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The Flash speeds into a big breakout year in 2014

Brian Truitt
USA TODAY
  • %27The Flash%27 comic book gets a new creative team in April.
  • Christopher voices the scarlet speedster in the animated %27Justice League%3A War%27
  • Grant Gustin stars as Barry Allen in the TV pilot for a potential %27Flash%27 series
The scarlet speedster gets a new creative team in co-writers Robert Venditti and Van Jensen and artist Brett Booth beginning in April's "The Flash" No. 30.

He may have been slow getting there, but the Flash is counting on 2014 to be the year when he speeds into the pop-culture zeitgeist.

While Superman and Iron Man were the superheroes of 2013, the zippy DC Comics character is getting the fast track in comics and on screen. At the very least, his appearances this year will raise his profile from simply being Sheldon Cooper's frequent Halloween costume of choice on The Big Bang Theory.

Flash alter ego Barry Allen, who plies his trade in the Central City police crime lab when not in his red costume, gets thrown into more procedural adventures when the new creative team of writers Robert Venditti and Van Jensen and artist Brett Booth debut in The Flash No. 30, out April 23.

A week later, they reintroduce Wally West, another guy who's worn the Flash togs, into the DC Universe in The Flash Annual No. 3

Grant Gustin guest-starred as Barry Allen on The CW's "Arrow" and will star in spinoff "The Flash" later this year.

Meanwhile, Christopher Gorham (Covert Affairs) voices the Flash in the animated movie Justice League: War (out Feb. 4 on Blu-ray and DVD). And Warner Bros. TV is filming a pilot later this year for The Flash as a spin-off of The CW's Arrow (Grant Gustin guest-starred as Allen in two episodes to introduce the character).

Unlike the serious Superman or broody Batman, the Flash is just "a fun guy," Gorham says. "He's a really smart scientist in his daily life who's a bit bumbling and socially awkward, but obviously he turns it on when he puts his tights on."

For Venditti, one of the things that makes the Flash so appealing on a mainstream level is he's just a guy who's really speedy.

A new story line begins in April's "The Flash Annual" No. 3 plus reintroduces Wally West into the DC Universe.

"From a very young age, one of the first things you want to be able to do is run fast," the writer says. "You don't want to fly, you don't want to have a ring that makes constructs out of light. It's just a simple, basic thing: 'I want to be able to run fast.'

"It's ingrained in our DNA, and here's a character that lives that out."

Of course, the real test of any superhero comes when he's put on the big screen. The next big moment for the Flash — who debuted in the Silver Age of comics in 1956 — could be an appearance in the 2015 Man of Steel sequel, which already has a powerful trio in Superman (Henry Cavill), Batman (Ben Affleck) and Wonder Woman (Gal Gadot).

"To tell you the truth, DC needs the Flash to break out, as he's a major component of the Justice League and has always been one of the stars in their canon," says Jeff Bock, senior box office analyst for Exhibitor Relations.

He adds that they may want to push him to the forefront sooner rather than later, since Marvel Comics' resident racer Quicksilver will be appearing in X-Men: Days of Future Past (May 23) and 2015's The Avengers: Age of Ultron.

"Time is of the essence here, DC," Bock says. "Godspeed."

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