TheCorpulent1
SHAZAM!
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Those are some mighty mature-looking kids if it is. Maybe Iron Man is the teen Armored Adventures version under the helmet, but I doubt it.
Those are some mighty mature-looking kids if it is. Maybe Iron Man is the teen Armored Adventures version under the helmet, but I doubt it.
I agree withthe founding members thing my biggest issue with alot of these shows is randomly deaging characters and changing continutiy ie. xmen evolution.
This is what I mean by being better than A:UTS by default. Having a low bar is an advantage sometimes. I mean just look at how Bruce Timm struggles to top himself. Avengers as a TV show at least doesn't have that. It has some impatient andWeb-Head said:I already see this being better than that crapfest we got a few years ago that didn't even have Cap and IM on the team. At least this show's gonna have the three main members.
Count me in on it.
I wouldn't expect tight continuity from any adaptation. Hell, it's hard enough to get tight continuity from the comics at this point. Expect changes. Hopefully they'll be minimized, but even if they're not it might still be cool. X-Men: Evolution, in spite of its wonky character ages and different storylines, is considered a decent show, if I'm not mistaken.
get Paul Dini & Bruce Timm to moonlight under a pseudonym..
wanted guests
Luke Cage
Blade
Falcon
Photon/Pulsar
Iceman
Spider-Man
Cloak & Dagger
Yeah, I'd like major plot elements to be brought over largely unchanged. Loki should be the motivating factor for the team's creation, Hank should build Ultron, Wonder Man, the Black Knight, and the Vision should be villains who defect to the Avengers, Kang needs to make plenty of appearances, etc.
I also think Hank and Jan should have some kind of falling out and Hank should leave in disgrace, only to come back to save the day later on. They could kiddify it a bit by leaving out the domestic violence and making Hank be under some kind of mind control (which is actually close to the comic version anyway, since he was having a mental breakdown at the time).
He's been involved a lot more than that. Dane's time on the Avengers is almost as long as some of the team's big names. He just comes and goes a lot and tends to stick around during periods that weren't all that popular. If it were me, I'd make him a full-time member and leave him there, but I'm obviously biased.I am shocked, SHOCKED that you would mention Black Knight.Kidding. Yeah, it would be good to see him. He was involved in the Avengers since the 60's, after all. His uncled was part of the Lethal Legion or Masters of Evil or whatever a few times.
I love who Ant-Man has a.. well, an ant, in his hand
He's been involved a lot more than that. Dane's time on the Avengers is almost as long as some of the team's big names. He just comes and goes a lot and tends to stick around during periods that weren't all that popular. If it were me, I'd make him a full-time member and leave him there, but I'm obviously biased.
I'm happy with him on MI-13 too. I like his friendship with Captain Britain and he's always had one foot in Arthurian lore, so it's definitely appropriate.Hes on MI-3 now, and I feel its more appropriate. Considering he left Excalibur for their lack of teamwork and MI-3 is an establish government agency I doubt he'd move (at least for the forseeable future)
He's been involved a lot more than that. Dane's time on the Avengers is almost as long as some of the team's big names. He just comes and goes a lot and tends to stick around during periods that weren't all that popular. If it were me, I'd make him a full-time member and leave him there, but I'm obviously biased.
Yeah, hopefully. Hopefully the roster's also allowed to expand rather than staunchly sticking with the founders. I like the founders and all, but the Scarlet Witch, the Vision, Wonder Man, Hercules, and a few others have almost as much right to be on the team as the founders do at this point.
Who said anything about the big three leaving? I just want the ranks to expand to include more of the major Avengers than just the founders. You know how TV adaptations tend to want to stick to one consistent cast far more than the comics tend to. Look at the '90s X-Men cartoon, where they stuck to that specific cast so doggedly that even founding X-Men like Iceman and Archangel were reduced to tiny cameos. I don't want to see the Vision or Wonder Man end up that way. I want them on the team eventually, but alongside Cap, Thor, Iron Man, and the others, not replacing them.That's kind of like saying plenty of Justice Leaguers have a right to be on the roster as Batman, Superman, and Wonder Woman. It may be true, but we all know the lesson of stacking your Big Three on the bench. Cap, Thor, and Iron Man are who the casual audience want to see, and why not?
Hulk leaves the team early so he could always be like a reoccurring guest character and they could continue to rotate that spot for other members now and then. Plus, there are only 6, and most team shows have seven.
Who said anything about the big three leaving? I just want the ranks to expand to include more of the major Avengers than just the founders. You know how TV adaptations tend to want to stick to one consistent cast far more than the comics tend to. Look at the '90s X-Men cartoon, where they stuck to that specific cast so doggedly that even founding X-Men like Iceman and Archangel were reduced to tiny cameos. I don't want to see the Vision or Wonder Man end up that way. I want them on the team eventually, but alongside Cap, Thor, Iron Man, and the others, not replacing them.
Awesome, can't wait for this series. UTS just didn't cut it.
2011 is so far away.
That is the dilemma. The majority of our animation market is still geared towards children. The problem is there is more competition than existed even into the mid-late 90's. Note that even in 1997 or so, you still had to pay for Internet by the hour most times. Cable was still considered a luxury with fewer channels until the 21st century. Nowadays the computer, game systems, DL's, and more cable channels and easy access have virtually destroyed the network TV cartoon market. It made cartoons, which were always expensive to do well, too expensive to invest as much into. Hence looking for easy outs, such as overseas animation, steamlined designs, even FLASH animation via computer and of course anime dubbing.
