Or the ones who died in space were skrulls and never the real mccoys to begin with! What a tweest!
Aw **** there goes the neighborhood
Oh oh what we are reading / for some time
ALL SOME TYPE OF FAKE DREAM
Suck it M. Night
Or the ones who died in space were skrulls and never the real mccoys to begin with! What a tweest!
No I'm not ignoring anything and understand the 'resurrection' was just a roundabout version of cloning.
Seriously, the new bodies are grown by the 5 using DNA samples Sinister keeps on every mutant, and the minds transferred to the 'husks' by Xavier from copies of the originals he continuously makes via Cerebro. Same basic principle as the 6th Day Arnie movie, or Spider-man's Ben Riley.
Now they are 100% perfect copies, but they are still copies. The original people died in space and nothing about the process used to clone them suggests thier souls (which isn't an unknown in the books) could have joined these duplicates, rather than passed on to whatever afterlife before the things were grown.
So my knowing all that does make it harder for me to feel quite the same about the characters brought back with this method.
Much like Ben Riley (or Gwen and all the other clones in Spidey) are never the same as the original to me.
Btw, I wouldn't be surprised if there's a twist or several to come from the whole resurrection thing. Might take them a while to play it out though.
The afterlife is ‘technically’ part of Marvel continuity (and Jack Kirby is ‘technically’ ‘God’), so if you want to make an argument that there’s strict Judeo-Christian set of post-death rules for a resurrection to result in a soul-reclaimed and soul-equipped being, then cool.
The problem is that we don’t do that. Almost every single character death we undo, or character we bring back through whatever story construct or general shenanigans doesn’t go on a soul quest to recover their essence (in the past, yes, sometimes, but not anymore–imagine if we did that nowadays in our current death-resurrection cycle, that’s a lotta issues).
Now, if you want to make the argument that recovering your soul is a lot like William Gibson’s explanation for jet lag (souls don’t travel at the same speed as planes so jet lag is just your body waiting for the soul to catch up), and it’s just floating around waiting to reattach itself to it’s rightful reanimated host, also cool.
But if that’s the case then what about duplicate copies, which one gets the soul? I dunno, that sounds like a story to me, but that’s also why they’re not allowing copies of characters on Krakoa. But what if there’s a mistake and you think someone’s dead, but make a copy anyway? Well, again, that sounds like a story… and we even have a series built around resurrection problems coming out next year.
The broader point is we bring back characters all the time in much less elegant ways, and this one is actually based on an experience Professor Xavier had in earlier X-Men comics, so it makes sense he would think of something like this. He knew it worked.
The comic says their essences are put into perfect replica bodies, which is exactly a ressurrection for the character. There is also an Omega level reality warper on The 5 which can explain away a lot. Did you see Nightcrawler up until HoX the same way since he was using a new body?
Hickman had this to say about "souls" in an interview:
The resurrected X-men are the same characters and they are still the X-men we know.
Yup, that's where it's from. Forgive me, it's been a very long time since I read X-Tinction Agenda.Isn't that from the X-Tinction Agenda where Jean and Logan were prisoners in the same cell at it looked like Logan was going to die? If so, that seemed like an act of kindness/mercy on the part of Jean. (To quote Homer Simpson: "Ah, sweet pity. Where would my love life been without it?")
Not that there isn't an element of mutual attraction there. Jean was retconned into finding Logan intriguing when she came back to life from Dark Phoenix Saga and Claremont had a chip on his shoulder about editors messing with the happy ending he gave Scott with Madelyne Pryor.
One thing I would like to see touched upon in this new version of the X-Men is intersectionality. How someone who's black and a mutant will have a different experience vs. Someone who's white and a mutant vs. Someone who is gay and a mutant. Someone with a pre-existing oppressed identity becomes a mutant and now their identities intersect.
Jean is drawn with a rather large bum here.Nope. This was in 1990.
