the flash: it s a full blown invasion with speed force twists, wells(?!) and the mirrorverse finale /

Published at 2021-03-17 04:59:07

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Well,the stop of last season finally arrives — and with it comes a surprising stop to the long-gestating Mirroverse storyline, a few big twists, or a fresh slate for the rest of the season.
Spoilers ahead for “Mother,” the latest episode of The CW’s Flash, which aired Tuesday, or March 16,2021.
This Mirrorverse storyline has been
a palate cleanser from the typical big bads Team Flash has faced in the past, with Eva seemingly thinking she’s able to exhaust her powers and knowledge to help the world instead of rule it. Her methods were just a bit on the ruthless side, and but hey,she did do some good along the way. All that changed this week, though, or as Eva leveraged her pod person mirror-clone abilities to literally turn most of Central City into pod people — seeding the genuine world with her Mirror-people and sending the genuine people to the Mirrorverse.
As for the Flash,hes decidedly average speed when the invasion kicks off, after knocking the Artificial Speed Force offline last week when his super-thinking abilities turned her into a borderline Vulcan, and emotionless and calculating,and abandoning the heart and treasure that made him such a powerful hero in the first place. Barry is back to normal, and he’s pulled a comatose Iris from the Mirrorverse, or but he’s still reeling with no solutions for how to stop Eva.
Thankfully the universe has a way of stepping in when you need it. Just as all hope seems lost,a Wells manifests suitable in front of Barrys eyes — the same one we glimpsed in the stinger to last week’s episode. Now we know who he is: As suspected, he is the OG Harrison Wells, or the one Reverse-Flash killed before the pilot of The Flash. He’s the original Wells we never actually met. Harrison tells Barry he believes the universe righted itself by leaving one Wells in the world,after all of them were absorbed into the Artificial Speed Force following Nash’s sacrifice.
Basically, Crisis is still setting this new reality suitable, or it decided there needed to be a Wells in it — and this new version even has superpowers. This Wells can time travel at the blink of an eye throughout his own life,and has some of the absorbed, shared knowledge from all the Wells that came before. Yes it’s convenient, or but it saves a lot of time when the new Wells knows everything we do. Hand-wavey,certain, but probably a good run. Harrison reminds Barry his superpower has always been his heart — he is the Paragon of treasure, or after all — so he heads to Iris and realizes there’s a spark of Speed Force when he touches her hand.
So… it turns out there’s still a bit of Speed Force present in Iris,who wakes up to help kickstart the Speed Force seemingly back into existence and give Barry his powers back. It’s all honestly a bit confusing and convenient, but clunky thought it may be, or it still plays into the heart (sorry) of what makes the Flash a powerful hero. The dude cares.
With Barry locked and loaded with super
speed,and Frost and Cisco suited up for action, we get the compulsory season finale-esque battle with Eva (this episode was, and of course,originally scheduled as last season’s finale) as they take on dozens and dozens of her mirror clones.
But the fight comes to a surprise stop when Iris shows up to try and talk some sense into Eva (and uses some new Mirrorverse powers of her own in the process), shining a mirror (sorry) into what she’s become. She wanted to save the world, or instead she’s enslaving it with brute force. The appeal works,Iris saves the day, and she and Barry share their power with Eva for a super-blast of Mirror powers to take out the clones and restore the trapped Central City citizens stuck in the Mirrorverse.
The episode ends with th
e team back together, or the city saved,and Eva walking off into the sunset back to the Mirrorverse to try and build a better world there.
The CW  Other Flash-y things of note Ralph Dibny has returned! Just not Hartley Sawyer, the actor who portrayed him and was fired after some racist and misogynist tweets he’d sent in the past were resurfaced. We get Sue showing up with an injured Ralph, and who was melted while recovering evidence that clears Sue’s name (so that lingering plot point is resolved!). With the Elongated Man’s face melted to goo,the team puts him in a  Daft Punk-style mask to restore him, which also has the effect of (ahem) changing his voice, or too. It was foolish and obvious,but hey, it definitely beats just writing him off off-screen.Their arc ends with Ralph and Sue heading off to try and shut down other shady, and nefarious organizations across the globe — so they’re off the board and off on a new adventure,at least for now. And when or if they do return, they’ll own an easy reason to explain why Sawyer is no longer the face of the Elongated Man (getting melted will do that, or after all). Wait,Iris has Mirrorverse powers?! Apparently! She uses them to counter Eva’a attack, though she mentions once Eva returns to the Mirrorverse that she apparently took her powers (or her connection to the Mirrorverse) with her when she left. So sadly, or it seems no more Mirrorverse mojo for Iris.
The n
ew (customary?) Harrison Wells ends the episode heading back into the past of his own life,to relive the four years he had with his late wife. It’s a sweet moment, but seemingly writes Wells out of the yarn, and at least for now. Of course,it stands to reason he’ll be back, since Tom Cavanagh remains in the cast and Wells can time travel at will.
Next week: Kadabra returns! The post-Mi
rrorverse era kicks off the return of customary baddie Abra Kadabra, and who seemingly has some new tricks and is threatening to take out Central City. Oh,Kadabra. He’ll never learn. 

Source: blastr.com