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Flashpoint (comics)
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| "Flashpoint" | |
|---|---|
Cover of Flashpoint#1 (May 2011). Art by Alex Sinclair, Andy Kubert, Sandra Hope, Nathan Eyring, Aspen MLT Inc. | |
| Publisher | DC Comics |
| Publication date | May – August 2011 |
| Genre | |
| Main character(s) | Barry Allen Reverse-Flash (Eobard Thawne) Batman (Thomas Wayne) Cyborg[1] Booster Gold Wonder Woman Aquaman |
| Creative team | |
| Writer | Geoff Johns[1] |
| Artist | Andy Kubert |
| Hardcover | ISBN 1-4012-3337-6 |
"Flashpoint" is a 2011 comic book crossover story arc published by DC Comics. Consisting of an eponymous core limited series and a number of tie-in titles, the storyline premiered in May 2011. The core miniseries was written by Geoff Johns and pencilled by Andy Kubert. The series radically changes the status quo for the DC Universe, leading into the publisher's 2011 relaunch, The New 52.
Flashpoint details an altered DC Universe in which only Barry Allen seems to be aware of significant differences between the regular timeline and the altered one, including Cyborg's place as the world's quintessential hero, much like Superman is in the main timeline, with Superman himself being held captive as a lab-rat by the United States government within an underground facility in Metropolis. In addition, Thomas Wayne is Batman, and a war between Wonder Woman and Aquaman has decimated western Europe.[1]
Consisting of a 61 issue run, the series crossed over with Booster Gold, sixteen separate three-issue miniseries, and a number of one-shots beginning in June 2011.[2] Flash #12 was the last in the series; a thirteenth issue was announced for sale in May of the same year, but was withdrawn.[3]
A sequel series, Flashpoint Beyond, debuted in 2022, with Johns returning to write the series alongside Jeremy Adams and Tim Sheridan.
The storyline is adapted in the film Justice League: The Flashpoint Paradox as well as in the third season of The CW television series The Flash. Elements of the storyline are also adapted into a feature film adaptation of The Flash as part of the DC Extended Universe.
Plot
[edit]Barry Allen wakes up to discover everything and everyone around him has changed. He is not the Flash, nor does he have powers. His mother Nora Allen (deceased in his own timeline) is alive; his father, Henry Allen, died of a heart attack three years ago (alive and in prison in his own timeline). Captain Cold is Central City's greatest hero, the Justice League was never established, and even Superman is seemingly nonexistent. In Gotham City, Batman throws a criminal off a building. Cyborg and Batman have a conference with a group of superheroes to discuss how Wonder Woman's Amazons have conquered the United Kingdom, while Aquaman's Atlanteans have sunk the rest of Western Europe, and the battle between the two has caused massive death and destruction. America is similarly endangered. The heroes cannot cooperate to find a solution, and the meeting is ended. Barry Allen drives to the Batcave, where Batman attacks him. Batman is revealed to be Thomas Wayne—in this timeline his son, Bruce, was killed by the robber instead of his wife Martha Wayne and himself. In this timeline, Thomas brutally beat the robber to death for murdering Bruce, and Martha went insane at the loss of her son, becoming the Joker.[4][5][6]
In the flooded remains of Paris, Deathstroke captains a pirate ship in search of his daughter. Emperor Aquaman appears and stabs Deathstroke in the chest and attacks Deathstroke's crew (Sonar, Icicle, and Clayface). Sonar is able to remove a piece of the trident from Deathstroke's chest and heal him. At Wayne Manor, Barry tries to explain to Thomas about his secret identity as the Flash and his relationship to Bruce Wayne. Barry's memory begins to spontaneously realign itself to the altered timeline and Barry realizes that the world of Flashpoint is not a parallel dimension, but an alternate reality. Barry's ring ejects Eobard Thawne's Reverse-Flash costume and causes Barry to believe that his enemy is responsible for changing history. Barry decides to recreate the accident that gave him his powers in a bid to undo the damage caused by Thawne, but his initial attempt fails and leaves him badly burned.[7]
In London, Steve Trevor is waiting at a rendezvous for Lois Lane but is attacked by Wonder Woman and the Amazons. Wonder Woman catches him by the neck with her Lasso of Truth and begins interrogating him. He explains that he was hired to extract Lane from New Themyscira because she was sent to gather information on the Amazons for Cyborg. The U.S. president informs Cyborg that Steve Trevor sent a signal to the Resistance but was intercepted because of a traitor among the heroes that Cyborg tried to recruit. Cyborg is relieved of duty as Element Woman sneaks into the headquarters. Meanwhile, in New Themyscira, Lane encounters the Resistance. A second attempt at recreating Allen's accident restores his powers and health. He concludes that the Reverse-Flash changed history to prevent the formation of the Justice League. He also learns that Kal-El was taken by Project: Superman. Flash, Batman and Cyborg join the cause to stop Wonder Woman and Aquaman. The three find a pale, weakened Superman at the Project and realize that he may well have been in a containment cell since he was a child—possibly never even seeing a human being before. After being rescued, Superman flies off in seeming fright in the midst of a battle with the guards, leaving the three in the sewers to be rescued by Element Woman.[8] Flash's memories continue to change.
