
In the climax of the movie, he witnesses spheres that contain imagery from the aforementioned DC superhero projects. When Miller’s Flash fractures the barriers of space and time, he experiences a cascade of realities that resembles an inverted 3D zoetrope. “Many things are very cool things, but they somehow step on the propulsion, on the pacing of the movie, which is something that you always have to have in mind.” The Chronobowl Scene

Spoiler Warning: In the climax of the movie, when The Flash opens up worlds within worlds, we glimpse even more versions of the DC heroes from yesteryear, including Christopher Reeve as Superman, George Reeves as Superman, and Adam West as the 1960s swingin’ Batman. There’s also a Supergirl ( Sasha Calle) who takes the place of the Superman that Miller’s The Flash knows from the Zack Snyder movies ( Henry Cavill.) The movie, starring Ezra Miller in dueling roles as the hyper-fast, physics-bending hero, debuts this weekend, and takes the speedy good guy on a crash course through different dimensions where he meets differing versions of himself, as well as a Batman ( Michael Keaton) who is very different from the Batman he knows ( Ben Affleck). “If you see the four-hour version of this movie, which was my first assembly, you will see what I left out,” director Andy Muschietti says.

It’s almost easier to discuss what it doesn’t include. Few films, however, contain the multitudes present in the new DC comic book saga The Flash. From the two smash-hit animated Spider-Verse movies to best-picture winner Everything Everywhere All at Once, movies about alternate realities and variant versions of heroes and villains have taken over pop culture.

Multiverses are all overwhelming the multiplexes.
