
They work well as an emergency relief service with adventures on the grandest scale. I've always seen X-Men as a science fiction soap opera and the book has some of the best characters in comics. Claremont, whose run on X-Men lasted from 1975 to 1991, had transformed the title from an afterthought filled with reprints into the most critically and commercially successful title of its era, a. "Something I'd planned even before the events on 9/11. "I feel that I was right in positioning the X-Men as a rescue and emergency organization," they recalled. In an interview with Newsarama, Morrison touched upon this change. evil and heroism, Morrison recognized that depicting the X-Men as generic superheroes no longer worked. Months before 9/11 transformed the world and how people viewed good vs. Wolverine approves, saying "Suddenly I don't have to look like an idiot in broad daylight." Beast follows this up by adding, "I was never sure why you had us dress up like superheroes anyway, Professor." Cyclops answers, "The Professor thought people would trust the X-Men if we looked like something they understood." In "New X-Men" #114, "E is for Extinction: Part One," Xavier asks his team what they think of the new uniforms.
