Pilot (''The Flash'')

"Pilot"
The Flash episode
Promotional poster for the Pilot
Episode no. Season 1
Episode 1
Directed by David Nutter
Story by
Teleplay by
Produced by
Featured music Blake Neely
Cinematography by Glen Winter
Editing by Paul Karasick
Production code 296648
Original air date October 7, 2014 (2014-10-07)
Running time 44 minutes
Guest appearance(s)

"Pilot" is the first episode of The CW series The Flash. The episode was written by Andrew Kreisberg and Geoff Johns, based on a story by Greg Berlanti, Kreisberg, and Johns, and directed by David Nutter. It was first broadcast on October 7, 2014, on The CW. The show is a spin-off from Arrow where many of the characters in The Flash were introduced during its second season. The episode revolves around Barry Allen (Grant Gustin), a forensic scientist working for the Central City Police Department. On the night of the launch of a particle accelerator, a malfunction causes it to explode during a storm. At the same time, Barry is struck by lightning. He wakes from a coma after nine months, and discovers that he has developed a new power: super speed. He is helped by S.T.A.R. Labs' personnel, led by Dr. Harrison Wells (Tom Cavanagh), who are trying to control his speed so that he can use it for greater good.

CW executives, impressed by early cuts of Barry Allen's appearances in the first two episodes of Arrow, ordered a stand-alone pilot. This allowed the creative team to flesh out his story and his world with a larger budget, as opposed to a backdoor pilot's constraint of incorporating characters from the parent show The Flash. Colleen Atwood, Arrow's costume designer, created the Flash's suit. The creative team wanted to make sure that the Flash resembled his comic book counterpart, and was not a poor imitation. The pilot was ordered on January 29, 2014, and on May 8, 2014, The Flash was picked up as a series, with an initial order from The CW for 13 episodes.

The pilot was first screened at the Warner Bros. Television and DC Entertainment panel at the San Diego Comic-Con International in July 2014. When it premiered, the pilot had a strong debut attracting 4.83 million viewers. It was the second-most watched premiere on The CW, behind the pilot episode of The Vampire Diaries broadcast in 2009. The episode received critical acclaim with praise for the tone (considered better than Arrow's), Gustin's performance as Barry, the action scenes, costume design, and the supporting cast.

Plot

The episode begins with Barry Allen, a forensic crime scene investigator for the Central City Police Department, recounting the troubles of his youth, including the murder of his mother who was stabbed during a lightning storm by a yellow blur, and his father being falsely imprisoned for the crime. In the present, Barry investigates a robbery and discovers evidence suggesting the Mardon brothers committed it. Later, Barry attends the unveiling of a particle accelerator created by Dr. Harrison Wells with his best friend Iris West at S.T.A.R. Labs. It explodes sending out an electrical surge, and Barry is struck by lightning created by it. Meanwhile, Iris' father, Detective Joe West, and his partner Fred Chyre follow the evidence Barry found. They discover the Mardon brothers attempting to flee in a plane. Chyre is killed, and the brothers are presumed dead after their plane crashes because of the electrical surge.

Barry wakes up from a nine-month coma in S.T.A.R. Labs and meets Dr. Caitlin Snow and Cisco Ramon. Dr. Wells, now wheelchair-bound following the explosion, arrives and attempts to explain to Barry that he has undergone genetic changes. Barry is too pre–occupied with getting back to his life and seeing Iris to listen. Eventually, he begins to experience superhuman abilities and returns to the lab. The team begins testing his abilities, over which he has limited control. Meanwhile, Clyde Mardon resurfaces in Central City. He can now control the weather and uses it to rob banks. Barry is forced to step in to help the police, but is unprepared to stop the super-powered thief. Later, Barry confronts Dr. Wells about the other "metahumans" created from the explosion. Feeling lost and hurt, he pays a visit to Starling City's Oliver Queen, alias "the Arrow", who tells him that he believes in him and his heroic potential. Barry returns to Central City and convinces Caitlin and Cisco to help him stop the super powered individuals. To that end, Cisco gives Barry a suit he designed for firefighters that will withstand the friction created by his high-speed movements.

