Badasssssssss.
As noted yesterday, I quite agree with Geoff Johns's claim that Barry Allen is the greatest hero ever. He gave up his life to not only save the world, but existence itself in 1985's Crisis on Infinite Earths. Basically, Barry Allen has been dead for as long as I've been alive. He has only recently been revived, in the one-shot comic DC Universe #0., in 2008. That's right. I didn't even have a chance to read my favorite superhero's (mainstream) tales (there's a multiverse...what can you do?) in fresh ink until I was 23. And why did he come back? To save existence. Again.
Double badassssssss.
THE FLASH:
Quite literally a happy family. Well, maybe a determined family would better suit this moment.
That's a handsome octogenarian...
Fastest Ginger Alive!
Fastest with the most Convoluted Backstory Boy Alive!
This Aryan looking fellow.
Making his first appearance in Showcase #4 in October of 1956, Bartholomew Henry Allen was the Flashpoint (see what I did there?) of the Silver Age of Comics. Barry was a notoriously methodical, albeit slow, CSI for the Central City Police Department. Always running late, be it for work or meeting his girlfriend, and later wife, Iris West (Wally's aunt), Barry lived a normal life. Well, until a freak accident changed all of that.
$h*t just got real.
That's right: working in his lab late one night (often depicted as trying to find evidence to find his mother's murderer), a bolt of lightening crashes through the window, dousing him with electrically charged chemicals. The results bond him to the Speed Force, starting his career as a superhero. Two things should be noted though: a) it is implied after his death (and mostly retconned since) that Barry became the lightening bolt that turned him into the Flash & b) do not try this at home.
It's as if he is actually turning into lightening as we speak...
Writers have varied Barry's speed capabilities, and while he is considered the fastest speedster ever, his top speed has varied from beyond the speed of light to beyond the speed of thought. He has complete control of the Speed Force, as well as self-molecular control (he can vibrate ever atom in his body, letting him travel to other realities/universes). And, if that wasn't enough, the man can travel through time. Travel. Through. Time. Suck eggs, Superman.
And to put it to bed, Barry straight up told Supes that those close races were for charity.
No other character's death was so heartfelt, nor so far reaching as Barry's. He wasn't just the greatest of heroes, but the greatest of men. His death wasn't done for shock, and he wasn't back in a year (again... Superman). Hell, you know he's the greatest when friggin Batman not only says that "Barry is the kind of man that I would've hoped to become if my parents hadn't been murdered." Later, when Wally came back to the present at the end of the Lightening Saga, Batman was visibly disappointed that it wasn't his good friend that returned. But when he did, it was worth it. The wheels were put in motion in DC Universe #0, where Barry started to emerge from the Speed Force, narrating the goings on in DC continuity, putting faces to names, until, finally, the reader learns that the amnestiatic narrator is Barry, he remembers, and he's coming back.
THIS is how you bring somebody back from the dead.
He makes his physical return about six months later, but not before the comic world is lit aflame in anticipation. The New York flipping Daily News ran an article about his return. DC wondermind Geoff Johns stated he's the best. There must be something about all the hubbub.
He was even chosen as a Blue Lantern (Blash? Flashtern?) during the Blackest Night.
Barry's back, kicking ass, making the world a better place. And that's why he'll always be my favorite superhero.
Fastest Man Alive...and sometimes Dead.
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