The president announces Cyborg's failure to unite the world's superheroes and the U.S. enters into the Atlantean-Amazon war. Flash, Batman, Cyborg, and Element Woman ask for the Marvel Family's help and Batman asks Billy Batson to use his lightning to prevent Flash's memories from changing further. The group hears of the failed air assault on England due to the Amazons' Invisible Plane air force. Hal Jordan, who had not become Green Lantern in this timeline, is the first casualty, and a giant Atlantean-generated tidal wave threatens the rest of New Themyscira. Flash tells Batman that if he fails to stop Thawne, the world will destroy itself. Despite reservations, Batman joins Flash as the group heads off to New Themyscira. Enchantress joins them en route. Wonder Woman and Aquaman are fighting one-on-one until Flash and his team arrive. The Marvel Family transforms into Captain Thunder, also transforming Tawky Tawny. Captain Thunder attacks Wonder Woman and appears to be winning until Enchantress reveals herself as the Amazon spy in the Resistance and uses her magic to restore the Marvel Family to their mortal forms. Penthesilea (who was secretly one of the conspirators of the Atlantean-Amazon war, along with Orm) kills Billy, causing a massive explosion that cripples the opposing forces. In the wake of the devastation, Thawne appears in front of Flash.[9]
The Reverse-Flash reveals that Flash himself created the Flashpoint timeline by traveling back in time to stop him from killing Barry's mother. Barry pulled the entire Speed Force into himself to stop Thawne, transforming the timeline by shattering the history of his allies. Thawne resets Barry's internal vibrations, enabling him to remember this. According to Thawne, these actions transformed him into a living paradox, no longer requiring Barry to exist and allowing him to kill the Flash without erasing his own existence. Thawne continues to taunt Barry with this knowledge until Batman kills him with an Amazonian sword. As the fight continues, Superman arrives and begins to aid the heroes, first by landing hard enough to crush the Enchantress under his feet. Thomas insists that Barry put history back to normal to undo the millions of deaths. Meanwhile, Cyborg detects seismic activity which he claims could destroy the world. Waves start to approach. Now knowing the point of divergence, the Flash restores the timeline. As he enters the timestream, a dying Thomas thanks him for giving his son a second chance and gives Barry a letter addressed to Bruce. Barry then meets with his mother and bids a tearful farewell to her.
Traveling back in time, Barry merges with his earlier self during the attempt to stop Thawne. While traveling through time, Barry realizes he can see three different timelines — DC (New Earth), Vertigo (Earth-13), and WildStorm (Earth-50). A mysterious hooded figure tells him that the world was split into three to weaken them for an impending threat, and must now be reunited to combat it. The DC, Vertigo, and Wildstorm universes are then merged, but unbeknownst to Barry and the hooded figure (later revealed to be a cursed immortal Pandora), the mentioned threat intervened and removed 10 years of history from DC characters, which created instead a new DC Universe. Barry then wakes up in a similar manner to the beginning of Flashpoint, also retaining all his memories from the alternate timeline. Believing that everything is over, Barry remembers Thomas' letter and gives it to Bruce, who is still Batman in this timeline. Bruce, deeply touched by his father's sacrifice to ensure his son's life, cries and expresses his gratitude to Barry for informing him of the events that transpired before the timeline was reset.[10]
Alternate versions
[edit]Tales from the Dark Multiverse
[edit]In Tales from the Dark Multiverse, Barry Allen attempts to restore his powers in order to undo the Flashpoint timeline, he dies in the process and Eobard Thawne – the Reverse Flash – takes his place and begins to reshape the world as he desires. After he blackmails the President to grant him authority by killing Aquaman to end the war, Thawne is nearly defeated by 'Superman', only for Superman to be killed by Batman so that Thawne may someday bring Bruce back to life. When Wonder Woman reappears with the New Gods of Apokolips as her gods, Thawne runs back in time to save the Waynes as a deal with Thomas, and then turns his attention to trying to reconstruct reality to make himself the hero.[11]
Publication
[edit]Titles
[edit]
- Prelude
- The Flash (vol. 3) #8–12
- Flashpoint main series
- Flashpoint #1–5
- Crossover
- Booster Gold (vol. 2) #44–47
- Mini-series: Several tie-in mini-series were announced via DC's "The Source" Blog[2] and the creative teams were announced in March 2011.[12]
- Batman-centric: Whatever Happened to Gotham City?
- Flashpoint: Batman Knight of Vengeance #1–3, written by Brian Azzarello and drawn by Eduardo Risso.
- Flashpoint: Deadman and the Flying Graysons #1–3, written by JT Krul and drawn by Mike Janin with covers by Cliff Chiang.
- Villains: Whatever Happened to the World's Greatest Super Villains?
- Flashpoint: Citizen Cold #1–3, written and drawn by Scott Kolins.
- Flashpoint: Deathstroke & the Curse of the Ravager #1–3, written by Jimmy Palmiotti and drawn by Joe Bennett & John Dell.
- Flashpoint: The Legion of Doom #1–3 written by Adam Glass and drawn by Rodeny Buchemi & Jose Marzan with cover by Miguel Sepulveda.
- Flashpoint: The Outsider #1–3, written by James Robinson and drawn by Javi Fernandez with cover by Kevin Nowlan
- Green Lantern/Superman: Whatever Happened to the Aliens?
- Flashpoint: Abin Sur – The Green Lantern #1–3, written by Adam Schlagman and drawn by Felipe Massafera.
- Flashpoint: Project: Superman #1–3, written by Scott Snyder & Lowell Francis and drawn by Gene Ha.
- Mystic-centric: Whatever Happened to Science & Magic?
- Flashpoint: Frankenstein & the Creatures of the Unknown #1–3, written by Jeff Lemire and drawn by Ibraim Roberson with covers by Doug Mahnke.[13]
- Flashpoint: Secret Seven #1–3, written by Peter Milligan and drawn by George Pérez and Scott Koblish
- Whatever Happened to Europe?
- Flashpoint: Emperor Aquaman #1–3, written by Tony Bedard and drawn by Ardian Syaf & Vicente Cifuentes.
- Flashpoint: Wonder Woman and the Furies #1–3, written by Dan Abnett & Andy Lanning and drawn by Scott Clark & David Beaty with covers by Ed Benes.[14]
- Flashpoint: Lois Lane and the Resistance #1–3, written by Dan Abnett & Andy Lanning and drawn by Eddy Nunez & Sandra Hope.[14]
- Everything You Know Will Change in a Flash
- Flashpoint: Kid Flash Lost #1–3, written by Sterling Gates and drawn by Oliver Nome with covers by Francis Manapul.
