Why, exactly?Nope.
If Jessie is added I'm actually interested. Teenage Jonny (and presumably Hadji) is already an improvement!
Well, to be honest the base of it is that being a 90s kid that's the version I watched growing up. I watched the heck out of The Real Adventures in middle school so it's always going to be "the real" Jonny Quest for me. Even with the badly-aged-and-never-very-good-in-the-first-place Questworld.
But even setting that aside, aging them up gives the boys a more active role in the story and gives them some agency and ability to take part and actually contribute. Instead of "kids get into trouble, so genius dad and secret agent bodyguard help them out"
we can see Hadji training under Dr. Quest to hone his natural aptitude for science, and see Jonny being mentored by Race into being a proper action hero in his own right. (And Jessie somewhere in between.)
It certainly doesn't have to be Whedon-esque angsty, but something on the level of Gargoyles/Young Justice would be good.
True, I haven't. I tried once but couldn't finish it;
I've never seen the Venture Brothers either, so I've no idea what goes on there tbh.
But (regular human) 14-15 year olds can reasonably contribute a lot more than 10 year olds both physically and mentally,
plus it's just a more interesting time of development overall.
There's a reason that the Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew have at least somewhat survived to modern times while the Bobsey Twins really haven't
Gargoyles absolutely had teenagers - what do you think Broadway, Angela, and especially Lexington were?Brooklyn was a young adult, probably 19 or so.
"The actual heroes" is dependent on the story.
This is why I really don't think The Impossibles belong in this story - there is room for more light-hearted stuff - including super-hero parody - as well as the more serious. I don't think The Impossibles was unsuccessful - it was cancelled because some do-gooders were whining about it being "too violent", which was rubbish. Anyway, making stuff "darker" when it was never meant to be is surely a fad that's had it's day. I want Multi's cape back!!!!It was the same article. All I can think of is what I mentioned before, that some of these heroes come from less serious cartoons. The Impossibles was one of those groups that was more superhero parody than superhero show. Multiman's cape is part of that parody, but these guys are talking about being really serious about their take, so getting rid of the cape was part of serious-ing them up. Meanwhile, Space Ghost has always been a bad-ass serious superhero, HB's own cosmic Superman, so to paraphrase the song, you don't tug on Space Ghost's cape.
Personally, reading this article calmed me down considerably. If the creators are showing their kids the old Wildey Comico comics, then their not planning full tilt teenage BS Jonny Quest. Yay!
Had it's day? Oh no, dear. As long a movie like Angstman v Superangstman makes 800 million dollars, The "let's make it dark for crap's sake" wagon train will just keep rolling along.This is why I really don't think The Impossibles belong in this story - there is room for more light-hearted stuff - including super-hero parody - as well as the more serious. I don't think The Impossibles was unsuccessful - it was cancelled because some do-gooders were whining about it being "too violent", which was rubbish. Anyway, making stuff "darker" when it was never meant to be is surely a fad that's had it's day. I want Multi's cape back!!!!
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