The Flash - Season 7 Apr 2026

The central cast remains as charismatic as ever. Grant Gustin continues to pour genuine heart into Barry Allen, even when the scripts fail him. The mid-season pivot to "Godspeed" and the exploration of the Speed Force’s sentient, wounded nature (as the "Strength Force," "Sage Force," and "Still Force") is a genuinely creative, if bonkers, attempt to shake up the formula. Episode 2, "The Speed of Thought," offers a fun glimpse of a ruthless, hyper-logical Barry, and Gustin sells it perfectly. Fans of the West-Allen family will also appreciate the show’s commitment to Iris as a reporter and partner, even if her "mirror clone" subplot drags on for too long.

Pacing is the season’s biggest villain. The first half is bogged down by endless, repetitive hallway conversations and characters explaining the same emotional beats ad nauseam. The "Forces" (Nora, Bart, and Deon) are introduced as Barry’s surrogate "children," a concept that feels less like mythology and more like a writer’s room indulgence—clunky, abstract, and devoid of the grounded science-fun that made early seasons work. The dialogue reaches peak melodrama, with speeches about "love" and "family" substituting for actual plot movement. The Flash - Season 7

(Watch only if you’ve invested six years already; otherwise, catch a recap.) The central cast remains as charismatic as ever