Generation X (comics)

Summary

Generation X is a fictional superhero team appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. A spin-off of the X-Men, the team was created by writer Scott Lobdell and artist Chris Bachalo. Generation X debuted during the 1994 "Phalanx Covenant" storyline, and appeared in their own monthly series in September 1994 with Generation X #1 (November 1994).[1]

Generation X
Cover to Generation X #67, by Art Adams.
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceUncanny X-Men #318 (November 1994)
Created byScott Lobdell
Chris Bachalo
In-story information
Base(s)Massachusetts Academy

Generation X consisted of teenage mutants designed to reflect the cynicism and complexity of the series' namesake demographic.[2] Unlike its predecessor the New Mutants, the team was not mentored by X-Men founder Charles Xavier at his New York estate, but by Banshee and former supervillainess Emma Frost at a splinter school in western Massachusetts.

The team edit

Volume 1 edit

 
Promotional art of Generation X (1994 - 2001) comic book series. Art by Brian Hitch.

Unlike the X-Men and New Mutants, Generation X did not attend Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters in upstate New York or learn from Professor Xavier himself. Instead, they trained at the Massachusetts Academy, located in Berkshire County, Massachusetts, and were mentored by Banshee, an Irish X-Man who possessed a "sonic scream", and the former villain White Queen, an aristocratic telepath.

Generation X consisted of:

  • Chamber (Jonothon "Jono" Starsmore), a British mutant who produced huge blasts of energy from his upper chest. When his powers first manifested, they destroyed the lower half of his face and chest, leaving him with only his limited telepathic powers with which to communicate, and releasing him from any necessity to eat, drink, or breathe. Because of this, he is characteristically sullen and bitter.
  • Gaia, formerly the otherworldly Guardian of the Citadel of the Universal Amalgamator, which could potentially be misused to combine all sentient consciousnesses into a single entity.[3] She was freed by Synch[4] and eventually joined the team,[5] but soon left to explore this world.
  • Husk (Paige Guthrie), a Kentucky coal miner's daughter who could shed her skin, revealing a different substance each time. She is the younger sister of The New Mutants' Cannonball, and elder sister of Icarus.
  • Jubilee (Jubilation Lee), a Chinese-American "mall rat" from Beverly Hills, California who could produce explosive energy. Jubilee had been a junior member of the X-Men in the early 1990s, and joined Generation X to learn more about her powers.
  • M (Monet St. Croix), a "perfect" young woman born into a rich family from Monaco who could fly, possessed super strength and had telepathic abilities. Her arrogant manner was an annoyance to her teammates and her habit of going into deep trances or fugue states when deep in thought was a mystery to her teachers. Mysteries surrounding the St. Croix family would play a big part in the series.
  • Mondo, a cheerful, laidback Samoan mutant who could take on the texture of objects he touched. Mondo eventually betrayed the team and was apparently killed by Bastion,[6] but it was later revealed that this was a clone. The real Mondo appeared two years later, but as a villain teamed with Juggernaut and Black Tom Cassidy.[7]
  • Penance, a silent, childlike and mysterious mutant who possessed diamond hard, red skin and razor-sharp claws. Penance appeared mysteriously at the Massachusetts Academy and at first, little was known about her. According to the Generation X Ashcan, the writers originally intended her to be a girl named Yvette from Yugoslavia. A hint of this can be seen when her mind is read by Emma Frost, revealing Eastern European tanks on the march in her memories.[8] This background was later changed by the following creative team.
  • Skin (Angelo Espinosa), a former reluctant teenage gang member on the streets of East Los Angeles who possessed six feet of extra skin. He could stretch his extremities, but mostly considered his mutation, which caused him to have sagging gray skin and painful headaches, a curse.
  • Synch (Everett Thomas), an African-American teenager from St. Louis, known for his pleasant, supportive temperament, who could copy the powers of other mutants/superhumans within physical proximity.
Issues Characters
#1-#3 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin, Synch.
#4-#5 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin, Synch, Penance.
#6-#7 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin, Synch, Penance, Artie Maddicks, Leech.
#8-#10 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin, Synch, Penance.
#11-#12 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin, Synch, Penance, Mondo.
#13 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin, Synch, Penance, Artie Maddicks, Leech, Mondo.
#14-#17 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin, Synch.
#18-#25 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin, Synch, Penance, Artie Maddicks, Leech, Mondo, Franklin Richards.
#26-#31 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin, Synch, Penance.
#32-#35 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, Skin, Synch, Penance, M Twins.
#36-#40 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, Skin, Synch, Penance, Artie Maddicks, Leech.
#41-#43 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin, Synch, Penance.
#44-#47 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin, Synch, Penance, Artie Maddicks, Leech, Gaia.
#48-#49 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin, Synch, Penance, Gaia, Maggott.
#50-#51 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin, Synch, Penance, Gaia.
#52-#56 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin, Synch, Penance, Artie Maddicks, Leech.
#57-#58 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin, Synch, Penance, Artie Maddicks, Leech, M Twins.
#59-#61 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, Skin, Synch, Penance, Artie Maddicks, Leech.
#62-#66 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin.
#67-#69 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin, Synch, Penance, Artie Maddicks, Leech.
#70 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin, Synch.
#71-#75 Chamber, Husk, Jubilee, M, Skin.

