Extinction.
The word is thrown around a lot. With more than 1,000 animal species endangered worldwide, the problem seems so big and distant that it's easy to ignore the threat.
But what if it was
your species being wiped out?
That's the focus of June's
X-Men: Endangered Species, a one-shot issue by Mike Carey and Scott Eaton that kicks off a crisis that will continue in stories running through X-Men books as part of this summer's X-Men event.
X-Men readers found out in January's
X-Men Annual #1 that the fateful words "no more mutants," uttered by Wanda Maximoff at the end of the House of M event in 2004, were even more devastating to mutants than originally realized. Not only did the majority of existing mutants lose their powers, but there has also been an end to any new mutant births.
As Marvel E.I.C. Joe Quesada
revealed in his weekly New Joe Fridays column, the writers behind the company's various X-Men comics met for a January summit and put together an event that Uncanny scribe
Ed Brubaker recently told us "will rock all the X books back on their asses."
Friday, Quesada debuted the cover to
Endangered Species, naming the creative team - Mike Carey, writing, Scott Eaton on pencils, and a cover by Marc Silvestri.
We caught up with both Carey and project editor Andy Schmidt to talk about the upcoming one-shot as well as what may follow.
First off, Schmidt:
Newsarama: To start with Andy, give us the big picture, what is
Endangered Species, and where do its roots lie?
Andy Schmidt: Technically speaking, an endangered species is one on the brink of extinction. You know, like mutants in the Marvel Universe. This came about from
House of M, when the Scarlet Witch said, No more mutants. Since then, there have only been about 200 mutants left on planet Earth.
What were doing now is taking that situation and really examining what it means, scientifically and emotionally. No mutants have been born since that day, and so the X-Men, and in fact all mutants, are beginning to realize that they are it. They are all thats left of the mutant race. Forever.
NRAMA: Mike Carey told us a little bit about this, and that the Annuals story would be leading towards this, but can you point out things a little bit on just what led the mutants to this point?
AS: The
X-Men Annual cemented the idea that no new mutants have cropped up since M-Day. Mikes been leading into this story for quite some time and dancing around it. Now is the time to really dive in. The X-Men now have certainty that they are dying. Now they have to deal with the reality of that knowledge and the weight of it.
NRAMA: So what gets the ball rolling in the one-shot?
AS: In the one-shot, we open on a funeral.
NRAMA: Who died?
AS: Im not going to lie to you, this isnt about who died, its about the significance of one more mutants death in the Marvel Universe. Its interesting to see who shows up to the funeral and why. What are they after? Is there tension when a villain shows up? Does the
House of M event shake Wolfsbanes faith? How does a school dedicated to new mutants cope with having no freshman class? What do any of them do?
Thats what
Endangered Species is about, and it all starts in the one-shot.
NRAMA: From the looks of reader response to date, it looks as if Mike's really surprised a lot of people with his X-Men work. In your view, what's he bringing to the table, and thereby, made him work for this one-shot?
AS: Hes got great ideas, and that has been more than evident on his
X-Men run. But
Endangered Species comes from his heart. This is bar none, Mikes best and most heartfelt and tense script thus far. Its really going to surprise a lot of people, even his
X-Men fans!
NRAMA: How encompassing is it? That is, will the allies in the Marvel Universe know or realize that this is going down, or is it an X-Universe-centric event?
AS: There will be Marvel Universe guest stars where appropriate. The mutant race dying off
is a big deal.
NRAMA: So from the one-shot, things go to
X-Men #200, right?
AS: Right.
Endangered Species back-ups start in
X-Men #200. They will run through four titles (
X-Men, Uncanny X-Men, New X-Men, and X-Factor) for 17 parts total. They will be coming out weekly.
As for what content is in them, the Beast is our point of view character as he tries to track down the cause and then reverse the effects of the disappearance of the mutant gene. Its a tough story, and it will have plenty of guest stars. Its intense.
NRAMA: Why Beast?
AS: Nobody else is going to do it. Its him or no one.
NRAMA: Who are the creative teams for the back-up stories?
AS: There will be announcements made about this later, but Mike Carey is locking in the structure for the overall 17-parts. Well have some great writers and pencilers on them.
NRAMA: The backup stories run through October - any hints as to what this may mean for the X-Men in November?
AS: Only that
Endangered Species is
the X-Men story to watch for the next few months. And in November, youll finally understand why.
And now, moving over to Mike Carey
Newsarama: Mike, was this part of the X-Men event something you suggested, or was it a result of the X-Men summit in January?
Mike Carey: It was something that came out of the X-Men summit, so it was something that all the X-Men writers came up with, brainstorming together when we were all together in January in New York. And as with the
X-Men Annual, it's a way of bringing forth the implications of what's already happened in the X-Men universe in
House of M and
Decimation. It's kind of exploring the aftermath.
