Stan Lee, creator of numerous Marvel comics characters such as Spiderman,
was born on this date in 1922. Today I’m focusing on one of his
superhero teams, The X-Men.
- The
X-Men were first created in 1963 by Lee and artist Jack Kirby. They
originally called the team The Merry Mutants. The whole mutant thing
came from the fact that Stan Lee didn’t want to have to come up
with a radioactive Spider style backstory for every character. 'Why
don't I just say they're mutants? They were born that way,' he
recalled in 2004. Marvel rejected the name because they didn’t
think readers would know what a mutant was. While the “X” is
often assumed to come from the team’s mentor, Professor Xavier,
The first issue has the Professor himself explain: “X-Men, for
Ex-tra power!”
The
original line up was: Cyclops (Scott Summers) who shoots energy from
his eyes and has to wear special glasses 24/7 to contain the power;
The
Beast (Hank McCoy) super-strong, covered in Blue fur; Ice Man
(Robert "Bobby" Drake) who can make ice and Snow; Angel
(Warren Kenneth Worthington III) who has big wings with White feathers, like an Angel; and Marvel Girl (Jean Grey), who has the
powers of telepathy and telekinesis.- While
early comic sales were underwhelming, in time the X-Men became
extremely popular and over time have undergone numerous re-boots and
engendered any number of spin off titles. A few of the characters
who have been part of the team include Storm (Ororo Munroe), whose
powers are controlling the weather and flight. She was the first
ever female black superhero, and is married to Black Panther;
Nightcrawler (Kurt Wagner), who has blue fur, pointy ears and a tail
and can teleport; Colossus (Piotr "Peter" Nikolaievitch
Rasputin), who can turn his body into steel; Shadowcat (Katherine
"Kitty" Pryde)who can move through solid objects; Gambit
(Remy LeBeau), who can charge any object with energy which then
makes them explode. He usually uses poker cards; Rogue (Anna Marie),
absorbs powers and memories from other people when she touches them;
and Psylocke (Elizabeth Braddock), a telepath.
- The
X-Men's enemies include Mystique, Sabretooth, Toad, Juggernaut,
Mister Sinister and Apocalypse. The best
known villain is
Magneto. He wants to gain civil rights for mutants, just
like the X-men do, but while they want to do it peacefully, Magneto
wants to do it
in the more
violent
style of Malcolm X.
- Arguably
the most popular character of all time is Wolverine (James
"Logan" Howlett),
the
one with the sharp metal claws which come out of his knuckles and an
adamantine skeleton. When the X-men films were being cast, producers
knew they needed a big name to play him. Dougray Scott was initially
cast, but had to pull out when filming of John Woo’s Mission:
Impossible 2 over-ran. Plan B was Russell Crowe, but he turned the
role down, because he “didn’t want to be the wolf guy”. He
thought this, coupled with his character in Gladiator had a wolf on
his shield would forever associate him with Wolves. He did have a
suggestion as to who might be up for it – Hugh Jackman. In the
comics, Wolverine is 5’3” tall. Hugh Jackman is 6’1”. Fans
at comic cons have been known to challenge Jackman for being too
tall!
- X-men
was among the first comic books to include social commentary in a
superhero story. Prejudice
against mutants
was an allegory for racial tensions in the United States with
many storylines reflecting that.
Diversity
has long been a feature. While the initial line up was mainly white
Americans (apart from Iceman who was Jewish/Irish), the 1975 re-boot
added a Russian (Colossus), a German (Nightcrawler), a Canadian
(Wolverine), a Kenyan (Storm), a Native American (Thunderbird) and a
Japanese guy (Sunfire).
- Race
isn’t the only diversity issue to be tackled. Iceman telling his
parents he was a mutant has been compared to someone coming out as
gay. An X-Men spin off title featured the first openly gay
superhero, Northstar, who in 2012 married Kyle Jinadu in the first
comic book same sex wedding. There’s a transgender character, too
– Mystique, one of the villains, was born in the late 19th century
and in the early 20th
century, was living as a man. She is the mother of Nightcrawler and
Rogue.
- Two
years before Patrick Stewart was cast as Professor X, someone in the
comics made an off hand reference to the fact that Professor X was
like Captain Picard in Star Trek – they were both bald,
morally-righteous leaders. The younger Professor X was played by
James McAvoy, who was said to be so excited about getting the part
that he shaved his head in preparation for filming, only to find out
he was to play Professor X before he went bald, and had to wear hair
extensions on set. While both actors are British, the character of
Professor X is actually American. The School for Gifted Youngsters
Building in New York is the house he grew up in.
- Brian
Singer, one of the X-Men movie directors, banned his cast from
reading X-Men comic books because he wanted them to play the
characters exactly as they were written in the script. The actors
ignored him and secretly slipped copies of the comics to each other
under their trailer doors.
- If
you live in the UK, you can ride an X-Men train. Virgin Trains
christened an 11-car Pendolino train X-Men: Days Of Future Past
to promote the film of the same name. Hugh Jackman and James McAvoy
were guests at the naming ceremony. The train still runs on the West
Coast Main Line out of London Euston and can be tracked with the
hashtag #xmentrain.
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Matt Webster lives in a tower block and attends a failing school. He dreams of being a spy like James Bond. Little does he know that he is being watched by someone who can make him into even more than that – a superhero.
His first solo mission is to attend a ball at the Decembrian Embassy and discover who is planning to steal a priceless diamond. While there, he meets the mysterious Lady Antonia du Cane, and is powerfully drawn to her. It soon becomes clear, however, that Lady du Cane is not what she seems. Matt’s quest to discover who she really is almost costs him his career.
A modern day Guy Fawkes gathers a coterie around him with the aim of blowing up Parliament with a nuclear bomb. To achieve this, they need money. Lots of it. Selling the Heart of Decembria Diamond will provide more than enough. All that stands in their way is the Freedom League – but the League is beset by internal disagreements. Can the heroes put their differences aside in time to save the day?
Prime Minister Richard Miller and his wife Fiona grieve for their daughter, Yasmin, who has been missing for three years, and is presumed to be dead. Viper agent Violet Parker could hold the key to what happened to Yasmin, but Violet is accused of giving away the organisation’s secrets. She is to be executed without trial. Will she take her knowledge of what happened to Yasmin with her to her grave?
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