Ideas for a New X Men Series

Damn, now that's just comic book age prejudice at its worst. Sorry, but looking at those designs from that era, they really don't look 18-19. I know that sounds petty, but they really don't look it.

I agree. But Marvel says differently, or implies differently. Sliding time scale, and all. I mean, hell, Spider-Man will never reach age 30. Or even 28.


Panthro said:
It would make doing tributes to him easier for the good people at You-Tube. This is one of the few decent Colossus tributes available - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HaDDxElwL-Y (funny how his Evolution design makes Colossus look like J.T. Marsh from Exo-Squad, which I think was animated by the same company that animated most of the 90s X-Men series).

I've seen that one. It's still pretty bad that his best moments are still from 90's animation. The Evolution clips had to be carefully edited to not show him getting OWNED just about every time he showed up. In fact the only named character he defeated was Toad...who anyone could defeat. He often practically couldn't get out of his own way (which was usually fair to say about all of the Brotherhood members of that show by Season 2, aside for Wanda).

Colossus definitely needs some justice in some cartoon somewhere. :(


Panthro said:
I don't know Dread. I'm getting a little tired of waiting for Kyle & Yost to bring their A-game to their more recent animated efforts. The constant back & forth from good episodes (Guardian Angel), to lackluster episodes (Breakdown) to just plain absurd wore on my nerves.

I would have liked to have seen what Greg Weisman could have done with the X-Men.

What has Yost written for DC?

Well if the next X-Men series is a First Class/young X-Men deal, which I assume would mean another visit to the Cyclops/Jean era (which I know you and probably half the users here are tired of), I just hope that if they do revisit that relationship, they have it make sense, because their relationship really didn't make sense in W&TXM, what little we saw of it, not with Cyclops being a psychotic misfit (definitely some Flanderization*/Ron the Death Eater* issues there) and Jean being a little seen plot device. I guess there may have been plans to expand on their relationship in season 2, but given the show's "hit the ground running" mentality, who knows.

*Flanderization - http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/Flanderization

*Ron the Death Eater - http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/RonTheDeathEater

Funny how X-Men Evolution, a show that took flack for being aimed at kids and/or tweens, offered what may have been the best take on Cyclops & Jean's relationship (lucky they lasted long enough to show the two grow into their relationship of course), while the darker & supposedly more mature/intelligent W&TXM reduced it to something unpleasant to look at.

Yost wrote for RED ROBIN for DC lately.

The reality is any show that deals with characters who are not at least in college will be considered a "kid" show by many fans, viewers, and even network people. There are no end of people who won't give "SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN" or "EVOLUTION" a chance, even though both Spider-Man and X-Men began in the 60's with teenage characters!

What Evolution usually excelled at was character development. Episode plots were not always the strongest, and some of the action was mundane for the time. But it was usually as good as any soap with the character stuff. Part of me likes to think that between all the haggling between Marvel and Kid's WB about what could and couldn't be done in that show, it forced the writers into a tunnel vision of, "this show will be good, no matter what", where they fought tooth and claw for anything decent that show accomplished (especially the first two seasons, when Kid's WB leaned on them the hardest). They also took some chances with writing certain characters, such as Rogue or Kurt, or even Scott.

Evolution easily had the best version of Cyclops ever. It was superior to every animated version before and since, and to some degree better than a lot of his comic book appearances. Without ignoring the traits that make him Cyclops, they made him a very appealing and effective male lead. Kirby Morrow also voiced him quite well. It was the show that helped make me a Cyclops fan in general; it showed me the potential he had besides just zapping stuff (I was 18 at the time it debuted). While I was definitely a Scott/Rogue shipper for that show, I would also agree they probably made Jean work the best. Some people did think she acted a bit to much like a *****, but I didn't mind the BWOC angle to her. She actually was sensitive and sweet when she had to be, although some fans miss those moments. She just wasn't a pushover, even if she still was always fainting during a fight when something was "too strong" for her TK shields.

"WOLVERINE AND THE X-MEN" I think often distracted itself. The writers were so giddy with having all the toys they couldn't have with Evolution, and all the cameos, and all the action, and even a far more steady and dark subplot arc structure, that characterization become secondary. And the difference is while decent fights in Evolution were not always regular, when they happened, the stakes were higher because it was easier to genuinely care about the characters. In "WOLVERINE AND THE X-MEN", the characters often were lost to stereotype so some battles were just spectacle and that was it, even though it had more action than Evolution.

I wouldn't call "Breakdown" a lackluster episode. There were some infuriating parts to it, but some better rewrites could have fixed that. It was good but not great, which could have been said for most of "W&TXM", going for the B when an A+ was possible with just a little extra study.

Panthro said:
So, any good underused villains who could use more exposure in the next series?

Proteus probably. It would be hard to translate that story exactly into a network cartoon, but in many ways it still is Colossus' best moment in the comics (sad, isn't it, since that was the 70's). The idealistic optimist of the team, Proteus was the villain who showed Colossus the face of true evil, and forced him to step up in a way he hadn't before.

colossus06.jpg


I never mind more Mr. Sinister.

Quite a lot of the cheesier X-Men villains from the 60's and early 70's never show up. Not that I would want them to, but there you go.

Arcade has only shown up once, and he wasn't really the Arcade we know.

William Stryker nor Bastion have yet to appear.
 
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So, any good underused villains who could use more exposure in the next series?

The various animated series have a long history of creating original characters that make it back into the comics (Firestar, Morph, X-23 to name a few). Why not come up with an original villain for once? Magneto, Kelly, Sentinels, Mr. Sinister, Apocalypse and the Shadow King all have had their day in the sun. It would be fun to come up with a completely new villain, especially since they are ruling out all spaced based (Skrulls, D'Ken, Brood) and magic based baddies.
 
