Flash # 200
By Loretta Ramirez
August 3, 2003 - 09:43
DC Comics
Writer(s): Geoff Johns
Penciller(s): Scott Kolins
Inker(s): Doug Hazlewood
Cover Artist(s): Scott Kolins, Doug Hazlewood
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The experience of reading this issue is much like weaving a motorcycle through a congested highway. You're moving faster than everyone else. You're thrilled. You're enthralled. Yet, painfully constant is the threat of crashing. Johns' skill as a writer is evident as the reader's experience parallels that of Wally West. Here is a super hero whose power is speed and personality is carelessness, and he has just crashed.
After revealing his identity as The Flash, Wally has endangered the lives of his wife and friends. The outcome--his wife miscarries unborn twins and his friends must sacrifice their own powers to assist Wally in preventing a timeline catastrophe. Thus, the reader is sped along a fast-paced story, at an almost dizzying rate, as The Flash fights to save the world and his wife.
Yet despite the emphasis on action, the still moments are the core of the story. This issue addresses the essence of what it means to be a hero--not fame, not honor. To be a hero is to be willing to share. Wally West has shared his powers with the world, shared to the point that he has finally lost the future he had so eagerly envisioned. Now, he is tired of running, tired of tragedy, and tired of being a hero. After running along with him, readers can sympathize with the hero who is truly, after all, just a man. Thus, the story ends on a bittersweet note, with the man reclaiming his life and the hero disappearing, unwilling to share further.
The art of Scott Kolins complements this poignant story with expressive faces and tense bodies. The action scenes are exhilarating. Particularly impressive is the final battle between The Flash and his opponent, Zoom, which spans the world in less than a second. Kolins captures this sense of speed where a thousand miles are covered in the duration of a single punch. More impressive is The Flash's parting scene as he runs to freedom with a stirring mixture of fear and determination--eyes closed but teeth gritting.
Overall: A+
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