Invincible (TV series)

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Invincible
Invincible title card.jpg
Title card as seen in the first episode
Genre
Created byRobert Kirkman
Based on
Invincible
by
  • Robert Kirkman
  • Cory Walker
  • Ryan Ottley
Voices of
  • Steven Yeun
  • Sandra Oh
  • J. K. Simmons
ComposerJohn Paesano
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes8
Production
Executive producers
  • Simon Racioppa
  • Robert Kirkman
  • David Alpert
  • Catherine Winder
  • Seth Rogen
  • Evan Goldberg
ProducerMaude Lewis
Running time42–49 minutes[1]
Production companies
  • Skybound Entertainment
  • Skybound North
  • Amazon Studios
  • Point Grey Pictures
  • Wind Sun Sky Entertainment
DistributorAmazon Studios
Release
Original networkAmazon Prime Video
Original releaseMarch 25, 2021 (2021-03-25) –
present (present)
External links
Website

Invincible is an American adult animated superhero streaming television series, based on the Image Comics series of the same name by Robert Kirkman, Cory Walker, and Ryan Ottley[2] which premiered on Amazon Prime Video. The show follows 17-year-old Mark Grayson and his transformation into a superhero under the guidance of his father Omni-Man, the most powerful being on the planet. During his transformation, Mark finds himself struggling between his personal life and superhero duties, where he will be forced to prove that he can be the hero that his father is. The series stars Steven Yeun, Sandra Oh, and J. K. Simmons,[3] as the Grayson family, while the rest of the cast serve as the recurring characters.

Following its release, the series received widespread acclaim from critics and audiences, with praise for its animation, action sequences, storyline, performances, and faithfulness to the source material.[4] In April 2021, Amazon renewed the series for a second and third season.[5]

Premise[]

Mark Grayson is a normal teenager, except for the fact that his father, Nolan, is the most powerful superhero on the planet.[6] Shortly after his seventeenth birthday, Mark begins to develop powers of his own and learn from his father.[7]

Characters[]

Main[]

  • Mark Grayson / Invincible (voiced by Steven Yeun):[8] The eponymous main character. Gaining his powers at 17 years old, Mark discovers the harsh realities of being a superhero while struggling to define himself. He is shown to have a berserker side when fighting the Flaxans and Machine Head's villains, revealed to be a Viltrumite trait. He is loosely inspired by Superboy.
  • Debbie Grayson (voiced by Sandra Oh): Mark's mother and Nolan's wife. Debbie is an experienced realtor, once long adjusted to being a superhero's spouse, before entering into a drunken spiral of depression during the end of the first season.
  • Nolan Grayson / Omni-Man (voiced by J. K. Simmons):[9] Mark's Viltrumite father and Debbie's husband. Born on Viltrum to a superpowered alien race, his parents died in his youth before he joined the Viltrum Empire's intergalactic expansion over several thousand years ago. After arriving on Earth 20 years before the series, Nolan is considered the most powerful superhero on the planet, with a civilian identity of a rich travel writer. He is loosely inspired by Superman.

Recurring[]

