Tag Archives: Flash: Rebirth

Flash: Rebirth Ranked #14 for August

IcV2 has posted their top 300 comics for August list with estimated sales figures. With no issue in July, Flash: Rebirth #4 still pulled a top-20 spot on the chart for August, coming in ranked #14. Sales estimates dropped below 80K to 78,107 copies.

Issue Rank Units Sold Change
Flash: Rebirth #1 (of 6) 2 102,429 +286.6%
Flash: Rebirth #2 (of 6) 4 86,183 -15.9%
Flash: Rebirth #3 (of 6) 10 83,086 -3.6%
Flash: Rebirth #4 (of 6) 14 78,107 -6.0%

Most comics do drop in sales from month to month, miniseries especially, but my understanding is that they usually level out. Flash: Rebirth actually dropped more from #3 to #4 than it did from #2 to #3…despite the fact that, according to ICv2, overall sales rose in August, buoyed by Blackest Night and Dark Reign.

So why the drop?

  • Did the delay cause readers to lose interest?
  • Did casual readers drop it at the half-way point? Is that typical? (I’ve found I usually give a miniseries 2 issues if I’m on the fence.)
  • Did the slow pacing of the first few issues frustrate readers?
  • Is it because it’s the first issue to be solicited after Flash: Rebirth #1 hit the stores? I’d expect that to have helped sales, given how well #1 has done.
  • Did budget crunches force readers to choose between Blackest Night and Flash: Rebirth?
  • Is it actually typical, and I’m just reading too much into it?

I’m puzzled.

Anyone else have any thoughts on the matter?

Update October 2: The Beat thinks that these are “solid figures for a Flash title…especially considering that the property has gone through two failed major relaunches since 2006.”

Blackest Night: Flash #1 Solicitation & Cover (Updated)

IGN has posted an interview with editor Eddie Berganza about upcoming Blackest Night tie-ins, including a cover gallery of all the Blackest Night-related covers coming in December.

Including Blackest Night: The Flash, with a cover that looks…oddly familiar!

Blackest Night: The Flash Flash: Rebirth

If you look at the full-sized image, you can see “Thanks, Ethan” under Scott Kolins’ signature. I’ve got to say, Kolins looks like a perfect choice for this mini.

Full solicitations will be out on Monday.

So who wants to start taking bets on which Flash is in the reverse pose?

Update: I didn’t notice at first, but the second page of the article has the solicitation text for the issue:

Blackest Night: The Flash #1

Written by Geoff Johns
Art and cover by Scott Kolins
Variant cover by Francis Manapul

The Flashes of Two Cities – Barry Allen and Wally West – battle the undead Rogues. Will the legendary speedsters be able to handle the Black Lantern Rogues’ revenge?

Plus, witness the resurrection of Barry’s greatest enemy, the Reverse Flash in this hyper-speed miniseries event reuniting the fan-favorite Flash creative team of Geoff Johns and Scott Kolins!

This issue will ship with two covers. For every 25 copies of the Standard Edition (with a cover by Scott Kolins), retailers may order one copy of the Variant Edition (with a cover by Francis Manapul).

On sale December 2 – 1 of 3 – 32 pg, FC, $2.99 US

Notes: Francis Manapul, of course, was recently announced as the artist on the new, ongoing Flash series. And may I say I like the description of Barry and Wally as the “Flashes of Two Cities.”

Flash Rebirth #2 Gets Second Printing

ComicList reports that Flash: Rebirth #2 will get a second printing, arriving in stores on September 30.

Two of the three reprints of issue #1 have taken an existing cover and removed most of the color. (The second printing brought in an alternate cover that had been used for solicitations, but not the actual printed comic book.) Here are the original covers for Flash: Rebirth #2, the standard on the left and the variant on the right:

So what do you think: will it be a black and white standard cover (with the filmstrip) with only Barry Allen in color, or black and white variant cover (Barry with his costume coming out of the ring) with only the costume in color?

Rebirth #4 Review Round-Up

Flash: Rebirth #4 Variant CoverFlash: Rebirth #4 has been out for a week. You know what that means, right? Yep: It’s time for a review round-up!

Here are a bunch of reviews I’ve found around the web:

Rokk’s Comic Book Revolution – “Finally! Johns delivered in Flash: Rebirth #4 what I have been waiting for from this title since the first issue.”

