Does anyone else remember the Men In Black animated series? I thought it had rather a quirky charm to it. I understand it run for four seasons and yet I only saw Season 1.
That was The Zeta Project.I recall another show from that era, a Batman Beyond spinoff about a runaway robot. I didn't follow through its full arc, but it seemed interesting enough. So that might be worth catching up with as well. Except I believe it was cancelled before any resolution was reached in the story?
It ended in a proper way, they saved Earth from an all-out invasion led by Alpha and then neuralyzed the whole planet into forgetting.
Does anyone else remember the Men In Black animated series? I thought it had rather a quirky charm to it. I understand it run for four seasons and yet I only saw Season 1.
You didn't miss much. Season 1 was great, a smart, sophisticated, character-driven show, but after the first season, its writing staff mostly moved over to Godzilla: The Series and the quality suffered. It became more strictly plot-driven and gimmick-driven than character-driven. There were some entertaining, if shallow, episodes in season 2, but it got progressively sillier as it went on. The comic-relief alien sidekicks increasingly took over the show at the expense of the main characters. Most annoying were the four "Worm Guys," who had a minor role in the movie and in the first season, but who became dominant in most of the rest of the series, even though they had absolutely no personality beyond one single joke, an obsession with coffee. It got reallllllly tiresome after a while.
Also, after the first season, Ed O'Ross was dropped (or left?) as the voice of Agent K, and was replaced by Gregg Berger, who gave a much blander, more droning performance. This was along with a character redesign that made him look almost like a completely different person (although most of the character designs were streamlined after season 1) and a complete abandonment of his complex, enigmatic, reserved but witty personality in favor of robotic ultracompetence. It was like K was replaced by a pod person and nobody noticed. The same thing happened to L in the fourth season. Not only was Jennifer Lien replaced by a much less sultry-voiced actress, but her cool, capable, levelheaded personality vanished as well; she became the sidekick and foil to a showboating alien agent and was constantly frustrated, angry, and subjected to indignities as a result of his antics.
In short, it started out strong, and the first season got stronger as it went, but each season thereafter got progressively worse, until in the fourth season it was a travesty of its former self.
The show does rerun on The Hub, but for some reason, they never show one of the best first-season episodes, "The Neuralyzer Syndrome," so my taped collection of the first season is stuck at one episode short. I'm wondering why that episode is censored. Usually when old cartoon episodes are dropped from network reruns, it's because of some sort of similarity to 9/11, but I can't recall whether there was anything like that in this episode.
The show does rerun on The Hub, but for some reason, they never show one of the best first-season episodes, "The Neuralyzer Syndrome," so my taped collection of the first season is stuck at one episode short. I'm wondering why that episode is censored. Usually when old cartoon episodes are dropped from network reruns, it's because of some sort of similarity to 9/11, but I can't recall whether there was anything like that in this episode.
^^ Maybe our ideas of good vs. bad animation are different... I should have said the change in look was what I found bad... Before the show became "Slimer-centric" the characters had a bit more realistic look about them. As the focus turned toward Slimer, it got a more little kid-friendly cartoony look, IMHO...
Was that the one where K got nerualized and thought he was a teenager again? There actually was a 9/11 related thing in that one: The way he's finally convinced that it's not the 1960s anymore is he sees the World Trade Center, which J told him were the tallest buildings in New York now.
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