  • Samantha Eve Wilkins / Atom Eve (voiced by Gillian Jacobs): A matter/energy manipulating superheroine. Formerly a member of the Teen Team and new Guardians rosters, she quits after her ex-boyfriend Rex cheats on her with Dupli-Kate after he had mistakenly thought her to have cheated on him with Mark. Struggling to find self-meaning, she chooses to help people directly with humanitarian actions. She is loosely inspired by Captain Atom.
  • William Clockwell (voiced by Andrew Rannells): Mark's best friend and civilian confidant who is openly gay.
  • Global Defense Agency: A clandestine organization that organizes global superhero responses and utilizes advanced technology in expediting their recovery or resuscitation after death. The organization is loosely inspired by S.H.I.E.L.D..
    • Cecil Stedman (voiced by Walton Goggins): Director of the GDA who possesses a long-range personal teleporter and inducts Invincible at the start of his hero career. He is implied to have a history with Damien Darkblood. He is loosely inspired by Nick Fury.
    • Donald Ferguson (voiced by Chris Diamantopoulos): A high-ranking GDA agent who serves directly under Cecil Stedman and is in charge of overseeing the secret projects meant to incapacitate or kill Omni-Man, only to die in a massive explosion in a futile attempt to kill Omni-Man.
  • Guardians of the Globe (new roster): Heroes who were formerly of the Teen Team merged with other experienced heroes with diverse skill sets.
    • Rudolph "Rudy" Connors / Robot (voiced by Zachary Quinto and Ross Marquand):[10] A deformed individual who operates a series of robotic drones and has a sizable personal fortune. Using "Robot", Connors formerly led the Teen Team before creating a new Guardians roster. He also uses Rex Splode's DNA and the Mauler Twins' expertise in cloning to make a new body for himself. He is loosely inspired by an alternate version of Iron Man.
    • Rex Sloan / Rex Splode (voiced by Jason Mantzoukas): An incorrigible superhero who can charge potential energy into anything he touches to create explosives and a former member of the Teen Team who is selected to join the new Guardians roster. Sloan shows some maturity after Omni-Man's public betrayal, growing closer to the team.
    • Kate Cha / Dupli-Kate (voiced by Malese Jow): A self-replicating superheroine, formerly of the Teen Team, before she is selected to join the new Guardians roster. All Kates are numbered, which decreases in losses so that whichever remains with "1" is the prime Kate. She also has a telepathic link with her doubles, which causes her to feel what they feel. She is loosely inspired by Multiple Man.
    • Shrinking Rae (voiced by Grey Griffin): A size-manipulating superheroine selected to join the new Guardians roster. Her name is a reference to the Shrink Ray device. She is loosely inspired by The Atom. She is one of the few characters from the comics to be gender-swapped.
    • Amanda / Monster Girl (voiced by Grey Griffin and Kevin Michael Richardson respectively): A cursed heroine whose powers allow her to transform into a powerful masculine-like ogre. She begins the series chronologically at 24 years old but is physically at age 12 due to her powers making her younger with each use. She is loosely inspired by the Hulk.
    • Markus Grimshaw / Black Samson (voiced by Khary Payton): An original Guardian from the team's early days who left after losing his powers. Donning an armored super-suit to continue as a hero, he joins the new roster as the veteran voice. After being hospitalized by Battle Beast, Black Samson's powers return to accelerate his recovery, and he shelves his armor.
  • Amber Bennett (voiced by Zazie Beetz): Mark's classmate and girlfriend. She was redesigned from her comic book source with a resemblance to her voice actress for the series. She is depicted with an insight to her, deducing Mark's identity before he tells her.
  • The Mauler Twins (both voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson): Blue-skinned, hyper-powerful, super-genius superhumans and long-time adversaries of the original Guardians. Both proclaim to be the original while stating the other is a clone.
  • Art Rosenbaum (voiced by Mark Hamill): A superhero suit tailor and long-time friend to many superheroes.
  • Damien Darkblood (voiced by Clancy Brown): A demon detective who escaped Hell to seek justice for others and save his soul, whose presence triggers a sudden cold in the ambient temperature. Cecil exiles him back to Hell to prevent him from exposing Nolan too early as a criminal. He is loosely inspired by Hellboy.

Guest[]

