More than ANYTHING I LOVED Age of Apocolypse. I've been thinking about getting the whole collection of graphic novel reprints for that.
But after that one, the writing got even more preachy. (a feat in itself.)
I just lost interest. Oh well.
The best thing was X-Men Adventures, the comic based on the cartoon, the stories adapted by....comic book fan Ralph Macchio!
He did an awesome job. The only thing I didn't like was that my favorite episode: "Till Death do Us Part", a two-parter, was illustrated terribly, with weak colors...AWFUL!
I also loved X-Men Unlimited, because those were real stories from begining to end, 64 pages.
But you guys who read the 80's comics were way luckier--I was able to read one or two of those and the writing is a thousand times better than most of the '90s ones.
Also, has anyone read the New Batman and Robin adventures or something? It's being written by Frank Miller, his version of how Batman and Robin met, which is somewhat darker. Basically a 12-year-old Dick Grayson becomes Robin right after his parents are killed. Batman is the Frank Miller version; older, mean and basically a jerk. He tries to leave Robin in the Batcave to starve because "That's how I survived." Alfred doesn't agree and gives Robin food anyway, and a place to sleep. And Batman is pretty ticked at Alfred for this. Like i said, it's pretty dark.
It's no big surprise that the (lackluster IMHO) live-action X-Men movies draw their biggest plot points from the Byrne/Claremont run.
QUICK_EDIT
There's also a lot of stuff from the original animated series. (which of course was from the comic)
Like when Jubilee runs away from the mansion in Night of the Sentinels, Wolverine wants to go after her, just like when he goes after Rogue in X1.
Mystique infiltrating the mansion and taking others' shapes to stir up trouble is very reminiscent of the "evil" Morph's actions in Till Death Do Us Part, part 1.
It's mostly the Singer films that do this, which makes sense, since I guess Bryan didn't feel like reading a bunch of comics
and just watched the entire series, every episode. (he has said that in interviews.) So he probably used it as a guide.
You can’t just have your characters announce how they feel! That makes me feel angry!