I disagree. I wouldn't trust a lot of TV writers to come up with a villain that is as worthy of appearing as Magneto or Mr. Sinister or even Mojo. I mean, I think we can all cringe at such menaces as Videoman from "SPIDER-MAN AND HIS AMAZING FRIENDS". The 80's Spider-Man show had a couple of original villains, and they all sucked.

I thought I listed a few villains who'd sat out a lot of animation. Proteus, William Stryker, Bastion, Arcade, perhaps even Danger to a degree. Magneto will always be there, and I certainly like Mr. Sinister. I could do without another Dark Phoenix Saga, or Mojo.
 
Proteus was in 90's X-men AND X-men Evolution.

Bastion IMHO was a lame and uninteresting 90's villain. Hackneyed creation.

Also just remember, as of last year, Warren Ellis was scripting an X-men anime series to be produced by Madhouse.
 
Proteus was in 90's X-men AND X-men Evolution.

Bastion IMHO was a lame and uninteresting 90's villain. Hackneyed creation.

Also just remember, as of last year, Warren Ellis was scripting an X-men anime series to be produced by Madhouse.

Proteus was not in X-MEN: EVOLUTION. Not unless you confused him for Legion, who was in Season 4.

Bastion has his moments. Some could argue Stryker as depicted from "X-MEN 2" was closer to Bastion than the original "GOD LOVES, MAN KILLS" story.

Right, the X-Men anime. Well, there's that. :dry:
 
I see your point, Dread, but it doesn't mean it can't be done! I love all of X Men's classic nemesis (nemesi???) but I am a bit tired of Magneto now-he has a bit too much overexposure at the moment, imho. This leaves us with second rung villains like Empath, Vargas (who I like), Ord (who I also like, mainly of Whedon's writing, but they won't go into space), Cassandra Nova and so on. Like I said, with the series avoiding space and magic storylines, we are stuck with the same villains over and over again.

I agree, more Sinister and Marauders. I would like a series to address Gambit's past with them (which they might have done in season 2).
 
I agree. But Marvel says differently, or implies differently. Sliding time scale, and all. I mean, hell, Spider-Man will never reach age 30. Or even 28.
Did Spider-Man ever make it to 26?

You have to admit, if Cyclops was really only 19 at oldest at the time of Giant Size, it makes this panel all the more unintentionally funny -

01CyclopsBackingWolverineForTheWin.jpg

^Now I love this panel, but I can't deny there's also something unintentionally funny about it, though that may just be because I'm looking at it in the here & now when Wolverine is supposed to be the greatest X-Man of them all, and if Cyclops is really only 19 in this shot, well, that just makes it funnier.

I've seen that one. It's still pretty bad that his best moments are still from 90's animation. The Evolution clips had to be carefully edited to not show him getting OWNED just about every time he showed up. In fact the only named character he defeated was Toad...who anyone could defeat. He often practically couldn't get out of his own way (which was usually fair to say about all of the Brotherhood members of that show by Season 2, aside for Wanda).

Colossus definitely needs some justice in some cartoon somewhere. :(
That is pretty sad. I'd love to see them animate Colossus beating up Ord (from Astonishing).

Yost wrote for RED ROBIN for DC lately.
Was that any good?

The reality is any show that deals with characters who are not at least in college will be considered a "kid" show by many fans, viewers, and even network people. There are no end of people who won't give "SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN" or "EVOLUTION" a chance, even though both Spider-Man and X-Men began in the 60's with teenage characters!

EDIT
I can't really argue with any of that (my apologies for not including it in the entire quote but I didn't want the page to look clunky).

I wouldn't call "Breakdown" a lackluster episode. There were some infuriating parts to it, but some better rewrites could have fixed that. It was good but not great, which could have been said for most of "W&TXM", going for the B when an A+ was possible with just a little extra study.
I don't know if I would call an episode that vilified its primary character good. It may not have been the writer's intention to vilify Cyclops (and by extension his relationship with Jean), but the episode failed to put him in any kind of positive light. Watching him get punked in the Danger ROom was like watching Hal Jordan get brutalized by Batman & Robin in Frank Miller's All-Star B&R (that and watching him & the other X-Men get punked by ninjas). Even if you argued that Logan was daring Scott to take a swing at him - and Logan did seem to be taunting Scott with his smug "She could do a lot better [than you]" line - that doesn't justify Scott going ape-s*** on him. In the end it still felt like anti-Cyclops/pro-Wolverine propaganda, regardless of whether or not Logan egged him on. Even in their audio commentary they couldn't really justify it beyond "we just wanted the show to open with Scott & Jean arguing." It's too bad, it could have been a more touching episode if it had been "The Rise & Fall of Cyclops" instead of settling for "The Multiple Falls of Cyclops".

Though you have to wonder if it was part of some plan to make the audience (X-fans and non-X-fans alike) root for Emma to "save"/"rescue" Scott from his unhealthy relationship with Jean. It's kinda sad that even in this day and age of supposedly "superior writing" that some writers still can't seem to build a new relationship without demonizing the previous one.

Proteus probably. It would be hard to translate that story exactly into a network cartoon, but in many ways it still is Colossus' best moment in the comics (sad, isn't it, since that was the 70's). The idealistic optimist of the team, Proteus was the villain who showed Colossus the face of true evil, and forced him to step up in a way he hadn't before.

colossus06.jpg
Colossus is extra cool when he's pissed.

I never mind more Mr. Sinister.
Who doesn't love Mr. Sinister?

Quite a lot of the cheesier X-Men villains from the 60's and early 70's never show up. Not that I would want them to, but there you go.
Even if they were modernized into more competent threats?

