The American film and television studio, subsidiary of Walt Disney Studios, Marvel Studios announced the slate of animated series for streaming platform Disney+ with three new shows, ‘X-Men ‘97’, ‘Spider-Man: Freshman Year’ and ‘Marvel Zombies’.
After Disney purchased 20th Century Fox in 2019, and the ‘X-Men’ movie franchise was on its last legs with the poorly received ‘Dark Phoenix’ and ‘The New Mutants’, many observers expected Marvel Studios to reboot the X-Men and reintegrate the characters back into the Marvel Cinematic Universe, ANI reported from Washington.
Instead, for its first swing at the team of powerful mutant superheroes, the company is reaching back to its own origin story: ‘X-Men ’97’ will be a continuation of the beloved 1990s ‘X-Men’ animated series that ran for five seasons on the Fox network from 1992 through 1997.
The show, which debuted in primetime before moving to Saturday mornings, was such a sensation that it’s widely credited for convincing 20th Century Fox to make the live-action ‘X-Men’ movie, which launched the modern era of superhero cinema when it premiered in 2000.
One of the associate producers on that film was current Marvel Studios chief Kevin Feige. Effectively, without the ‘X-Men’ animated series, Marvel Studios probably wouldn’t exist.
Beau DeMayo, who wrote Netflix’s animated ‘The Witcher’ spin-off ‘Nightmare of the Wolf’, will serve as head writer on ‘X-Men ’97’. The show is set to premiere in 2023.
‘Spider-Man: Freshman Year’, meanwhile, will be tied to the MCU while also evoking Marvel’s deeper history, with an aesthetic approach that, “celebrates the character’s early comic book roots”.
This show will follow Peter Parker on his journey to becoming Spider-Man within the MCU, suggesting the show might dramatise this Peter’s origin story, something the live-action movies with Tom Holland bypassed entirely.
As for ‘Marvel Zombies’, it also connects to Marvel comics, specifically a limited series written by Robert Kirkman with art by Sean Phillips that launched in late 2005 in which pretty much all the Avengers become, well, zombies.
It is also reported the three new series, along with Season 2 of ‘What If?’ and the ‘Guardians of the Galaxy’ spin-off ‘I Am Groot’, mark the first wave of animated shows from Marvel Studios.