  • Allen the Alien (voiced by Seth Rogen): An assessor of member world candidates for the Coalition of Planets whose homeworld was conquered by the Viltrumites. He initially has a scuffle with Invincible near the moon's orbit, but realizes that he mistakenly went to Earth when he was supposed to travel to the planet Urath.
  • Kill Cannon (voiced by Fred Tatasciore): A supervillain armed with an arm-mounted laser cannon whom Mark confronted and defeated.
  • Steve (voiced by Jon Hamm): A Secret Service agent guarding the White House front gate.
  • Matt (voiced by Max Burkholder): Steve's step-son.
  • Guardians of the Globe (original roster): A decades-old superhero team that is loosely inspired by the Justice League and the Avengers. Following the massacre of the original membership, a new roster is created.
    • The Immortal (voiced by Ross Marquand):[11] The millennia-old leader of the Guardians who was once a Celtic warrior before he was exposed to a cosmic anomaly. He went on to fight in the Crusades and become Abraham Lincoln. The Maulers later revive him to fight Robot and the New Guardians, but the Immortal goes to fight Omni-Man instead, but is subsequently defeated, though he recovers under the GDA. He is loosely based on Vandal Savage.
    • Holly / War Woman (voiced by Lauren Cohan):[11] A powerful ancient warrior princess and co-benefactor of the Guardians whom Nolan killed. She is loosely inspired by Wonder Woman.
    • Alana / Green Ghost (voiced by Sonequa Martin-Green):[11] A superheroine in a green suit encasing with ghost-like powers whom Nolan killed. She is loosely inspired by Green Lantern and Invisible Woman. She is one of the few characters from the comics to be gender swapped.
    • Martian Man (voiced by Chad Coleman):[11] An exiled, shapeshifting Martian hero whom Nolan killed. He is loosely inspired by Martian Manhunter.
    • Josef / Red Rush (voiced by Michael Cudlitz)[11] A Russian speedster and the team's first responder whom Nolan killed. He is loosely inspired by The Flash and Quicksilver.
    • Darkwing (voiced by Lennie James):[11] A British gadget-wielding caped crusader and co-benefactor of the Guardians whom Nolan killed. He is loosely inspired by Batman.
    • Aquarus (voiced by Ross Marquand): A hydrokinetic human-fish humanoid and king of an underwater nation whom Nolan killed. He is loosely inspired by Aquaman and Namor.
  • Connie (voiced by Mae Whitman): War Woman's co-worker and business partner in the heroine's civilian identity.
  • Principal Winslow (voiced by Reginald VelJohnson):[12] Mark's high school principal.
  • Doc Seismic (voiced by Chris Diamantopoulos): An earthquake-generating mad scientist who holds socially progressive views towards the U.S. government and its past leaders.
  • Bi-Plane (voiced by Ross Marquand): A flight suit-empowered supervillain. He attempts to destroy Denver before he is thrown into space by The Immortal. He is loosely inspired by Vulture.
  • Kursk (voiced by Ross Marquand): A Russian electrokinetic supervillain. He is loosely inspired by Electro.
  • Titan (voiced by Mahershala Ali):[11] A criminal enforcer who can manifest regenerative stone skin armor at will. He later becomes a crime lord after his boss, Machine Head, is arrested and works to protect people that are overlooked by superheroes. He is loosely inspired by the Thing and Luke Cage.
  • The Flaxans: A warrior race of aliens who capture slaves from other dimensions. They seek to conquer Earth despite three failed attempts and Omni-Man attacking their planet.
    • Slash (voiced by Djimon Hounsou): The scarred leader who aims to kill Invincible for scarring him and conquer Earth before he is killed by Omni-Man.
  • Olga (voiced by Grey Griffin): Red Rush's widow.
  • Martian Emperor (voiced by Djimon Hounsou): The Martians' ruler who quarantines Mars to isolate the parasitic Sequids from the rest of the universe.
  • Vanessa (voiced by Nicole Byer): Titan's wife.
  • Fiona (voiced by Nicole Byer): Titan's daughter.
  • Machine Head (voiced by Jeffrey Donovan): A cyborg crime lord with an auto-tuned voice, extensive illicit funding, and Titan's former boss. Currently in GDA custody.
  • Tether Tyrant (voiced by Reginald VelJohnson): A supervillain hired by Machine Head.
  • Battle Beast (voiced by Michael Dorn):[13] A space-faring leonine alien warrior seeking to find worthy opponents to fight.
  • D.A. Sinclair (voiced by Ezra Miller):[11] A mad scientist with an obsession for "improving" humanity. After his tech overwhelms Invincible, Cecil Stedman hires Sinclair to mass-produce zombie cyborgs, or "Reanimen", to fight Omni-Man and counter the Viltrumites' impending invasion.
  • Rick Sheridan (voiced by Jonathan Groff): William's love interest who is kidnapped and converted into a Reaniman.
  • Adam Wilkins (voiced by Fred Tatasciore): Eve's father who vocally disapproves of her being a superhero.
  • Eve's mother (voiced by Grey Griffin): A soft-spoken woman who acts as a buffer between her husband and daughter.
  • Doug Cheston (voiced by Justin Roiland):[14] A student at Upstate University who is kidnapped and converted into a Reaniman. He commits suicide after a fight with Invincible.
  • Kyle (voiced by Khary Payton): A nerdy frat-boy who befriends Amber at Upstate.