Joe and Detective Eddie Thawne, his new partner, track Clyde down to his old hideout, but are unable to stop him. Barry arrives and is overwhelmed by Clyde's powers. Dr. Wells, speaking to Barry through a com-link, coaches him on how to stop Clyde. It works, but Barry is too tired to continue fighting. Joe shoots and kills Clyde before he can kill Barry. He has discovered Barry's secret. Joe apologizes to Barry for not believing him, and asks him to keep this secret from Iris. With his new powers, Barry vows to exonerate his father. Elsewhere, Dr. Wells enters a secret room, rises from his wheelchair, and walks to a device that projects an image of a newspaper set ten years into the future (April 25, 2024) stating that "the Flash" has vanished.

Production

Development

On July 30, 2013, it was announced that Arrow co-creators Greg Berlanti and Andrew Kreisberg, its pilot director David Nutter, and DC Comics CCO Geoff Johns would develop a television series based on the Flash for The CW. It would detail Barry Allen's origin.[1] After the announcement, Kreisberg revealed that Barry would appear first as a recurring character in three episodes of Arrow season two, written by Berlanti, Kreisberg and Johns. The third appearance would serve as a backdoor pilot for the new show. Kreisberg added that Barry would be a forensic scientist, and the introduction of his superpower, and his reactions to it, would be very human and grounded.[2]

Barry ultimately appears in two episodes of Arrow's second season. The planned backdoor pilot was cancelled in favor of a traditional pilot by The CW executives impressed by early cuts of Barry's first two appearances on Arrow. The pilot allowed the creative team to flesh out Barry's story and his world with a bigger budget, as opposed to a backdoor pilot's constraint of incorporating characters from the parent show. The pilot was officially ordered on January 29, 2014, was written by Berlanti, Kreisberg, and Johns, and directed by Nutter.[3][4] On May 8, 2014, The Flash was officially picked up as a series, with an initial order for 13 episodes.[5] Three more scripts were ordered in September 2014 following a positive response to newly completed episodes by The CW executives.[6] When developing the series' concept, Berlanti said they took inspiration from Richard Donner's Superman films, specifically the "heart and humor and scope and Americana". When comparing The Flash pilot to Arrow, Berlanti sees the latter as a nighttime crime world, and the former, where the action begins and ends during the day, as more of a sci-fi world.[7]

Casting

Grant Gustin as Barry Allen filming the pilot episode of The Flash.
Grant Gustin, while filming the pilot in Vancouver, March 2014.

On September 13, 2013, Grant Gustin was cast as The Flash.[8] He began researching the character during the audition process, reading as many comics as possible. Knowing it would be difficult to read everything, Gustin focused primarily on The New 52 series of comics, thinking they were closest to the show's "look and feel".[9] On January 21, 2014, Jesse L. Martin was cast in the role of Joe West, Barry's adoptive father and police detective.[10] Three days later, Rick Cosnett and Danielle Panabaker were cast in the roles of Detective Eddie Thawne and Caitlin Snow.[11] Carlos Valdes was cast Cisco Ramon on February 14. The announcement also stated that he and Panabaker would first appear in an episode of the second season of Arrow.[12] The same day, Candice Patton was cast for the role of Iris West, Barry's love interest.[13] Tom Cavanagh joined the cast six days later as Harrison Wells, with his role described as "a rock star in the world of physics and the mind and money behind Central City's S.T.A.R. Labs Particle Accelerator".[14] Cosnett was originally slated to portray Jay Garrick in the pilot before the character was changed to Eddie Thawne.[15]