- Flashpoint: The World of Flashpoint #1–3, written by Rex Ogle and drawn by Paulo Siqueira with covers by Shane Davis and Brett Booth.
- He Never Got the Ring
- Flashpoint: Hal Jordan #1–3, written by Adam Schlagman and drawn by Ben Oliver with covers by Rags Morales.
- Batman-centric: Whatever Happened to Gotham City?
- One-shots
- Flashpoint: Grodd of War #1, written by Sean Ryan and drawn by Ug Guara with cover by Francis Manapul
- Flashpoint: Reverse-Flash #1, written by Scott Kolins and drawn by Joel Gomez with cover by Ardian Syaf and Vicente Cifuentes
- Flashpoint: Green Arrow Industries #1, written by Pornsak Pichetshote and drawn by Mark Castiello with cover by Viktor Kalvachev
- Flashpoint: The Canterbury Cricket #1, written by Mike Carlin and drawn by Rags Morales with cover by Rags Morales
Collected editions
[edit]The series is collected into a number of volumes:
| Title | Material collected | Published date | ISBN |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Flash Vol. 2: The Road to Flashpoint | The Flash (vol. 3) #8–12 | November 2011 | 978-1401232795 |
| Flashpoint | Flashpoint #1–5 | October 2011 | 978-1401233372 |
| Absolute Flashpoint | Flashpoint #1–5, The Flash (vol. 4) #1 | January 2019 | 978-1401286262 |
| Flashpoint: The World of Flashpoint Featuring The Flash | Grodd of War #1, Kid Flash Lost #1–3, Legion of Doom #1–3, Reverse Flash #1, Citizen Cold #1–3 | March 2012 | 978-1401234089 |
| Flashpoint: The World of Flashpoint Featuring Wonder Woman | Emperor Aquaman #1–3, Outsider #1–3, Lois Lane and the Resistance #1–3, Wonder Woman and the Furies #1–3 | March 2012 | 978-1401234102 |
| Flashpoint: The World of Flashpoint Featuring Superman | World of Flashpoint #1–3, Booster Gold #44–47, The Canterbury Cricket #1, Project Superman #1–3 | March 2012 | 978-1401234348 |
| Flashpoint: The World of Flashpoint Featuring Batman | Batman: Knight of Vengeance #1–3, Deadman and the Flying Graysons #1–3, Deathstroke and the Curse of the Ravager #1–3, Secret Seven #1–3 | March 2012 | 978-1401234058 |
| Flashpoint: The World of Flashpoint Featuring Green Lantern | Hal Jordan #1–3, Abin Sur – The Green Lantern #1–3, Frankenstein and the Creatures of the Unknown #1–3, Green Arrow Industries #1 | March 2012 | 978-1401234065 |
| Flashpoint: The 10th Anniversary Omnibus | Booster Gold (vol. 2) #44-47, Flash (vol. 3) #9-12, Flashpoint #1-5, Flashpoint: Reverse-Flash #1, Flashpoint: Abin Sur the Green Lantern #1-3, Flashpoint: Emperor Aquaman #1-3, Flashpoint: Batman Knight of Vengeance #1-3, Flashpoint: Citizen Cold #1-3, Flashpoint: The World of Flashpoint #1-3, Flashpoint: Deadman and the Flying Graysons #1-3, Flashpoint: Deathstroke and the Curse of the Ravager #1-3, Flashpoint: Lois Lane and the Resistance #1-3, Flashpoint: The Outsider #1-3, Flashpoint: Secret Seven #1-3, Flashpoint: The Canterbury Cricket #1, Flashpoint: Wonder Woman and the Furies #1-3, Flashpoint: Kid Flash Lost #1-3, Flashpoint: Project Superman #1-3, Flashpoint: Frankenstein and the Creatures of the Unknown #1-3, Flashpoint: Green Arrow Industries #1, Flashpoint: Grodd of War #1, Flashpoint: Hal Jordan #1-3, Flashpoint: The Legion of Doom #1-3 | April 2021 | 978-1779509772 |
In other media
[edit]Television
[edit]Several allusions to Flashpoint are made in The CW's live-action Arrowverse:
- Multiple allusions are made on The Flash television series during the first three seasons. The character Blackout appears in the season one episode "Power Outage". In the episode "Rogue Time", Barry Allen is warned that going back in time to save Nora Allen's life would have a terrible ripple effect on the timeline. In season one's finale "Fast Enough", Barry time travels back to the night of his mother's murder, but is told by his future self not to interfere in the events, and shares a conversation with his dying mother that is similar to the one in the comic.[15][16] In the season two episode "Enter Zoom", it is revealed that Robert Queen is the vigilante known as the Arrow of Earth-2 instead of Oliver Queen, mirroring Batman's reversal in the comic. In the episode "Rupture", Harry Wells attempts to recreate the accident behind Barry's powers on the de-powered speedster using a method similar to the one featured in the comic. A loose adaptation of Flashpoint begins in season two's finale "The Race of His Life". Grief-stricken after Hunter Zolomon/Zoom kills Henry Allen, Barry travels back to 2000 and stops Eobard Thawne/Reverse-Flash from killing Nora, thus radically altering the timeline. In season three's premiere "Flashpoint", Barry has Eobard kept imprisoned in a carbine cell and lives in the new timeline (dubbed 'Flashpoint' by Eobard) for three months with both his parents alive and begins dating Iris West, while Wally West is the Flash. On the other side, Barry discovers that Joe West is a reclusive alcoholic frequently missing shifts at work, Cisco Ramon is a self-centered billionaire tech genius, and Caitlin Snow is not a biologist but a pediatric ophthalmologist. As in the comic book story, Barry begins losing his memories as the Flashpoint timeline starts to overwrite the timeline he is familiar with. Eobard tries to convince Barry to release him, so they can fix what he did, but Barry refuses to listen and tries to make things better by helping Wally stop The Rival. Barry succeeds in stopping the Rival who is killed by Joe, but not before Wally is critically wounded. Realizing Flashpoint's effects are only going to get worse, Barry releases Eobard who kills Nora in 2000 and returns Barry to the corrected 2016, but Eobard leaves a taunting hint that things are not exactly the same, evident by Eobard being alive in 2016 rather than being erased from existence in 2015 due to Eddie Thawne's suicide. In the episode "Paradox", several differences from the original timeline are revealed. Cisco is angry with Barry after Dante Ramon's death in a car accident and Barry refused to go back in time to prevent this. Iris and Joe have a strained relationship after Iris discovered that Joe concealed that Francine West was still alive. John Diggle has a son, John Jr., rather than a daughter, Sara. Julian Albert is a colleague in the forensics department who has been apparently working with for a year. Caitlin has been developing metahuman ice powers. Barry attempts to go back and reset the timeline again, but is pulled out the time stream by Jay Garrick. Acting as a stern mentor, Jay explains time travel consequences by comparing the timeline to a broken coffee cup – it will never be completely the same even after it has been repaired. Jay advises that Barry must live with the mistakes of Flashpoint and move forward. When Barry reveals the timeline changes, the others gradually forgive and help battle enemies from Flashpoint timeline due to Doctor Alchemy.