Weekly Crisis – “I rarely drop miniseries or events midway through, but I came in looking for more of the Barry Allen from Final Crisis, not the grimdark Saint Barry version…”

Comic Book Legacy – “Flash: Rebirth #4 was the strongest of this mini-series and is what saved this series from being classified as one of the worse stories of the year. Hopefully Geoff Johns can carry the momentum from this issue…”

The Homeworld – “I’ve been a Flash fan ever since I was a kid, and seeing this book finally turn around really makes me happy. Hopefully, the book can salvage itself from it’s previous issues and finish out as a new, true Flash classic.”

Matt Gray is Too Dangerous for a Girl – “Ethan Van Sciver’s art, coloured by Brian Miller, is the best it’s been so far – sharp, not over-cluttered and always serving the story; there are no pin-ups for the sake of it, but several big moments that deserve their full-page splash status”

Pulp Tone – “Unlike LOST, I got the answers in this issue and then some. If the answers or explanations are new I wouldn’t even know and they’re just set as truth at this point.”

Bureau 42 – “The characterization is there. We see what motivates the DC speedsters, good or evil, and get a front row seat while events conspire to put Barry’s head right back in the game..”

Comicgasm – “The only gripe I had with this issue is that they could’ve done this earlier. Instead of going through 3 issues where practically nothing happened, Johns could’ve saved us from a lot of trouble by cutting out a lot of crap and getting to the retcon-explanations sooner.”

Comix 411 – “I’ve liked this series so far, but this issue was very confusing. … I just hope Geoff can continue to juggle all of these speedsters and make things interesting and not have them seem redundant.”

Multiversity Comics – “The best part of the issue is, though, is just as Johns went and redefined the very mythos that defined Green Lantern, he is completely redefining the way we look at Flash and the speedsters.”

IGN Comics – “the issue is consumed by two of my least favorite things in comics– time-travel and in-story retcons. I needed an aspirin after I finished reading this comic.”

Tpull’s Weekly DC Comics Review – “Van Sciver tries hard to do different effects and distinguish the various speedsters, but I actually wonder if he’s trying a little too hard. Still, the art is great.”

The Comic Addiction – “Ethan Van Sciver did a tremendous job on this issue. After seeing his variant cover with Professor Zoom and the energy flowing behind him I knew the art was going to be fantastic.”

Attentiondeficitdisorderly Too Flat – “I suppose the main reason I’m not letting my problems with Johns’s solution to the Flash equation is that I’m not convinced we’ve seen the end of it.”

Weekly Comic Book Review – “Hell yeah! THIS is what I signed up for with Flash: Rebirth. A great issue that totally rewards you for sticking around, as long as you don’t mind the change of what’s been established in the Flash folklore.”

ComicNews.Info – “Despite my inability to instantly adapt to the writing, I admit that Rebirth is a fun book. Issue #4 specifically has stuck with me, and it has more to do with the art than anything else.”

Creative Loafing – “Flash: Rebirth finally gets going….this week’s edition ties together some story elements, revs up the action and includes some really cool character moments.”

Read/Rant – “Honestly, these kinds of stories annoy me. I don’t need a 6-part story to justify continuity “fixes”. Johns’ retcons don’t feel any more natural just because he wrote a story where Professor Zoom “explained” it all.”

MONDOcomics – “It feels like [Geoff Johns] finally convinced DC to bring back Barry Allen, and then realized there was no need to. As a result, every issue is buried in exposition and unnecessary retcons.”

The Buy Pile puts the book in its “No, just…no” category, saying that it “introduces science that makes Smallville’s Lanastronomy seem like a graduate dissertation. Really? Wow. There’s just too many speedsters running around here, and ignoring that pesky death inconvenience.”

Conociendo el Universo DC (in Spanish) – “#4 es otra muestra del guionista de su capacidad para conciliar distintas versiones de un mismo hecho o elemento de la continuidad del DCU, y a la vez crear la propia para dar juego a nuevas historias.” — roughly, “#4 is another example of the writer’s ability to reconcile different versions of the same work or elements of DC continuity, and at the same time create the foundation for new stories.”

Every Day is Like Wednesday – “Ethan Van Sciver continues to do a whole lot of neat things with with his art to suggest super-speed, and Johns’ descriptions often match up with those images quite nicely.”

