‘X-Men ’97’ Is a Worthy Follow-Up to the Beloved Animated Series: TV Review
20.03.2024 - 10:03
/ variety.com
Alison Herman TV Critic “X-Men: The Animated Series” may have an enduring impact as meme fodder, but to many millennials, the Fox show was a gateway into one of Marvel’s most venerable franchises. Before the live-action blockbusters of the early aughts, and certainly before the rise of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, “The Animated Series” offered a primer on mutants as a powerful allegory for marginalized groups, plus iconic characters like the saber-clawed Wolverine and telepathic Jean Grey.
Due to the intricacies of intellectual property rights, the X-Men have been a conspicuous absence from the MCU since its inception in 2008. Disney’s acquisition of Fox opened the door for an integration, but the Mouse House has been patient in deploying its new assets.
The animated series “X-Men ‘97” marks the first X-Men title to originate from Marvel Studios, the unit captained by power producer Kevin Feige. Smartly, the show reintroduces the X-Men on their own terms, rather than grafting them onto a pre-existing ensemble.
Under head writer Beau DeMayo, “X-Men ‘97” is also freed of any obligations to the MCU’s continuity. (DeMayo was recently fired from the show, but had completed work through an upcoming second season.) As a direct follow-up to “The Animated Series” set near the end of the last millennium, the show can dedicate its energies to doing right by a nostalgia object while introducing itself to a new audience.
And as off-canon animation, “X-Men ‘97” can take bigger, wilder swings in its story, staying true to the fantastical nature of comics writing while remaining grounded in characters’ emotions. In the finale to “The Animated Series,” Professor Charles Xavier was fatally shot by an anti-mutant bureaucrat.
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