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X-Men ’97 Kicks Off a New Season With Timey-Wimey Adventures
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X-Men 97
X-Men ’97 Kicks Off a New Season With Timey-Wimey Adventures
The sophomore season starts with a time-traveling family reunion, a break-out role for X-Force, and an Apocalyptic Big Bad.
By Ben Francisco
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Published on July 6, 2026
Image: Marvel Studios Animation
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Image: Marvel Studios Animation
“Days of Past Future”
The second season of X-Men ’97 picks up where last season left off, with the X-Men stranded across time. Bishop (voiced by Isaac Robinson-Smith) and Forge (Gil Birmingham), two of the few X-Men remaining in the 1990s, have tracked down their teammates to two times: ancient Egypt in 3000 B.C.E., when Apocalypse arose as the first mutant, and the 40th century, when he reaches the height of his power. The two split up to retrieve their teammates, with Bishop going to the past and Forge to the future.
Arriving in the year 3960, Forge is ambushed by Apocalypse’s Terminator-like robot henchmen. Fortunately, he’s quickly saved by Wolverine (Cal Dodd), who’s now sporting bony claws sans shiny indestructible metal, since Magneto stripped him of his adamantium at the end of last season. After a sweet lovers’ reunion between Forge and Storm (Alison Sealy-Smith), they reconvene with Cyclops (Ray Chase) and Jean Grey (Jennifer Hale). Cyclops and Jean explain that they want to stay in the future a little longer to take advantage of this second chance at parenting young Nathan (Michael Johnston). (Last season, they had to send baby Nathan away to the future to get treated for the techno-organic virus that was killing him, not yet knowing he’d grow up to be the time-traveling soldier known as Cable. But they haven’t told young Nathan any of this, so the poor kid thinks his parents just abandoned him. The X-soap opera is in full effect!)
Image: Marvel Studios Animation
Meanwhile, it seems even the mighty Apocalypse has to deal with the woes of aging after seven millennia, so he’s searching for a new body—and has decided Nathan Summers is the perfect fit.
Cyclops pleads with the leader of the rebellion, Mother Askani (Gates McFadden), asking if Nathan really is destined to defeat Apocalypse. She affirms the truth of the prophecy and warns Cyclops, “None escape the whims of time.” Ignoring her warnings, Jean and Scott are about to tell Nathan the truth, when Apocalypse’s horsemen attack and overpower the three of them.
The other X-Men hatch a plan to save the Summers family, and Mother Askani reveals to Storm that she’s from a different dystopian timeline and is the one who’s flung the X-Men across time, hoping to thwart Apocalypse’s schemes in both the past and the future.
Still in captivity, Scott and Jean finally come out to Nathan as his parents (eliding a few details, such as his mother technically being Jean’s clone, not Jean herself). Inspired by the love of his rediscovered family, Nathan uses his telekinetic powers to take control of the techno-organic virus in his body and disables the collar dampening his mutant powers, allowing them to escape.
With Mother Askani’s encouragement, Storm brings her powers to a whole other level, using it to summon a solar storm to power up Apocalypse’s old ship so that they can catch the runaway train holding Cyclops, Jean, and Nathan. With all the X-Men of this time now free and reunited, they handily defeat the four Horsemen, though Apocalypse himself escapes, fleeing to the 1990s to confront the X-Men there.
Back in the ’90s, a much older Nathan (now Cable, voiced by Chris Potter), strategizes with Archangel (Christopher Barger) and Psylocke (Naoko Mori) about recruiting more mutants in the fight against Apocalypse, a direct lead-in to….
“A Force to be Reckoned With”
Image: Marvel Studios Animation
The second episode has an unusual start for this series: instead of the credits, it’s a cold open showing Quentin Quire (Thomas Dekker), Monet (Miatta Ade Lebile), and several other young mutants seeking refuge at the abandoned X-Mansion, only to be captured by the government-sanctioned mutant team X-Factor. Jubilee (Holly Chou) and Sunspot (Gui Agustini) are hiding out in an arcade, bemoaning the sad state of the world with the other X-Men still missing. Then Cable shows up and recruits them to join his black ops team of mutants working to take down Apocalypse.
The scene cuts to a new take on the opening credits featuring the title “X-Force” and the team’s current roster, causing the simultaneous gagging of thousands of fans around the world.
X-Force tracks down one of Apocalypse’s old Horsemen, War, to Carnaval in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. They telepathically interrogate him and then kill him, disturbing Jubilee with their violent methods. War doesn’t offer much intel, but the psychic blocks in his mind lead them to Emma Frost (Zehra Fazal) in London, England.