John Wesley Shipp, the actor who played Barry in the 1990 series was cast the following day in an unspecified recurring role.[16] In May 2014, his role was revealed to be that of Henry Allen, Barry's father. Berlanti stated that he was cast because "given his history with The Flash, [Kreisberg], [Johns] and I could only think of one person we wanted to play Barry's father and that was John Wesley Shipp. He gives a fantastic and emotional performance in the pilot, and we are looking forward to his presence in many more episodes."[17]

Design

Johns stated that the show's Flash would resemble his comic book counterpart, complete with his trademark red costume, and not be a poor imitation. Kreisberg elaborated: "No sweat suits or strange code names; he will be The Flash." While researching the best way to depict the Flash's lightning speed, Johns stated it would not just be the standard "blurring around".[2] The developers brought in costume designer Colleen Atwood, who also designed the costumes for Arrow, to create the Flash suit.[18] It features a burgundy color scheme, a masked helmet, and gold accents throughout.[19] It went through multiple adjustments from the moment it was created using computer rendering to the day of filming the pilot.[9] Primarily made of leather, the suit has areas with a stretchable material to allow Gustin room to bend. According to Atwood: "It was all about a costume that could sell speed, Grant [Gustin] was continually moving in the suit, so it had to be designed to make that all happen visually and functionally."[20]

Filming

The pilot was produced between March 2[21] and March 25, 2014,[22] with filming taking place in Vancouver, British Columbia;[23] additional filming took place in Portland, Oregon.[24] Comparing how action sequences are shot for the series with those on Arrow, Gustin said:

When [Arrow] shoot[s] action sequences, pretty much what you see is what you get and they're really doing everything. We do a lot of plate shots that are empty shots of the area we’re going to be in and then they’re putting us in later in post. I do a lot of the fighting. I don’t have to do it full speed and then they ramp it up and a lot of people have to freeze and I keep moving... It’s really tedious stuff that we have to do. On theirs, they learn fight choreography and they shoot it from the perfect angles and what you see is what you get.[25]

Music

Arrow composer Blake Neely is the series' primary composer, and was selected to score the pilot.[26][27] He previously composed a theme song for Barry during his two appearances in the second season of Arrow but he noted that: "It had to be different... but it also couldn't be so different that it couldn't fit in the Arrow universe, ... it had to be in a style that could hold hands with Arrow."[28]

Release

Broadcast

The pilot was first broadcast at the Warner Bros. Television and DC Entertainment panel at San Diego Comic-Con International in July 2014 along with the pilot of Gotham and brief footage of Constantine.[29] "Pilot" then aired in the United States on The CW on October 7, 2014.[30] It was aired alongside the US broadcast in Canada on CTV,[31] while it was first aired in the United Kingdom on Sky 1 on October 28, 2014.[32] It premiered on Fox8 in Australia on December 3, 2014.[33]

Home media

The episode, along with the rest of The Flash's first season, was released on Blu-ray and DVD on September 22, 2015. Bonus features include behind-the-scenes featurettes, audio commentary, deleted scenes, and a blooper reel.[34] On October 6, 2015, the episode became available for streaming on Netflix in the United States.[35]

Reception

Ratings

The first episode of The Flash was watched by 4.8 million viewers and had a 1.9 18–49 demographic rating, making it The CW's most watched and highest rated series premiere since The Vampire Diaries in 2009. It also became The CW's second-most watched series premiere ever, behind 90210, and the third-highest rated in the 18–49 demographic.[36] The CW re-aired the pilot the following day on Wednesday, October 8, 2014 after the season 3 premiere of Arrow. The episode was watched by 2.11 million viewers and achieved a 0.7 adults 18–49 rating.[37] Factoring live plus seven-day ratings, the pilot was watched by a total of 6.8 million viewers, becoming The CW's most-watched telecast and the highest-rated premiere among men 18–34 (2.5 rating). It broke the previous record for the most-watched telecast held by the cycle 8 finale of America's Next Top Model in 2007 (6.69 million). Additionally, across all platforms, including initiated streams on digital platforms and total unduplicated viewers on-air over two airings the week of October 7, 2014, the premiere was seen more than 13 million times.[38]