Episodes[]

No.TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal release date [15]
1"It's About Time"Robert ValleyRobert KirkmanMarch 25, 2021 (2021-03-25)
When hulking villainous scientists, the Mauler Twins, attack the White House, they are repelled by the Guardians of the Globe and Nolan Grayson / Omni-Man. Nolan's son Mark, who is waiting for his powers to emerge, goes to school and defends classmate Amber Bennett from bully Todd. After Todd punches Mark to the ground, Amber saves the latter and develops an interest in him. Later, Mark's superpowers emerge, and he finishes work to tell his parents at dinner. While Nolan is initially uncertain, he still begins to train Mark on how to use them. However, wishing to emphasize the severity of being a superhero, Mark is caught off-guard by his father punching too hard. Feeling hurt emotionally and physically, Mark blows off steam by stopping a robbery in a homemade suit. After a heart-to-heart with his son, Nolan takes Mark to meet superhero suit tailor, Art Rosenbaum, who creates a proper superhero suit for Mark after he chooses to call himself "Invincible". Later, Nolan secretly ambushes the Guardians and kills them all before falling unconscious from damage sustained from their resistance.
2"Here Goes Nothing"Paul FurmingerSimon RacioppaMarch 25, 2021 (2021-03-25)
The clandestine Global Defense Agency nurses a comatose Nolan in their secret hospital, but failed to revive the Guardians, so Director Cecil Stedman informs Mark and his mother, Debbie. As extra-dimensional aliens called the Flaxans attack, Mark helps the Teen Team hold off their forces. When the Flaxans rapidly age and retreat, Teen Team leader Robot deduces this was due to a time dilation difference between the Flaxans' homeworld and Earth. As Mark recognizes Atom Eve as classmate Samantha Eve Wilkins, they share their identities and become friends. The Flaxans return with anti-aging technology, but Mark and the Teen Team destroy them, forcing another retreat. The Flaxans return once again and nearly succeed until a recuperated Nolan forces them back to their homeworld, where he devastates their planet in retaliation before returning as news breaks of the Guardians' deaths. Meanwhile, Mark skirmishes with Allen the Alien, who wants to test Earth's defenses for the Coalition of Planets. Calling a time-out to talk and learning of Allen's mission, Mark corrects his mistaking "Earth" for another planet, "Urath". Allen leaves, bidding a friendly farewell. Concurrently, demon detective Damien Darkblood investigates the deaths of the Guardians for Cecil, theorizing the killer was among the heroes.
3"Who You Calling Ugly?"Jeff AllenChris BlackMarch 25, 2021 (2021-03-25)
After a televised funeral, the Graysons attend the Guardians' private burial with their loved ones, where Darkblood questions Nolan privately and hints at his suspicions. Cecil commissions Robot to form a new Guardians roster of his choosing, given his handling of the Flaxan invasions, so Robot merges the Teen Team with other heroes Monster Girl, Black Samson, and Shrinking Rae. However, Eve immediately quits, still resentful of her teammate and boyfriend Rex Splode after catching him cheating with teammate Dupli-Kate. When Mark gets Amber's number, he sets up a "study date", which gets interrupted when he helps Eve stop Doc Seismic from attacking Mt. Rushmore. Despite waiting, Amber still stays for their date out of intrigue. When Rex tries apologizing to Eve, she refuses to accept and seeks out Mark, only to discover him with Amber and leaves unnoticed. With Robot's unseen help, the Maulers escape from their GDA prison, though one sacrifices the other. When Darkblood questions Debbie, he finds Nolan shared little with her. This encounter leaves her suspicious of Nolan, who senses Darkblood's lingering presence.
4"Neil Armstrong, Eat Your Heart Out"Cory EvansRyan RidleyApril 1, 2021 (2021-04-01)
Angry that the GDA has not caught the Guardians' killer yet, Red Rush's widow, Olga, commissions Debbie to sell her house so she can return to Moscow. Cecil asks Nolan to protect the first mission to Mars, but the latter refuses, citing his responsibilities protecting Earth, so Mark volunteers. Despite a successful landing, Mark's inattentiveness allows Martians to abduct the astronauts. The Martian Emperor orders their execution to prevent the parasitic Sequids from reaching Earth and destroying the universe. Mark hastily evacuates the astronauts to their shuttle, failing to realize a Martian had replaced one of them. Meanwhile, as Nolan and Debbie vacation in Rome to rekindle their relationship, he manipulatively regains her trust with half-truths. Cecil realizes Nolan is the killer, but cannot act until he determines the latter's motive and a way to stop him. Knowing he will not drop the case, Cecil banishes Darkblood to Hell, unaware that the detective hid his notepad in Debbie's closet. As the surviving Mauler begins cloning himself, Robot monitors his progress and methods before stealing a DNA sample from Rex to present to his real self, the deformed Rudy Connors.
5"That Actually Hurt"Jay BakerChristine LavafApril 8, 2021 (2021-04-08)
