barry, no matter how fast he’s running. Shocking surprises come fast and furious in all 23 action-packed adventures featuring The Fastest Man Alive.

So, how’s the set?

The Episodes: It’s going to be very hard to ever replicate the greatness that was the first season of The Flash. Unfortunately, one thing that The Flash Season 1 did so well that still didn’t connect for Season 4 is a strong villain. While I have more appreciation for The Thinker after rewatching some episodes and checking out the extra interview features on this set, I still don’t really feel that empathy and care for him that I had for, say, Eobard/Wells.

Season 4 also tried to course correct with more humor to varied success. Sometimes it worked; others the show was far too amused with itself. (I don’t need to see any more Wellses no matter how much I love Tom Cavanagh, for example, and “psychic pregnancy” will never not be too campy for me.)

There’s some good stuff, though. The best version of Barry’s suit so far premieres in Season 4, and Barry and Iris finally get married this year, even if every time they got married, they ended up interrupted. There are some episodes that worked to innovate, and there are also things like Barry in jail which seem to go on for too long. But at least with a DVD or Blu-ray you can fast forward, right?

Season 4 is also where we meet Ralph Dibny. He grows on you until you finally stretch your appreciation levels. By season’s end, you love Ralph as much as everyone else might.

The Extras: Of all the DC TV shows, The Flash usually gets the best treatment as far as extras go. We’ve got deleted scenes (including some WestAllen!), bloopers, and the all-encompassing Comic-Con video… and some other great extras, including Sterling Gates and Eric Wallace with Katee Sackhoff offering commentary on Amunet (who I do enjoy more after seeing Sackhoff speaking about her, but I still don’t understand why the silly accent was a thing). There’s also a really nice feature about the Elongated Man, and all four episodes of this year’s DC TV crossover are represented.

There’s also talk about The Thinker, and as I said, I appreciate the storyline more but I still didn’t have that emotional connection with the character that I feel I needed. The other bodies thing at midseason made that all even worse.

Packaging & Art: This is one of the best looking Flash Blu-ray sets so far. Dynamic design on the box art and on the discs. I like it.

Is It Worth It? As I said, nothing will be Season 1 again, but if you’re a fan of The Flash there are a lot of extras to make this worth it. Order yours from Amazon.com at a discounted rate and support this website!

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