Volume 2 edit

Following the war between the mutants and Inhumans, Kitty Pryde has Magik teleport X-Haven from Limbo to Central Park and renamed it the Xavier Institute for Mutant Education and Outreach. Jubilee teaches one of the classes consisting of students who are considered liabilities during missions and with personalities ill-fitting of an ambassador.

  • Bling! (Roxanne "Roxy" Washington), an openly bisexual student with body made of diamond-hard material.
  • Eye-Boy (Trevor Hawkins), one of the new mutants to manifest their powers after the war between the X-Men and Avengers whose body is covered in eyeballs, which gives him expert marksman skills and the ability to see through illusions, track peoples auras, see electrical and magical waves, and spot people's weaknesses.
  • Hindsight (Nathaniel Carver), a new student who can use psychometry to see someone's past through skin contact.
  • Kid Omega (Quentin Quire), an Omega level mutant possessing advanced cognitive and telepathic abilities.
  • Morph (Benjamin Deeds), an average college student who has the power to shapeshift and chemically induce people into liking him.
  • Nature Girl (Lin Li), a quiet student with heightened affinity for the natural world.

After the series edit

Banshee edit

Banshee, distraught and possibly suffering from a breakdown, founds the X-Corps, a group of mutant adventurers who came into conflict with the X-Men over their questionable methodology and membership. Among the group are several former members of the Brotherhood of Mutants. It is revealed that Banshee was having the new Mastermind, the daughter of the deceased original Mastermind, manipulate the Brotherhood's members into having them work with him. However, it turns out that Mystique was posing as one of the members, Surge, and she is working with the new Mastermind behind Banshee's back. Mystique helps the brainwashed members to revolt; two members of the X-Corps are killed and Mystique stabs Banshee through the throat before being stopped by the X-Men. Banshee survives the attack and recuperates in the hospital.

In 2006's X-Men: Deadly Genesis, Banshee is killed by Vulcan, Cyclops and Havok's long-lost brother, while attempting to rescue an airplane full of innocents. Later, Banshee's daughter Siryn takes the title of Banshee in his honor.[9] Sean is latter resurrected by the Apocalypse Twins by the Death Seed as a Horseman of Death.

Chamber edit

Chamber starred a four-issue mini-series, X-Men Icons: Chamber, written by Brian K. Vaughan. In it, he went undercover at Empire State University as a student to find out who killed six openly mutant students.

Later, after a reluctant recruitment into the X-Men, Chamber was an active part of the team in battles with long-time X-Men villains Mystique and Vanisher. He subsequently underwent a mission for the X-Men (under the 'guidance' of Wolverine) to infiltrate Weapon X and learn the truth about the team. During his time there, Chamber had his face and most of his body restored by Weapon X, as an incentive to join them. He later disappeared with the rest of Weapon X when trying to contact Logan about 'Neverland'.

