The Flash: Race Against Time


By Mark Waid, Brian Augustyn, Oscar Jimenez, Anthony Castrillo, Jim Cheung, Sergio Cariello & various (DC Comics)
ISBN: 978-1-56389-721-4

Created by Gardner Fox and Harry Lampert, Jay Garrick debuted as the very first Scarlet Speedster in Flash Comics #1 (January 1940). “The Fastest Man Alive” wowed readers and inspired dozens of high-velocity knock-offs for over a decade before changing tastes benched him and most other superheroes in 1951.

The concept of speedsters – and superheroes in general – was revived in 1956 by Julie Schwartz in Showcase #4 when police scientist Barry Allen became the second DC good guy to run with the concept.

The Silver Age Flash was the heroic match which sparked off the 1960’s revival of costumed adventurers. His rollercoaster ride of jet-age escapades ushered in a new and seemingly unstoppable proliferation of superheroes and villains. When he died in a typically gallant manner along with many others during Crisis on Infinite Earths in 1985 he was succeeded by his sidekick Kid Flash.

The neophyte human meteor initially struggled to fill the golden boots of his predecessor, both in sheer physical capability and, more tellingly, in confidence: Wally West felt a fraud, but like a true champion he persevered and eventually overcame all odds and challenges.

However after years in the role West grew and become, arguably, an even greater hero than his mentor, triumphing over not only his predecessor’s uncanny foes and a whole new Rogues’ Gallery of his own in a non-stop succession of increasingly incredible exploits…

Most of the super-speedsters in the DCU congregate in the twinned metropolis of Keystone and Central City. Here resides Wally’s true love, journalist Linda Park, his aunt Iris West-Allen (a refugee from the 30th century and Barry’s widow) and fellow velocity vigilante Jay Garrick. Nephew Bart (Impulse) Allen and elder statesman of Speedsters Max Mercury reside nano-seconds away in Manchester, Alabama.

At the end of his last adventure – battling a ruthless maniac who attempted to seize control of the extra-dimensional Speed Force which empowers all super-fast heroes and villains – the legion of speedsters were anxiously awaiting his return after Wally vanished into the extra-dimensional phenomena.

But, as Race Against Time (reprinting issues #112-118 of the monthly Flash comicbook) opens with ‘Future Perfect’ by Mark Waid, Anthony Castrillo & Anibal Rodriguez, Linda has a new Flash in her life: John Fox an new hyper-hero who has travelled back from the 27th century.

Wally has gone missing before and always found a way to return and so, while he’s gone, Fox has come back to protect the Twinned City from harm, especially new thermal felon Chillblaine. However as the goes go by and Linda grows dangerously close to the Future Flash she is utterly unaware of his secret agenda and dark motives…

Wally, meanwhile is lost and bouncing around the corridors of chronology. As ‘Race Against Time’ proper begins he materialises in ‘Wallyworld’ (with Oscar Jimenez & Jose Marzan Jr. joining Castrillo & Rodriguez); the 64th century era where he is venerated and revered as a god.

The drone-like citizens dote on his every word, devoid of individual initiative and, having adopted all his bad habits beg The Flash to “wisely lead them”…

After utterly failing to set them straight Wally dumps the whole mess into the hands of the last responsible adult of the epoch and escapes back into the time-stream just as back in the 20th century, Linda and Fox discover that the new Chillblaine is a foe far beyond their ability to handle…

‘Sibling Rivalry’ finds Wally in the 30th century clashing with Barry Allen’s children Don and Dawn Allen. The super-fast “Tornado Twins” have grown to adulthood in an oppressive, xenophobic dystopian World-state where aliens and metahumans are hunted, and without their aid he’s stuck there. In Central/Keystone a millennium earlier, Fox’s troubles also multiply when magnetic maniac Dr. Polaris and a hideous, hidden ally kidnap Iris for her knowledge of future events…

The Future Flash’s secret is revealed as Wally, gradually nearing his home era with each temporal leap, arrives in the 27th century and meets Fox for the first time. In this world hyper-velocity and time-travel are illegal, mandates enforced by super-robots known as ‘Speed Metal’ (with additional pencils from Jim Cheung). Most worrying however is the realisation that with each jump Wally’s memory of Linda erodes: the closer he gets the more the Speed Dimension pulls at him and the less he remembers of his human life and love…

After helping Wally return to the time-stream Fox makes a momentous decision. He knows that a Great Disaster will afflict the end of the 20th century: a mini Ice Age that will devastate the world. Assuming Wally will be unable to stop it – if he arrives at all – Fox follows him, determined to change history, save humanity and, if necessary, replace his ancestor…

By the time of ‘Flash Frozen’ (Jimenez & Marzan Jr.), Linda thinks she has fallen for Fox and Wally consequently finds himself drawn into the Speed Force, becoming pure unthinking energy just as the Ice Age trigger event begins. Frantically hunting for the cause – be it Chillblaine, Polaris or something else – Fox is completely overwhelmed, and his troubles only increase when Linda realises he has been manipulating her from the start.

Luckily, that’s the moment when Wally becomes the first person ever to return from beyond the Speed Barrier to save the day and redeem John Fox in the spectacular climax ‘Double Team’ (illustrated by Cheung & John Nyberg), but tragically it’s not soon enough to save everybody…

There’s no rest for the repentant however, and in the aftermath when Speed Metal robots arrive, hunting the fugitive Fox, the far-flung Flashes have to unite once more to defeat them and save Linda in ‘Cold, Cold Heart’ (scripted by Brian Augustyn & Waid with art from Sergio Cariello & Brian Garvey)…

Superlative scripter Mark Waid and this impressive band of collaborators went into imagination overload to produce a stunning adventure which called on a wealth of fascinating facets from the vast mythology that has grown around three generations of Scarlet Speedster.

Race Against Time is another sublime, superb rocket-ride of drama, tension and all-out inspirational action, captivatingly told and perfectly pushing the buttons of any superhero fan, whether a Flash follower or not. Catch and enjoy, time and time again…
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