Fastest Man Alive

"Fastest Man Alive"
The Flash episode
Episode no. Season 1
Episode 2
Directed by David Nutter
Teleplay by
Story by
Produced by
Featured music Blake Neely
Cinematography by Jeffrey C. Mygatt
Editing by Paul Karasick
Production code 3J5352
Original air date October 14, 2014 (2014-10-14)
Running time 42 minutes
Guest appearance(s)

"Fastest Man Alive" is the second episode of the The CW series The Flash. The episode was written by Andrew Kreisberg and Geoff Johns from a story by Greg Berlanti and Kreisberg and directed by David Nutter. It was first broadcast in October 14, 2014 in The CW. The show is itself an spin-off of the show Arrow, where many characters in the series were introduced during the second season. The episode revolves about Barry Allen (Grant Gustin), a CSI forensic scientist working for the Central City Police Department. During a visit to an event, the event is robbed by masked men. This is later revealed as the result of an accident during the accelerator explosion and the men are in fact a man who can duplicate himself. The episode also shows flashbacks when Barry tries to see his dad in jail, to Joe's disapproval.

The episode received critical acclaim, with critics stating that the series' mysteries and intrigue are helping it for the future.

Plot

With Cisco's (Carlos Valdes) help, Barry (Grant Gustin) saves people from a burning building before the firefighters arrive. Caitlin (Danielle Panabaker) chastises them for doing other people's job and reminds them that they need to focus on catching the humans affected by the accelerator explosion while Wells (Tom Cavanagh) and Cisco note that his rate has increased.

Barry is called by Joe (Jesse L. Martin) to investigate a crime scene of a murder in a shop. While surveillance shows a man shooting the person, Barry notes that six people with somehow the same shoe size were responsible for the marks in the floor. Iris (Candice Patton) then reminds him of an event they were going to attend by Simon Stagg (William Sadler) for a school assignment. The event is then assaulted by robbers, who steal jewelry. Barry tries to stop them but he faints before he can catch them.

In S.T.A.R. Labs, the team deduce that Barry is getting hypoglycemic from the use of his abilities due to a sped-up metabolism and needs to ingest more calories to maintain his energy level. Joe has found that Barry is investigating Henry's arrest and Nora's murder and chastises him. This causes to remember when a young Barry (Logan Williams) ran away from their home to meet with his dad (John Wesley Shipp) in jail, who is later shown to have asked Joe to keep his son from visiting him in prison. Barry in response admits that he grew up without his father although he knew he was innocent all the time and states that Joe is not his dad, hurting him.

Stagg is attacked in his headquarters by the same robbers and Barry tries to defeat them but sees that they're duplicates of the man and escapes. The team deduce that the man is Danton Black (Michael Christopher Smith), an ex-employer for Stagg who was fired after Stagg took credit for his work and may have been testing the duplicate test during the accelerator explosion. During a talk with Iris, Barry sees that she seems to know there's someone dubbed the "red streak" who is saving people at a high speed.

Using an in vitro process from a cell, Caitlin manages to make a clone of Black. As the clone can't move, the team deduce that Black is the original and the clones will stop when he is defeated. The clone begins to move and Joe shoots him, and they realize that the original Black is duplicating and heading to kill Stagg. Stagg's guards are killed by the clones. Barry tries to find Black but he makes hundreds of clones to disguise himself. Barry finds the original but when Black tries to kill him, he falls out a window. Barry holds him but Black refuses to be saved and falls to his death.

Barry and Joe fix their problems, with Joe promising they will find out who killed his mother and free his dad. Wells later visits Stagg and discuss Black, but Stagg states that his focus now is the Flash and plans on catch him for his purposes. Wells stands up and stabs Stagg, telling him it's nothing personal but needs to keep "the fastest man alive" safe while Stagg falls to the floor, dead.

Reception

Viewers

The episode was watched by 4.27 million viewers with a 1.7 rating in the 18-49 demographics.[1] This was a 12% decrease in viewership from the pilot, which was watched by 4.83 million viewers with a 1.9 rating in the 18-49 demographics.[2] The Flash ranked as the most watched program on The CW in the day, beating Supernatural and also the most watched in the week, beating Arrow.

Critical reviews

"Fastest Man Alive" received critical acclaim from critics. Jesse Schedeen of IGN gave the episode a "great" 8.6 out of 10 and wrote in his verdict, "The Flash only got better in its second episode. The show benefits from a clear sense of confidence as it establishes Barry Allen's world and his relationships with both the crew at S.T.A.R. Labs and the West family. The show has its share of drama, but also plenty of superhero action and a general sense of lighthearted fun. Sure, it would be nice if the writers would develop their villains more before killing them off, but hopefully that problem will be addressed over time."[3]

The A.V. Club's Scott Von Doviak gave the episode a "B+" grade and wrote, "With the heavy lifting of establishing the Flash's origin, world, and supporting cast out of the way, 'Fastest Man Alive' gives us a better idea of what to expect from The Flash on a week-to-week basis. If it wasn't clear already that the TV version won't be shying away from the way-out sci-fi aspects of the comic books, this second episode makes it undeniable as the Scarlet Speedster goes up against a villain who can self-replicate into dozens, even hundreds of copies of himself."[4]

Chancellor Agard of EW stated: "In hindsight, The Flash's series premiere might not have been as good as we all thought it was. Admittedly, it was great to finally have a DC Comics adaptation that respected and trusted the source material enough to not make the show 'dark' and 'gritty' to make it palatable to audiences. However, in all of this excitement, it was easy to miss how the pilot did not always completely gel together. There were several well-executed and exhilarating moments, but there were also just as many things that didn't work (most of the supporting cast and the dialogue). This week's episode, however, makes up for it and is a better indication of what the powers-that-be behind The Flash are capable of doing with the character."[5]

Alan Sepinwall of HitFix wrote, "On a whole, though, 'Fastest Man Alive' very much followed the TV formula of 'repeat the pilot 5 or 6 times until the audience understands what the show is.' Not all of the story beats were identical, but enough of them were — including Barry needing an inspirational speech from a mentor in order to beat the bad guy, the Freak of the Week dying, and Harrison Wells again demonstrating the ability to walk and knowledge of the future in the final scene — that I'm hoping the creative team will shake things up soon."[6]

References

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