EvilClareToo said:
The various animated series have a long history of creating original characters that make it back into the comics (Firestar, Morph, X-23 to name a few). Why not come up with an original villain for once? Magneto, Kelly, Sentinels, Mr. Sinister, Apocalypse and the Shadow King all have had their day in the sun. It would be fun to come up with a completely new villain, especially since they are ruling out all spaced based (Skrulls, D'Ken, Brood) and magic based baddies.
Aw, but Colossus fighting the Skrulls would be awesome! (if staged properly)
 
I see your point, Dread, but it doesn't mean it can't be done! I love all of X Men's classic nemesis (nemesi???) but I am a bit tired of Magneto now-he has a bit too much overexposure at the moment, imho. This leaves us with second rung villains like Empath, Vargas (who I like), Ord (who I also like, mainly of Whedon's writing, but they won't go into space), Cassandra Nova and so on. Like I said, with the series avoiding space and magic storylines, we are stuck with the same villains over and over again.

I agree, more Sinister and Marauders. I would like a series to address Gambit's past with them (which they might have done in season 2).

I don't think Magneto's been overexposed to the same point as, say, Joker and Lex Luthor have in films or cartoons. Hell, in the 90's cartoon, he was almost a guest character rather than a perennial villain after Season 2.

Magneto's the focal point after Xavier, and they're the yin and yang. I'd argue it is impossible to do a decent X-Men show without him, and I don't think I would want to see a show try. He's one of the greatest comic book villains of all time, and part of that is because he's more than a cackling stereotype (although in 80's animation, he was exactly that). While we can (and have) nit picked WOLVERINE AND THE X-MEN's flaws, one of their strengths was how they handled Magneto.

The last original villain I recall in an X-Men cartoon was Guy Spears from X-MEN EVOLUTION, who was making a sports drink, "Power8", that turned out to be able to physically harm mutants in "X-TREME MEASURES" in Season 3. The Morlocks got the brunt of it as the fluid leaked into the sewers, and while he claimed ignorance and told Xavier he would cease production, the episode ended with him claiming his drink was now more valuable. It was actually one of a few interesting potential subplots that Evolution let drop (Colossus being another). I suppose he could have become a Lex Luthor type figure, an enemy of the X-Men who hides behind legalities and due process to avoid punishment. Of course, one could imagine that William Stryker or Bastion could be handled in a similar fashion.

Could we count Duncan Matthews as an "original" villain? He was created to fill out the supporting cast of EVOLUTION, to basically give Jean a jock to date while Cyclops was having a brief romance with Taryn Fujioka. He was a constant jerk character, but some could argue he became a villain. When mutants became outed after the end of Season 2, he became a flat-out opponent of the X-Men; literally teaming up with the Brotherhood to physically fight the X-Men in an attempt to get them thrown out of school for using their powers in public. True, he was manipulated into that position by Principal Kelly, but he eagerly tried to punch Cyclops out. He led his jock buddies to assault Scott at least once before, and of course by Season 4, we have "UPRISING". Despite having graduated, Duncan's still wearing his varsity jacket and decides to lead his goon squad to nuke mutants with Ghostbuster-style proton packs.

48_uprising_033.jpg


Is this the face of a villain?

Some people at the time referred him to Flash Thompson, but he's actually far removed from Flash. Thompson at least in the end proved to have a heart under his jerk-armor. Duncan's just all jerk, covering a core of psycho-sauce.

I'm open to using some more obscure villains, such as Vargas or so on. I was never a fan of Ord. Joss Whedon likes villains who wax and wane between dangerous and comedic, but I don't think it worked for Ord. You're not a threat after Lockheed sends you screaming into the night. You can't lose to the team pet and still be a threat. That's like losing to Snarf.

Least outside the Guardians of the Galaxy, but neither Cosmo or Rocket Raccoon are pets; they're members outright. Lockheed's a pet.

Did Spider-Man ever make it to 26?

You have to admit, if Cyclops was really only 19 at oldest at the time of Giant Size, it makes this panel all the more unintentionally funny -

01CyclopsBackingWolverineForTheWin.jpg

^Now I love this panel, but I can't deny there's also something unintentionally funny about it, though that may just be because I'm looking at it in the here & now when Wolverine is supposed to be the greatest X-Man of them all, and if Cyclops is really only 19 in this shot, well, that just makes it funnier.

I think Marvel begrudgingly claims or implies that Spider-Man is 25-27 years old, but no older. And even 27 would push it. I mean, I'm 28 and that's not young; only 37 years away from social security! :o

I do agree, those panels are funnier if you go with Marvel that he's hardly supposed to be 20 or 21 there (anymore). But that's their story for perpetual youthful characters. In another decade, they'll say he was 12 in that scene.

Of course, the very concept of "Marvel Time", of characters not aging in or close to real time, was hardly even dreamed up by the mid 70's when that issue was written and drawn. That was a concept that began in the late 70's at best, into the 80's.

Panthro said:
That is pretty sad. I'd love to see them animate Colossus beating up Ord (from Astonishing).

Ord was a lame villain (to repeat, Whedon tried to have him wax and wane between comedy and threat, and I don't think it worked), but that was a good scene. That said, "I am made of rage!" scenes with Colossus really shouldn't be that hard to write and storyboard. They're feats of strength & smashing. Hulk and Superman get moments like that all the time. Why is it such a problem for Colossus? It certainly can't be as rare or hard as writing a bit where Squidboy saves the day.

And yet...

