How The Flash, many years in the works and beset by turmoil, finally reached the finish line

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How The Flash, many years in the works and beset by turmoil, finally reached the finish line
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The DC film, starring Ezra Miller and Michael Keaton, opens in Singapore cinemas on Jun 14.

There were many stressful things about making The Flash and getting it to theatres. It was shot in the middle of a pandemic. There was isolation from friends and family for the 138-day shoot. There were A-list schedules to coordinate for cameos. There was a star in Ezra Miller who, after it wrapped, made headlines for legal run-ins amid a mental health crisis. And behind it all, a studio undergoing leadership changes and rethinking the whole DC Comics strategy.

This image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows Ezra Miller, from left, Ezra Miller and Sasha Calle in a scene from "The Flash." The Muschiettis were finishing It Chapter Two when the studio approached them about The Flash. They didn’t concern themselves with the messy, marathon development historythey just wanted to figure out if this was worth several years of their life. In the story, Andy Muschietti found a compelling emotional core: The relationship between Barry Allen and his mother, who was killed when he was a child and whom he wants to go back in time to save.

They told Keaton, who jogged to their lunch meeting in Brentwood, they wouldn’t be able to do the film without him. They wanted to find his Bruce Wayne in a place people wouldn’t expect. By the end of lunch, Keaton had agreed and jogged off.

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