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It's true. Logan's attraction to Jean was a plot point way back in the 70's. And frankly that's where it should have stayed. He had a (one-sided) crush on Jean, got over it and fell in love with Mariko. It was a perfectly nice little subplot.She got that Kardashian ass there
but yeah, even the first episode of the Animated series had the love triangle going on
The Jean/Logan thing predates the movies and New X-Men by quite some time
New X-Men just made it official that Logan was better for Jean than Scott could ever hope to be
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Agreed. Enough already. It sends me to sleep.It's true. Logan's attraction to Jean was a plot point way back in the 70's. And frankly that's where it should have stayed. He had a (one-sided) crush on Jean, got over it and fell in love with Mariko. It was a perfectly nice little subplot.
Sadly, between Claremont's pettyness and the every new version of the X-Men (cartoon, movies, Ultimate) choosing to re-use that story, the boring pairing of Logan/Jean continues its chemistry-free existence. I just hope MCU will resist the urge to give that particular dead horse yet another beating.
I just saw this on twitter. If only she's an actress. I want someone that looks as close to her as possible and with the same goddess-like vibe to play storm. Marvel better be taking note, people can't wait to see MCU storm. If they get her casting right, there's going to be a lot of goodwill from fans.Perfection. Feige better not mess this up:
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Gorgeous dark black skin and visually arresting.
Thinking about how the MCU X-Men movie could be, I'd have Bobby and Jubilee as the POVs teenage characters. Showing them parallelly being bullied at school and rejected at home. Jubilee bullied for being chinese and rejected for being a mutant, and Bobby bullied for being a mutant and rejected for being gay.
I'd have parental rejection as one of the main themes of the first movie.
Yes sir.Perfection. Feige better not mess this up:
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Gorgeous dark black skin and visually arresting.
It would be very cool if they could find an actual African/Kenyan actress for Storm. It would probably have to be a relatively unknown -- newcomer, which is my preferred casting model for these characters. A search across the African diaspora to find the MCU's StormAn actress than can give that "larger than life"/powerfull/exotic vibe would be perfect for Storm.
One thing is for sure, it shouldnt be an american actress (at least to me)
That would be amazing. Rejected by their parents/society, they find their true home in the X-Men: a group of outcasts -- where they learn that being who you are in the face of adversity is something to be proud of; Celebrated even. Bobby & Jubilee could be the avatars of the mutant coming of age in it's purest form.
Parental rejection would be starting the series pretty dark/intense and angsty, that could work but would probably demand the series start in a tone similar to the Fox series, not something more like typical MCU or TAS fun (at least fun at times), would make Jubilee very different from how she had been before or at least TAS, and would imply the mass public had become very intolerant pretty quickly. I liked that TAS had Jubilee and her adoptive parents still loving each other, them concerned about but not rejecting her, even though the school was considered to be a better environment for her.
Perfection. Feige better not mess this up:
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Gorgeous dark black skin and visually arresting.
And further expanding on your point, "parental rejection" does not have to be presented through the lense of a dark, gloomy world like the Fox films. Angsty? Sure, but angst has always been a major part of the teenage experience and a part of the X-Men franchise as a consequence. There are plenty of coming of age stories that deal with rejection from parents & teen angst.A family coming together is really what I have in mind for the first movie.
A big part of "being a mutant" is an allegory to being LGBTQ+. And parental rejection is, wanting or not, a big part of the experience of many LGBTQ+ people. If they're aiming for that kind of allegory, it just makes sense.
Oh, for sure. Imagine how devastating that must be, to have your brother adopted by another family to live a fairly comfortable life while you are stuck in the system, alone. That's why I could see him bonding with Jubilee. Because he knows how it feels to be yanked through Foster care, longing for a sense of family. Charles gave Scott a father figure and the X-Men gave him a sense of belonging that he hadn't had since the plane accidentOn another note, maybe it doesn't quite fit fully the "parental rejection" theme, but Scott could serve that in some way.
I mean, if I remember correctly, both Scott and Alex were sent to a foster care, but Alex was quickly adopted while Scott remained there for a really long time. A lot of people are "eager" to adopt kids, but they always overlook and reject older kids. This is something that always comes to my mind when I think about Scott. How that could've affected him. But I don't remember anything hinting that in the comics really.
One of the strengths in FOX's approach was trying to bring more psychological complexity to the characters. And man, when I think about Scott, Alex and their relationship... it's such a huge fertile ground. Too bad one of FOX's major problem was just being obsessed over the same characters and not giving anybody else a chance.
It could've been a good angle to explore.