The Canadian premiere was watched by 3.11 million viewers, making it the most-watched broadcast that night and the second for that week.[39] In the United Kingdom, the premiere was the fourth highest-rated broadcast of the week and the eleventh of that month, with 1.53 million viewers.[40][41] The timeshifted version got 82,000 viewers.[42] The premiere in Australia was the most-watched broadcast on pay television, with 129,000 viewers tuning in.[43]

Critical response

In addition to the strong response from viewers, the pilot received critical acclaim from reviewers. Jesse Schedeen of IGN gave the episode a "great" 8.4 out of 10. He felt the show could stand on its own, and complimented Gustin and the cast for their "solid" acting. He also hoped that future episodes would have "more complex villains".[44] The A.V. Club's Scott Von Doviak gave the episode a "B+" grade noting "early indications are that The Flash is perfectly suited to the small-screen environment".[45] Calling the pilot "this year's best new drama," Andy Behbakht of TV Overmind praised the "rich cast of characters" portrayed by "phenomenal actors". He also felt David Nutter's directing was "outstanding".[46]

Chancellor Agard of Entertainment Weekly had a more subdued response. He felt the pilot was promising, but that the characters needed to be "fleshed out" more. He praised the pilot for embracing time travel from the Flash's mythology.[47] In another review for the same publication, Jeff Jensen gave the episode a "B+", writing, "The series inspires more hope than fear. It vibrates with big-picture vision and has smart fun with its premise". He also praised Jesse L. Martin's performance as Barry's dad calling it "appealingly flinty and deeply felt". Overall he believed, "With sustained energy and careful modifications, The Flash should be a long-run kick."[48] Carissa Pavlica from TV Fanatic, gave the episode a perfect 5 star rating out of 5 describing the show as "inspirational",[49] and Noel Kirkpatrick of TV.com wrote The Flash "seems primed to be the most fun show" of the TV comic book landscape.[50]

The Atlantic's Katie Kilkenny called the show "a welcome return to the civic hero for DC".[51] Tim Goodman of The Hollywood Reporter noted "...if you can't smash something like the Hulk does or be a badass in the mold of Batman, you're going to need to make that 'I run fast' thing the basis of jokes and endearment rather than fear and awe". He felt the pilot had captured "precisely the right mood".[52] The Los Angeles Times' Mary McNamara thought the show was "super-engaging" with a hero who is "both smart and loved, before and after his transformation," supporting the view that "the geek has inherited the earth".[53]

Matt Roush of TV Guide called The Flash "one of the most enjoyable, agreeable and infectiously exuberant new shows of the fall". Calling it "a welcome respite from the angst-heavy gloom" of shows like Arrow and Fox's Gotham.[54] Giving the episode a "B+", Alan Sepinwall of HitFix liked its "lighter and more optimistic tone".[55] Rob Sheffield of Rolling Stone liked that Grant Gustin added "the right touch of hyperactive studliness",[56] Matthew Gilbert of The Boston Globe, giving the episode a "B+" wrote: "All the potential here is in the show's resistance to the joyless atmospherics that have become the bane of comic-book shows and movies. Let's see if they can keep the broodiness at bay and come up with plots that have more than good vs. evil at stake."[57]

Accolades

The episode was nominated for the 2015 Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation (Short Form).[58] Gustin was named TVLine's "Performer of the Week" for the week of October 6, 2014, for his performance in this episode for "[nailing] moments of whimsy, elation, heartbreak, fear and loss — all while exuding the kind of rare charisma upon which entire franchises can be built". The site praised in particular the scene when Barry puts his new powers to the test and the scene at the prison with his father, calling the latter the episode's "most powerful interlude".[59]

See also

References

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