They find Emma on her way back from her party, interrupting what looks like it would have been a very fun encounter with two gentlemen companions. She admits to helping War and brings the team to Switzerland, where they find an abandoned lab for powering up a new cohort of Horsemen—but with much more powerful technology than Apocalypse has previously used. Then they’re ambushed by X-Factor, revealing that Emma double-crossed them in exchange for amnesty.
A fun fight scene between X-Factor and X-Force ensues. Most delightfully, Emma Frost transforms into diamond form and sits back and watches the whole thing with a distracted yawn. Cable and his team escape—but X-Factor captures Jubilee.
Havok (Teddy Sears) and Polaris (Carolina Ravassa) interrogate Jubilee, explaining that X-Factor is “just trying to keep order by easing tensions.” Jubilee rightfully points out that abducting innocent mutants doesn’t exactly seem to be the best way to “ease tensions.” She reminds Polaris of her time in the X-Men and notes that while Cable’s methods are questionable, at least his cause is worthwhile. Havok and Polaris lock up Jubilee with dozens of other mutants, many of them children.
Apparently Polaris was moved by Jubilee’s speech, because she sneaks back to her cell to deactivate her inhibitor collar. With an impressive display of acrobatics and fireworks powers, Jubilee escapes and single-handedly frees the other imprisoned mutants. Cable and the rest of X-Force arrive to pick them up, but their victory comes at a cost. They’re now wanted fugitives.
The episode’s closing jumps back to 2,000 years in the future, where a much younger Cable sends the X-Men back to their own time, separating the Summers family yet again.
“Rise of Apocalypse — Part 1”
Image: Marvel Studios Animation
In the 1990s, Forge reconvenes at the mansion with Storm, Jean, Cyclops, Morph (J.P. Karliak), and Wolverine, bemoaning that Bishop has not returned with the rest of the team—and they have no way of following them into the past.
In Egypt in 3000 BCE, the other X-Men have found En Sabah Nur (Adetokumboh M’Cormack), history’s first mutant, who will one day become Apocalypse. In this time, En Saban Nur and many others have been enslaved by Rama Tut (John de Lancie), who has an army of robots and other advanced technology at his disposal. En Saban Nur and his comrade Baal (Michael Dorn) are leading the uprising against Rama Tut’s oppressive regime.
Magneto (Matthew Waterson) has befriended En Sabah Nur, hoping to convert him to Xavier’s dream of human-mutant harmony instead of his own apocalyptic vision of “survival of the fittest.” Nur successfully raids one of Rama Tut’s strongholds, defeating Tut’s right hand, Logos (Chris Britton). Following Magneto’s counsel, Nur shows mercy to Logos and takes him prisoner, instead of killing him, as Baal urges him to do.
Meanwhile, Rogue (Lenore Zann), Nightcrawler (Adrian Hough), Professor X (Ross Marquand), and Beast (George Buza) are hiding out nearby. Beast is trying to repurpose Rama Tut’s robots and other tech to build a time machine to take them home—but doesn’t have a power source strong enough to fuel it. Nur is happy to have found community in this group of mutants, feeling less alone than he did before, but doesn’t know they’re hiding that they’re from the future.
En Sabah Nur and Magneto interrogate Logos, who eventually reveals that Rama-Tut is close to discovering a lost celestial temple that could give him near unlimited power. Professor X scans Logos telepathically, hoping the temple could help them return to their own time, but learns little.
Baal shows Nur that the X-Men have been hoarding the pharaoh’s advanced technology, and accuses them of making a weapon for themselves. Hurt by his new friends’ betrayal, Nur kills Logos and orders his army to attack the X-Men. Bishop—who’s been undercover among Nur’s followers—reveals himself to assist his teammates in defending themselves.
Just as the X-Men and En Sabah Nur’s battle climaxes, Rama-Tut locates them and uses a new weapon to raze their base, ending the episode on a cliffhanger.
Commentary
Image: Marvel Studios Animation
Like the first season of X-men ’97, these three episodes are dense, sometimes packing a year’s worth of comics continuity in a single episode. The characters have also proliferated almost as much as in the comics, so it seems wise that they split them up, allowing each of these three episodes to focus on a different core cast.
The first episode is a strong opener, allowing Scott and Jean to have a restorative connection with Nathan and giving us some closure to the complicated cross-time Summers family tree. In the comics, that tree also includes Mother Askani, who’s also known as Rachel Summers, Jean and Scott’s daughter from another alternate timeline. It’s probably for the best that they leave that as an Easter egg for fans without delving too deeply into the timeline weeds.