Panthro said:
I don't know if I would call an episode that vilified its primary character good. It may not have been the writer's intention to vilify Cyclops (and by extension his relationship with Jean), but the episode failed to put him in any kind of positive light. Watching him get punked in the Danger ROom was like watching Hal Jordan get brutalized by Batman & Robin in Frank Miller's All-Star B&R (that and watching him & the other X-Men get punked by ninjas). Even if you argued that Logan was daring Scott to take a swing at him - and Logan did seem to be taunting Scott with his smug "She could do a lot better [than you]" line - that doesn't justify Scott going ape-s*** on him. In the end it still felt like anti-Cyclops/pro-Wolverine propaganda, regardless of whether or not Logan egged him on. Even in their audio commentary they couldn't really justify it beyond "we just wanted the show to open with Scott & Jean arguing." It's too bad, it could have been a more touching episode if it had been "The Rise & Fall of Cyclops" instead of settling for "The Multiple Falls of Cyclops".

Though you have to wonder if it was part of some plan to make the audience (X-fans and non-X-fans alike) root for Emma to "save"/"rescue" Scott from his unhealthy relationship with Jean. It's kinda sad that even in this day and age of supposedly "superior writing" that some writers still can't seem to build a new relationship without demonizing the previous one.

Flaws in writing are flaws in writing under any era. The wasteland of the early 1980's animation still had some well written shows that sought to push those boundaries. Much as there are shows now that squander opportunities.

In a discussion with a friend online, I came to the realization that until about the late 90's or early 2000's, "leader" characters in team shows were usually the flattest ones. They usually were the least flawed, who delivered the most exposition or functional dialogue (of the "This way, gang!" variety), and could often have the show stolen from them by a wittier, more flawed supporting character. As the 21st century came, though, this trend in Western animation started to wane. For EVOLUTION, the writers (many of them the same) managed a good balance between showing Scott as flawed, and making mistakes, and depicting his strengths and making him likable. For WOLVERINE AND THE X-MEN, they went too far in one direction and barely acknowledged the rest. Part of me thinks the writers didn't quite realize the impression they were putting out until later, if at all. They were just rushing to meet deadline and obey the series bible. Part of me likes to think they didn't want to deliberately make Cyclops seem like a sympathetic villain more than a tormented anti-hero, that they know the difference because they've written better stuff before. But maybe part of me is still an optimist.

Or, like a lot of problems with writing, they had a fine idea, but botched the execution. In writing, execution is better than an idea, sometimes. A great idea executed poorly is not worth more than a mundane idea executed brilliantly.

We digress. WOLVERINE AND THE X-MEN, loved it or hated it, or somewhere in between, is gone. The riddle will be what the next, inevitable X-Men show will be. Part of me thinks the cast will skew younger, and likely may have their Ultimate outfits. The Ultimate line is dying in the comics, but mass media people still seem to like it. Plus, to executives over 35, "ten years ago" is called "current". :doh:

Panthro said:
Colossus is extra cool when he's pissed.

Damn right! Wolverine's intense when he's mad, but he can't knock a building over.


Panthro said:
Who doesn't love Mr. Sinister?

Some of the Kid's WB people, since he wasn't there?


Panthro said:
Even if they were modernized into more competent threats?

It would take some incredible writing to make Locust, Cobalt Man, or Mechano into anything decent on TV. On the other hand, think of the narrative freedom!

Panthro said:
Aw, but Colossus fighting the Skrulls would be awesome! (if staged properly)

If staged properly, any fight can be worth watching. That's the point of good staging. You think imported martial arts films become and remain hot for the plots? It's the awesome fights, man!
 
I'm open to using some more obscure villains, such as Vargas or so on. I was never a fan of Ord. Joss Whedon likes villains who wax and wane between dangerous and comedic, but I don't think it worked for Ord. You're not a threat after Lockheed sends you screaming into the night. You can't lose to the team pet and still be a threat. That's like losing to Snarf.

Hahahahahahahaha!!!!! That's going to be my quote of the week!!!!! You gotta love Snarf! Joss seemed to have a problem making threating "baddies" who didn't have some comedic value, unless they are shady organizations like in Firefly and Dollhouse.

I don't disagree with the fact that the original villains sucked up to now. I just mean it does not mean it cannot be done sometime in the future. Now that Marvel has gone all vampire, I wouldn't be surprise if they appear in a future X Men show (make it stop!!!)

My Magneto comment refers to the fact that since 2000, he has had a lot of exposure in almost all the X mediums. I really like Magneto, don't get me wrong, it's just I don't want his to be the main bad guy ALL the time (ok, he wasn't so much in Season 3 and 4 of Evo, but he was still a main player). I preferred the exposure and characterization in the 90's series.
 
Hahahahahahahaha!!!!! That's going to be my quote of the week!!!!! You gotta love Snarf! Joss seemed to have a problem making threating "baddies" who didn't have some comedic value, unless they are shady organizations like in Firefly and Dollhouse.

I don't disagree with the fact that the original villains sucked up to now. I just mean it does not mean it cannot be done sometime in the future. Now that Marvel has gone all vampire, I wouldn't be surprise if they appear in a future X Men show (make it stop!!!)

My Magneto comment refers to the fact that since 2000, he has had a lot of exposure in almost all the X mediums. I really like Magneto, don't get me wrong, it's just I don't want his to be the main bad guy ALL the time (ok, he wasn't so much in Season 3 and 4 of Evo, but he was still a main player). I preferred the exposure and characterization in the 90's series.

The last time a vampire fought anyone X-Men related on TV, it was episode #18 of SPIDER-MAN AND HIS AMAZING FRIENDS, which is both known as "THE BRIDE OF DRACULA" or "THE TRANSYLVANIAN CONNECTION", which aired originally in 1983. And that only counts because the show featured Iceman & Firestar, who were both former X-Men in it. Of note was the Dracula who appeared was the Hollywood version, not the Marvel Universe version. Imitations of the Wolfman and Frankenstein's Monster also appeared (as Dracula's minions).

