X-Men animated series

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For the newer X-Men animated series see X-Men: Evolution. For other uses see the X-Men (disambiguation) page.
X-Men
Format Animated Series
Action
Adventure
Created by Larry Houston
Frank Squillace
Voices of Cedric Smith
Cathal J. Dodd
Norm Spencer
Iona Morris
Country of origin  United States
Flag of Japan Japan
No. of episodes 76 (List of episodes)
Production
Running time 22min
Broadcast
Original channel Fox Kids
Original run October 31, 1992September 20, 1997
External links
Official website
IMDb profile
TV.com summary

X-Men is an animated television series which debuted on October 31, 1992 in the United States on the Fox Network as part of its Fox Kids Saturday morning lineup (see 1992 in television).

X-Men is Marvel Comics’ second attempt at an animated X-Men program, after the poorly received half-hour pilot “Pryde of the X-Men” was broadcast multiple times between 1989 and 1992. It is considered to be one of the most faithful animated series based on a comic book. The popularity and success of X-Men (along with Batman, which also debuted in the Fox Kids 1992–93 season) helped launch a number of comic-based animated series in the 1990s.

Contents

Background

X-Men was originally going to premiere over the Labor Day weekend in September; however, due to production delays, it was pushed to the end of October. The “Night of the Sentinels” two-part episode originally aired as a “sneak preview” even though it truly wasn’t ready for broadcast. So, there were many animation errors in these two episodes. The errors were later corrected when Fox re-aired the pilot in early 1993.1

X-Men was one of the longest-lasting series on Fox Kids, second only to Batman: The Animated Series, its most acclaimed and successful to date.citation needed Despite its final new episode airing in late 1997 after five complete seasons, Fox did not remove the show from their line-up until 1998. The show is also one of the highest-rated and most-viewed Saturday morning programs in American history.citation needed During its peak years (1995 and 1996), the show was often shown weekday afternoons, in addition to Saturday mornings.

X-Men also stands as the longest-running Marvel Comics-based show, running for five seasons and 76 episodes. The second longest, Spider-Man: The Animated Series, lasted for five seasons and 65 episodes. Although produced by different animation studios, both series were set in the same animated universe, and the X-Men even made guest appearances on Spider-Man’s show. (The second X-Men animated series, X-Men Evolution, does not share this continuity.)

After the box office success of the live-action X-Men movie in the summer of 2000, Fox began airing reruns of the cartoon on weekday afternoons. This ended in early 2001. Soon after, ABC Family and Toon Disney, due to Disney’s buyout of all Saban Entertainment programs, began airing reruns.

Synopsis

The show features an X-Men similar in look and line-up to the early 1990s X-Men drawn by Jim Lee, composed of Cyclops, Wolverine, Rogue, Storm, Beast, Gambit, Jubilee, Jean Grey, Professor X, and as well as an original character, Morph.2 Though they were not part of the team as featured in the animated series, the following X-Men have all guest-starred in at least one episode: Colossus, Nightcrawler, Emma Frost, Forge, Havok, Polaris, Cannonball, Banshee, Iceman, Archangel, Longshot, Dazzler, Sunfire, Psylocke, Cable, and Bishop. Keen-eyed fans may also spot cameos by other familiar mutants, such as Feral or Rictor. One prominent X-Men, Shadowcat, did not appear in the whole series in any way.

A number of famous storylines and events from the comics are loosely adapted in the series, such as the Dark Phoenix Saga, Days of Future Past, the Phalanx Covenant, and the Legacy Virus. The third episode, “Enter Magneto,” features a confrontation at a missile base: this is largely based on the X-Men’s first battle with Magneto, as told in their 1963 debut X-Men #1. The season four episodes “Sanctuary, Parts I & II,” which involve Magneto creating an orbiting haven for mutants, were influenced by several storylines from the comics, chiefly the first three issues of X-Men (Volume 2) and the "Fatal Attractions" crossover.

Beyond faithfully recreating many of the popular characters and stories from the comic books, the series also dealt fairly openly with mature social issues. The ills of prejudice, intolerance, isolation, and racism were all frequent themes in the animated series, as they were in the comics. The series also deals with other social issues, albeit sometimes in subtext, that are not often handled by children’s programming: divorce (“Proteus”), Christianity (“Nightcrawler” & “Bloodlines”), the Holocaust (“Enter Magneto,” “Deadly Reunions,” “Days of Future Past,” and “The Phalanx Covenant”), AIDS hysteria (“Time Fugitives”), and even satires of television itself (“Mojovision” and “Longshot”). The Friends of Humanity, a prominent anti-mutant group that appears in the second season, bears great resemblance to the Ku Klux Klancitation needed and other white-supremacy groups. Adult sexual themes are also explored: in “Till Death Do Us Part,” Morph shapeshifts into Rogue to attract Gambit, and in “Whatever It Takes,” he morphs into Jean Grey, to manipulate Wolverine’s emotions. Likewise, Mystique would often shapeshift into, and flirt with, men and women. Gay mutant Northstar would make two appearances into the animated series, when he had recently come out in the comics.