He subsequently reappeared as an attendee of the Excelsior support group (with his mouth and chest destroyed once more, supposedly in a bar fight) within the Runaways series, claiming he was "only there for the free pizza", despite once again no longer having a mouth with which to eat. It was revealed (to the reader, not to the rest of Excelsior) that he was merely someone posing as Chamber.

A mini-series titled Generation M debuted in November 2005, focusing on the after-effects from House of M, in which Scarlet Witch uses her hex/mutant powers to wish for "no more mutants". The first issue revealed a powerless Chamber (on life-support, due to missing the bottom of his face and most of his chest).

Chamber later showed up in New Excalibur #9 (September 2006) as a patient at a London Hospital, recounting to a so-called Dr. Hartley the story of how right before his powers burned out on "M-Day" they went supernova, once again destroying his face and chest. They are interrupted by Pete Wisdom, who offers Chamber Excalibur's help. As he leaves the two alone for a quick cigarette break, Hartley kidnaps Chamber. Later, Chamber awakes to find himself fully healed, but looking similar to the X-Men villain Apocalypse as a side-effect. He finds himself a guest of the new Clan Akkaba, worshippers of Apocalypse who had originally appeared in the Marvel limited series, X-Men: Apocalypse vs. Dracula. In fact, Chamber's great-grandfather and Hartley, revealed to be Frederick Slade from the aforementioned limited series, were the only survivors of the original Clan Akkaba. Slade reveals that they are all descendants of Apocalypse and that Apocalypse's blood healed Chamber, though he no longer has any powers. Chamber tells them he wants nothing to do with them and is allowed to leave. As he walks outside, he meets Excalibur and tells them in no uncertain words that he doesn't want their help or to have anything to do with any X-team.

After investigating the abandoned headquarters of Clan Akkaba, New Excalibur discovers that Chamber was lied to, and that he is indeed still empowered. The consequences of this storyline have yet to be resolved. Next, he appeared in New Warriors, going under the codename "Decibel", with Jubilee referring to him as Jono and sporting the same physical appearance given to him by Clan Akkaba. Like most of the team, his new powers are more technological in nature, and it appears he can form solid energy projections or sonic blasts much like Songbird or Banshee. After the Age of X storyline concluded, Chamber appeared at the Jean Grey School with his mutant powers returned and is teaching mutants with physical deformities how to adapt to life with them.

Emma Frost edit

Immediately after Generation X's cancellation, Emma became a core member of Grant Morrison's New X-Men team where she demonstrated the secondary mutation of being able to transform her body into diamond. During this time, she also began a romantic relationship with Cyclops. She has remained a central figure in nearly every incarnation of the X-Men since.

Husk edit

Husk, along with Jubilee and M, appeared as part of Banshee's X-Corps, dubbed "Banshee's Angels". After Banshee was badly injured by Mystique, Husk returned to the X-Men's school in Westchester. She became a regular cast member in Uncanny X-Men under writer Chuck Austen, and experienced a brief flirtation with Angel despite being many years younger than him. She later drifted into the background as a supporting X-Men character, but sided with Wolverine in the X-Men's "Schism", where she served as a faculty member at the Jean Grey School for Higher Learning in Wolverine & the X-Men. She began to lose control of her powers, and when questioned by Shadowcat, abruptly quit her position.

Jubilee edit

Jubilee made several appearances in Uncanny X-Men following the end of Generation X, where she appeared first as a member of Banshee's X-Corps alongside M and Husk and later as an ancillary character in Chuck Austen's run.

She briefly had her own self-titled series, written by Robert Kirkman. While it was originally intended to be an ongoing series aimed at the teen market, launched as part of Marvel Comics' Tsunami line, it was retroactively dubbed a mini-series and canceled with issue #6, due to disappointing sales.

