
  Review by
        Eric Hillis
  Directed by: Andy Muschietti
  Starring: Ezra Miller, Michael Keaton, Michael
    Shannon, Sasha Calle, Ron Livingston, Maribel Verdu, Kiersey Clemons, Antje
      Traue
 
    
  In the summer of 1989 the world succumbed to bat-fever. Tim Burton's
    Batman was a sensation in a way few movies have been since.
    Sure, other blockbusters have sold more tickets in the years since, but I
    can't think of any that have dominated pop culture for an entire summer the
    way Burton's film did. Everywhere you looked in '89 people were sporting
    black t-shirts bearing the iconic bat logo. Prince's hit singles 'Batdance'
    and 'Partyman' seemed to be on an endless loop on radio and MTV. The buzz
    around screen legend Jack Nicholson playing the Joker was electric. Strange
    as it seems now, nobody was excited about the actor cast as the caped
    crusader, Michael Keaton. At the time superheroes were synonymous
    with chiselled jaws and bulging biceps. Why was this comedy actor with a
    terrible mullet cast as Bruce Wayne? As they so often are, comic book fans
    were incensed at the casting choice (thankfully they didn't have internet
    access back then). But the fans were proved wrong as Keaton won them over,
    convincing as both the charming Wayne and the brooding Batman. Today, most
    fans consider him the definitive screen Batman.
  When it was announced that Keaton would return to the role for
    The Flash, it seemed like a purely cynical piece of fan service. Let's face it, it
    is a cynical piece of fan service. But this is a rare case of fan-pandering
    that actually works. Keaton is a couple of years older than Harrison Ford in
    Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull and a
    couple of decades older than Sean Connery in
    Never Say Never Again, yet he brings a vitality to the part that was sorely lacking in those
    famous returns to signature roles. In 1989 many people didn't view Keaton as
    traditionally good looking enough to play Batman, but now he's the most
    handsome 70-year-old you could imagine. When he dons the famous mask, his
    jaw is as square as any actor who pulled on the batsuit. Whenever he's on
    screen in The Flash, any doubts dissipate instantly. We've doubted Keaton twice, but he's
    convinced us yet again. He's Batman!

  Of course, this movie isn't called Batman (much to the annoyance of
    Hollywood bean counters, no doubt), it's called The Flash. It's the first standalone movie for Ezra Miller's Barry Allen aka
    The Flash, and most likely the last, given Miller's well documented string
    of real life crimes. It does however open with a fun sequence that sees The
    Flash team up with his Justice League buddies Batman (Ben Affleck)
    and Wonder Woman (Gal Gadot, charismatic in a way she never quite was
    in her character's own movies) for a very old school adventure involving a
    maternity hospital collapsing into a sinkhole. As director
    Andy Muschietti plays around with classic superhero imagery of
    falling babies being saved midair and Batman and Wonder Woman flirting
    awkwardly like adolescents, we're left to wish we had gotten a light-hearted
    Justice League movie rather than the moody bore Zack Snyder delivered.
  Wait, if Affleck is Batman, how does Keaton fit into all this? Well, it's
    because like the recent
    Spider-Man
    and
    Doctor Strange
    movies, The Flash harks back to that 1972 Doctor Who special
    The Three Doctors and introduces the concept of a multiverse
    to offer various incarnations of the same character. Allen sets this in
    motion by using his ability to movie faster than the speed of light to
    travel back in time in the hopes of averting his mother's murder, which has
    been pinned on his dad. Visiting his childhood home and finding mom alive
    and kicking, Allen is chuffed until he runs into an alternate version of
    himself who hasn't yet acquired his powers. When it turns out that General
    Zod (Michael Shannon, sadly no return for Terence Stamp) has just
    arrived on Earth looking for Superman, the two Allens seek out Batman, only
    to find it's the Keaton rather than Affleck incarnation.

  As I mentioned, once Keaton pops up the movie draws you in. Taking its cues
    more from the Marvel Cinematic Universe than its DC counterpart, the script
    has an annoying propensity to punctuate too many moments of pathos with
    quips, but Keaton manages to make it work. There's a loveable quality to his
    Bruce Wayne, whose late life is boosted by being relevant again, and you can
    see Keaton is experiencing something similar himself. The joy he feels in
    returning to this role is palpable. Remarkably, his 70-year-old form never
    looks ridiculous when strutting about in the iconic suit. He made me
    nostalgic for 1989's Batman, and I haven't even seen that movie!
  To get to Keaton you have to wade through a whole lot of Miller however.
    I'm not one of those people who like to pretend someone is a bad actor
    because they're a bad person, but as the original Allen Miller lacks the
    required vulnerable likeability (perhaps because I'll always associate him
    with the creepy sociopaths they played at the start of their career in
    Afterschool and We Need to Talk About Kevin) while as the alternate Allen they're as annoying as '90s Pauly Shore. The
    portion of the movie in which Allen 1 takes Allen 2 under his wing seems to
    go on forever and gets bogged down in a stream of exposition and
    plotsplaining. It's nowhere near as funny as it thinks it is, with a gag
    about famous movie roles being occupied by alternate actors dragged out
    through pages of dialogue when it would have been infinitely more effective
    if we had just been shown a wall of movie posters.

  Once Keaton arrives, the two Millers are pushed aside, and we're also
    introduced to Supergirl (a very good Sasha Calle), with the quartet
    forming a sort of makeshift alternate Justice League. As is always the case
    with these movies, it all leads up to a poorly staged action climax that's
    15 minutes longer than it needs to be. This climactic sequence is a mess,
    with a jarring tone (what should be an emotionally affecting moment is
    ruined by a sequence of both Flashes dashing around to upbeat power pop) and
    shoddy CG effects that make the characters look like Gerry Anderson puppets.
    The goodwill generated by Keaton's committed turn is soured by a late swathe
    of fan service that includes yet another ethically dubious digital
    resurrection of a deceased star.
  Ironically, The Flash moves along nicely when it's being
    anchored by a 70-year-old actor, but when we're left in the company of the
    titular speedster it halts to a snail's pace.
 
   
