INVINCIBLE season 2 (2023-4) review
The Amazon Prime smash hit returns for the remaining eight episodes (released Thursdays) of its second season and it is soaring with the usual stratospheric action and blood splatter.
The last time we saw teen superhero, Mark Grayson (Steven Yeun), he was recovering from a devastating confrontation with the Viltrumites, intergalactic colonialists and the overarching antagonists of the series. His father (JK Simmons), a Viltrumite who turned rogue, was taken by them. That is all on top of Mark, along with fellow heroes, having to deal with threats on Earth, from Mars and even across alternative realities.
So far, this season has packed as powerful a punch as its
predecessor, brutally deconstructing what it means to be a superhero. But the
thrills were paused at the 4th episode and fans had to endure
an almost three-month break from one of the best modern superhero outputs of
our age.
The latest episode, titled "This Must Come As A
Shock", picks right up where we left off in December. Within 45 minutes,
showrunner Robert Kirkman (who also wrote the graphic novel the show is adapted
from) slowly reintroduces the team of characters and their plights before an
implosion of action and thrills in the last ten minutes. If you were frustrated
at the cliffhanger before the hiatus, the ending of this episode may leave you
screaming for more, as it did me. Once again, Kirkman follows the ‘Always Leave
Them Hungry’ method as I find myself begging for the next week to fly at light
speed.
In an interview with Variety, Kirkman explained the
distinct nature of Invincible in the current superhero craze: “We like to make
our episodes feel as eventful and impactful as possible. We also try to play
with superhero tropes. [W]e always try to do those things that we haven’t seen
and stuff that that we enjoy.” He continues “[W]hen it came to adapting it for
the show, we just really lucked out that it ended up falling in this episode.
It’s a really great way to kick off the back half of the season.”
In the last ten minutes of the episode, Mark and some of Earth’s
mighty defenders fend off a Martian warship and its body-snatching crew. But
then we have two faceoffs for the price of one. Back on Earth, the remaining
supes, including scene-stealer Rex Splode (Jason Mantzoukas), are left to deal
with a violent cult dubbed the Lizard League.
Kirkman uses this twosome climax as part of his rejuvenation of
the genre. He states “Like [Rex Splode] says in the episode, “Come on, two big
things happening at once? That never happens.” And if you read comics as long
as I’ve read comics, it gives you this sense of, like, are the villains
coordinating? Why is one guy attacking on this day and another attacking on
this day? There’s never a time when two guys decide to attack on the same
day.
Villains such as these are no strangers to superhero serials.
Whether from the Adam West Batman of the 60s to the CW’s The
Flash (2014-23), heroes need time off the primary threats to deal with
the ‘bum of the month’. Invincible, however, flips that cliché on
its head and makes the Lizard League far more destructive a threat, resulting
in what could be some long-lasting trauma for the rest of the season (no
spoilers here!).
Whereas superhero output has become mostly stale this decade
thus far, Invincible has shown its action to be visceral (and
gory) and have its heroes suffer and perhaps even lose. Season one’s fifth
episode saw Mark take on a group of what looked to be street-level threats,
only to be beaten within an inch of his life (have not seen Marvel or DC do
that lately). And now Kirkman plays his hand again, making audiences fearful at
every minute for the safety of these characters, even with their powers. Rex, amid the carnage, even utters “This isn’t happening!”,
Kirkman’s way of telling the next generation of comic-book writers that just
because you have powers doesn’t mean you aren’t vulnerable.
Whatever
the next three episodes of Invincible bring, Kirkman leaves us
with much promise: There’s so much yet to come in [these final three episodes],
and it’s a really, really dense season.” He asserts “I’m really excited to get
to the finale and for people to see where we’re going, what we’re doing, and
how we’ll leave things in Season 2, knowing that Season 3 is on the horizon.”
Thus,
we can expect more bloodshed and trauma for unlucky Mark and his friends in
their exploits as superheroes. And all before the bigger baddies storm
in.
The
series streams on Amazon Prime and stars Steven Yeun (Beef),
JK Simmons (Spider-Man), Sandra Oh (Killing Eve), Zazie Bates (Joker),
Sterling K Brown (This is Us) and Jason Mantzoukas (Brooklynn 99).
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