Jubilee was also depowered during the "Decimation" storyline and was shown lamenting her lost powers, but reluctant to ask Wolverine for help, convincing herself that she needed to grow up and handle it herself. Subsequently, she was briefly shown in issue #2 of Generation M and later seen in Wolverine: Origins #10. After being injured after a battle with Omega Red, she was taken away for medical attention by S.H.I.E.L.D. She since returned in the second issue of New Warriors (vol. 4), in which she is known as Wondra and uses technology to mimic superpowers, in particular gauntlets which enhance her strength to superhuman levels. Recruited by Night Thrasher, she was suspicious of his motivations and his most outspoken critic.

During the "Curse of the Mutants" storyline, Jubilee became a vampire. A subsequent four-issue mini-series, Wolverine and Jubilee, detailed her process of coming to terms with this change, and she remains a central cast member in X-Men, having found[10] and adopted[11] a baby named Shogo.

M edit

M appeared for a time as part of Banshee's X-Corps along with Husk and Jubilee, following which she became an employee of X-Factor Investigations, in X-Factor (vol. 3). She was an instrumental part of many of their investigations and, along with Strong Guy, considered the muscle of the group. After being seduced by a dupe of Multiple Man's,[12] she developed a romantic interest in him, but his feelings laid with her teammate Siryn, which led to friction within the group. She has since made her peace with both Siryn and Madrox. M is currently appearing as a central character in Magneto's Uncanny X-Men.

Penance edit

Penance (now renamed "Hollow")[13] appeared in the limited series Loners, where she was held captive by a ring of drug makers in order to harvest her genetics to create MGH. She was accidentally freed by Ricochet.[14] After a battle with a crazed Phil Urich, she left, following him.[15] She re-appeared in late 2011 as a new student at Avengers Academy.[16]

Skin edit

Jubilee and Skin were shown to be living in LA in a story in the anthology series X-Men Unlimited, sharing an apartment and attempting to adjust to civilian life.[17] They were both, however, attacked by a mutant hate group in 2003 and Skin died after being crucified on the X-Men's front lawn.[18] Writer Chuck Austen mistakenly used an incorrect surname when referring to the character after his death;[19] however, a gravestone with the correct surname was shown in the anthology series X-Men Unlimited, where Iceman reminisced about their brief friendship.[20] He has recently been resurrected on Krakoa and currently is not on a team.

Synch edit

Having died near the end of Generation X, Synch was one of the first mutants resurrected on Krakoa.[21] He was placed on a team aling with Darwin and Wolverine that was sent to the Vault, a pocket dimension with a vastly accelerated flow of time home to dangerous superhumans, with the intent of gaining information about the mysterious place.[21] While around three months passd in the real world, more than five hundred years passed in the Vault [21] before Synch and the others were able to escape the Vault and relay the information back to the X-Men.[22]

Members edit

Character Alter Ego Joined in
Banshee Sean Cassidy Generation X #1 (1994)
White Queen Emma Grace Frost
Skin Angelo Espinosa
Synch Everett Thomas
M Monet Yvette Clarisse Maria Therese St. Croix (Claudette & Nicole)
Husk Paige Guthrie
Jubilee Jubilation Lee
Chamber Jonothon Evan Starsmore
Blink Clarice Ferguson Uncanny X-Men #317 (1994)
Penance Monet St. Croix / Yvette Generation X #3 (1995)
Mondo Generation X Annual '95 (1995)
Gaia Generation X #43 (1998)
Wards
Leech Generation X #5 (1995)
Artie Maddicks Arthur Maddicks
Franklin Richards Generation X #20 (1996)
M-Twins Claudette & Nicole St. Croix
Allies
Gateway Generation X #1 (1994)
Maggott Japheth
Generation X (2017)
Jubilee Jubilation Lee Generation X, vol. 2 #1 (2017)
Bling! Roxanne "Roxy" Washington
Kid Omega Quentin Quire
Nature Girl Lin Li
Morph Benjamin Deeds
Hindsight Nathaniel Carver
Eye-Boy Trevor Hawkins