- The episode "Armageddon, Part 4" revealed that Eobard Thawne created a Reverse-Flashpoint where he was Flash and Barry was Reverse-Flash after Thawne went back in time to kill Nora and a younger Barry. In this timeline, Reverse-Flash assisted Damien Darhk in killing Ray Palmer, Nate Heywood, Sara Lance, most of the Legends, and Cisco Ramon, Joe West was knocked onto the train tracks in front of a moving train by Reverse-Flash, Ryan Choi became the new Atom, Frost and Mark Blaine are dating, Allegra Garcia and Chester P. Runk used to date which didn't work out and noted after a devastating fight with the Legion of Doom, Damien's daughter Nora Darhk has died at some point, and Ryan Wilder and Sophie Moore are married where they plan to adopt a child. Investigating what Despero meant that he would cause Armageddon, Flash goes to the year 2031 where he learns of the changes and his role in the Reverse-Flashpoint where Barry will fade away when the Reverse-Flashpoint becomes permanent by midnight. With help from the Reverse-Flashpoint Darhk, Barry had to run at the speeds to undo the Reverse-Flashpoint with Thawne right behind him. While Darhk coordinated him while fighting Frost, Chillblaine, Atom, and Sentinel, Barry was able to undo the Reverse-Flashpoint.
- The Flashpoint timeline's fallout continued in season two of Legends of Tomorrow. A temporal clone of Eobard Thawne works with Damien Darhk, Malcolm Merlyn and Leonard Snart to change their histories by acquiring the Spear of Destiny to rewrite reality and avert their respective demises/deaths and Eobard's erasure from history. This eventually ends with Eobard getting caught by the Black Flash and being wiped from existence again.
- This version of Eobard also made brief returns in season seven of Legends of Tomorrow and season eight of The Flash.
- Several elements of the Flashpoint, are alluded in the Kite Man: Hell Yeah! episode, "Portal Potty, Hell Yeah!". In the episode after Kite Man and Golden Glider moved in together over their bar, "Noonan's", they find out that their toilet is a time portal, after Bane was accidentally travelled back in time in the 1980s, in the day Golden Glider accidentally killed her parents after discovering her superpowers. Kite Man travels back in time to prevent the death of Golden Glider's mother, which was successful. Although she later abandons both Glider and her brother, Captain Cold, to live her life, which causes some major changes to the timeline, erasing all of Glider's pictures of her mother. Elsewhere, Golden Glider's mother is seen trapped in a mysterious jail cell, being gassed by an unseen cackling figure.
Film
[edit]- The 2013 DC Universe Animated Original Movie entitled Justice League: The Flashpoint Paradox closely adapts the Flashpoint comic's story.[17] Similar to the comic launching The New 52, the film served to launch a shared universe of fifteen DC animated films released between 2013 and 2020. Among the differences is the prologue with the Justice League helping the Flash defeat the Rogues, the implication that Eobard Thawne is not Nora Allen's killer, Enchantress not betraying Cyborg's Resistance, and Lex Luthor being a part of Deathstroke's crew of pirates.
- In Justice League Dark: Apokolips War, John Constantine reads Flash's mind to learn about the "Flashpoint" incident. Following the defeat of Darkseid and Batman stating that Earth lost 31% of its core due to Darkseid's actions, Constantine asks Flash to travel back in time to trigger another Flashpoint and restart the timeline over again so that the current state of things will be erased. Barry replies that he promised his wife Iris not to do it again. Constantine assures him that, though certain changes will not be good, it will still be better than the current timeline. Flash resolves to follow through and runs off into the Speed Force, and the surviving Justice League watch as a white dome of light resets reality.
- Elements of the Flashpoint storyline are incorporated for the DC Extended Universe film The Flash. Director Andy Muschietti was requested to adapt the storyline, which he recognized as a great story due to employing time travel to include Barry Allen's origin story and Batman, by Warner Bros., though Muschietti personally feels that his film is more suspenseful to make a more emotional experience whereas the original comic was more like Jacob's Ladder. The film is directed by Muschietti, from a screenplay by Christina Hodson, with Ezra Miller reprising their role of The Flash, and Ben Affleck and Michael Keaton reprising their respective roles of Batman. The film was released in theaters on June 16, 2023.[18][19][20][21][22]
Video games
[edit]- The 2013 video game Injustice: Gods Among Us had Flashpoint-inspired designs of Batman, Aquaman, Wonder Woman, and Deathstroke as downloadable content.
- The 2015 video game Batman: Arkham Knight had Batman's Flashpoint design for Batman as downloadable content.
