The X-Men are all about change, but that doesn’t mean that some changes aren’t bigger than the others. The ’90s were a time of seismic changes for the comic industry, not all of them good, and the X-Men weathered these changes as the stars of the biggest comics of the decade. The beginning of the 21st century would see Marvel have a massive change as well, as writer/artist Joe Quesada took over the company as editor-in-chief. Quesada wanted to fix Marvel and started at the top.The year 2000 featured the return of X-Men legend Chris Claremont, but that wasn’t what Quesada had in the cards for the main X-Men books. Instead, Quesada would reach past Marvel’s usual stable of creators and bring in a writer who had come to Marvel in the years 2000 after leaving DC – Grant Morrison. From 2001 to 2004, Morrison would helm the X-Men. However, not everything was going well in the halls of the X-office during those three years, because there was another writer, one who would give readers stories that were among the worst of all time.Casey was a rising star in the comic industry, but the true blockbuster part of the announcement was Grant Morrison. Morrison had a name for themselves in DC, working on series like Animal Man, Doom Patrol, and JLA, creating stories that broke new ground and revitalized DC franchises in need of new directions. Morrison also worked at Vertigo and created their magnum opus of ideas for the 1990s: The Invisibles. That series would eventually lead to the problem that would see Morrison leave DC.
The X-Men are all about change, but that doesn’t mean that some changes aren’t bigger than the others. The ’90s were a time of seismic changes for the comic industry, not all of them good, and the X-Men weathered these changes as the stars of the biggest comics of the decade. The beginning of the 21st century would see Marvel have a massive change as well, as writer/artist Joe Quesada took over the company as editor-in-chief. Quesada wanted to fix Marvel and started at the top.
The year 2000 featured the return of X-Men legend Chris Claremont, but that wasn’t what Quesada had in the cards for the main X-Men books. Instead, Quesada would reach past Marvel’s usual stable of creators and bring in a writer who had come to Marvel in the years 2000 after leaving DC – Grant Morrison. From 2001 to 2004, Morrison would helm the X-Men. However, not everything was going well in the halls of the X-office during those three years, because there was another writer, one who would give readers stories that were among the worst of all time.
Casey was a rising star in the comic industry, but the true blockbuster part of the announcement was Grant Morrison. Morrison had a name for themselves in DC, working on series like Animal Man, Doom Patrol, and JLA, creating stories that broke new ground and revitalized DC franchises in need of new directions. Morrison also worked at Vertigo and created their magnum opus of ideas for the 1990s: The Invisibles. That series would eventually lead to the problem that would see Morrison leave DC.
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