Since 2000, the X-Men had a movie franchise in which Magneto was a central figure in all of them (and the main villain in two of them). With X-MEN: FIRST CLASS sounding like "Young Xavier & Magnus in love" according to some summaries, I don't expect this to change. He IS their central villain most depictions. It is worth noting that perhaps why he had a muted presence in the 90's show was the 90's cartoon was imitating the comics at the time, which were pushing Apocalypse and Sinister more than Magneto.

If there were other villains or threats vying for space, and Magneto was a presence but used sparingly (to make the threat level higher), that could work. If he shows up 8 times within 26 episodes like Dr. Doom in the last FANTASTIC FOUR series, then that won't work.

FYI, Craig Kyle's promotion to working on writing for Marvel Studios films is a reality. Entertainment Tonight had an interview on the "THOR" set and it was stated he was one of the writers on the set there. This is atop of whatever comics he is writing at the time. Chris Yost is also writing comics but also is working on AVENGERS: EARTH'S MIGHTIEST HEROES. So whatever the next X-Men show is, it likely will be written mostly by others, with a different story editor. Which is good or bad, depending on your POV.
 
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Warren Ellis is writing the next X-men show.

Why do people ignore the things that I say :mad:
 
Does the "X-Men anime" count as a new show? Or will it just be some new Marvel animated DTV? I mean, "BATMAN: GOTHAM KNIGHTS" was basically an anime. :p

From what I saw of the X-Men anime, I wasn't impressed. I didn't have a desire for Wolverine as Spike Speagel. And yes, with Blum voicing, I know the irony.

I'm ignoring it because it looks dumb, and a proper X-Men show is inevitable.
 
X Men anime???? Where can I find a clip of this?

Now that First Class is a reality, I hope we will see a proper X Men show in the next 2 years.
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sLYjywXyyDI

That is an official Marvel trailer for the WOLVERINE anime. Or at least Wolverine is the only X-character featured. The animation's terrific (MADHOUSE, go figure), but it seems very generic. The only way it could be more so is if Wolverine summoned a mecha. Which at least would be too funny for words.

I'm not exactly counting down the hours until I see the rest.

Iron Man will also be getting an anime as well.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L4Q7xgxDJh4&feature=channel

The Iron Man anime actually looks much better, and more in tune with his premise.

Although it is a bit of an unfair culture exchange. Whenever we hear that an anime version of an American franchise is being made, through Japanese eyes, we are expected to jump and cheer as if it will be the Holy Grail. Yet if Americans try to Westernize a Japanese franchise, we're told to run for the hills.

Granted, to be fair, terrible films like the American DRAGON BALL and SPEED RACER don't help that equation any.
 
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Dread you are sort of pissing me off right now because 1) you are ignoring things I've said and reported. And 2) you are twisting **** around.

Warren Ellis announced an X-men series he was scripting at SDCC. The Marvel/Madhouse deal involved Ellis being like a story editor on FOUR projects. The 2 that got test clips shown were for Iron Man and Wolverine. Then Ellis said the other 2 he was working on were X-MEN and BLADE. Like Iron man and Wolverine, these are said to be separate 12 episode shows.

The Wolverine clip is a test clip. It's not the final product. Same with the Iron Man clip. The Wolverine show Madhouse is doing would not be the same as the X-men one.

So once again, Ellis as of last summer was working on a new X-men show.
 
Very well. It wasn't intentional, dude, sorry. I honestly hadn't heard much about the Ellis/SDCC thing.

Ellis' ASTONISHING X-MEN has been more weird than good, which I guess makes it a fit for anime. I imagine it may have the same cast as the book (Cyclops, Wolverine, Emma Frost, Armor, Storm, and Beast) and I'm not too impressed. MAD-HOUSE is a good studio, so it'll at least look lovely.

So, they are doing a WOLVERINE anime and an X-MEN anime with the same anime studio that are not related to each other? That makes a ton of sense. It's like doing a VENOM and SPIDER-MAN cartoon that aren't related.

There were some "anime intro's" to the 90's X-Men cartoon that was translated and distributed there that are an interesting novelty, but I imagine this 2010 version will be nothing like that. I'll probably make better judgments when we see some production artwork or a trailer. At any rate, from what I've seen and heard so far, I expect this will provide some great eye candy, but I'm curious whether it will be of much quality beyond that. "BATMAN: GOTHAM KNIGHTS" wasn't terribly good (I'd argue the commentary track between Kevin Conroy and Denny O'Neil was better than the film itself). The problem is that while there is good anime out there (and a lot of it), it seems when an anime version of another license is made, it tends to reflect less creativity and more cliches. I imagine the X-Men will be jumping 50 feet into the air and fighting giant monsters here.

Although it would be funny if, for some reason, Colossus was in it. And in a 12 episode anime, was depicted better than in 20 years of animation. :p

Expect Cyclops to unleash a Goku-sized optic blast while screaming, as well. :up:

Seriously, speaking, I imagine the X-Men could work as perhaps a GATCHAMAN style production, or maybe a school set shounen style thing.
 
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Very well. It wasn't intentional, dude, sorry. I honestly hadn't heard much about the Ellis/SDCC thing.

I've talked about it on the forums consistently.

Ellis' ASTONISHING X-MEN has been more weird than good, which I guess makes it a fit for anime. I imagine it may have the same cast as the book (Cyclops, Wolverine, Emma Frost, Armor, Storm, and Beast) and I'm not too impressed. MAD-HOUSE is a good studio, so it'll at least look lovely.

Ellis worked on your precious JLU series or have you put that out of your mind as well?