- The 2017 video game Injustice 2 featured the Flashpoint version of Wonder Woman making a cameo in Green Arrow's alternate ending as a member of the multiverse Justice League.
- The 2011 video game DC Universe Online launched its 40th episode, "World of Flashpoint" in 2021, featuring Queen Wonder Woman, Emperor Aquaman, Batman (Thomas Wayne), and the Flash.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "FLASHPOINT THURSDAY Noon Eastern Edition, Live from ComicsPRO". The Source: The Official Blog of DC Comics. 10 February 2011. Archived from the original on 12 January 2012. Retrieved 31 July 2019.
- ^ a b "Flashpoint Friday: Everything Will Change in a Flash". The Source: The Official Blog of DC Comics. 28 January 2011. Archived from the original on 1 February 2011. Retrieved 31 July 2019.
- ^ "Cancellations". Previews. Vol. 21, no. 6. June 2011. Archived from the original on 12 May 2012. Retrieved 31 July 2019.
- ^ Johns, Geoff (w). Flashpoint, no. 1 (May 2011). DC Comics.
- ^ Azzarello, Brain (w). Flashpoint: Batman – Knight of Vengeance, no. 2 (June 2011). DC Comics.
- ^ Azzarello, Brain (w). Flashpoint: Batman – Knight of Vengeance, no. 3 (July 2011). DC Comics.
- ^ Johns, Geoff (w). Flashpoint, no. 2 (June 2011). DC Comics.
- ^ Johns, Geoff (w). Flashpoint, no. 3 (July 2011). DC Comics.
- ^ Johns, Geoff (w). Flashpoint, no. 4 (Early August 2011). DC Comics.
- ^ Johns, Geoff (w). Flashpoint, no. 5 (August 2011). DC Comics.
- ^ Tales from the Dark Multiverse: Flashpoint Vol 1 #1
- ^ "DC DC Rolls Out "Flashpoint" Mini Creative Teams". Comic Book Resources. 4 March 2011. Retrieved 2011-04-02.
- ^ Renaud, Jeffrey (May 27, 2011). "FLASHPOINT FACTS: Lemire Bolts Frankenstein into "Flashpoint"". Comic Book Resources. Comic Book Resources. Retrieved September 1, 2011.
- ^ a b Campbell, Josie (April 29, 2011). "FLASHPOINT FACTS: DnA Takes On "Lois Lane" and "Wonder Woman"". Comic Book Resources. Comic Book Resources. Retrieved May 17, 2011.
- ^ "Matt's Inside Line: Scoop on Bones, Once, Homeland, Blacklist, Haven, Reign, TVD, Sleepy Hollow and More". TV Line. September 5, 2014. Retrieved September 5, 2014.
- ^ "Grant Gustin on 'The Flash': "My Favorite Character That I'll Ever Get to Play"". The Hollywood Reporter. August 18, 2014. Retrieved August 18, 2014.
- ^ Warner Home Video issues press release, new images from Superman Unbound
- ^ McMillan, Graeme (July 22, 2017). "EXCLUSIVE: Flash Movie Won't Feature The Flashpoint We Expect, Says Director". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved July 22, 2017.
- ^ Goodman, JJ (January 8, 2020). "New 'Flash' Movie Title Suggests It Could Shake Up the DC Universe". That Hashtag Show. Retrieved January 8, 2020.
- ^ Breznican, Anthony (20 August 2020). "Ben Affleck Will Return as Batman in The Flash". Vanity Fair. Retrieved 2021-01-06.
- ^ D'Alessandro, Anthony (2020-10-06). "'The Batman' Flies To 2022 Post 'Dune' Drift, 'Matrix 4' Moves Up To Christmas 2021, 'Shazam! 2' Zaps To 2023 & More WB Changes – Update". Deadline. Retrieved 2021-01-06.
- ^ Barnhardt, Adam (April 26, 2023). "The Flash Directors on How Flashpoint Was an Influence". ComicBook.com. Retrieved 2023-04-26.
External links
[edit]Flashpoint (comics)
View on GrokipediaPremise and Narrative
Core Plot
In the core storyline of the 2011 Flashpoint miniseries, written by Geoff Johns with art by Andy Kubert, Barry Allen awakens in an alternate timeline where his mother, Nora Allen, is miraculously alive after having been murdered in his original reality. Lacking his super-speed powers and working as a forensic scientist in a unrecognizably altered DC Universe, Barry quickly realizes that his previous time-travel intervention to save Nora from her killer has caused a catastrophic divergence, reshaping history and turning allies into strangers or enemies.[3][4] Desperate to restore order, Barry recreates the lightning-struck chemical accident that first empowered him by sprinting through a storm-doused laboratory, regaining his speedster abilities at great personal risk. He soon uncovers that his arch-nemesis, the Reverse-Flash (Eobard Thawne), orchestrated the timeline's alteration as a vengeful torment, taunting Barry with visions of the chaos. Throughout his quest, Barry allies with a grizzled Batman revealed to be Thomas Wayne—whose son Bruce died in the infamous alley mugging—and Cyborg, who has become the United States' premier government-sanctioned hero amid the absence of traditional Justice League figures; he also witnesses the brink of global annihilation from a brutal war between Aquaman's invading Atlantean forces and Wonder Woman's expansionist Amazons, which has already submerged and devastated large swaths of Europe. In this warped world, other heroes exist in diminished forms, such as Superman imprisoned in a secret government facility since childhood and Hal Jordan serving as an Air Force test pilot without his power ring.[5][6][4] As the conflict reaches its peak, Barry races at super-speed to London for the climactic battle between Aquaman and Wonder Woman, learning en route that the timeline's fusion of disparate historical elements has rendered it unstable and irreparable without full reversal. Tempted to preserve the reality where his mother lives, Barry grapples with the moral cost but is ultimately compelled by Thawne's psychological manipulations—highlighting the infinite suffering caused by the shift—to return to the pivotal moment of Nora's death. By allowing the murder to occur, Barry sacrifices this alternate existence, accelerating back through time to reset the DC Universe, inadvertently launching the rebooted continuity known as The New 52.[7][8][4]Tie-in Storylines
