posted December 10 2024
x-men re-examined: out of the past
Fox dropped the season 3 premiere of X-Men: The Animated Series unusually early in the broadcast season, airing these episodes in July and August of 1994. If you think airing the season premiere of a kids’ show in the middle of summer is weird, just wait. Would you believe that Fox aired these episodes across two consecutive Friday nights, in prime time, before reruns of the network’s other recent mega hit, The X-Files? Well they did. That’s how big X-Men was at the time. That’s where we are in the summer of 1994. That’s what was happening in pop culture.
Season 3 has big ambitions, and “Out of the Past” is a very strong start. It’s the best two-parter since season 1’s “Days of Future Past”, making excellent use of both its half hours. The writers finally remembered that characters other than Wolverine can have personalities, and as a result this story comes alive in a way that few season 2 episodes did. It’s gorgeously animated to boot, simply the best the show has ever looked.
Part 1
Air date: July 29, 1994
There’s a very effective sense of escalation across this story. Part 1 mainly follows Wolverine, Gambit, and Jubilee as they get pulled into the New York subways to confront Lady Deathstrike and the Reavers. Deathstrike wants to crack open a mysterious spacecraft that’s been underground for centuries and claim its power,1 and she needs someone with adamantium claws to do it. Part 2 reverses the dynamics and turns into something of a chase. The great power in the ship is the Spirit Drinker, an invulnerable monster that could destroy the world if it reaches the surface, requiring the expanded X-Men team to figure out a way to stop it, with Deathstrike turned into a begrudging ally.
Adding to the drama, Lady Deathstrike is Yuriko Oyama, Wolverine’s ex. She has a mess of motivations for becoming this long-fingered cyborg, but it boils down to revenge: she believes that Wolverine murdered her father, who happens to be the man who invented the adamantium grafting procedure.2 In case this isn’t dramatic enough, she declares, “I decided to change my outer form to match the darkness inside me.” Yeesh. Wolverine claims he never killed her father, though that gets a little lost amid all the action. Wolverine gets plenty of chances to look cool in this story, including this exchange with Deathstrike:
Deathstrike: Your end can be quick and easy, or slow and painful. It’s your choice.
Wolverine: Sorry, Lady, I don’t do easy.
But it’s not just Wolverine! Gambit hasn’t been this cool since season 1. He repeatedly stops the well-meaning but naïve Jubilee from rushing in, instead waiting patiently for the right moment to tip the conflict in their favor. There are clever touches with his powers, like using a charged card as a torch and exploding out of the otherwise inescapable nets the Reavers favor. But I’m most struck by how Gambit acts in his very first scene. He’s immediately wary that we’re hearing about Yuriko from Morlock lackey Leech instead of their leader, Callisto. When Wolverine growls that the message is personal and rushes off, Gambit goes, “Everything’s personal with that one.” When Jubilee tries to pitch helping Wolverine as a family obligation, he just yawns at her, but agrees to tag along for her sake. Gambit shows more personality in this one brief scene than in the entirety of “X-Ternally Yours”.
Part 1 maintains this nice balancing act where Wolverine is facing the brunt of the action and drama, with Gambit and Jubilee hanging back until they can join the fight in the third act. The show makes great use of Gambit (as previously mentioned), and even gives Jubilee a cool moment. She sneaks up behind a Reaver and uses her powers to blind him. On the sidelines, Xavier uses Cerebro to observe all these events at a distance, periodically screaming about the “INCREDIBLE POWER” inside the ship.
Anyway, it’s all high melodrama and snappy action until somebody lets out the glowing green energy monster.
Stray observations:
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This episode brings back the Morlocks, who are mostly there to serve as the collateral victims of Lady Deathstrike’s misguided mission. It’s smart to use characters we’ve already met for this! Callisto briefly fights Deathstrike for ownership of the spacecraft, since she wants its power to reclaim her place as leader of the Morlocks, a nice callback to the events of “Captive Hearts”.
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The animation is excellent throughout, but almost overdone at times. There are some scenes where Deathstrike never stops moving, twisting and turning for no apparent reason.
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The X-Men play basketball in teams: skins vs. skins. I’m not exactly complaining.