So, they are doing a WOLVERINE anime and an X-MEN anime with the same anime studio that are not related to each other? That makes a ton of sense. It's like doing a VENOM and SPIDER-MAN cartoon that aren't related.

I'm not sure if this is sarcasm or not. Wolverine and X-men are both their own self-sustaining brands at the end of the day.

There were some "anime intro's" to the 90's X-Men cartoon that was translated and distributed there that are an interesting novelty, but I imagine this 2010 version will be nothing like that. I'll probably make better judgments when we see some production artwork or a trailer. At any rate, from what I've seen and heard so far, I expect this will provide some great eye candy, but I'm curious whether it will be of much quality beyond that. "BATMAN: GOTHAM KNIGHTS" wasn't terribly good (I'd argue the commentary track between Kevin Conroy and Denny O'Neil was better than the film itself). The problem is that while there is good anime out there (and a lot of it), it seems when an anime version of another license is made, it tends to reflect less creativity and more cliches.

Madhouse had nothing to do with Gotham Knights. That was Studio 4*C. Madhouse DID on the other hand do the animation production for Planet Hulk and Hulk VS.

I imagine the X-Men will be jumping 50 feet into the air and fighting giant monsters here.

Yeah we never see stuff like that in American superhero comic books:

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i wld like to see something like JLU done w/the X-Men...over the years their have been so many mutants come and go from the team some we love and some we h8e, so I wld like to see the core team, whoever make it up, team up w/other mutants, sort of like a global X-Men team, just those mutants didn't want to come and live at the mansion instead they keep in contact w/Xavier mentally and whenever trouble arises Xavier dispatches those mutants that would help...

just an idea...it'll keep the focus off of wolverine and spotlight other characters
 
I've talked about it on the forums consistently.

Then I guess I put it out of my mind to focus on WOLVERINE AND THE X-MEN and other more "official" TV show versions. Quite frankly I'd have preferred to see that second season of W&TXM, as much as I complained about the first. But I guess with Kyle moving "upstairs" into movies (he is on the set of "THOR", according to ET), Yost focusing on an Avengers cartoon, and Disney throwing their weight around more on small screen media, that wasn't possible.

Dread said:
Ellis worked on your precious JLU series or have you put that out of your mind as well?

By "worked on" you mean "wrote one episode". Which was "DARK HEART", where the team fought a weird, amorphous monster. Which was a good episode, but hardly the best the show had. I'm judging more from his comics work. At times he's a poor man's Grant Morrison, full of weird ideas but sometimes botching the execution and narrative flow. He was the man who decided that Ultimate Dr. Doom needed goat legs and acidic spit, for instance. No one is handing him an Eisner for his ASTONISHING X-MEN work. A lot of his THUNDERBOLTS run was loopy. He's done some amazing stuff, don't get me wrong, but my general rule is I stop kissing a writer's pen for excellence if it's been at least five years since he's at least produced something halfway decent. Too many people in the industry worship at the feet of someone who hit one grand slam with a few stories and then never came anywhere close to it, rather than giving some new blood a chance.

Kyle and Yost were not always flawless, but they never wrote stuff that was too weird to follow. Ellis has. That's my concern.

On the flip side, he has quite a lot of black ops stories behind him, such as with RED. One would assume that would make sense to mine a little for handling the X-Men. But I've learned that assuming a writer will have a logical conclusion as how to handle a franchise can sometimes be about as reliable as picking the winning lottery numbers.

Dread said:
I'm not sure if this is sarcasm or not. Wolverine and X-men are both their own self-sustaining brands at the end of the day.

It's always bemused me. Wolverine's technically a spin off of the X-Men. That was where he got popular and how he branched out and off. Ironically, if you look at sales figures these days, Wolverine sells better with the Avengers or the X-Men than he does alone these days. Probably the issue is, Wolverine will appear in both his own anime AND X-Men, so it seems like a double dose. Sure, Iron Man will be pulling double duty on ARMORED ADVENTURES and EARTH'S MIGHTIEST HEROES, but at least we had a rest of a good decade since the last time he had a TV show. Wolverine's being full court pressed by mass media right when he is starting to slip from his prime in the comics, and I am curious how this will play out. I personally believe popularity robbed a lot of what made Logan cool (which was being an underdog scrapper, not Captain Perfect Fighter Leader) and with there always being a vocal minority of people screaming that Logan has been shoved down their necks for 15 years, I am curious whether this will help successfully boost Logan to the selling power he had in the 90's or if it will backfire as badly as having Daken take over Logan's main solo.

Dread said:
Madhouse had nothing to do with Gotham Knights. That was Studio 4*C. Madhouse DID on the other hand do the animation production for Planet Hulk and Hulk VS.

Didn't MADHOUSE animate the "Deadshot" portion of "GOTHAM KNIGHTS"? Granted, that was easily the best segment. At any rate, as a preview of what "anime versions of comic heroes" could be like, I don't think it scored a home run. Anime is more than following cliches, but it seems as if when there is an attempt to work on a Western franchise, they rely on them.

MADHOUSE usually always does a good animation job. Hell, they still have a lot of rep in my eyes for things that many younger anime fans have forgotten, such as NINJA SCROLL, DEMON CITY SHINJUKU, A WIND NAMED AMNESIA, and CYBER CITY ODEO 808 (among others). I remember every time I hear a commentary or interview about HULK VS. or PLANET HULK and someone gushes about the job MADHOUSE did on the animation, I roll my eyes because they make it sound like a shock when MADHOUSE is one of the very best animation studios in Japan. But the truth of the matter is I don't know what to expect here, and as a long jaded fan, mystery = disappointment the longer you know little of a project. Ellis isn't the master of the X-Men as a writer to me.