After Debbie finds Darkblood's notepad, her lingering suspicions return, and she locates Nolan's bloodied super-suit while he is away. After Black Samson lectures his teammates on failing to protect civilians due to their infighting, Robot secretly approaches the restored Mauler Twins with a job offer. Meanwhile, Mark promises to help Amber at a soup kitchen she volunteers at as recompense since he neglected her while working as Invincible. However, he must also help superpowered enforcer Titan defeat his boss, Machine Head, who predicted their attack and hired multiple villains for security. The Guardians arrive to help, but Mark, Monster Girl, and Black Samson are beaten by Thokk, the Battle Beast, which prompts the rest of the Guardians to act as a team. Seeing the other villains swiftly defeated, Thokk abandons the battle due to its ignominy. The GDA arrest Machine Head and medevac Mark and the others, allowing Titan to take over Machine Head's operation. Eve also volunteers alongside Amber, needing direction after quitting being a superhero, but leaves when Cecil calls her about Mark's hospitalization. Elsewhere, GDA scientists test samples of Mark's blood, discovering the cells are invulnerable to every lethal test they run.
6"You Look Kinda Dead"Paul Furminger / Jae HarmCurtis GwinnApril 15, 2021 (2021-04-15)
Humbled by his week-long recovery, Mark reconciles with Amber before both accompany his best friend, William, on a weekend visit to Upstate University to see his crush, Rick Sheridan. However, a cyborg experiment of mad scientist, D.A. Sinclair's, escapes confinement and fights Mark before killing himself. As William deduces Mark's identity, Amber breaks up with Mark due to his "absence" during the cyborg's rampage, and he sacrifices reconciliation to rescue William and Rick from Sinclair. Seeing Rick converted into a cyborg, William's pleas for help enable Rick to overcome his alteration and help Mark win. Following Sinclair's arrest, Cecil takes an interest in his technology, which overwhelmed Mark's physiology. Meanwhile, Rosenbaum examines Nolan's bloodied suit for Debbie, confirming Nolan killed the Guardians. Both fearfully agree to stay silent, but the revelation sends Debbie into a drunken depression. Having studied her biology beforehand, Robot gathers magical ingredients to heal Monster Girl. While the Maulers continue to grow a body for Robot, they also exhume the Immortal's corpse in order to resurrect him as their enthralled weapon against Robot. Concurrently, Eve is inspired by Amber to skip college and use her powers in direct humanitarian endeavors.
7"We Need to Talk"Vinton HeuckSimon RacioppaApril 22, 2021 (2021-04-22)
After Debbie relocates to the GDA, Cecil explains the truth before both witness Nolan kill Cecil's associate, Donald Ferguson, and several GDA agents. Adding a neural link upgrade, the "Rudy" clone reluctantly euthanizes his progenitor. Paying and betraying the Maulers, the new Rudy leaves for a Guardians summons. He explains himself to the team, who are taken aback by Rudy's revelations before learning the truth about Omni-Man and their predecessors' fates. Cecil buys time by talking to Nolan before retreating to deploy Sinclair's "Reanimen" and a modified Kaiju to kill him. Unfazed by Mark revealing his superhero identity, having deduced the truth weeks earlier, Amber dumps him as he never trusted her before. Mark seeks Eve's wisdom, but she criticizes his selfish behavior. When the two intercept Nolan's fight with the Kaiju, Cecil orders Eve to leave Mark and rendezvous with the Guardians. Just as the Maulers revive Immortal, he flies off to battle Omni-Man in an attempt to avenge the death of his team, while Mark narrowly subdues the Kaiju. News choppers capture Omni-Man killing Immortal in a live global broadcast, before Nolan finally asks to talk with a bewildered Mark.
8"Where I Really Come From"William RuzickaRobert KirkmanApril 29, 2021 (2021-04-29)
After revealing himself as an infiltrator for the Viltrum Empire sent to conquer Earth, Nolan fails to convince Mark to join him and overpowers his son, devastating Chicago and killing thousands. While reminiscing on Mark's childhood however, Nolan realizes his own humanity and love for him, and sadly leaves Earth. The Guardians and Eve mobilize to aid Chicago relief efforts as the world learns of Omni-Man's betrayal while Cecil helps Debbie and Mark by falsifying Nolan's civilian death. A devastated Debbie shares a drink with Rosenbaum, also hurt by Nolan's betrayal, as Mark and Amber rekindle their relationship after his two-week recovery. As Amber and William learn Eve is also a superhero, Cecil sends Mark to intercept an approaching Allen and updates him on recent events. Allen warns Mark that a Viltrumite fleet will come for Earth, given Nolan's uncharacteristic abandoning of his post, but he thinks that Mark can help the Coalition stop the Viltrumites' expansion. As Mark plans to finish high school, the Maulers are arrested while Immortal recuperates under GDA protection. Villainous forces conspire to return as Cecil commissions D.A. Sinclair to mass-produce Reanimen contingency troops.

