a5c7b9f00b Everyone at one time wants to go to the past and change everything. And Barry Allen has that chance. When he was a child, his mother was brutally murdered and when he grew up, lightning struck in his lab turning him into the Fastest Man Alive. However, traveling to the past to change it can distort everything with serious consequences. When he wakes up, it&#39;s in a world he doesn&#39;t even know. This is a world where the Justice League does not exist, where no one has ever heard of Superman, where Aquaman and Wonder Woman have plunged the world into the darkness of war, where no human has ever wielded the Green Lantern&#39;s light, where the Fastest Man Alive is just another man, and where Batman hasmuch blood on his handshis enemies do. Powerless and alone, Barry remembers realityit once was. He turns to Batman for help to get his powers back and joins forces with the warped versions of the men and women he once fought alongside with to set things back to rights. It will take time, but unfortunately, Barry is running out of ithis memories are starting to fade. Whether Barry succeeds or fails…the world will never be the same An alteration of the timeline for the superhero, The Flash. The Flash must team with other heroes to restore the timeline while the Earth is ravaged by a war between Aquaman&#39;s Atlantis and Wonder Woman&#39;s Amazons. The Flashpoint Paradox is an animated feature that employed several people, undoubtedly giving them the resources to provide food and shelter for themselves and, conceivably, some of their loved ones. This is a good thing.<br/><br/>Alas, these folk….. undoubtedly some of whom are witty and charming…. created a product with all the verve and care of a worker at a Styrofoam cup factory. I mean, they made it. It&#39;s there. It exists. But there&#39;s no real personality to it.<br/><br/>Oh sure, it takes beloved characters that have charmed generations and portrays themhumorless reprobates, but is that &quot;personality&quot; or a mere patina, like the blue/green on copper plumbing about the public toilet? The plot is put together without care, and the acting so wooden they maywell have laid a microphone on a tree stump. The character designs are unappealing grotesques, although the animation, while limited, is occasionally lively. Despite this, it doesn&#39;t lookif any of the creators put a single iota of care into the product. There&#39;s no resonance, no emotional content. It simply appearsif a group of preadolescent boys were polled on what they thought should go into a &quot;grown up&quot; superhero tale, and the data was fed into a computer. It falls flat, in every sense.<br/><br/>There is nothing I can imagine that would be a worse use of a slice of the finititude of our existence. This is one big middle finger thrown up at the existential questions. Avoid. Forget this exists. Hug a loved one. Walk a puppy. Drink a nice wine. Do anything else. To waste time on this is an unforgivable obscenity.<br/><br/>Except for the Kevin Conroy bits, I guess. But that&#39;s not enough. Not enough. Reviewed by: Dare Devil Kid (DDK)<br/><br/>Rating: 3.8/5 stars<br/><br/>DC and Warner Bros. seem to make much better animated direct-to-home videos than they do full-length feature films (with the rare exception of the &quot;Batman&quot; films). Another grand entry in the legacy of DC home videos and a treat for all the DC superhero fans that is sure to resonate across diverse age groups.<br/><br/>With the plot particularly emphasizing on &quot;The Flash&quot;the central character of how the story unfolds, this one promises to be a special treat for fans of the red-suited speedster like me; who&#39;ve only ever been treated once before (a riveting T.V. show back in 1990) to a worthy visual medium of the fastest man ever.
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366 weeks ago