NRAMA: In the
X-Men Annual, you revealed that no new mutants have been born since we heard Wanda Maximoff say, "No More Mutants." She effectively put an end to any mutants ever showing up in the future?
MC: In the
X-Men Annual, we established that there hasn't been a single mutant birth since Wanda uttered those words. She not only suppressed the effect of the X-gene on current mutants, but she also put a end to the birth of mutants. There hasn't been a mutant birth since.
NRAMA: In the
Endangered Species one-shot, you'll be kicking off a larger story, right?
MC: Yes.
Endangered Species is not just a one-shot. There's a one-shot, and then there are going to be a number of short stories following it. The one-shot is a powerful and disturbing statement -- a sort of snapshot -- of the new status quo. And then coming out of that, there are going to be a number of short stories which we'll feature in
Uncanny, X-Men, X-Factor and
New X-Men between July and November. The story will be going off in different directions, and we'll be getting a sense of the enormous scale of this crisis and the number of things on every level -- from the very small and personal picture to the macro-cosmic -- the number of things that are going to be left broken by this and the number of things that are at stake here.
NRAMA: And the short stories that follow the one-shot -- are they going to be completely different, self-contained stories, or is there an ongoing storyline running through them?
MC: There is a thread running through the stories that has one of my favorite X-Men, Beast, very much at the heart.
NRAMA: Is Beast at the center of the one-shot?
MC: Not so much. There are a lot of characters from all of the X-books who come together on this significant occasion. And it's a strange mix of characters. Not necessarily ones you'd expect to see, and not necessarily the big headline-grabbing characters.
NRAMA: Such as?
MC: OK, you'll have Rictor and Wolfsbane there, and Madrox from
X-Factor. And Mercury and X-23. And Xavier will be there, as well as Cannonball from the adjectiveless team. Wolverine will be there, and Cyclops, Emma and Beast will all be there. So will Iceman.
NRAMA: You have mutants who kept their powers and some who lost them, with, for example, Iceman having temporarily lost his powers and Rictor not having mutant powers anymore.
MC: That's true. And that comes up in the course of the story.
NRAMA: So all these characters come together, and what happens?
MC: I don't want to tell too much about the storyline in the one-shot, because it's a very, very different approach to storytelling. It's not like any X-Men story I've ever told and unlike any X-Men story that has been told in recent years. It's a vignette in a way. The focus is much more on emotion and relationship and character than on action. There is very little high-profile action. It's about the realization, the acceptance that mutants are past the tipping point and have become a red-line species and are heading for extinction. And it's possibly reached the point where it's irreversible.
And then the story continues with the Beast exploring a number of avenues and possibilities that might change their situation.
NRAMA: And of course X-Men fans will be left to wonder whether that situation will be fixed...
MC: Yes, that's going to become the central question in the second half of this year. That question is going to be hanging over every single character in the X-verse.
NRAMA: Going back to what you said about using a different approach to storytelling for the one-shot, if I asked who the villain is in this issue ... it's not that kind of a story, is it?
MC: It's not that kind of a story. There will be at least one major villain who will appear in the story -- not as an antagonist for the X-Men. He's there for the same reason that they are, and they don't fight him.
NRAMA: It also sounds like it's a story that focuses more on mutants in general more than any team of X-Men.
MC: Yes, because it's mixed and matched characters from all of the teams. So yeah, I think it has a wider concept than just the X-Men.
NRAMA: We saw Exodus and Sinister linked to this discovery in the
X-Men Annual. Will they be playing a role in the upcoming story?
MC: They're not really integral to
Endangered Species, although one of the two may get a cameo.
NRAMA: Does the threat of extinction cause mutants to unite? We've already seen some former villains and heroes working together somewhat in response to the O*N*E actions during
Decimation, where they rounded up and interred mutants at the Xavier mansion, but does this threat of extinction bring them together even more than in the past?
MC: I think it will make some unlikely alliances, yes. It will make other people re-examine their priorities and perhaps come to conclusions that will be surprising. This is like a scourge in which every single character has to be tested. They each have to respond to it in their own way. Some of them will break, and others will discover strengths or aspects of themselves that they didn't know were there. They will all re-examine themselves in the light of this.
NRAMA: You showed in the
Annual how shocking this was to the mutants who found out. Extinction is a word we use to apply to animals all the time, but applying it to a humanoid species is a whole new level of scary.
MC: Yeah, it is. And I think it has an analogy -- and I don't want to get too morbid -- but it has an analogy in this whole question of climate change and the fact that the human race is looking at a situation that within three or four generations, we may make the planet uninhabitable for our species. You can get into a mood where you do feel kind of apocalyptic. There is a movie,
Children of Men, that explored the same idea where the human birth rate dropped to zero. No new children were being born.
But it's that staring into the future and wondering if the future is going to be there. It's a terrifying and haunting predicament.
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