JerseyJoker
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the animation isn't done by the people at marvel.
cause they work cheap. Same wit some writers. Some *cough*loeb*cough* can't write their way out of a paper cup.idk how they land jobs at Marvel lmao
Wats the salary of a comic penciler? or how do they get paid?
Seeing as how they took so long to even put this series out I doubt they would even bother with that now matter how good it could potentially be.i wonder what politics were involved in that lol some of the animation was really on point almost looking japanimationish.. they should re-do the series with the best japanimation artist available![]()
i wonder what politics were involved in that lol some of the animation was really on point almost looking japanimationish.. they should re-do the series with the best japanimation artist available![]()
- After "The Phoenix Saga" aired, the remaining episodes that aired were not in the correct continuity order. Because the bulk of episodes were being animated with many different studios, the writers decided not to continue with linear storylines like the first two seasons, as many would likely air as soon as they became available. Continuity problems became so bad that episode 5.05 "Longshot" and episode 5.04 "No Mutant is an Island" did not air for two years after they should have, thanks to animation quality issues. "No Mutant is an Island" was *supposed* to explain Jean Grey's return, setting up the Dark Phoenix Saga.
- Due to late development for the first season, episode 1.08 "The Unstoppable Juggernaut" aired after episode 1.09 "The Cure" and episode 1.10 "Come the Apocalypse" during the first run. Because of this, a quick animation fix with re-edited footage was created for the original airing of episode 1.09 "Slave Island", showing the X-Men returning home to the Mansion and the Blackbird landing.
# In the first showing of the episode where the X-men fight Apocolypse in Muir Island, the episode ends with a shot of the X-mansion in good condition, but the second and third showings have a different ending where the X-men discover that the X-Mansion was destroyed (Juggernaut destroyed the Mansion).
# When the episode "A Rogue's Tale" first aired, it was called "I Remember Mama." It became known as "A Rogue's Tale" starting with the first repeat.
# Mr. Sinister's original voiceover at the end of the initial airings of "Final Decision" was replaced when the character was cast for season 2.
# In "A Rouge's Tale" (AKA I Remember Mama), during the original airing, animation cells for Jean Grey inexplicably vanish from for a number of frames during Rouge's crazed flight around the Mansion.
# When Wolverine is attempting to break free from the ice in the episode "The Phoenix Saga pt.3: Cry Of The Banshee", for a single frame you can see a production note indicating to cut the print. This frame was removed and replaced in later airings.
# The first season of X-Men, when aired on FoxKids, featured CGI character profile models during the end credits. Later airings replaced these credits with those similar to season 2. When the fourth year episodes began, short clips from past episodes were filtered into the credits for the original airings. When the final year's worth of episodes aired, the series recieved slightly altered intro animation and music. When reruns of the series moved over to UPN for a short while, all of the aired episode intros and credits were replaced with brand animation, featuring Cable among the regular X-Men.
# After Iona Morris quit voicing Storm, some early episodes were re-dubbed by Alison Sealy-Smith however poorly and sometimes unsynchronized (most evident in "Enter Magneto") There were often alterations in scenery and dialogue made to first season episodes after the initial airings, such as the original ending of "Night of the Sentinels Part 1." The original ending had soldiers dressed in red and white armor hiding behind the door to the room the X-Men were about to enter, however reairings had the soldiers in green military fatigues.

http://marvel.toonzone.net/news.php#ni281Both "X-Men: The Animated Series" DVD Volume Releases Premiere With Strong Sales
May 18, 2009 by James Harvey
The X-Men: The Animated Series - Volume One and X-Men: The Animated Series - Volume Two DVD releases debut to high sales, both nearly selling 100,000 copies each.
Above is the front and back cover art for both the recent X-Men: The Animated Series - Volume One and X-Men: The Animated Series - Volume Two DVD releases.