Part 2
Air date: August 5, 1994
The Spirit Drinker looks a little goofy but it isn’t messing around. One touch of its tentacles absorbs your consciousness, instantly putting your body in a coma. It can burn its way through physical matter (mostly) and seems invulnerable to conventional attacks. To top it off, the thing is a ravenous animal that will not be reasoned with.
As with Part 1, Part 2 is well balanced between rising action and cool character beats that enrich the story. The action piece is straightforward: stop the invulnerable Spirit Drinker from reaching the surface without getting yourself absorbed into it. The stakes keep rising, as first the Reavers, then the innocent Morlocks, then Jubilee, and then Deathstrike are felled by the monster’s touch. Ultimately, Wolverine and Gambit manage to electrocute the thing on the subway system’s third rail, releasing everyone’s consciousness. Deathstrike thanks Wolverine for saving her life but vows to return for her revenge,3 exiting with a curt bow. Things are back to normal…mostly.
In the middle of all this, Beast and Professor Xavier explore the broken spaceship. It’s a strange place, full of highly advanced technology and incomprehensible interfaces. Until Xavier gets a psychic zap from one of them, that is. Suddenly he can understand the ship’s language and work its equipment. It’s a weird and slightly unsettling moment. Xavier is so engrossed in the ship that he doesn’t even notice Beast leave. Xavier is thrilled to finally make progress with the ship, but he doesn’t understand how he’s doing it. The episode gives an uncommon amount of breathing room for this scene because “meddling with forces beyond your understanding” is basically this season’s tagline.
The episode is packed with great character moments that elevate the story. A sampling:
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Xavier summons Beast from an art gallery, where he was musing on whether one can really tell the difference between Jackson Pollock’s canvases and his drop cloths. He interrupts Cyclops and Jean at dinner, just as Jean is remarking that they finally have some time to themselves.
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When Wolverine, Gambit, and Deathstrike get some distance from the Spirit Drinker, they have time for a telling exchange. Wolverine is concerned for the Morlocks, who never asked for trouble. Gambit is concerned for the Morlocks and the men that Deathstrike callously left behind. Deathstrike, on the other hand, doesn’t care about any of them. Her revenge is all that matters.
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When Xavier sees Deathstrike’s unconscious body:
Xavier: And this is…?
Wolverine: An old friend. She wants me dead.
This adventure has left Xavier shaken. His time with the ship gave him visions of a powerful empire, a galactic conflict, and forces far beyond anything he’s ever experienced. “I fear this was only the beginning,” he says to his X-Men. And then something happens that I remember even thirty years later: the camera pans upward into a shot of the Earth, with the words, “COMING SOON! THE PHOENIX SAGA” set against footage of flames.
This season premiere is a real return to form. It’s not a perfect pair of episodes, but it’s easily better than almost all of season 2. It’s a great prelude to the imminent Phoenix Saga and chock full of what makes X-Men great. Season 3 starts strong.
Stray observations:
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Every attempted psychic interaction in this story ends with either Xavier or Jean screaming for a bit and then gasping that they’re fine. I’m sure that doesn’t portend anything!
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I spotted only one plot hole in this otherwise well built story. After Jean unsuccessfully attempts to read the Spirit Drinker’s mind (screaming, gasping, argh), Cyclops wants to laser it to death. Wolverine stops him, explaining that a lot of innocent minds are trapped inside it. But later, they’ll blow the thing up with a high voltage rail anyway, so what did it matter?
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Even in a very well animated episode like this, Jean’s outfit looks ridiculous. I can’t wait for her to put on her Phoenix costume.
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On the toilet: Storm and Rogue. And on the Forever Toilet, Morph. The end of “Reunion” implied that Morph is elsewhere being treated for their various traumas, and we’ll only see them a couple of times for the remainder of the series.
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How, exactly, miles of subway infrastructure could have been built around an ancient spaceship without anyone noticing is a thought experiment left to the viewer. ↩
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This episode fills in some of the backstory on Wolverine’s and Deathstrike’s relationship by reusing the flashback scenes from “Repo Man”, which are easily the best parts of that episode. ↩
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Narrator voice: She doesn’t. ↩