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‘Invincible’ Season 4 Is Doing Right By Debbie

The Prime Video superhero animated series' heated reunion between J.K. Simmons' Omni-Man and Sandra Oh's Debbie Grayson ate and left no crumbs.
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While the animation in Invincible Season 4 has been a delicate give-and-take in the quality department, there’s no arguing that the show has been knocking it out of the park thanks to its cast’s emotional performances. And by far, the strongest performance this season—arguably in the entire show thus far—comes from the fated reunion between Omni-Man and his wife, Debbie Grayson, wherein Sandra Oh delivered such a gut-punch of a performance that every award show worth its salt might as well call it a wrap and give her her flowers early.

Debbie and Omni-Man’s heated reunion has been one that fans have been waiting for for a long time. And how could they not? After killing millions of innocent bystanders in Chicago in his brutal battle with his son, Mark, Omni-Man/Nolan proclaims in front of Mark, the entire world watching the news, and God, that Debbie was nothing more than a pet to him. What’s worse, Nolan went off and immediately had another kid, Oliver, with a bug alien woman, whom Debbie was saddled with raising.

Invincible still of Debbie waiting in the threshold of a doorway for Nolan.
© Skybound Animation/Prime Video

While Nolan was dealing with his own trite man pain over being a POS debating whether he should end it all by throwing himself into a black hole, Debbie spent the majority of Invincible‘s second and third seasons attempting to unpack all that real pain and trauma Nolan so selfishly inflicted upon her, while trying to get back into dating again with the extremely ordinary, yet nice, Paul. So, you can imagine when Nolan returns to Earth to put her baby boy in the front lines of a Viltrumite war, Dragon Ball Z-style, she’d have a lot to air out with Nolan after he insists on chatting with her despite how bad of an idea everyone thought that was. And after giving her a weak-ass apology deserving to be hung in the rafters alongside Mad Men‘s Don Draper’s pigheadedness, Debbie righteously read Nolan to filth.

As further proof of how powerful Oh’s performance is as Debbie, Invincible’s official Twitter account even shared behind-the-scenes footage of her absolutely going ham in the booth while recording.

“It’s a real confrontation on many levels,” Sandra Oh told Den of Geek, regarding Debbie and Nolan’s reunion. “I remember feeling lucky that J. K. [Simmons] had already done his lines, so I had his voice already. I also remember weeping through the entire thing.”

She continued: “It happened very easily. When you have the ability to play a character for a long time, you don’t have to reach that far because you’ve already said it, or you’ve already lived it. Your character is already in you, and it ends up feeling earned. People are waiting for this moment, so you can kind of let it all out.”

Oh delivering the performance of a lifetime behind the booth shouldn’t surprise anyone; she is the first actress of Asian descent to be nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series, and the first woman of Asian descent to win two Golden Globes. She’s nice like that. But what makes this performance genuinely revelatory is that it’s less about the show finally doing right by Debbie, and more about how consistently it does so compared to her comic book counterpart.

Io9 2025 Spoiler Debbie in the comics is a far cry from Debbie in the Prime Video show. Rather than interrogating how awful Nolan had treated her in the aftermath of his and Mark’s fight, in a moment of weakness, she shamed Mark for “driving him away.” What’s worse, Debbie basically shoves Paul to the side and gets back with Nolan, forgiving him way too easily after he delivers a sappy “it’ll never happen again” speech. Had the Prime Video show committed to the same avenue for Debbie, it’d be character assassination. Thankfully, its showrunners were aware that they’d established a far different Debbie and committed to honoring her character by delivering a visceral, cathartic moment in her reunion with Nolan.

Invincible comic page of Debbie crying on Mark's shoulder.
© Robert Kirkman and Ryan Ottley/Image Comics

“I like her snappy resilience. She’s no nonsense, but her resilience has real feminine power,” Oh told Den of Geek. “Here’s the human character, and everyone else has a superpower, but she’s not swayed. She’s not intimidated. When you feel hopeless or powerless within larger power structures and things you cannot control, Debbie shows how you can stand firm in what you believe and in your deepest humanity. I love that about her.”

While many fans check in to Invincible for its gruesome fights, the real magic of the series is the complicated drama of its cast dealing with the baggage of what it means to be a hero and the sacrifices that follow. It’s why I had to scratch my head at how the fourth episode in hell was rated so low among viewers, disparaging it as filler when the animation-original episode did a ton of great character writing for Mark to actually articulate all of his complicated feelings, whereas the comics never gave him time to breathe between one disaster and the next.

As a comic book reader, I was left unexpectedly hopeful by the show’s take on Debbie and Nolan’s reunion about how it might navigate other thorny emotional minefields ahead. Keeping it a buck, I’ve been white-knuckling it since season 2, wondering how the adaptation would handle sexual assault—one that the comic rushes into forgiveness far too quickly when it absolutely shouldn’t have—and whether its joint fandoms were mature enough for it. But that’s a conversation for another day. For now, I’m hoping the show continues to trust its instincts, reshaping the comic with a steadier, more compassionate hand by giving its characters—especially its women—the agency their often mean-spirited comic iterations were too often denied.

New episodes of Invincible Season 4 air every Wednesday on Prime Video.

Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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