SciFiPulse – “The issue is also full of fast-paced action, with old friends we’ve known for years in peril as well as newer characters. And Professor Zoom has never been so dangerous.”

Adventures of a Comic Book Girl – “Yes, I got this. You know why? One word: MAX. … And now the whole Flash family is fighting together! I love it. Awesome.”

The Comic Book Bin – “While this mini-series has been exciting and amusing, it isn’t quite the tour-de-force that “GREEN LANTERN: REBIRTH” was.”

ComiXtreme – “A fantastic issue, with a very solid script that’s a great read. But the artwork just completely overshadows even the script, as I could have just looked at the pictures and still enjoyed it, in total awe of Van Sciver’s artistic talent.”

Comic Collector Live – “Flash: Rebirth #4 reminds me VERY much of Green Lantern: Rebirth at this point, which is both good and bad. It’s GOOD because Green Lantern: Rebirth was terrific, but BAD because, well, it’s just like Green Lantern: Rebirth. ”

Mania – “The series has gone from being good to great and then down to pretty good and then pretty late, so finally getting an issue that blew the doors down like this one did made it feel like it was worth the wait.”

iFanboy – “Why purport to tell the story of his return to the world and then take him out of it to literally run around in circles? It is ultimately just frustrating to watch a man that can do so much running and not get anywhere.”

Comics Bulletin – “With reveals that will have you gasping and art that will keep you on your toes, Flash: Rebirth has the potential to be a home run. The only drawback is that some of the underlying story elements are somewhat of a stretch, making it feel like the creative team was reaching a bit in order to try and keep up the same quality as last time.”

Added: Pai – “A lot of the issue is about the things that draw the speedsters home when they’re stuck in the speed force. Max claims he doesn’t have anyone like that. Barry tells him he’s a father to Bart, and brings him home. Oh I welled up reading this.”

Added: El Jacone’s Comic Book Bunker – “Some big time “OH NO THEY DINNIT!” moments mixed with some wonderfully loopy Silver Age science produces one heck of a ride. ”

And of course there’s my own review here.

Audio

iFanboy Podcast – haven’t had time to listen to it, but the show notes say that “Ron and Conor, two old time Flash fans, really loved The Flash: Rebirth #4.”

Half Hour Wasted – haven’t had time to listen to this one either, and there’s no summary, so I don’t know if they liked it or not.

Overall

One theme that keeps recurring in these reviews is the feeling that the story has finally started moving. There are plenty of people who have loved the series from the beginning, and plenty of people who still dislike it (I’ll need to run a round-up of interesting Twitter posts on the subject), but this seems to be the make-or-break issue for a lot of readers who, like myself, were previously on the fence.

Flash News from Fan Expo: Rebirth, Series Launch & More

Between Ethan Van Sciver’s presence and the fact that Flash: Rebirth #4 had just been released two days earlier, there was a lot of Flash talk at Friday’s DC Nation panel at Fan Expo.

Newsarama’s article has a lot of Flash coverage, including this interesting statement by Flash: Rebirth artist Ethan Van Sciver:

I’m having a great time. It’s the book I pestered [Dan Didio] for over three years. I love Barry Allen. I love the Flash. The Flash is probably my favorite superhero. Barry has been gone 25 years and I though that was a pretty fair homage to pay for Crisis, but it was time to bring him back. When Geoff and I finally convinced Dan to let us do it, we built a huge gigantic story that really needed every single Flash, even some that had been missing, in order for it to work.

Flash Rebirth is Part 1 of that. It’s assembling all the pieces, putting them back together where we needed them to be, and then explain one little segment of what the speed force is. Again, Geoff is only giving you a taste of what it is. It’s so much more broad. Professor Zoom ties into it big time and it’s going to lead to a long, fruitful, and very successful ongoing series after this.

Jesse Quick

He added that Jesse Quick/Liberty Belle “has a great scene” in issue #5, and Dan Didio remarked that DC will be “exploring more about” Liberty Belle and Hourman. “They could be one of the more fun DC couples coming out right now.”

Bart Allen

CBR’s coverage includes some remarks that Ethan Van Sciver made about Kid Flash:

“How great is it to see Bart Allen again? I started on Impulse…I fed my family drawing Bart Allen as a young husband,” Sciver recalled “the look on Bart’s face in issue #4 was the look on my face when I drew it.”