Production[]

Development[]

On April 4, 2017, it was announced that a film about Invincible was being developed by Universal Pictures. It was also revealed that Evan Goldberg and Seth Rogen would be the directors of the film after their collaboration on the AMC TV series Preacher. It was also revealed that the film would be rated R, to keep its faithfulness to the comic series. Skybound Entertainment and Point Grey Pictures would be producing the film.[16][17] However, when the series was announced, the film remained in hiatus, until on July 28, 2021, it was revealed that the film was still in development and would not be connected to the series.[18][19]

On August 11, 2017, Robert Kirkman signed a deal with Amazon to develop various series for Amazon Prime Video, with his company Skybound Entertainment. However, it was revealed that series that are already in production or development with other studios, will not be developed for Amazon.[20] Kirkman revealed that he was interested on developing a series of the Invincible comic series, but that would not be possible at the moment because Universal was developing a film based on the comic series.[21] Kirkman commented: "At Skybound Entertainment we strive to tell the best stories in the most unique and creative ways in an effort to always break new ground. A forward thinking company like Amazon is the perfect home for us. Sharon Tal Yguado has been an instrumental force in the success of The Walking Dead and Outcast from day one. Being able to not only continue that relationship, but also expand it into new territory with the vast resources of Amazon, means great things are ahead for myself, David Alpert, Skybound, and fans of awesome entertainment."[22]

