He is, in fact, he'd been known to move as fast as 13 trillion times the speed of light.But I thought the Flash is known as the Fastest Man Alive?![]()

He is, in fact, he'd been known to move as fast as 13 trillion times the speed of light.But I thought the Flash is known as the Fastest Man Alive?![]()
Sure I can't, I'm not Flash.You can't go faster than light in real space.
I'm really curious to see the costume for this Flash. The comic version is a hard thing to make look good in real life. While the one from the 90's Flash looked pretty good it always bugged me that it looked impossible for one person to put on by themselves.
"Barry (Grant Gustin) is different from Oliver (Stephen Amell)," he said. "He's a man of science and has more of a sci-fi bent, whereas Arrow has a bit more of a crime bent.
Berlanti also confirmed that The Flash will feature more super-powered characters, with the particle collider that gave Barry Allen his super-speed continuing to play into storylines.
"We've talked a lot on Arrow about the particle collider and Harrison Wells and S.T.A.R. Labs and so you'll see S.T.A.R. Labs as an active part of the show," he revealed.
The Flash is currently at the pilot stage at US network The CW, though Berlanti insisted that Gustin would continue to appear on Arrow if his own show does not go ahead.
WW got a full pilot too. How did that work out?
The Wonder Woman pilot was David E. Kelley developing a show for NBC that was out of his comfort zone. The Flash is a spin-off of a successful CW show by producers working within their comfort zone. Something could of course go wrong, but the odds are much better here than with Kelley's Wonder Woman.
Better, but not exact. That was a backdoor pilot, not a standalone pilot. Plus CBS has a lot of resources and a strong line-up of shows, so it's harder to get on the schedule than on the CW.Oh, so a better example is NCIS: RED.
Not by the CW. They don't have the resources for that. They tend to order about eight pilots and then pick up five or six of them as series. The current management is very SFF friendly and SFF shows currently account for their top four shows, one of which is a spin-off, so the chances of The Flash being picked up are very good.Regardless, the point is a lot more pilots are made than go to series.
Harrison is described as a rock star in the world of physics and the mind and money behind Central City’s S.T.A.R. Labs Particle Accelerator. He becomes a pariah after his lab explodes. But he redeems himself when he discovers that his failed experiment accidentally created the world’s fastest man, The Flash (Grant Gustin).
That's a surprising retcon to the Arrow universe, but I think it's a promising development. Arrow has turned out to be a strong interpretation of the DCU, so it could make sense to use it as the anchor for an extended DCU on television, given how much trouble they're having getting one to work in the movies. Okay, they are going forward with a Batman/Superman movie, but there are no guarantees.
Or, maybe the plan is to follow Marvel's lead and do a shared universe encompassing both film and TV. It's conceivable that Arrow could be retroactively folded into the Man of Steel universe (or vice-versa, depending on how you look at it).
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