Episodes

VHS & DVD releases

Select episodes, predominantly from the first season, were released on VHS during the show’s original run. Within Australia, the first two episodes "Night of the Sentinels Part 1 & 2" was included in an X-Men branded Showbag in the Royal Show of each state.

At the height of the series’ popularity, Pizza Hut sold two VHS tapes that featured Night Of The Sentinels (Parts 1 & 2) and Enter Magneto/Deadly Reunions. Also contained was round-table discussion between prominent names such as X-Men creator Stan Lee and writers Scott Lobdell, Fabian Nicieza, and Bob Harras.

So far, very few episodes have been released on DVD. According to TVShowsOnDVD.com, X-Men is the ninth most requested unreleased television show and the second most requested animated television show behind MTV's Daria.3 Regardless, there are no plans for an official release of season box sets.

As of 2008, the series is planned for release on Region 2 DVD in the UK in 2008 by Liberation Entertainment as part of a release schedule of Marvel Animated series. The first season is scheduled for release on August 25, 2008 in two volumes. Season two will also be released in two volumes scheduled for release on October 27, and November 14. Due to the closure of the UK division of Liberation Entertainment Season 2 will not be released.4

Alternate versions

The original opening sequence featured the X-Men demonstrating their mutant abilities to a now very distinctive instrumental theme. This intro is used throughout the first four seasons. A modified version is eventually introduced in season five, episode five (“Longshot”). In this new intro, the beginning of the theme is slightly changed. New fighting scenes are also added.

In the first season only, the credit sequence consisted of computer-animated rotating 3D models of the different team-members created by graphic design artist, Dave McCarty, set to a different, electric-guitar-based heavy-metal theme. In subsequent seasons, the computer-animated sequence and guitar-based closing theme were dropped and replaced with clips from the regular animation over the regular instrumental theme. When UPN began airing repeats on Sunday mornings an alternate credits sequence was used: a high-quality Japanese-animated version of the original opening.

  • Brazil

Rede Globo cut all of the intro sequence except for the logo at its end—which they do to almost all animated series they air. The American intro was retained when it was aired later on Fox Kids and Jetix.

  • Japan

The opening intro was replaced with a new, Japanese-animated segment of the characters as well as a new Japanese theme with vocals called “Rising (ライジング),” by the Japanese band Ambience (アンビエンス). Starting with episode 46 an alternate anime intro was used, featuring the new theme “Dakishimetai Dare Yori Mo (抱きしめたい誰よりも…).” The end credits sequence was also changed: it featured shots of X-Men comic books set to the song “Back to You (バック・トウ・ユー),” also by Ambience.

Several very well-known seiyū (Japanese voice actors) played roles in the TV Tokyo edition of the Japanese dub, such as Kōichi Yamadera (Cyclops), Shinobu Adachi (Jean Grey), Rihoko Yoshida (Storm), Akiko Hiramatsu (Jubilee), Masashi Ebara (Wolverine), Norio Wakamoto (Mr. Sinister), Yūko Kobayashi (Rogue), Yoshito Yasuhara (Gambit), Ayako Shirashi (Dazzler), Ryūzaburō Ōtomo (Magneto) and Rokurō Naya (Professor X).