Publications edit

List of titles edit

  • Generation X Collector's Preview (October 1994, Marvel Comics)
  • Generation X #−1 & 1–75 (July 1997 & November 1994 – June 2001, Marvel Comics)
  • Generation X Annual 1995–1997, 1999 (September 1995 – November 1999, Marvel Comics)
  • Generation X/Dracula Annual 1998 (October 1998, Marvel Comics)
  • Generation X 1/2 (July 1998, Marvel Comics & Wizard Magazine)
  • Generation X San Diego Comic Con 1/2 (July 1994, Marvel Comics, Overstreet)
  • Generation X Holiday Special (February 1998, Marvel Comics)
  • Generation X Underground Special (May 1998, Marvel Comics)

Significant stories edit

  • Gen¹³/Generation X (July 1997, Image Comics) – Generation X has a crossover with Image Comics' Gen¹³.
  • Generation X/Gen¹³ (December 1997, Marvel Comics) – Generation X meets Gen¹³ a second time.
  • Marvel Team-Up #1 (September 1997, Marvel Comics) – Generation X teams up with Spider-Man.

Adaptations edit

The TV film edit

In February 1996, the Fox Network aired a made-for-television Generation X movie, produced by Marvel Entertainment. The film featured Banshee and Emma Frost as the headmasters of Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters and M, Skin, Mondo, Jubilee and two new characters, Buff and Refrax, as students (Chamber, Husk, Synch, and Penance were not written in because the budget didn't allow for the special effects their powers required). The team battled a mad scientist who used a machine to develop psychic powers. Plans to develop a syndicated series that would air on the same night as popular sci-fi thriller The X-Files were abandoned.

X-Men '92 edit

Issue 8 of the Infinite comic series ended with a version of Generation X appearing as new students under the X-Men. This team will include Jubilee, Chamber, Husk, Skin, and M.[23]

Novels edit

  • Generation X (1997, Berkley) by Scott Lobdell and Elliot S. Maggin, illustrated by Tom Grummett and Doug Hazlewood (ISBN 1-57297-223-8)
  • Generation X: Crossroads (1998, Berkley) by J. Steven York (ISBN 0-425-16631-7)
  • Generation X: Genogoths (2000, Berkley) by J. Steven York, illustrated by Mark Buckingham (ISBN 0-425-17143-4)

Planned Fox Kids live action series edit

In 1999, there were plans for a Generation X live action series that would've aired on Fox Kids. The series never materialized. The only remnant of it comes from a 1999 Fox Kids/Fox Family upfront.[24]

References edit

  1. ^ DeFalco, Tom; Sanderson, Peter; Brevoort, Tom; Teitelbaum, Michael; Wallace, Daniel; Darling, Andrew; Forbeck, Matt; Cowsill, Alan; Bray, Adam (2019). The Marvel Encyclopedia. DK Publishing. p. 146. ISBN 978-1-4654-7890-0.
  2. ^ Brevoort, Tom; DeFalco, Tom; Manning, Matthew K.; Sanderson, Peter; Wiacek, Win (2017). Marvel Year By Year: A Visual History. DK Publishing. p. 270. ISBN 978-1465455505.
  3. ^ Generation X #34
  4. ^ Generation X #39
  5. ^ Generation X #45
  6. ^ Generation X #25 (1997)
  7. ^ Generation X #60–61
  8. ^ Generation X #12
  9. ^ X-Factor vol. 1 #200
  10. ^ X-Men vol. 4 #1
  11. ^ X-Men vol. 4 #7
  12. ^ X-Factor vol. 3 #10
  13. ^ The Loners #3
  14. ^ The Loners #2
  15. ^ The Loners #6
  16. ^ Avengers Academy #21
  17. ^ X-Men Unlimited vol. 1 #34
  18. ^ Uncanny X-Men #423
  19. ^ Uncanny X-Men #427
  20. ^ X-Men Unlimited vol. 2 #9
  21. ^ a b c X-Men vol. 5 #5
  22. ^ X-Men vol. 5 #19
  23. ^ Infinite Comics: X-Men 92 Issue 8
  24. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Fox Kids/Family Winter 99 Upfront". YouTube.

External links edit

  • Generation X at IMDb  
  • Generation neXt
  • Review, captures, and clips from the TV film at Antimatter Multiverse