However, on June 19, 2018, it was announced that Amazon had given a series order to the project for a first season consisting of eight episodes.[23] It was also revealed that the series would be animated and its episodes would be hourlong.[24][25][26] Simon Racioppa serves as showrunner for the series, based on the comic book of the same name by Robert Kirkman, and also serves as executive producer alongside Kirkman, David Alpert, and Catherine Winder. Production companies involved with the series include Skybound.[7][27][28][29] Coincidentally, executive producers Evan Goldberg and Seth Rogen (who also provides a voice on the show) are working on a live-action film adaptation of the comic, which is separate from the animated series, as co-directors, writers, and producers.[30][31] On April 29, 2021, after the release of the final episode of the first season, Amazon renewed the series for a second and third season.[5][32]

Casting[]

On January 31, 2019, the cast of the series was revealed, with Steven Yeun to portray Mark Grayson / Invincible and J. K. Simmons portraying Nolan Grayson / Omni-Man.[33][34] Sandra Oh, Mark Hamill, Seth Rogen, Gillian Jacobs, Andrew Rannells, Zazie Beetz, Walton Goggins, Jason Mantzoukas, Mae Whitman, Chris Diamantopoulos, Malese Jow, Kevin Michael Richardson, Grey Griffin and Max Burkholder also joined the cast of the series.[35][36] On July 18, 2020, Robert Kirkman confirmed the casting in a live video on Twitter.[37][non-primary source needed]

Animation[]

When the show was confirmed to be animated, it was confirmed that Wind Sun Sky Entertainment and its partner company, Skybound North, would be animating the series. Catherine Winder, CEO and partner at Wind Sun Sky, commented: "We typically focus on creator-driven content for the global marketplace. There's nothing we love more than to partner with strong creative voices and visionaries around which we can build franchises."[38][39]

Title sequence[]

The series title sequence is recognized by appearing right where a character would have said "Invincible" for the first time at each episode. However, the title sequence also becomes bloodier with each episode. Invincible's creator Robert Kirkman revealed that he wanted to represent the dark days that lie ahead by using the increasingly bloody title cards. Simon Racioppa revealed that he wanted each episode to be different from the previous ones to convince the audience to not skip it.[40][41]

Music[]

On December 2, 2020, it was revealed that John Paesano would be composing the score to the series.[42]

Release[]

When Amazon ordered the first season of the series, it was confirmed that the series would be consisting of eight episodes.[43] On January 22, 2021, during a live-stream celebrating the 18th anniversary of Invincible #1,[44] Kirkman revealed that the series would debut on March 25, 2021 (midnight EST), with the first 3 episodes.[45] The remaining episodes would release weekly thereafter.[46]

Reception[]

The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 98% approval rating for the first season based on 66 critic reviews. The website's critical consensus reads, "With bold animation, bloody action, and an all-star cast led by the charming Steven Yeun, Invincible smartly adapts its source material without sacrificing its nuanced perspective on the price of superpowers."[47] Metacritic reported a score of 73 out of 100 based on 16 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews" for the first season.[48]