The other big moment in episode one is Storm’s summoning of solar flares. On the one hand, it’s always fun to see Storm go Omega. On the other hand, this seems like a power-up that will inevitably have to be forgotten for the sake of future plots. It was also a massive build-up all so that the X-Men could… catch up to a really fast train? If you’re going to have one of your best characters make a play that big, I feel like you should save it for something with a better payoff. But then again, it gives the ever-brilliant Alison Sealy-Smith a chance to show off her amazing voice-acting with an inspiring Storm soliloquy, so in the end I was happy with it. I’m not sure if any actor—whether in voice acting or live action—will ever embody Storm with the iconic gravitas that Sealy-Smith brings to the role.
Image: Marvel Studios Animation
In general, the voice acting continues to be a strength of the show. In addition to Sealy-Smith, Agustini, Chou, Potter, and Waterson all offer notably strong performances as Sunspot, Jubilee, Cable, and Magneto in these three episodes. There’s also exceptional talent on display among the guest stars, including three actors from Star Trek: The Next Generation (de Lancie, Dorn, and McFadden) whose brilliant voicework offers an extra dollop of nostalgia for the large Venn diagram slice of X-fans who are also Trekkies.
The second episode was my favorite of this batch, which is surprising since I’ve never been a huge fan of X-Force or Cable. But I enjoyed the way it set up two clear paths for mutants beyond the typical Xavier-Magneto binary. There’s Cable and X-Force, with its more military orientation, and there’s X-Factor, which is oriented toward government collaboration in this depiction. Jubilee’s resistance to Cable’s take-no-prisoners approach is well done, and very much mirrors the debates between X-Force and the traditional X-Men model. Jubilee’s argument with Polaris is also nicely executed, and I found myself loving her bad-ass prison-breakout-while-playing-the-Walkman moment. The whole episode shows how much she’s grown both as a person and in her power since way back in the first episode of the original series.
This X-Factor roster mostly mirrors the team from Peter David’s first run in the comics, but the mutant-hunting angle goes back to the original five X-Men posing as mutant hunters when they first formed X-Factor. But the posing part was pretty essential, and even that carried some heavy moral baggage. In the show, once it’s clear that the X-Factor team is literally caging mutant kids, their cooperation with the government goes from morally questionable to morally reprehensible. (It’s all the more disturbing knowing that, in our own present-day reality, the government is kidnapping, caging, and abusing immigrant children.) I found it hard to believe these characters would sink that low, especially Polaris, and part of me wishes the show had left space for a little more ambiguity, though the core theme at work remains resonant.
Image: Marvel Studios Animation
I’m always delighted any time Emma Frost gets screentime, though this depiction seems quite a bit more villainous than the one we know in present-day comics—particularly her complicity with rounding up mutants. But I did see moments of the Emma I know and love with her interrupted three-way, her manicuring, and her nonplussed yawning during the big battle.
The third episode mostly feels like set-up, but I like what they’re setting up. Magneto being the one with the idealistic hope of converting Apocalypse to the side of the angels is an unexpected dynamic with potential to tread some new territory. Rama Tut—a variant of the time-traveling Kang the Conqueror, at least in the comics—provides an interesting foil for both Apocalypse and the X-Men, especially when voiced with such verve by John de Lancie.
These episodes are chock-full of cameos, especially the second one. Like many fans, I was excited to see characters like Quentin Quire, Chamber, the Cuckoo sisters, Artie, Monet, Dust, Synch, and others brought to animated life. For the most part, the show did a good job of letting these characters remain in the background to fill out the story, offering Easter eggs to those who know without overwhelming those whose X-knowledge is less than encyclopedic. Even so, there were a lot of named characters, and there were times I wondered if more casual fans would have trouble keeping track.
I was low-key thrilled that we jumped right to Wolverine having the adamantium-free, bony version of his claws, and even enjoyed the slightly wetter sound of the snikt when they came out. I’m looking forward to seeing where they take that plotline, including the awkward reunion when Logan and Magneto are back in the same time.
Morph was an unexpected favorite of mine last season, but didn’t have much to do in these. Hopefully we’ll get more of them in the remaining episodes.
Image: Marvel Studios Animation
The writers are clearly setting up Apocalypse to be the big bad of this season, which has definite potential. I’m completely unclear on how time travel works in this universe but largely felt able to set that aside and enjoy the timey-wimey adventures.
Overall this premiere is a promising start, maintaining all the ingredients that made the first season so successful: savoring the nostalgia without letting it hold back the story, drawing smartly on a wealth of source material in the comics, and delving into the complexities of mutant resistance and resilience in difficult times that resonate with our own present-day world.[end-mark]
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