Collect the entire INVINCIBLE comic book series that the hit Prime Video series is based on in these all-new softcover editions!
NOW A HIT ANIMATED SERIES ON PRIME VIDEO!
These all-new definitive softcover editions collect the entire INVINCIBLE comic book series from the very beginning, with stunning covers from Cory Walker and Dave McCaig.
Invincible and Atom Eve are dating, but how can young romance last in the face of time travel, a team-up with the Astounding Wolf-Man, and moving back in with his mom and half-brother?
Meanwhile, in the outer reaches of space, Omni-Man and Allen the Alien stage a daring jailbreak!
Collects INVINCIBLE #54-59 & THE ASTOUNDING WOLF-MAN #11
Robert Kirkman is an American comic book writer best known for his work on The Walking Dead, Invincible for Image Comics, as well as Ultimate X-Men and Marvel Zombies for Marvel Comics. He has also collaborated with Image Comics co-founder Todd McFarlane on the series Haunt. He is one of the five partners of Image Comics, and the only one of the five who was not one of the original co-founders of that publisher.
Robert Kirkman's first comic books were self-published under his own Funk-o-Tron label. Along with childhood friend Tony Moore, Kirkman created Battle Pope which was published in late 2001. Battle Pope ran for over 2 years along with other Funk-o-Tron published books such as InkPunks and Double Take.
In July of 2002, Robert's first work for another company began, with a 4-part SuperPatriot series for Image, along with Battle Pope backup story artist Cory Walker. Robert's creator-owned projects followed shortly thereafter, including Tech Jacket, Invincible and Walking Dead.
PT Nota-se uma clara evolução na maturidade de Mark (Invincible). O próprio reconhece que está cada vez mais parecido com o pai — e, em certa medida, é verdade —, embora continue a demonstrar um sentido moral que o distingue claramente dele.
Ao longo deste volume, Mark estabelece novas alianças e aprofunda o afastamento em relação ao seu antigo aliado, Cecil. A relação com Eve mantém-se, enquanto continua também a treinar o seu meio-irmão. Paralelamente, o pai, juntamente com o alien Allen, prepara um plano de fuga da prisão.
No conjunto, trata-se de um volume denso, marcado por múltiplos acontecimentos e avanços significativos na narrativa.
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EN There is a clear growth in Mark’s (Invincible) maturity. He himself acknowledges that he is becoming more like his father—and, to some extent, that’s true—although he still retains a moral compass that clearly sets him apart.
Throughout this volume, Mark forms new alliances and further widens the rift with his former ally, Cecil. His relationship with Eve continues, while he also keeps training his half-brother. Meanwhile, his father, alongside the alien Allen, is working on a plan to escape from prison.
Overall, this is a dense volume, packed with multiple events and meaningful developments in the story.
Another strong, consistent volume. Pushing a 9/10, but similar to Season 3 of the show, it feels a tad repetitive thematically. Every situation with Mark is always testing his no-kill rule and his perception of heroes, villains, and rehabilitation. And yeah, each situation is different and more complex than the last which is great, but they all end with Mark saying something along the lines of "was i right to do that?" which is where the repetition of the same thematic beat gets tired. There's nothing wrong with the actual content, it's all amazing stuff, but a slight buffer between a few of these moments as a pace breaker wouldn't have been a bad idea.
This is alright, although not very memorable (except for the horrible ending). Mark has become a character I don’t like anymore, although psychologically I can understand his behaviour because of what happened a book, maybe two, back. It’s nice they show the romance between him and Eve alongside all that superhero stuff, it’s cute. Until you remember again what kind of gore you just saw few pages ago. This comics is a real emotional rollercoaster, hahah.