In theSun’s review of the second season, we pointed out despite a strong narrative, the season had a weak, downright comical moustache-twirling primary villain. However, as a whole, it was elevated by solid writing and great animation, be it during the fights or standard conversations.
Superhero morality tested
Mark Grayson/Invincible (Steven Yeun) continues to face the repercussions of his father Nolan/Omni-Man’s (J.K. Simmons) actions in the first season. This time around, he is also burdened with setting a good example for his half-brother Oliver/Kid Omni-Man (Christian Convery).
In the background, several other developments take place, particularly Cecil Stedman’s continued research into developing anti-Viltrumite weapons to protect Earth through morally dubious means, Allen the Alien (Seth Rogen) attempting to break Nolan out from a Viltrumite prison in space and Angstrom Levy’s return.
Animation woes drag season down
For the half-brothers, a large aspect of their relationship and growing familial bond, which grows throughout and bookends the season, is where do they, as heroes, draw the line when it comes to killing “bad guys” who deserve it and whether the act of taking another’s life is warranted.
Possibly due to budget or time constraints, every shot, scene or action sequence from the first episode up to the sixth looks like it was done by an amateur animator – or animation team – on YouTube.
To illustrate this, look at a picture with someone’s face on your phone and use your fingers to crudely enlarge the image and move it around. This is what scenes in Invincible’s third season look like when they try to portray movement.
Amazon Studios may have brought its budgeting approach from The Boys over to Invincible, where a large chunk of a season is done on a shoe-string budget so money can splurged on the season finale. Because once the seventh episode kicks off, the animation quality roars back with a vengeance.
Lasting nearly 40 minutes, I Thought You’d Never Shut Up is an orchestra of mayhem, as one of the most infamous Viltrumites from Robert Kirkman’s comics appears on Earth.
Nothing short of being a The Walking Dead reunion for Yeun and Morgan, their characters enter into a battle that is best summed up as a destructive spectacle, levelling entire cities and leaving at least several thousand civilians either dead or maimed for life.
Conquest also answers the question that Mark and Oliver asked each other – yes, some bad guys should certainly be killed if it means protecting even one person.
Invincible’s third season is streaming on Prime Video.
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