Revolution (Marvel Comics) Explained

Revolution
Theme:y
Individual:y
Titles:Cable #79
Gambit #16
Generation X #63
Magneto: Dark Seduction #1
Uncanny X-Men #381
Wolverine #150
X-Force #102
X-Man #63
X-Men #100
Superhero:y
Publisher:Marvel Comics
Startmo:May
Startyr:2000
Endmo:June
Endyr:2000
Issues:9
Writers:Warren Ellis
Chris Claremont
Ian Edginton
Tpb:Counter-X: Volume 1: X-Force
Isbn:0-7851-3304-6
Tpb1:Counter-X: Volume 2: Generation X
Isbn1:0-7851-3305-4
Tpb2:Counter-X: Volume 3: X-Man
Isbn2:0-7851-3306-2
Subcat:Marvel Comics
Sort:Revolution

"Revolution" was the title given to the May 2000 revamp of Marvel Comics' X-Men-related comic books, timed to coincide with the publication of X-Men vol. 2 #100.

Publication history

In each series, the "Revolution" issue represented a jump of six months after the previous issue's events. In most cases, "Revolution" also marked an attempt to send each title in a new creative direction. To this end, new creative teams were assigned to the titles. Many characters' costumes were redesigned, and a "Revolution" logo was printed along the right-hand side of each issue.

The most publicized of the changes was the return of writer Chris Claremont to the flagship titles X-Men vol. 2 and Uncanny X-Men, after nearly a decade's absence.

The event also included nods to early-1990s marketing strategies, such as printing variant covers[1] and including trading cards.[2]

The excitement of the event was dampened by Marvel Comics' timing, as most of the series involved had launched with all or part of their new creative teams a month before the event, even though the "Revolution" logo was still printed on the May issues. Uncanny X-Men did not join the "Revolution" event until its June 2000 issue. Furthermore, Claremont stated in later interviews that he had ghostwritten several issues of various X-Men titles before the event.

Counter-X

As part of the Revolution event three X-titles, X-Man, X-Force, and Generation X were to be show-run by a longstanding creator working with new writers and artists. Originally Rob Liefeld had been approached to take over the titles, but turned down the offer when he found out he would be unable to hire his own colorists.[3] Warren Ellis was then approached, and the Counter-X line was born. Ellis plotted the general direction for each of the Counter-X books, and initially co-wrote each title with Steven Grant on X-Man, Ian Edginton on X-Force, and Brian Wood on Generation X.

Aftermath

The "Revolution" event was poorly received by fans and critics, leading to Claremont leaving X-Men and Uncanny X-Men after nine months. The X-Men line of books were revamped again in July 2001 with Grant Morrison writing New X-Men, Joe Casey writing Uncanny X-Men, and Claremont writing the new title X-Treme X-Men.

Bibliography

The included issues, in order of publication, were:

Dark Seduction #1 (June 2000), the first issue of a mini-series by Fabian Nicieza, Roger Cruz, and Andy Owens.

Collected editions

The Revolution stories by Chris Claremont have been collected in a Marvel Omnibus

Other titles were collected as trade paperbacks

The Counter-X run was collected with its own sub-branded trade paperback:

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. X-Men vol. 2 #100
  2. Uncanny X-Men #381
  3. Web site: Q and A: Jason Liebig . February 7, 2021.
  4. Web site: Archived copy . 2016-12-06 . 2016-06-21 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160621232410/http://www.previewsworld.com/support/previews_docs/orderforms/APR13_Cancel.txt . dead .