Ben Travers of IndieWire gave the show a B grade, stating that "Kirkman's adaptation is provocative, surprising, and sometimes challenging, as it constantly tries to disrupt the accepted ideas of its genre, whether that's the superhero genre, the teen drama genre, or the misguided notion that animation is a genre unto itself."[49] Kathryn VanArendonk of Vulture states "the series has a palpable 'more of an eight-hour movie' thing going on, and the potential of that model is that it will all coalesce in the end into this glorious, big, transfixing story" but also adds that "the pitfall is that it makes these opening episodes a little weaker; there are so many characters happening here, so many story threads to put in place, that it's hard to know what to invest in as a viewer."[50] Caroline Framke from Variety commented: "Now, of course, Kirkman is the wildly successful co-creator and executive producer of 'The Walking Dead,' so even those who might not have picked up an 'Invincible' comic might be interested in this spry, hourlong animated series that somehow manages to be both snarky and earnest within the same breath."[51] William Hughes from The A.V. Club praised the series for its animation and stated: "Funny, exciting, and emotionally smart—seriously, Sandra Oh is killing it here—Invincible isn't bulletproof. But, like its increasingly burdened hero, it's trying. And sometimes, in the superhero game, that's all you can really do."[52] Bob Strauss from Datebook praised the show, commenting: "While you can’t describe 'Invincible' as gritty, it does feel like the right kind of animated super-show for an era marked by Zack Snyder’s dark-hued 'Justice League' reconstruction and Amazon’s own, ultra-pathological take on the genre, 'The Boys.' It’s as clean-looking as any program we grew up with, but it has the dirtier stuff we secretly wanted."[53]

Siddhant Adlakha of IGN gave the first season an 8 out of 10, stating the season "is great, thanks to its unique action and strong character-centric gravitas" and that the show "combines familiar superhero tropes with unexpected gore and moving character dynamics, resulting in the year's most surprising superhero series."[54] Alan Sepinwall from Rolling Stone stated: "As the series moves along, Kirkman and company begin introducing twists to what we think is the formula — perhaps too many. Even within three episodes, the number of reversals and secrets pile so high that it can be hard to invest in certain characters and scenes, rather than trying to guess what will come next."[55] Roxana Hadadi from RogerEbert.com praised the series for its story and animation, commenting: "'Invincible' sets up those questions quickly and engagingly in these first three installments, wraps them in a mystery, and then splatters them with blood. It's not an entirely new approach for this genre, but the familiarity of 'Invincible' is forgivable in light of the confidence that both Kirkman and Yeun bring to the material. They're the reason to watch."[56] Niv M. Sultan from Slant Magazine gave the first season 3.5 stars of 4, and commented "Invincible recaptures what our current glut of superhero fiction largely loses sight of: the pleasure that superheroes must feel when wielding their powers. Not the sacred satisfaction of helping the downtrodden, but the id-centered thrills of soaring through the sky and inflicting hurt on those deemed deserving."[57] Louis Chilton from The Independent gave the series 3 stars of 5 and sated "Invincible often seems derivative; perhaps its ideas were more groundbreaking in the original early-2000s comics. Some of its characters are unapologetic parodies (the Batman facsimile “Darkwing”, for example), and you could easily go through picking out elements or story ideas that have cropped up in Watchmen, or The Incredibles, or Sky High, or Misfits. But there are still some good bones to its premise, and just enough subversiveness to let you ignore the fact this is a story you've seen a hundred times before."[58]

Accolades[]

Award Date of ceremony Category Recipient(s) Result Ref(s)
Hollywood Critics Association TV Awards August 22, 2021 Best Animated Series or Animated Television Movie Invincible Nominated [59]
Dorian TV Awards August 29, 2021 Best Animated Show Invincible Nominated [60]

In popular culture[]

The series inspired an internet meme called "Think Mark, Think", based on a scene from episode 8.[61][62]

Controversy[]

Invincible creator Robert Kirkman was sued by comic book colorist William Crabtree citing rights and profits concern on January 10, 2022. [63][64]

References[]

  1. ^ "Invincible Season 1". Amazon.com. Retrieved August 16, 2021.
  2. ^ "Robert Kirkman's Invincible TV Show Includes Several Walking Dead Actors". GameSpot. Retrieved August 6, 2020.
  3. ^ Romano, Evan (April 22, 2021). "'Invincible' Might Actually Have the Greatest Voice Cast Ever". Men's Health. Retrieved August 16, 2021.
  4. ^ Petski, Denise (January 22, 2021). "Robert Kirkman's Animated Series 'Invincible' Gets Premiere Date On Amazon". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved January 22, 2021.
  5. ^ a b Otterson, Joe (April 29, 2021). "'Invincible' Renewed for Season 2 and Season 3 at Amazon". Variety. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
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