Flash Movie Review: The Flash
I USED TO HAVE A FRIEND who wished most of his life back to his past. He was present for the most part when we would get together, but inevitably, something would come up and trigger him to express his wish he could have done things differently in his past. I explained many of us do the same thing; however, they do not let that desire take hold of their life. There are a multitude of things I wish I would have handled or done differently, but what good is it to sit and dwell upon it. There was the long-term relationship I was in that ended in a brutal way, with me contributing some of the brutality in a backlash. Or the times I was too afraid to express my feelings and acted in ways that came across as non-sympathetic or non-pulsed. I wish I had studied and focused harder in my schooling so I would have had a clearer sense of what I wanted to do when I entered college. And because it has scarred me for most of my life, I wish I would have started to take better care of myself earlier, to possibly avoid the taunts and teasing I endured about my weight. On the other hand, I believe there is a reason for everything. I had to go through what I did to become who I am now. MY FRIEND HAD SO MANY REGRETS about the way things happened in his past that it caused him to suffer with bouts of depression and anxiousness. He held down a good job, but his social life took a beating; he was either too sad to get together with people or he talked so much about his past that people did not want to be around him. They call that a “catch 22” situation. No matter how hard friends and family tried, he never found a peaceful place to reside in. I felt sad about it. One thing I dislike doing is using someone’s tragedy to make someone else feel better about themselves, but I went ahead and shared a story about someone I knew who asked a friend of theirs to pick up an item they had on hold at a store and the friend got into a car accident on the way and died. Imagine the guilt that person had for asking their friend to do something for them that resulted in their death. I try to make sense of things, so a part of me believes that actions such as these are meant to be. Also, who knows what would happen if we could change things from our past. This action, fantasy adventure certainly presents a strong case for the consequences that result from changing the past. DISCOVERING A NEW SKILL THAT COULD save his mother’s life, a son travels back in time in the hopes of making a change that would affect the outcome of his present life. With Ezra Miller (We Need to Talk About Kevin, Fantastic Beasts franchise) as Barry Allen, Michael Keaton (The Founder, The Protégé) as Bruce Wayne, Sasha Calle (The Young and the Restless-TV) as Kara Zor-El, Michael Shannon (Take Shelter, Midnight Special) as General Zod and Ron Livingston (The Professor, Office Space) as Henry Allen; this superhero film was a major disappointment. I thought the script was awful, not making any sense to me except on a basic level. The special effects were nothing great and the script was annoying with the constant bickering that went back and forth between characters. The only part I enjoyed was Michael Keaton reprising his role as Batman. Outside of that, I still have a hard time understanding how a movie studio can consistently take a fantasy story and make it boring. I must think that some of the people associated with the making of this picture wish they could have done things differently. There was an extra scene at the end of the film’s credits.
1 ¾ stars
Posted on September 20, 2023, in Fantasy/Sci-Fi and tagged 1 3/4 stars, action, adventure, ezra miller, fantasy, michael keaton, michael shannon, ron livingston, superhero, time travel. Bookmark the permalink. 2 Comments.
My sons persuaded me to watch this movie on the basis that we could “hate watch” it and be entertained. It was, however, such a dull disaster of movie-making that we were not even inspired enough to generate our own jokes. The plot was somehow both blandly predictable and baffling, the banter and any attempts at comedy just fell flat and came across as annoying, and the special effects looked worse than imagery generated 20 years ago. It was such a waste of my time.
A film is extra bad when it cannot even be made fun of; you are 100% right. And here, Helen Mirren was so excited to play a villain and this is what she got stuck in. Thanks for telling us your experience.