Cast and characters

See also: List of characters in X-Men (TV series)
Character English Japanese
(TV Tokyo)
Japanese
(Toon Disney)
Allegiance
Professor Charles Xavier Cedric Smith Rokurō Naya Seizō Sasaki X-Men (Leader)
Forge Marc Strange Kiyoshi Kobayashi X-Factor (Leader)
Wolverine/Logan Cal Dodd Masashi Ebara Takeshi Maruyama X-Men
Cyclops/Scott Summers Norm Spencer Kōichi Yamadera Takashi Nagasako X-Men
Mister Sinister/Nathaniel Essex Christopher Britton II Norio Wakamoto Nasty Boys and Savage Land Mutates (Leader)/Apocalypse
Juggernaut/Cain Marko Rick Bennett Shōzō Iizuka None
Colossus/Piotr Rasputin Akio Ōtsuka N/A X-Men (Temporarily)
Storm/Ororo Munroe Iona Morris (1992)
Alison Sealy-Smith (1992–1997)
Rihoko Yoshida Yōko Kurata X-Men
Gambit/Remy LeBeau Chris Potter (1992–1996)
Tony Daniels (1997)
Yoshito Yasahura Shinya Fukumatsu X-Men, Thieves Guild
Rogue Lenore Zann Yūko Kobayashi Megumi Yamato X-Men
Beast/Doctor Henry “Hank” McCoy George Buza Shigeru Chiba Haruo Satō X-Men
Bishop Philip Akin Daisuke Gōri Xavier Security Enforcers/X-Men
Sabretooth/Victor Creed Don Francks Tarō Arakawa Magneto
Puck/Eugene Milton Judd N/A N/A Alpha Flight
Shaman Alpha Flight
Jean Grey/Phoenix Catherine Disher Shinobu Adachi Jun Sagawa X-Men
Morph Ron Rubin Mitsuru Ogata N/A X-Men/Sinister (Temporarily)
Jubilee/Jubilation Lee Alyson Court Akiko Hiramatsu Saori Seto X-Men
Cable Lawrence Bayne Tesshō Genda N/A Clan Chosen/X-Men
Erik the Redd N/A Shi’ar Empire (Evil)
Nightcrawler/Kurt Wagner Paul Haddad X-Men (Temporarily)
Banshee/Sean Cassidy Jeremy Ratchford Kunihiko Yasai X-Men (Temporarily)
Doctor Moira McTaggart Lally Cadeau N/A X-Men
Snowbird Melissa Sue Anderson Alpha Flight
Carol Danvers/Miss Marvel Roscoe Handford Mako Hyōdō None
Longshot Rod Wilson N/A X-Men (Temporarily)
Gorgeous George Nasty Boys
Apocalypse John Colicos
James Blendick
Kenji Utsumi Horsemen of Apocalypse (Leader)
Magneto/Erik Lehnsherr David Hemblen Ryūzaburō Ōtomo Jin Urayama Himself
Amelia Voght Acolytes/X-Men(temporarily)
Archangel/Angel/Warren Worthington III/Death Stephen Ouimette Daiki Nakamura N/A X-Men/Apocalypse (Temporarily)
Mystique/Raven Darkholme Randall Carpenter
Jennifer Dale
Yūko Sasaki Brotherhood (Leader)
Avalanche/Dominic Szilard Petros Rod Coneybeare N/A Brotherhood
Pyro/St. John Allerdyce Graham Halley Brotherhood
Quicksilver Adrian Egan X-Factor
The Blob Robert Calt Brotherhood
Ilyana Rasputin Tara Strong none (Colossus' sister)
Henry Peter Gyrich Barry Flatman Project Wideawake (Temporary Leader)
Guardian/Vindicator Alpha Flight
Graydon Creed John Stocker Friends of Humanity
Leech Morlocks
Shadow King Maurice Dean Wint Kiyoyuki Yanada Himself
Sentinels David Fox Shinichirō Miki Sentinels
Master Mold N/A Sentinels (Leader)
Sasquatch/Doctor Walter Langkowski Harvey Atkin Alpha Flight
Darkstar Elizabeth Rukavina ???
Famine Cathy Gallant Horsemen of Apocalypse
War James Millington Horsemen of Apocalypse
Pestilence Judy Marshak Morlocks, Horsemen of Apocalypse
Ruckus Dan Hennessey Nasty Boys
Amphibius Peter McCowatt Savage Land Mutates
Vertigo Megan Smith Savage Land Mutates, Nasty Boys
Northstar Rene Lemieux Alpha Flight
Annalee Kay Tremblay Morlocks