That said, Saturday mornings still deliver enough ratings that at least 3-4 major networks still offer cartoons from 7 or 8:00 a.m. to Noon, albeit some of them, like Disney, just re-air stuff from cable.
The problem with cartoons, also, is that as they still rely on being geared towards children because merchandise covers a lot of costs and often is how profits are maintained. High toy sales are likely a good reason why the newest run of TMNT cartoons have lasted 7 seasons. But even the action figure market is slowing down because kids "grow up" faster and have more technology to play with. Back when I was a kid, it wasn't unheard of for kids to still be playing with action figures until age 11-12, which is deep into junior high. Nowadays, such kids would be considered "babies" and so the toys are ditched for the controllers more and more. I haven't looked at toy figures but I can't imagine they reach the hieghts of the 80's. Adults collect toys, but that can't make up for this gap. And since adults don't buy toys in droves, gearing cartoons for them, beyond prime time comedies, is usually seen as nil.
But, there still is hope. Both SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN and WOLVERINE AND THE X-MEN offer content that should please adults as well as kids; the latter is especially dark. So there's hope for AVENGERS: EMH to be geared properly. I am sure Yost & Ceilio likely are aware of the past failure of an Avengers show. Yost in particular in interviews usually knows his stuff. They know there is pressure to do it right; these sorts of opportunities only come around once a decade (or less). To drop the ball twice in a row would be unforgiveable. Still, like I said, it is hard to be worse than A:UTS. To me, that's the second worst comic book cartoon ever made (topped only by Superfriends, which refused to die and still taints network expectations for fluffy shows).
As for "nothing like Gargoyles ever again", I will say that Wiesman is off to a great start in SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN, and if you want some truly underrated comic cartoons, then the first 5 seasons of TMNT from 2002-2006 are some great stuff (which Wiesman also worked on for a while, as well as Yost and other writers). That entire span of over 100 episodes is truly an accomplishment. FAST FORWARD in 2007 bungled things, but they're trying to right the ship in '08.
I actually find it a GOOD SIGN that the roster shown are the founders. That is keeping with Avengers history. There's nothing barring The Hulk from becoming a "part timer" after the first few episodes and bringing in others like Black Panther, Vision, etc. Pym is there and through him come Ultron and Vision anyway (and if you want to be really faithful, Vision's brain patterns from the seemingly dead Wonder Man; one of the few things A:UTS tried to do right). JL/U didn't have every founding member appear in every episode and often had guest stints from B and C listers (B'WANNA BEAST for F's sake got an entire episode). There were tons of geek references in FANTASTIC FOUR: WGH, which Yost co-wrote.
There's potential here, even if it takes getting past some Disney HERCULES esque exaggerated character models.
There's potential here, even if it takes getting past some Disney HERCULES esque exaggerated character models.
I think this show is another step in the right direction for hand-drawn animated series too. TMNTand SSM was a turning point IMO in righting the ship. What I find is that kids and adults love more "adult" animated hows and hate it when a show is dumbed down. "Darker" more adult-themed stories actually do better in the ratings with kids and adults.
For me, the art design really isn't as important as the storytelling is. Whether it's the Kirbyesque Timm design of DCAU, The Bratz-esque style of SSM or thr photorealistic style of Gargoyles, a good story makes the viewer want to watch it over and over again. I don't mind the TF animated style designs, it's very colorful and unique.
Greg Weisman is a great writer and he adds a lot of depth to his characters in his storytelling. If he can write Hank and Jan's relationship with the complexity of Elisa and Goliath, this series will be awesome. I can't wait to see what he's going to do with Ultron. There's a lot of potential for Pym; his inferiority complex, his need to measure up to the other more powerful Avengers. The core founders had great personalities that contrasted one another. That's going to make for good storytelling. I have nothing but anticipation for this series. Now if the studios can do something about the crap distribution for these shows (Bringing them back as anchors for their Staurday morning lineups like TNBA and STAS) I see a light at the end of the tunnel for Hand-drawn animation. If Transformers Animated, TMNT and SSM were on the same channel, I'd have a reason to stay in on Saturday mornings
Exactly. Kids don't like being talked down do, and don't see themselves as kids. All they want to be seen as is adults, even if they're not yet. Kids are exposed to more thing than we were and some people lament how they grow up too fast. Maybe. But it is what it is. I always roll my eyes when kids easily can see far worse things on WWE or the average PG-13 movie than a lot of cartoons. I recall being a kid in the 80's and rolling my eyes when Leonardo or Wolverine could never cut anything but robots. Virtually ignoring the cornball morality lessons.
Think of the best shows down the line and they are always the shows that pushed things, showed that maturity level.
Art design can be gualling if you dislike it, but so far, the models in A:EMH don't look too bad. The only one that is iffy is Iron Man's helmet. Exaggerated designs are par for the course, and they don't look as extreme as some of the LOSH designs did in the early stages or Cheeks Galloway on SS-M.
Greg Weisman is NOT involved in this show; he is the story editor behind SPECTACULAR SPIDER-MAN.
The people behind AVENGERS: EARTH'S MIGHTIEST HEROES so far are Chris Yost, who has worked on TMNT, THE BATMAN, X-MEN EVOLUTION, FANTASTIC FOUR: WGH and on the Lion's Gate DTV's, and Cieli (forgot the first name), who has worked on ROBOT CHICKEN and directed 9 episodes for the first two seasons of TEEN TITANS.