Dread said:
Yeah we never see stuff like that in American superhero comic books:

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Good example, actually. Whedon claimed in ASTONISHING X-MEN that the X-Men were supposed to go back to wearing costumes (rather than the leather jackets from the Morrison era) and basically be superheroes again. And how many genuine superhero acts did they do in 25 issues? I don't mean reacting to internal crises at the Mansion (which the X-Men usually always do endlessly), I mean really go out and fight a monster or stop a crime? Two. They saved hostages from Ord, and they fought a giant monster. In fact the latter was so bloody rare of the X-Men these days that the Fantastic Four were already there and Thing joked that the X-Men were sort of in their jurisdiction.

Usually, in various comic runs and TV cartoons, the X-Men usually only respond to mutant affairs or solve a crisis that effects them directly. They rarely are seen just going out and being heroes against, gasp, a natural disaster or a non-mutant, non-Shi'ar, non X-Wheelhouse threat. And to be fair, maybe this is for a good reason. The X-Men's strength is in their central metaphor; it makes them different from most other superhero teams and thus probably more relatable, especially to youths. Some probably fear making them seem generic if they ventured far from their premise and their wheelhouse, and thus they focus mostly on that in many runs. You COULD just depict them as a GATCHAMAN paramilitary type squad of spandex soldiers with super powers and team themed attacks, but would hardcore X-Men fans accept that if it didn't cover the usual themes of the X-books about tolerance or minority relations?

Anime actually have no end of franchises about teenagers with strange powers trying to learn about them as well as fend off threats in a school or dojo type setting. With only modest re-writes, NARUTO is very close to that, as one obvious example. The dilemma is whether the X-Men just become the wrapping paper to something that has little to do about them, or if the anime goes overboard to grab every cliche it can get from the anime genre without really honing in on something unique unto itself?

Will the WOLVERINE anime merely be VAMPIRE HUNTER D with claws. or will it have something to say about the character that works? Same with the X-Men one. That is the question.

At any rate, if 12 X-Men anime episodes have already been ordered, I do hope Ellis and MADHOUSE learn the lesson that they cannot rely on getting renewed; they HAVE to put their best foot forward. They can't just make mistakes left and right and assume a second season will salvage them, as I think W&TXM did in spots. They have to hit the ground running and never slow down, and if that sounds like a tall order, it is...but TSSM did it. Every episode has to work towards a subplot yet be unique unto itself, and they can't just assume characters or plots that are hinted can be embellished later...there may not be a later. Be excellent NOW! ;)
 
Just make Astonishing X-Men: The Animated Series. :o
 
Hey Dread!

I've seen the clips from the Wolverine and Iron Man anime last year-the X Men anime was news to me, but I see no clips are available yet. Do you know this will resemble anything like the X Men manga, Misfits?

I wasn't impressed with the Wolverine clip-mainly because I don't believe that Wolverine, at least visually, lend himself to that style of animation (compare especially to other characters like Gambit or Psylocke, which would suit the visual style better). Do you know when these episodes will be released, and whether this will be a strait to DVD release?

BTW will you be heading to SDCC this year?
 
Just make Astonishing X-Men: The Animated Series. :o

It already is a motion comic. Which is Orwellian for "poorly animated show". :p

Hey Dread!

I've seen the clips from the Wolverine and Iron Man anime last year-the X Men anime was news to me, but I see no clips are available yet. Do you know this will resemble anything like the X Men manga, Misfits?

I wasn't impressed with the Wolverine clip-mainly because I don't believe that Wolverine, at least visually, lend himself to that style of animation (compare especially to other characters like Gambit or Psylocke, which would suit the visual style better). Do you know when these episodes will be released, and whether this will be a strait to DVD release?

BTW will you be heading to SDCC this year?

No. I live in NYC and the SDCC is way too far and expensive for me to fly over to make. I try to make the occasional convention in New York.

X-MEN: MISFITS is a shojo manga title (girl's comics), so I doubt it will bare much resemblances. Why? The last time an X-Men show managed to strongly claim a female demographic audience, it was X-MEN EVOLUTION. The result? Botched DVD release. The show still remains very popular among girls, I've noticed. 14,000 entries in Fan Fiction.net (which is usually populated by girls), and most of the fan sites I have seen, both current and old, were run by girls. Without even trying, Marvel and Kid's WB actually managed to hook both boys and girls here, and I think both blinked for whatever reason for years. At least Evo is available for free online.

But more often than not, comic book people aim for young males, and see girls as a happy accident if they're there. Warren Ellis is writing it, but I expect it to either be straightforward or weird, not like a girl's harem series like MISFITS is (Kitty Pryde, the main heroine, is one of the only female characters in the cast, surrounded by hunky men). Yes, "harem" is a semi-common trope in manga - male versions are "AH MY GODDESS" and more famously, "TENCHI MUYO". Incidentally, "SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN" at times came close (with up to three ladies chasing around young Peter Parker).

There actually was a manga version of the X-Men in the 90's, but it was basically an adaptation of the cartoon series, complete with Capcom style announced attacks. Marvel reprinted some of it in the late 90's, although the manga SPIDER-MAN from the 70's and 80's saw a better run.

To be fair, Wolverine spent a lot of his life in Japan so you could claim that alone can lend itself to some anime. But these aren't meant to fit into American canon per say; they are meant to be complete reinterpretations. So Wolverine could be a Vampire Hunter D style ninja fighting monsters in feudal Japan with metal claws, or the X-Men could end up baring "sentai" elements for all we know. I suppose so long as each piece is entertaining and works on it's own merits, it should be okay. There will be plenty who don't try it because it is anime, or because it is different, or both. That may be about 10% of the audience on a good day.