The Flashpoint event featured 16 tie-in miniseries and one-shots that depicted the chaotic alternate universe created by Barry Allen's interference in the timeline, illustrating the widespread butterfly effects through reimagined heroes, villains, and global conflicts. These stories expanded on the core crisis by showing how everyday lives and power structures had been irrevocably altered, with superhumans either absent, corrupted, or repurposed in ways that escalated tensions toward worldwide annihilation. Rather than focusing on Barry's personal journey, the tie-ins emphasized standalone vignettes of despair and violence, building a mosaic of a fractured world where the absence of traditional Justice League figures left humanity vulnerable to unchecked ambitions.[9] Central to the event's world-building were the "Flashpoint: The World" miniseries, which explored key anomalies in the superhero landscape. In Flashpoint: Abin Sur - The Green Lantern #1-3, Abin Sur survives his crash on Earth and retains his power ring, becoming a rare beacon of heroism in a timeline devoid of human Green Lanterns like Hal Jordan; he undertakes a mission from the Guardians to retrieve a White Lantern entity amid the escalating wars, highlighting the Corps' distant, emotionless oversight of a crumbling planet.[10] Flashpoint: Project Superman #1-3 revealed Kal-El's tragic fate, where the infant Superman crash-lands in Metropolis instead of Smallville and is imprisoned as a weakened "Subject One" by the U.S. government for experimentation, underscoring the lack of Kryptonian saviors and the militarization of superhuman potential. Meanwhile, Flashpoint: Deathstroke and the Curse of the Ravager #1-3 followed Slade Wilson leading a mercenary pirate crew—including alternate versions of Terra, Geo-Force, and Cinder—in a high-seas raid through flooded Paris, clashing with Atlantean forces and demonstrating how opportunistic villains filled voids left by absent heroes.[9][11] The Atlantis-Amazon war formed the backbone of several tie-ins, portraying a cataclysmic clash that had already submerged much of Western Europe and threatened global extinction. Flashpoint: Emperor Aquaman #1-3 depicted Arthur Curry as a vengeful emperor of Atlantis, driven by the assassination of his wife Mera (intended for him but striking her instead) to unleash tidal waves that sank countries, his internal torment fueling relentless aggression against the surface world and Amazons. Complementing this, Flashpoint: Wonder Woman and the Furies #1-3 showed Diana as a militant queen leading her warriors from a conquered United Kingdom, interrogating captives like Steve Trevor and enforcing brutal dominance, with the conflict's origins traced to a failed political marriage turned betrayal. These arcs interconnected through shared devastation, as Atlantean floods and Amazonian invasions ravaged neutral territories, forcing survivors into desperate alliances and amplifying the timeline's instability.[12][9] Other tie-ins delved into peripheral horrors, revealing how the timeline shift warped cultural and societal elements. Flashpoint: Grodd of War #1 chronicled Gorilla Grodd's conquest of the entire African continent after overthrowing Solovar, ruling with telepathic tyranny and ritualistic brutality; bored by unchallenged power, Grodd orchestrated gladiatorial spectacles and genocidal purges, his dissatisfaction stemming from the lack of worthy adversaries like the Flash, which isolated his regime from the broader wars. In Flashpoint: Deadman and the Flying Graysons #1-3, Boston Brand operated as a selfish trapeze artist in Haly's Circus alongside the Grayson family—including a young Dick Grayson—performing death-defying acts across war-torn Europe; the troupe's pursuit of the mystical Helm of Nabu drew Amazon attackers, resulting in the Graysons' massacre and forcing Deadman into reluctant heroism amid the chaos. These narratives wove the butterfly effects of Barry's actions into intimate tragedies, showing how even non-superhuman corners of the world succumbed to the event's ripple effects, heightening the urgency for timeline restoration.[13][14] Additional stories like Flashpoint: Lois Lane and the Resistance #1-3 portrayed journalist Lois Lane spearheading a guerrilla network against the invading forces, smuggling refugees and uncovering war atrocities, which paralleled the global resistance themes. Flashpoint: Batman - Knight of Vengeance #1-3 featured Thomas Wayne as a gun-toting vigilante Batman, haunted by his son Bruce's murder, clashing with his Joker-turned mother Martha in Gotham's underworld. Together, these tie-ins created a web of escalating crises, where localized power grabs and personal vendettas converged to mirror Barry's dawning realization of the timeline's fragility.[11][9]Characters and Alternate Universe
Altered Protagonists
In the Flashpoint alternate universe, Barry Allen awakens as a powerless civilian forensic scientist in Central City, haunted by fragmented memories of his original timeline and overwhelmed by guilt for inadvertently altering reality in a desperate attempt to save his mother, Nora Allen, from murder.[2] Initially stripped of his super-speed powers, Barry struggles to convince others of the timeline's distortion, eventually regaining his abilities through a risky chemical process and becoming a reluctant Flash compelled to restore the world he broke.[15] His journey is marked by isolation, as familiar allies like Hal Jordan and Wally West are absent or transformed, forcing him to navigate a war-ravaged landscape driven by personal remorse.[3] Thomas Wayne assumes the mantle of Batman in this timeline after witnessing the murder of his son, Bruce, in the alleyway that originally claimed his own life in the prime DC Universe, transforming the philanthropist surgeon into a ruthless, gun-wielding vigilante who employs lethal force against Gotham's criminals.[16] Blaming Barry Allen for the timeline's chaos that led to Bruce's death, Thomas operates from the shadows with a hardened cynicism, viewing the Flash as the architect of global devastation, yet he forms a tenuous alliance with Barry to confront the crisis, providing resources like the Batcave while grappling with his own losses.[1] This version of Batman lacks Bruce's moral code against killing, embodying a darker, more vengeful protector amid the Atlantean-Amazonian conflict. Victor Stone, known as Cyborg, emerges as the United States' premier government-sanctioned hero and public icon in the altered reality, his cybernetic enhancements making him a symbol of national resilience as he coordinates defenses against the escalating war between Atlantis and Themyscira.