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*The episode is a reference to a passage from the [[wikipedia:Bible|Bible]], Exodus 7:19, in which God tells Moses that if he wills all of the Egyptians' water to become blood (as punishment for the Pharaoh keeping the Israelites in Egypt), then "there will be blood".
 
*The episode is a reference to a passage from the [[wikipedia:Bible|Bible]], Exodus 7:19, in which God tells Moses that if he wills all of the Egyptians' water to become blood (as punishment for the Pharaoh keeping the Israelites in Egypt), then "there will be blood".
 
*This is the first Halloween episode of {{S|The Flash (The CW)}} and the second in the [[Shared multiverse]] after the {{S|L}} episode, {{Ep|Phone Home}}.
 
*This is the first Halloween episode of {{S|The Flash (The CW)}} and the second in the [[Shared multiverse]] after the {{S|L}} episode, {{Ep|Phone Home}}.
*[[Ralph Dibny|Ralph]] says he "not looking to get married", when he says he's going to find [[Sue Dearborn]], in the comics he's married to her.
+
*[[Ralph Dibny|Ralph]] says he "not looking to get married", when he says he's going to find [[Sue Dearbon]], in the comics he's married to her.
 
*[[Barry Allen (Earth-1)|Barry]] and [[Cisco Ramon|Cisco]] ask how [[McCulloch Technologies]] had managed to engineer such an advanced technology, and [[Harrison Nash Wells|Nash]] revealed that they actually hadn't. They had uncovered it from the homeworld of the [[Dominators]] three years before, during "some invasion" This line not only easily justifies how such an impressive technology went undetected, but it pays an interesting homage to the first time that Arrow, The Flash, Supergirl, and Legends of Tomorrow crossed over together. And with "Crisis" set to completely outdo the previous annual events in scale and scope, it's a subtle way to show how far the fictional universe has gone.
 
*[[Barry Allen (Earth-1)|Barry]] and [[Cisco Ramon|Cisco]] ask how [[McCulloch Technologies]] had managed to engineer such an advanced technology, and [[Harrison Nash Wells|Nash]] revealed that they actually hadn't. They had uncovered it from the homeworld of the [[Dominators]] three years before, during "some invasion" This line not only easily justifies how such an impressive technology went undetected, but it pays an interesting homage to the first time that Arrow, The Flash, Supergirl, and Legends of Tomorrow crossed over together. And with "Crisis" set to completely outdo the previous annual events in scale and scope, it's a subtle way to show how far the fictional universe has gone.
   

Revision as of 01:58, 30 October 2019

"There Will Be Blood"[1] is the fourth episode of the sixth season of The Flash, and the one-hundred-eighteenth episode overall. It aired on October 29, 2019[1].

Synopsis

Barry's efforts to prepare Cisco for Crisis are derailed when Cisco schemes to save Barry's life instead. Meanwhile, Ramsey Rosso uses his deadly new abilities to save his own life, while sacrificing his humanity in the process.[1]

Trivia

  • The episode is a reference to a passage from the Bible, Exodus 7:19, in which God tells Moses that if he wills all of the Egyptians' water to become blood (as punishment for the Pharaoh keeping the Israelites in Egypt), then "there will be blood".
  • This is the first Halloween episode of The Flash and the second in the Shared multiverse after the DC's Legends of Tomorrow episode, "Phone Home".
  • Ralph says he "not looking to get married", when he says he's going to find Sue Dearbon, in the comics he's married to her.
  • Barry and Cisco ask how McCulloch Technologies had managed to engineer such an advanced technology, and Nash revealed that they actually hadn't. They had uncovered it from the homeworld of the Dominators three years before, during "some invasion" This line not only easily justifies how such an impressive technology went undetected, but it pays an interesting homage to the first time that Arrow, The Flash, Supergirl, and Legends of Tomorrow crossed over together. And with "Crisis" set to completely outdo the previous annual events in scale and scope, it's a subtle way to show how far the fictional universe has gone.


References