


He goes back to undo his own actions from earlier in the film. Then we are just left with the original Barry. But he realizes that the original Barry isn't going to help.ĭark Flash tries to kill the original Barry, but younger Barry, finally realizing there is no saving this timeline, sacrifices himself, and by doing this, he kills himself and his older self. He even pushed Barry into this timeline, hoping he would help him. He hasn't stopped trying to right the wrongs of the past. It is revealed that it is an older version of younger Barry, Dark Flash. After a short battle with this deformed-looking creature, a punch breaks its mask. That is when the thing we saw push older Barry into this timeline appears again. While reality is falling apart all around them, younger Barry is still determined to fix things, while older Barry has realized the only way to properly fix things is to allow his mom to die. We see Christopher Reeve's Superman, Helen Slater's Supergirl, Adam West's Batman, and even a Nicolas Cage Superman from the canceled Tim Burton film. This is where we get to see nearly every cameo in The Flash. Different timelines are represented as glowing orbs in the sky as they crash into each other and merge. As he goes back and forth from future to present, it causes catastrophic events for the multiverse. Older Barry tries to convince younger Barry to stop, but it is in vain, much like younger Barry's attempts at fixing things. Related: Andy Muschietti Breaks Silence on Criticized "Wonky" VFX on The Flash Seeing the mess that younger Barry is creating, older Barry decides to use Speed Force to join him-resulting in the pair being inside a golden orb that seems to move through different times. However, younger Barry continues to try to fix things using time travel. It becomes evident to older Barry that no matter what they do, Batman and Kara Zor-El are destined to die, and this version of Earth is doomed.
