Reviews

Incorruptible, Vol. 2 by Horacio Domingues, Mark Waid

blairconrad's review against another edition

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4.0

Still fun and interesting. I liked new Jailbait.

crookedtreehouse's review against another edition

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2.0

Racists are terrible. Criminals who have sexual relationships with underage girls are also terrible. Pitting them against each other,while showing how one of them is trying to be better has to be handled just right to rise from Exploitative Garbage to Interesting Story Of Redemption, and this volume of the story doesn't rise to Interesting.

At this point in the story, I am rooting for everyone to explode into band aids or food or something that can help literally any background character in this book recover from the...I don't want to say damage because it seems like I'm trying to riff on one of the dumbest names in comics....injuries at the hands of the awful characters in this book.

Even the art in this book looks like it regrets its involvement in the story.

I don't recommend it.

chwaters's review against another edition

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3.0

So, Jailbait has run away and Max Damage is continuing to attempt figuring out how to actually be a superhero after all his time as a notorious supervillian. Concerned for Jailbait's safety while on her own, Max coerces a woman he has recently saved into wearing her costume and posing as her to prevent knowledge of Jailbait's absence from getting out. Max also starts to realize it's not particularly heroic to have an underage sidekick and begins to come to terms with letting Jailbait go her own way, whether she wants to or not.
The moral conversion of a supervillian continues...

joelipsett's review against another edition

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3.0

Aside from the more cartoony art (which doesn't match the adult tone of the content), my biggest gripe with this one is how Wait literally treats Jailbait as an interchangeable sidekick. It's mildly alarming considering the girls are both underage, though I suppose we are dealing with morally compromised individuals. Aside from those issues, the Incorruptible series remains an interesting "slice of life" counterpoint to the greater-in-scope companion series Irredeemable.

rball's review

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2.0

Horacio Domingues sinks this. His action all reads as static and his linework is sub-webcomic level.
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