In other media

Video games

  • X-Men Cartoon Maker: The X-Men Cartoon Maker was a recreational software package that allowed the user to create animations with a minimal level of sophistication by utilising a library of backdrops, animations and sound effects from the show. Wolverine (voice-only) helps you out.
  • X-Men: Released by Sega in 1993 for Game Gear, Sega Mega Drive/Genesis.
  • X-Men: Children of the Atom: Released by Capcom in 1994 for Arcade, PlayStation, Sega Saturn, PC. The characters in the series were licensed by Capcom and were the inspiration for the video game X-Men: Children of the Atom, which in turn would be the basis for the Marvel vs. Capcom series of video games.6. Most of the voice actors who did the voices in the series reprised their roles for the video game. Capcom would continue to use these characters long after the show was cancelled before eventually losing the rights to create Marvel-based games to Electronic Arts in 2001.
  • X-Men Legends: an action-RPG released for Playstation 2, Microsoft Xbox, Nintendo GameCube, and N-Gage in 2004. Up to 4 players form a team selected from a roster of 15 X-Men (including the hidden unlockable Professor X). Characters level up their skills and mutant powers through experience points and acquiring special items. In Story Mode the first player takes the role of Magma, a New X-Man, and navigates her through the Xavier School in between missions, including the mansion's outside grounds, dorm rooms, and the subbasement that houses Cerebro, the Danger Room, Beast's Lab, a Brig, and the X-Jet Hangar. There is also a fighting-only Multiplayer Mode set in the Danger Room that allows players to access both heroes and villains.
  • X-Men Legends 2: Rise of Apocalypse: 2005 sequel to X-Men Legends partially based on the "Age of Apocalypse" storyline from the comics. This game features a larger number of skins for characters (including skins based on "Age of Apocalypse") as well as an expanded roster that includes Brotherhood members Magneto, Juggernaut, Scarlet Witch, and Toad. Iron Man, Deadpool, and Professor X are hidden unlockable characters. Where the original game was predominantly told from the perspective of Magma (who is also not in this game), Legends 2 is told from an outside perspective with all 4 players being active at all times. Also new to this game is the Team Bonus, where characters will get boosted stats if the team assembled matches a pre-set list in the computer. For example, a team of all New X-Men (characters created in the 1980s) will receive a 15% health bonus.
  • Marvel Ultimate Alliance: This game follows the same gameplay style found in the X-Men Legends series but with a character roster that spans the whole Marvel Universe. Locations in the game from the X-Men comics include the villain Arcade's circus and a Shi'Ar space vessel. Playable X-Men in the game include Iceman, Storm, Wolverine, Colossus (Xbox 360/PS3/Wii exclusive), Cyclops (Xbox 360 downloadable), Nightcrawler (Xbox 360 downloadable), Magneto (Xbox 360 downloadable), Sabretooth (XBox 360 downloadable), and Jean Grey (Game Boy Advance only). Like Legends 2, this game features the Team Bonus, and also lets the player(s) create their own pre-set team with a bonus of its own.

X-Men Adventures

X-Men Adventures

Cover of X-Men Adventures Volume 2 # 5
Publication information
Publisher Marvel Comics
Publication date November 1992 to March 1997
Main character(s) X-Men

X-Men Adventures is a comic book series published by Marvel Comics. Beginning in November 1992, it adapted three of the five seasons of the X-Men animated series. Following that in April 1996, it became Adventures of the X-Men, which contained original stories set within the same continuity.7 It lasted until March 1997, shortly after the show’s cancellation by the Fox Network. In the final issue, #12, of Adventures of the X-Men, it is revealed that this universe existed prior to the current Marvel Universe, and was destroyed by the fracturing of the M’Kraan Crystal.

Bibliography

  • X-Men Adventures (Volume 1) (17 issues) (1992-1994)8
  • X-Men Adventures (Volume 2) (15 issues) (1994-1995)9
  • X-Men Adventures (Volume 3) (13 issues) (1995-1996)10
  • Adventures of the X-Men (12 issues) (1996-1997)11

References

  1. ^ "DRG4’s Exclusive X-Men Cartoon Pilot Differences". drp4.wariocompany.com. Retrieved on 2008-01-17.
  2. ^ Mangels, Andy. "FOX Snares X-Men". drg4.wariocompany.com. Retrieved on 2008-01-17.
  3. ^ "X-Men (1992)" (html). TVShowsOnDVD.com. Retrieved on 2008-05-24.
  4. ^ Classic Marvel Super Heroes. On DVD NOW!
  5. ^ Navarro, Alex. "X-Men: The Arcade Game". The Greatest Games of All Time. Gamespot. Retrieved on 2008-06-18.
  6. ^ "X-Men: Children of the Atom" (html). member.cox.net. Retrieved on 2007-01-28.
  7. ^ "The 1990s: Claremont’s exit, mega-crossovers". Retrieved on 2007-01-26.
  8. ^ "X-Men Adventures Comics checklist Volume 1". comics-db.com. Retrieved on 2007-02-13.
  9. ^ "X-Men Adventures Comics checklist Volume 2". comics-db.com. Retrieved on 2007-02-13.
  10. ^ "X-Men Adventures Comics checklist Volume 3". comics-db.com. Retrieved on 2007-02-13.
  11. ^ "Adventures of the X-Men Comics checklist". comics-db.com. Retrieved on 2007-02-13.

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