Flash 347-350
“Trial of the Flash Part 6”
Not really a jury of his peers. Moustache man can impale the Flash. |
The Trial is over! Behold the verdict
for the Scarlet Speedster. Spoiler, he's guilty! How can he be guilty
of the Reverse Flash isn't dead?! Prepare your head for some
spinning.
Sorry for the overuse of exclamation
points there but this final chapter to 'The Trial of the Flash'
completely loses its shit. Any semblance of realism in the story
disappears (not that here was much to begin with, but when the
conceit is a superhero finally being put on trial for taking the law
into their own hands, that's an interesting attempt at realism) and
transference of souls, time-travel and resurrection are the plot
points we're bombarded with.
Despite the best efforts of Flash's
formerly-antagonist-lawyer-now-turned-best-pal, the jury returns a
verdict on Flash's complicity in the murder of the Reverse-Flash:
guilty. Flash, being the hero that he is agrees to go to jail, even
though there's nothing stopping him from just flat-out running off
and finding a new life elsewhere that doesn't include running fast.
No, society has spoken and Flash will be a hero until the end and
accept the punishment meted out. One disappointing aspect of the end
of this story has been the lack of a lot of involvement from Flash's
friends in the Justice League. The JLA shows up once, to admonish the Flash, basically and Green
Lantern (the Hal version), Barry's best friend, shows up to offer
some salient advice, but
other than that they don't do much. You'd think any of them would
deign it worth their time to show up at the trial, maybe play as a
character witness, or at least visit the poor schlep in jail, at the
very least give him hell for how he treated his wife-to-be. Sure, he
saved her life, but left her to languish in a mental hospital. Nope, we don't get to
see them at all. Perfect point for some inter-title continuity, but
instead Flash is in a world all his own.
Screw you guys, I'm outta here. |
Also,
just an aside because I've spent so much time on this part of the
story: after Fiona Webb's relapse in court during
the previous part of this story she does not show up at all in this
story again nor in the entirety of Post-Crisis continuity. That's it,
Fiona's story ends with a mental breakdown. She deserves a lot more
than the Flash.
I'm
also going to throw out that Flash deserves a better ending than
what's presented here. To skip ahead a bit: Flash 350, the final
chapter in this story is always the final issue of the series.
Considering that 'The Trial of the Flash' has been going on for
almost 2 years right now, it's safe to assume this story was not
planned to end the series, it's just the way things shook out. The
way events quickly devolve from any kind of rational method of
story-telling into the crazy shit I'll type out in the next paragraph
has to do with the writer struggling to give the entirety of the
Flash's superhero career some kind of closure.
Let's
do this: Flash's guilty verdict is the result of jury manipulation,
obviously. Or, given the events that lead up to it, not so obviously.
While the jury had come to a not-guilty verdict on their own, there
is one verdict, a portly bald accountant by the name of Newbury who
has access to advanced technology and claims that, if the jury
deadlocked or came back with a guilty verdict, would ensure that a
not-guilty verdict would be missed. So how did this mysterious man
fail so miserably? That would be the mysteriously returned Reverse
Flash who takes the identity of one of the jurors and is able to use
similarly advanced technology to what Newbury possesses and force a
guilty verdict. Where does this deluge of jury-verdict-changing
technology come from?
A whole lot of jury-tampering brought us to this moment. |
What
the fuck is going on? Reverse Flash is still dead, a newly-introduced
villain to this story by the name of Abra Cadabra is to blame and has
been donning the identity of the deceased banana-colored villain.
Abra hails from the 64th
century where' he's a failed magician and entertainer who eventually
travels back to the 20th
century to find audience, passing off advanced technology as real
magic. At some point he becomes a criminal and is punched by the
Flash several times which leads to this plot to ensure a guilty
verdict for the Flash. But who is Newbury? Newbury is also from the
future, attempting to thwart Abra Cadabra by making sure the
not-guilty verdict recorded by history in the 64th
century comes to pass. Flash should be exonerated! Newbury is a
resident of Central City 20th
century possessed by the should of Barry Allen's murdered first wife
Iris West. I know, I know, get this: Iris was never killed in our
time: at the moment of her death West's relatives from the future
snatched her soul to the future and placed it in a new body. Later,
when Barry needs her help during the trial, West's soul is sent back
to the past to inhabit the body of Newbury. With this revelation,
Flash's body is whisked to the 64th
century where he's reunited with his first wife and lives happily
every after. To the people of the 20th
century, Flash was found not-guilty and simply disappeared.
With these revelations, he should have stayed in jail. |
Yeah
bu-whu?
That's
how it ends? With this future soul-stealing mumbo-jumbo and two main
characters introduced into the end of a 25-part series? What a
disappointing ending. Screw it, what a crap ending. A ton of new
elements are introduced at the end that take the focus away from the
trial, abandon established characters like Fiona Webb or Flash's
lawyer and shoe-horns in a convoluted attempt at a happy ending tied
in a bow. I don't buy it and this is the kind of crap that leads to
superhero comics being maligned as mediums for decent story-telling.
Don't worry, Crisis is coming to clean this up and hopefully wipe it
away.
At least the public knows he's not guilty even though getting there was a hell of a trip. |