[1] Unlike his typical role as a Teen Titans member in the main continuity, Cyborg here leads strategic operations from the Pentagon, assembling ragtag teams such as the Secret Seven and the Outsider to safeguard America, while interfacing with global leaders to avert total annihilation.[3] His prominence underscores the absence of traditional icons like Superman, positioning him as the linchpin of human resistance in a fractured world.[2] Among other reimagined heroes, Aquaman rules as a tyrannical emperor from Atlantis, having flooded much of Western Europe in retaliation for the death of his wife, Mera, and now commanding vast oceanic forces in a genocidal campaign against the surface world.[17] Wonder Woman serves as the fierce warlord queen of the Amazons on Themyscira, leading an invasion of the United Kingdom after a failed diplomatic marriage to Aquaman erupts into all-out war, her forces allying with neither side in the broader conflict but dominating conquered territories with brutal efficiency.[18] Superman, Kal-El, exists not as a heroic figure but as a pale, emaciated prisoner subjected to years of torturous experiments by the U.S. government's Project Superman, his powers stunted from infancy after his rocket's crash, rendering him a weaponized lab subject rather than a beacon of hope.[19] Supporting these altered protagonists are figures like Lois Lane, who transforms from a renowned journalist into a covert resistance operative in occupied England, coordinating guerrilla strikes against the Amazon invaders after surviving the flooding of Paris and losing her colleague Jimmy Olsen.[20] Steve Trevor, typically Wonder Woman's liaison, operates as a U.S. intelligence agent infiltrating Amazon lines but ends up as a captive in New Themyscira (the Amazon-occupied British Isles), interrogated under the Lasso of Submission before his execution by Wonder Woman, his role highlighting the espionage perils in the war-torn landscape. These changes, influenced briefly by the Reverse-Flash's timeline manipulations, underscore the protagonists' fractured alliances and desperate bids for survival.[2]Antagonists and Supporting Roles
In the Flashpoint alternate universe, Eobard Thawne, the Reverse-Flash, acts as the central antagonist by engineering the timeline shift specifically to inflict suffering on Barry Allen. Having anticipated Barry's attempt to save his mother from murder, Thawne manipulates events to create a reality where Barry witnesses the distortion of his relationships and the world's heroes, deriving sadistic pleasure from the resulting despair. His revelation as the puppet master in the storyline's climax underscores his obsessive vendetta, positioning him as the catalyst for the global war and Barry's desperate quest to restore reality. Gorilla Grodd emerges as a formidable warlord, having overthrown the leadership of Gorilla City to conquer Africa and subsequently launch an invasion of the United Kingdom and continental Europe. Commanding an army of telepathically controlled apes, Grodd forges opportunistic alliances amid the Amazon-Atlantean conflict, employing brutal tactics such as devouring the brains of defeated foes to fuel his expansionist ambitions. His simian conquest amplifies the chaos of the war, turning the British Isles into a battleground that draws in resistance fighters and further destabilizes the fractured world. Nathaniel Adam, known as Captain Atom, functions as a key antagonistic force within the United States military hierarchy, transformed into a quantum-powered enforcer who authorizes devastating nuclear strikes against Atlantean forces encroaching on American territory. Unlike his heroic counterpart in the prime timeline, this version embodies militaristic ruthlessness, prioritizing total victory over collateral damage and clashing with figures like Cyborg in efforts to contain the invasion. His deployment of atomic weaponry escalates the transatlantic war, symbolizing the desperate, ethically compromised defenses of a besieged nation. Among supporting roles, Jason Rusch, bonded as part of the Firestorm matrix with Ronnie Raymond, is conscripted and weaponized by the U.S. government as a living nuclear arsenal, his transmutation abilities redirected toward offensive strikes on Atlantean targets, stripping him of autonomy in the militarized conflict. Ronnie Raymond, as Firestorm, is conscripted and weaponized by the U.S. government as a living nuclear arsenal, his transmutation abilities redirected toward offensive strikes on Atlantean targets, stripping him of autonomy in the militarized conflict. Pandora appears fleetingly at the narrative's resolution, a mysterious immortal figure who intervenes to guide the timeline's correction, subtly alluding to multiversal fractures and the consequences of temporal meddling. These elements intensify the war's stakes through personal vendettas, such as Thomas Wayne's initial alliance with Alfred Pennyworth to repel Barry Allen's intrusion at Wayne Manor, where the vengeful Batman views the speedster as an existential threat to his isolated existence.Publication History
Core Series and Tie-ins
The core of the Flashpoint event is a five-issue limited series titled Flashpoint #1–5, written by Geoff Johns and illustrated by Andy Kubert.[1] This miniseries serves as the central narrative hub for the crossover, exploring the altered reality created by Barry Allen's time manipulation.[1] The event expanded through 16 three-issue miniseries published under the Flashpoint banner, each reimagining key DC characters and factions in the divergent timeline.[4] Notable examples include Batman: Knight of Vengeance by writer Brian Azzarello and artist Eduardo Risso, Citizen Cold written and illustrated by Scott Kolins, Project Superman by writer Scott Snyder and artist Gene Ha, and The World of Flashpoint featuring contributions from multiple creators such as Johns and Kubert.[21][22] Additional one-shots, like Flashpoint: Hal Jordan, further supplemented the lineup, providing standalone glimpses into specific alternate histories.[4] Collectively, these releases encompassed over 60 issues, positioning Flashpoint as a comprehensive universe-wide crossover that reshaped the DC continuity and paved the way for the New 52 relaunch.[4] The tie-ins drew on a diverse roster of talent, including writers like Peter Milligan for The Outsider and artists such as Ardian Syaf for Emperor Aquaman, emphasizing varied artistic styles to depict the fractured world.[21]Release Schedule