Aside for Warren Ellis writing the X-Men anime, nothing is known about it quite yet.

It may become a problem if viewers get the feeling that Marvel is abandoning shows too soon, and so don't even bother investing themselves in them. 26 episodes is not very much in today's day and age; it was barely a long run in the 80's. In the past 4 years alone, Marvel has commissioned and abandoned in some way at least 3 cartoons that have come and gone in 26 episodes despite a lot of flare and bluster. AVENGERS: EARTH'S MIGHTIEST HEROES will get 52 and IRON MAN: ARMORED ADVENTURES and SUPER HERO SQUAD will likely get about the same, but what about the rest? Will audiences reasonably figure, "If not even Marvel gives a **** about their X-Men shows, why should I hassle myself to watch it? I'll just wait for DVD, if the reviews are good."

I think Marvel sees this as a bit of a pandering exercise. "Ooo, the kids LOVE anime, let's give them anime!" And they're not alone. WB did that with TEEN TITANS, which utilized more anime cliches than SAILOR MOON, and that lasted 5 seasons and a movie. The problem is that it isn't 2005 anymore, and the anime market is actually starting to contract a bit. A legion of fans who illegally DL their anime have taken their toll, combined with DVD collections that are cheaply priced, far cheaper than when VHS ruled the day. Now, in 2010-2011, may actually not have been the best time to jump on the anime bandwagon, but Marvel's all about missing signals these days. They don't realize that timing matters, that impressions matter, that signals matter.

I guess this shows how much I have aged a bit. I still enjoy anime, especially good anime (although I have nostalgia for older stuff I liked, even if it is terrible), but less so at 28 than when I was 18, or 15. If you'd told the 18 year old me that an X-Men anime was coming, I'd have rocketed to the moon in glee. But now I'm just wondering what they do with it, and if releasing so many short series rather than one that has patience and faith to it like Evolution or the 90's show, would be better off.

Craig Kyle used to sometimes get annoyed that so many people put the 90's X-Men show on a pedestal, despite it's many, many flaws and shortcomings. A simple reason is because it lasted so damned long. 5 seasons, 76 episodes. Name me the last Marvel cartoon that lasted that long. You can't, because as of now, it has yet to exist. In fact, Marvel has yet to MATCH it. That is why the 90's show never dies from fan memory, because it had the longest to cement itself there. If Marvel wants an X-Men show, or a Spider-Man show, or even an Avengers show, to stand the test of time, it has to not only be excellent. It has to stand the test of time by LASTING FOR ENOUGH TIME. Is spitting out a 12 episode anime and then likely doing something totally different 2 years later really the best strategy for keeping the X-Men on the airwaves? If this anime is going to be the bee's knees, then stick with it a while, have half the confidence and faith in it that fans are expected to have.

Maybe I feel a little jilted at all this promotion for W&TXM season 2 that was going to be so awesome, and them, POOF, nothing, because Momma Disney loves her some Iron Man now.
 
No. I live in NYC and the SDCC is way too far and expensive for me to fly over to make. I try to make the occasional convention in New York.

Similar logistical problem...Well, one day... I'm heading to NYC next week. Is the MoCCA worth a visit?

X-MEN: MISFITS is a shojo manga title (girl's comics), so I doubt it will bare much resemblances. Why? The last time an X-Men show managed to strongly claim a female demographic audience, it was X-MEN EVOLUTION.

Yes, I guessed as much that Misfits was shojo. I would argue that all X Men shows claim a large female demographic compared to other comic book based shows on the basis of 1) there are major female characters who are relatable (empowered yet flawed, interesting and multicultural) and 2) X Men tend to lean on more inter-character drama than other super-hero shows, much due to the group dynamic nature of the premise. It really pisses me off sometimes how most, if not all, comic companies pander to boys (Super Hero Squad anyone?) and completely ignore girls, in spite of the fact that, as you pointed out, we make a huge part of the fan bases of comics like X Men and their shows. We don't all want to watch ponies and princesses, FFS!!!! My 8 year old was crushed when season 2 was cancelled. We cringe at our other options-Disney channel shows about girls who kick butt but complain that they rather be shopping and obsessing about boys and make-up. It's insulting!

I guess this shows how much I have aged a bit. I still enjoy anime, especially good anime (although I have nostalgia for older stuff I liked, even if it is terrible), but less so at 28 than when I was 18, or 15. If you'd told the 18 year old me that an X-Men anime was coming, I'd have rocketed to the moon in glee. But now I'm just wondering what they do with it, and if releasing so many short series rather than one that has patience and faith to it like Evolution or the 90's show, would be better off.

I grew up with 70's and 80's anime (American titles: Battle of the Planets, Voltron, Robotech) and I enjoy good anime (MiniClare is a big fan of Studio Ghibli movies) but I totally agree with you here. Not to mention, for every good anime, there is a dozen crap ones (Pokemon, ya hear me???)

Craig Kyle used to sometimes get annoyed that so many people put the 90's X-Men show on a pedestal, despite it's many, many flaws and shortcomings.

Never understood his dislike of the 90's show. Maybe he really disliked its "Claremontness". It's not like Evo or WATXM didn't have their flaws either.
 
Only nostalgic fans like that overrated 90s show.So I'm with Craig Kyle on this one .I used to like the show growing up but X men Evo and WATXM has exposed how average that show really is.
 
i just found out that they cancelled watx i don't know how this passed by me i am kinda sad but am kinda happy at the same time

I just hope we have a good xmen show that can do story arcs from the comics. I would like to see a more serious xmen show that can do storylines from recent xmen storylines like Messiah Comlex or House of M but i think it would be to complex but i would like to see these storylines
 

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