- The Flash annual from #01 to #12 - The Flash special #01 - The Flash #0 - The Flash secret files and origin #01 and #02 - Speed Force #01 - The Flash plus #01 - The Flash 80 page giant #01 (1998) and #02 (1999) - Kid Flash - The biggest Flash story of 2018 starts here, with a special story starring the classic Wally West, who’s conflicted over whether to let Iris West know he is alive—and he’ll need the help of the Flash to figure out what to do! And a guest-appearance by the Suicide Squad makes it even better.

Tackling this annual with an equal amount of pages a piece, each artist brings a real expressiveness and broad theatricality to the annual, carefully honed by the inks of Jason Paz and the rich colors of Hi-Fi.
The Flash Annual #3 is exactly what a Flash story should be. By using elements from two separate ongoings and taking a more unconventional approach to this kind of momentary crossover, Joshua Williamson and the stocked roster of artists give us the best of both titles, while also taking an unexpected approach to how he lays the story out for an extra bit of narrative oomph. Again, this could have been just another three-fronted superhero clash, but the way Willamson feints and repeats the scenes (from the Flash’s real-time POV) gives the main action a bit more flair beyond just seeing everyone scrap.Speaking of flair, the interlocking styles of Stephen Segovia, Brandon Peterson, Carlo Pagulayan provide this annual plenty of it, visually. Told largely from Captain Boomerang’s point of view as he’s interrogated by police, Williamson plays a neat shell game with his script, obfuscating the reality of the story with Digger’s cheeky and self-aggrandizing voice. The Flash Annual #3 might be a bit more scattered than you would expect a regular one-shot to be, but I think that just adds to its charm. Details by Issue; Timeline; Cover gallery.

Barry Allen may be the Scarlet Speedster, but at the end of this crossover issue, will he still be the Fastest Man Alive? It was published on June 16, 2020. Just Imagine! Editing View Change History. Tackling this annual with an equal amount of pages a piece, each artist brings a real expressiveness and broad theatricality to the annual, carefully honed by the inks of Jason Paz and the rich colors of Hi-Fi. No recent wiki edits to this page.

Though all three artists really swing hard here, the pages of Brandon Peterson, last seen in the 31st century on Legion of Super-Heroes, bring a keen comedy to the annual, highlighting the pure fantasy of how Boomerang says he brings down Deathstroke with a single punch. Bringing the good out of the bad guys, The Flash Annual #3 is a solid choice this week.Get the best comic news, insights, opinions, analysis and more!Thank you for signing up to Newsarama.
Bringing the good out of the bad guys, The Flash Annual #3 is a solid choice this week.Get the best comic news, insights, opinions, analysis and more!Thank you for signing up to Newsarama. Table of Contents. “FLASH WAR” prelude! But instead of being just a run-of-the-mill team-up, Williamson takes a more stylish direction with the chronology of this annual. The Flash Annual #3 is published by DC Comics, written by Joshua Williamson, art by Stephen Segovia and Brandon Peterson, inks by Jason Paz and Brandon Peterson, colors by Hi-Fi and letters by Steve Wands.

I will say that the sudden smoothness clashes slightly with the more rough-hewn pencils of Segovia and Pagulayan, but not enough to completely upend the tonality of the piece overall. Please deactivate your ad blocker in order to see our subscription offerGet PS5 ready with Official PlayStation Magazine's 180-page PlayStation 5 special issue Started in 1987. Famous Flash Firsts The Flash; 1. It was published on June 16, 2020.