The buildup to the Flashpoint event was laid out in the "Flash: Rebirth" six-issue miniseries, published from April 2009 to March 2010, which reestablished Barry Allen as the central Flash character following his resurrection in the 2008 storyline "Final Crisis." This was followed by the "Road to Flashpoint" storyline in The Flash vol. 2 #8–12, released from December 2010 to May 2011, which introduced elements like the mysterious speedster Hot Pursuit and set the stage for Barry's time-travel decision.[23] DC Comics announced Flashpoint at the 2010 San Diego Comic-Con as a pivotal summer crossover event, teasing its role in reshaping the DC Universe. The core five-issue limited series began with Flashpoint #1 on May 11, 2011, written by Geoff Johns with art by Andy Kubert.[3] Tie-in miniseries and one-shots, exploring the alternate timeline's impacts on characters like Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman, commenced in June 2011, including Flashpoint: The World #1 on June 1, which compiled short stories from various creative teams.[24] To build anticipation, DC launched the "Flashpoint Friday" marketing campaign in May 2011, featuring weekly digital previews, character reveals, and behind-the-scenes content on their official blog, emphasizing the event's weekly tie-in releases across over 50 titles. The full event wrapped with Flashpoint #5 on August 31, 2011, resolving the alternate reality crisis and restoring the primary timeline.[8] This directly transitioned into the New 52 initiative, with Justice League #1 releasing on August 31, 2011, marking the relaunch of DC's superhero line with revised origins and numbering.[25]| Key Release Milestone | Date | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Flash: Rebirth #1–6 | April 2009–March 2010 | Foundational miniseries reintroducing Barry Allen. |
| The Flash vol. 2 #8–12 ("Road to Flashpoint") | December 2010–May 2011 | Prelude arc building to the time-alteration plot. |
| Flashpoint #1 (core series start) | May 11, 2011 | Launch of the main limited series. |
| Flashpoint: The World #1 (tie-in debut) | June 1, 2011 | First anthology issue of alternate-world stories. |
| Ongoing tie-ins (e.g., Batman: Knight of Vengeance, Superman: Project Breakdown) | June–August 2011 | Weekly releases expanding the event's scope. |
| Flashpoint #5 (event conclusion) | August 31, 2011 | Finale restoring the DC Universe timeline. |
| Justice League #1 (New 52 lead-in) | August 31, 2011 | Post-event relaunch kicking off revised continuity. |
Collected Editions and Legacy
Trade Paperbacks and Omnibuses
The Flashpoint storyline has been collected in various trade paperback (TPB), hardcover (HC), and omnibus formats since its original publication, allowing readers to access the core miniseries and extensive tie-ins in compiled volumes. The initial collected edition of the core five-issue miniseries by Geoff Johns and Andy Kubert was released as a hardcover in October 2011 (ISBN 978-1401233372), gathering Flashpoint #1-5 along with variant covers, a map of world threats, sketches, and character designs. A trade paperback version of this core collection followed in March 2012 (ISBN 978-1401233389), making the event more accessible in softcover format.[26][27][28] Tie-in stories were bundled into themed TPBs starting in 2012, such as Flashpoint: The World of Flashpoint Featuring Green Lantern (March 2012, ISBN 978-1401234065), which compiles Hal Jordan #1-3, Abin Sur - The Green Lantern #1-3, Frankenstein and the Creatures of the Unknown #1-3, and Green Arrow Industries Presents: Planet War #1. These volumes focused on alternate-universe tales involving Lantern Corps members and related characters, spanning 232 pages in paperback. Other similar 2012 TPBs included collections for Batman, the Flash, and the World of Flashpoint, each curating 3-4 miniseries to explore the event's broader implications.[29][30][31] Larger compilations arrived later, including a 2012 hardcover edition of select collected works under broader Flashpoint branding, aggregating core and key tie-ins for premium binding. The most comprehensive release is the Flashpoint: The 10th Anniversary Omnibus (April 2021, ISBN 978-1779509772), a 1,512-page hardcover that encompasses the entire event, including Flashpoint #1-5, Booster Gold #44-47, The Flash #9-12, Flashpoint: Reverse-Flash #1, and all major tie-in miniseries like Batman: Knight of Vengeance, Project Superman, Emperor Aquaman, War of the Gods, and more. This edition, available in hardcover and digital formats, totals over 1,500 pages and serves as the definitive single-volume archive.[15][32] In 2024, DC issued a refreshed trade paperback, Flashpoint (New Edition) (September 3, 2024, ISBN 978-1779517272), reprinting the core #1-5 with an updated cover while maintaining the original 176-page content for modern audiences. Digital variants of these collections are available through platforms like DC Universe Infinite, alongside hardcover options for durability. These editions contributed to the event's enduring popularity, with strong sales helping propel the subsequent New 52 relaunch.[33][34][35]| Edition | Format | Release Date | ISBN | Contents Summary | Page Count |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flashpoint (Core) | Hardcover | October 2011 | 978-1401233372 | Flashpoint #1-5 + extras | 168 |
| Flashpoint (Core) | Trade Paperback | March 2012 | 978-1401233389 | Flashpoint #1-5 + extras | 176 |
| Flashpoint: The World of Flashpoint Featuring Green Lantern | Trade Paperback | March 2012 | 978-1401234065 | Hal Jordan #1-3, Abin Sur #1-3, Frankenstein #1-3, Green Arrow Industries #1 | 232 |
| Flashpoint Collected Editions | Hardcover | 2012 | N/A | Core + select tie-ins | Varies |
| Flashpoint: The 10th Anniversary Omnibus | Hardcover/Digital | April 2021 | 978-1779509772 | All core issues and tie-ins | 1,512 |
| Flashpoint (New Edition) | Trade Paperback | September 2024 | 978-1779517272 | Flashpoint #1-5 + updated cover | 176 |
