After a four-month hiatus, Invincible season 2 is ready to bust some skulls and break our hearts once more.
Compared to the three-year gap between the hit Prime Video show’s first two seasons, the enforced break between Invincible season 2 part 1 and its follow-up is a mere drop in the ocean. And yet, splitting its second season in two – a decision that co-showrunner Simon Racioppa said “wasn’t the original plan” – proved divisive among its loyal fanbase.
Like you, I was disappointed about having to wait for season 2’s last four episodes, but the delay didn’t affect how much I thoroughly enjoyed Invincible season 2 part 2. Yes, the unavoidable mini-season quality born from its mid-season break impacts its pacing, and there are a couple of creative choices that I found fault with. Nonetheless, the R-rated animated show’s latest installment is a superhumanly strong entry laced with tragic potency and pulsating storylines that maintains Invincible’s standing as one of the best Prime Video shows around.
Battling back from the brink
Part 2 opens in the immediate aftermath of Invincible season 2 episode 4’s explosive, ominous ending. The severely injured Mark Grayson (Steven Yeun) – aka the titular superhero – is stranded on Thraxa after the brutal beatdown he and his dad Nolan (J.K. Simmons), also known as Omni-Man, suffered at the hands of the Viltrum Empire. With his dad detained for betraying his Viltrumite brethren, his half-brother Oliver (Nolan and Andressa the Thraxan’s son) to look after, and seemingly no way to get back home, Mark has his work cut out.
Or he would, if his peaceful and accommodating Thraxan hosts didn’t provide him with a spaceship-shaped plot device so he can travel back to Earth with Oliver in tow. The first of a few convenient Macguffins in season 2 part 2, it’s a narrative device that doesn’t allow Mark to use his own smarts to get out of this specific intergalactic mess and subsequently grow as a character.
Still, with Mark back on his homeworld, Invincible earnestly begins to make up for its seasonal intermission on Amazon’s primary streamer. Well, once we find out what every member of its ensemble cast has been doing in the interim. Season 2 episode 5 is very much a “now, where were we?” entry that catches us up on what Mark’s allies have been up to during his off-world adventures. It’s a slightly sluggish reintroduction to Invincible after its time away, which further underlines some fans’ view that separating season 2’s eight episodes was superfluous.
Once its semi-onerous recap is complete, Invincible wastes no time reminding us why it’s such a fantastic series with a seemingly endless capability to emotionally stun you. Episode 5’s final 10 minutes, which sees Mark and the Guardians of the Globe divided up to stave off simultaneous attacks from the Sequids (remember them from season 1?) and the Lizard League, is an overwhelmingly barbaric sequence of events that knocked me for six. Sure, it’s a classic but trope-filled storytelling technique that plays into the clichéd notion of “united we stand, divided we fall”. However, even though I’ve read Invincible’s 144 comic book issues, seeing these events brought to life in brutal, adult animated fashion was as staggering as Nolan murdering the original Guardians line-up in Invincible’s very first episode.
The importance of this life-threatening twofold event is particularly telling in the character development that arises from its bloody fallout, especially where Invincible’s large supporting cast is concerned.
As I briefly noted in my Invincible season 2 part 1 review, Rex Splode (Jason Mantzoukas) is one of the biggest beneficiaries of the show’s wider examination of its ensemble cast, which continues in this season’s second half. From bravely leading the depleted Guardians’ last stand against the Lizard League – the aforementioned merciless battle, which he almost doesn’t walk away from – to the mature advice he gives Mark and Samantha Eve Wilkins (Gillian Jacobs), aka Atom Eve, Rex is arguably the most evolved character in the show.
Rex isn’t the only one who undergoes a personal transformation. The Immortal (Ross Marquand) embarks on an epiphanous journey in the wake of episode 5’s life-threatening events. Atom Eve continues to grapple with her place among her superpowered peers, while Rudy (Marquand) and Amanda/Monster Girl (Grey Griffin) struggle to navigate their burgeoning but fractious relationship. Elsewhere, an all-too-brief but intimate chat between Black Sansom (Khary Payton) and relative Guardians newcomer Bulletproof (Zandale Randolph), which tees up the latter’s forthcoming importance to Invincible’s wider narrative, is also a noteworthy inclusion.
Invincible thrives as an impactful, character-driven series, and its ability to switch between gore-laced action, heart-wrenching drama, and disarming humor – the Guardians revealing that they knew Shapesmith wasn’t human caught me off guard with their voice actors’ delightful deadpan delivery – continues to be one of its greatest assets.
If I have one gripe about season 2 part 2’s subplots, it’s that there’s a distinct lack of permanence regarding the demise of specific characters. Such instances may be revisions that Racioppa and Invincible’s original co-creator Robert Kirkman wanted to make to improve the source material. Even so, without spoiling anything for non-comic readers – that would be cruel – the decision to abandon these martyrish moments removes some of Invincible’s renowned shock value and introduces a somewhat displeasing level of character immunity to proceedings.