According to independent research and various home media retailing outlet sources, the two new X-Men: The Animated Series DVD releases from Buena Vista Home Entertainment have made impressive debuts on home video sales charts. The X-Men: The Animated Series - Volume One DVD release sold nearly 97,000 copies in its first week, placing in the top 20 for home video sales for the week of May 3rd, 2009. Similarly, the X-Men: The Animated Series - Volume Two DVD release sold almost 91,000 copies in its first week, also placing in the top 20 for home video sales for the week of May 3rd, 2009. Both titles were released on April 28th, 2009. This marks an incredibly strong debut for the X-Men: The Animated Series DVD franchise, guaranteeing future releases for the classic animated series. On a related note, The Spectacular Spider-Man - Volume Four, which was released by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment also on April 28th, 2009, did not place in the top 30 for home video sales.
Click on the links below to discuss both the X-Men: The Animated Series - Volume One and X-Men: The Animated Series - Volume Two DVD releases.
-X-Men: The Animated Series - Volume One DVD Talkback (Spoilers)
-X-Men: The Animated Series - Volume Two DVD Talkback (Spoilers)
Further DVD releases for X-Men: The Animated Series and The Spectacular Spider-Man are slated for later this year, including at least two more two-disc DVD releases for X-Men: The Animated Series and a The Spectacular Spider-Man: The Complete First Season DVD release. Stay tuned for further updates.
# In the first showing of the episode where the X-men fight Apocolypse in Muir Island, the episode ends with a shot of the X-mansion in good condition, but the second and third showings have a different ending where the X-men discover that the X-Mansion was destroyed (Juggernaut destroyed the Mansion).
- After "The Phoenix Saga" aired, the remaining episodes that aired were not in the correct continuity order. Because the bulk of episodes were being animated with many different studios, the writers decided not to continue with linear storylines like the first two seasons, as many would likely air as soon as they became available. Continuity problems became so bad that episode 5.05 "Longshot" and episode 5.04 "No Mutant is an Island" did not air for two years after they should have, thanks to animation quality issues. "No Mutant is an Island" was *supposed* to explain Jean Grey's return, setting up the Dark Phoenix Saga.
- Due to late development for the first season, episode 1.08 "The Unstoppable Juggernaut" aired after episode 1.09 "The Cure" and episode 1.10 "Come the Apocalypse" during the first run. Because of this, a quick animation fix with re-edited footage was created for the original airing of episode 1.09 "Slave Island", showing the X-Men returning home to the Mansion and the Blackbird landing.
# When the episode "A Rogue's Tale" first aired, it was called "I Remember Mama." It became known as "A Rogue's Tale" starting with the first repeat.
# Mr. Sinister's original voiceover at the end of the initial airings of "Final Decision" was replaced when the character was cast for season 2.
# In "A Rouge's Tale" (AKA I Remember Mama), during the original airing, animation cells for Jean Grey inexplicably vanish from for a number of frames during Rouge's crazed flight around the Mansion.
# When Wolverine is attempting to break free from the ice in the episode "The Phoenix Saga pt.3: Cry Of The Banshee", for a single frame you can see a production note indicating to cut the print. This frame was removed and replaced in later airings.
# The first season of X-Men, when aired on FoxKids, featured CGI character profile models during the end credits. Later airings replaced these credits with those similar to season 2. When the fourth year episodes began, short clips from past episodes were filtered into the credits for the original airings. When the final year's worth of episodes aired, the series recieved slightly altered intro animation and music. When reruns of the series moved over to UPN for a short while, all of the aired episode intros and credits were replaced with brand animation, featuring Cable among the regular X-Men.
# After Iona Morris quit voicing Storm, some early episodes were re-dubbed by Alison Sealy-Smith however poorly and sometimes unsynchronized (most evident in "Enter Magneto") There were often alterations in scenery and dialogue made to first season episodes after the initial airings, such as the original ending of "Night of the Sentinels Part 1." The original ending had soldiers dressed in red and white armor hiding behind the door to the room the X-Men were about to enter, however reairings had the soldiers in green military fatigues.
Great news...just means that they wont drag their feet on releasing Vol. 3 and 4.![]()

t:
I honestly think its the best superhero cartoon in history. I would put it ahead of B:TAS. and certainly ahead of Spider-man: TAS.