You can see a few preview pages here, here, and here.Ā There are so many pages in the issue that itās tough to choose which ones to include here.
This was definitely worthy of a milestone issue. Ā There are multiple stories: one set in the present, a Len solo story which is sort of set in the Johns era, a pre-Crisis Sam story, a New 52-esque Speed Mind story, a Golden Age Jay story, and one about Wally's new role. Ā Plus, of course, a bunch of gorgeous pinups.
To get things out of the way, unfortunately it is definitely confirmed that Commander Cold is dead. Ā Steadfast and Fuerza are alive but off to do other things, James is locked up in a cell again, and the other Rogues are loose. Ā David Singh appears and is surprisingly nice to Barry, and it's confirmed that he and Hartley are still together and doing well. Ā Roy appears briefly and is now 100% confirmed to be in current continuity (technically his previous appearances were in a holiday issue, which are often of dubious canonicity, and he'd seemingly appeared twice in Zandia but at least one of his 'appearances' there was a Psych illusion). Ā And Iris is working on a story about how the Flash has helped people and inspired them, so we see flashbacks of Barry saving the day from various Rogues and Grodd.
Then Godspeed shows up, and lures Barry to the Flash Museum so Paradox can confront him. Ā Paradox airs his grievances, and tells Barry to give up being the Flash or see everything he cares about destroyed. Ā Paradox sics August on Barry, and the story ends in a cliffhanger, undoubtedly to be continued next issue. Ā It's notable that August is surprised to learn of the future Flash who was killed by Paradox, and perhaps that'll play into him turning on his boss in the story to come...at least if his desire for atonement is real, and he's actually upset to see any version of Barry killed. Ā It's possible that he thinks he can play along and save Barry from Paradox even if he has to beat him up a bit.
Then we've got the Len solo story by Johns and Kolins, which is shown above. Ā As always, Kolins is great with the little details which don't even figure into the story but add a lot. Ā We see the Stanley Cup stashed in Len's filthy apartment, as is tradition. Ā And Len's got a computer now, which is interesting. Ā Some of Lisa's stuff is stored in his closet, and he's got a yearbook photo of the Rogues. Ā And later in the story Jai is wearing a turtle shirt, which must be a nod to the long-rumoured plan that he was supposed to become the new Turtle before Flashpoint (you may recall that he was depowered in Flash: Rebirth and resentful about it, and Eobard claimed that one of Wally's kids would ruin his life). Ā Jai and Irey's appearance tells us that this isn't quite in proper continuity or is set during the Brightest Day era -- but if it was set during Brightest Day, Wally wouldn't necessarily think Len's actions were directed specifically at him, since Barry would be around too. Ā And even the yearbook photo fudges things a bit, since we wouldn't have a costumed Lisa and a youthful Roscoe around at the same time, barring a retcon. Ā Though Johns does love his retcons, so you never know.
The Len story is great and a lot of fun, and shows much of what we love and maybe also dislike about that era of Len. Ā As always, he over-indulges on the beer even as he otherwise decries drug use (although in fairness, he doesn't say anything about drugs in this story), but that is one of his flaws and probably one of the remnants of an abusive upbringing steeped in booze. Ā Johns seems to be throwing a little shade at the New 52 Rogues with the line "Guys who can snap their fingers and make a snowstorm because of some meta gene, how do you respect that? Ā When I hold that gadget in my hand, it means something." Ā Agree or disagree with that statement -- I don't think it's necessarily right or wrong -- there's no question that the meta Rogues were very much at odds with the Rogues of the Johns era. Ā And you may recall that Johns depowered New 52 Len as soon as he got a chance to; it's pretty clear he didn't like that development.
Wally's interpretation of Len's actions is very interesting and completely understandable from his POV, but of course he's misread the situation entirely. Ā Obviously he doesn't know Len as well as he thinks he does. Ā He'd be correct if it was quite a few other Flash villains (including some of the other Rogues), but he assumes the worst of all of them and we've seen before that sometimes he's wrong. Ā But the Len of that era deliberately cultivated misperceptions of himself and the other Rogues to get people to underestimate him or keep them off-balance, and ultimately he's probably got himself to blame for Wally's misunderstanding. Ā I don't think Len would mind Wally misunderstanding him for the reasons mentioned above, but maybe Wally would treat him better if he truly understood Len's motivations. Ā Food for thought.
It's also nice to see Chyre and Morillo too, who are very much missed. Ā Chyre's been name-dropped in the Rebirth era, but I'd like to see him and Morillo actually appearing again, even if just occasionally.
The Sam story is pretty cool and has a lot of Silver/Bronze Age simplicity and weirdness to it, and wouldn't be out of place in the published stories of that era. Ā So I admire that Wolfman and Rossmo were able to capture those aspects in it. Ā The issue doesn't contain something from every era of the Flash, but this story covers the Silver/Bronze Age era wonderfully.
The Jay story is really interesting; it's otherwise a very Golden Age-inspired story with the Thinker, but then Eobard puts in a surprise appearance, taunting Jay that he'll be forgotten in the future. Ā It's a very Eobard thing to do, although unusual to see him taking an interest in Jay. Ā And obviously it foreshadows Jay's disappearance from this Earth/continuity from the New 52 until recently. Ā I'm very much looking forward to seeing how Jay is used now that he and the JSA seem to be back, and wonder if Eobard will continue bothering him. Ā Obviously Eobard's primary grudge is with Barry, but of course he's messed with other members of the Flash Family as well. Ā And messing with the Flash Family in general may become a hobby of his with the [spoilers for comics in May] development that he's creating his own Reverse Flash Family.
The Wally story is partly an epilogue to the Flash Forward series and partly a prologue to the upcoming Generation Zero issue on Free Comic Book Day. Ā In it, Wally observes different versions of continuity: the pre-Flashpoint history and the post-Flashpoint history, side by side and seemingly both still in continuity. Ā Or, if not still in continuity, then still existing together. Ā Presumably he (or someone else) will deal with that to streamline continuity, but the question is, will both versions still remain, get merged into one, or will something else happen entirely? Ā We may not find out until FCBD and beyond.
So all in all, this was a great issue, and fitting for a milestone. Ā It was great fun to see the various stories, pinups, and variant covers, and so nice to see a classic Johns-Kolins story about Len, a spotlight on Jay, and an era-appropriate story featuring classic Sam. Ā It's also good to finally get some answers about lingering questions in current continuity like the fate of James and Commander Cold and the missing Forces users, even if we're not always happy about the developments. Ā I do think Henry's killing was weirdly abrupt and has been handled as something of an afterthought so I'm not thrilled about that, but it is good to get confirmation and some finality to it.Ā Ā Hopefully he isn't completely forgotten after this.