Wally West

Joey Cavalieri Ethan Van Sciver joked that, as far as Wally West’s role in the rest of the series, we should “See Blackest Night.” Nice.

Didio went on to state that, unlike with Green Lantern, “Wally was the perfect replacement. Everybody had moved on so now it’s not a story about somebody who has to fix something broken in his absence, but somebody who is coming back to see if he was relevant still. What I’m talking about actually plays into what the story is about.”

Nasty Trick?

There’s also apparently a “nasty trick” coming up, regarding which EVS said, “Keep reading, it’ll all make sense.” I’m beginning to wonder whether Cavalieri’s joke about Wally may have been hiding the truth in plain sight.

We know Blackest Night: Flash focuses on Barry and Wally and has live Rogues vs. dead Rogues. What if Wally West dies at the end of Flash: Rebirth, and Blackest Night: Flash has live Barry vs. Black Lantern Wally West? There has been speculation that at least some of the Black Lanterns will return to life by the end of Blackest Night, and Wally could be brought back by the end of the event. Kind of like the way Kyle Rayner was temporarily bonded to Parallax during Sinestro Corps War.

Ongoing Series

And now for a scoop by @liabrown1: At the DC Universe panel on Saturday, they announced that the Flash ongoing series will launch in March 2010. This lines up with the 3-issue Blackest Night: Flash miniseries starting in December. With any luck, September may be our last month without a Flash book for a long time!

She adds that DC is “not ready to announce” the artist on the Kid Flash series, which implies that they’ve at least got someone in mind.

Update: CBR’s coverage of the DCU panel is up.

Update 2: Newsarma’s DCU Editorial write-up is up too, and there’s a bit of confusion as to how many Flash books are launching when.

Full Review: Flash: Rebirth #4 — “Flash Facts”

Flash: Rebirth #4 Standard Cover

Well, I said I wanted this issue to knock my socks off, and Geoff Johns & Ethan Van Sciver certainly delivered! After three issues of setup, Flash: Rebirth #4 kicks the story into high gear. Eobard Thawne, the Reverse Flash, stands revealed as the villain behind Barry Allen’s troubles, the mythology of the speed force expands, and everyone gets involved in a high-stakes battle for the legacy of the Flash.

The Professor is In

I’ve never been a huge fan of the Reverse Flash. Sure, there’s a reason the evil counterpart is a standard villain type. For one thing, it’s always interesting to see what a villain can do with the same powers but no scruples (as demonstrated admirably when Lex Luthor and the Flash have their minds switched in “The Great Brain Robbery” episode of Justice League Unlimited). For another, when the villain has the same powers as the hero, it cancels out the hero’s usual advantages — but the side effects of their struggle are often doubled.

The thing is, Professor Zoom always struck me as an overdone, melodramatic villain, evil or the sake of being evil — the kind who would twirl his mustache while tying Iris to the railroad tracks. Maybe that was because he never really got updated with modern storytelling the way the Rogues did, except for a single story — appropriately enough, Mark Waid’s “The Return of Barry Allen.” By contrast, I found Hunter Zolomon a much more interesting character with unusual motivations, though one who should be used sparingly. So having Zoom II taken off the playing field in Rogues’ Revenge and Zoom I brought back at the same time as his own arch-nemesis seemed, well, lazy.

This issue, however, presents a Zoom who is thoroughly menacing. Barry’s internal monologue zeroes in on the key constant in Zoom’s appearances: he’s a predatory stalker. And now he’s been reimagined as — like his opposite number — a scientist. A scientist with an obsession and no ethics committee, who has spent his life experimenting on the subject of his fixation.

Rush

There’s so much going on in this issue that the first time through I didn’t realize what a huge chunk of exposition is dropped at the beginning of the issue. For one thing, it’s interspersed with a battle. For another, despite Thawne’s academic affectations, it’s much more straight-forward than the technobabble at the beginning of the last issue.

Also: a couple of items bring home the fact that this entire miniseries (or at least what we’ve seen so far) takes place in the space of one day. The first issue established a number of celebrations and parades that were going to happen later that day — and this issue, one of the battles crashes through that parade.

I don’t think I can say much more without giving away plot points, so be warned: Spoilers after the cut.

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