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Animation? Do We Have A Choice?

WolverineXMen.jpg

Sometimes it's hard to be a comic book fan. You strive to prove the medium's legitimacy and its ability to be an adult venue, yet no matter how hard some try we always come back to converting the properties to cartoons and toys. We bring it on ourselves, really.

Not surprisingly, Iron Man and Wolverine are both getting animated series next year. And what's that? They both have movies nearing release? Well, what a shock!

The Iron Man series follows a teenage Tony Stark while Wolverine and the X-Men follows Logan and an upstart team of new and old mutants against a world overrun with Sentinels.

For the full skinny, hit the jump in an iron suit.

According to USA Today :

Marvel superheroes are working overtime.

Iron Man and Wolverine, each the lead in an upcoming feature film, will be doing double duty in two new Nicktoons Network cartoons, Iron Man: The Animated Series and Wolverine and the X-Men.

The two TV series, which premiere in early 2009, are designed to play off the big-screen popularity of the Marvel comic-book characters. Iron Man, which stars Robert Downey Jr. as a rich inventor transformed by his high-tech armor suit, premieres May 2, while Hugh Jackman's Wolverine returns to the screen next spring in X-Men Origins: Wolverine.

The new series match up well with Nicktoons' core audience, boys ages 6 to 14, general manager Keith Dawkins says. Boys make up 65% of the audience for the Nickelodeon property. "Our audience loves superheroes and ... animation," he says. The Marvel characters also will help raise the profile of the digital cable network, which reaches 50 million homes.

Other big-screen films are spawning TV animation, too. Nicktoons' animated Speed Racer: The Next Generation premieres May 2, a week before the live-action, big-screen Speed Racer. The computer-animated Star Wars: The Clone Wars opens in theaters in August, leading into a new fall cartoon series on Cartoon Network and TNT.

The two Nicktoons-Marvel shows, each consisting of 26 half-hour episodes, will enjoy higher profiles because of the big-screen productions, which include three previous X-Men films. "We're trying to create synergy with the brand by having a continual awareness of different interpretations of the characters in the marketplace," says Eric Rollman of Marvel Studios, which has another animated series, The Spectacular Spider-Man, on the CW's Kids WB lineup.

For Nicktoons, the interpretation translates into a teen Iron Man, a superhero closer in age to the network's young viewers. The X-Men cartoon sees Wolverine thrust into the role of reluctant leader, as the beaten-down heroes must try to prevent a future world ruled by destructive robots.

1 Comments

CJG said:

I'm slowly getting my boyfriend more and more into comics largely by getting him hooked on the cartoons.

I've been recording Legion of Superheroes and The Batman for some time now. And the other day when I went to buy JLA: New Frontier, he suggested we also pick up JLU season one. Which we've been watching a lot lately.

He likes to make me name off the characters. But I think he's honestly enjoying it.

I'm trying to get him to graduate to actual comics soon. :D

"Oh Lois, you SO don't want to know!"

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