Redirected from The Uncanny X-Men
The book was a victim of poor sales despite groundbreaking artwork by Neal Adams and began printing reprints with issue #66 in 1970. The book was revived by Len Wein[?], Chris Claremont and John Byrne in 1975. The book quickly became popular with the fans and a sales hit; Claremont and Byrne became superstars of the comic industry and other comicbook titles imitated the superheroic team formula of the book.
Claremont remained with the book for over a decade until differences with the editorial regime in 1991 caused him to leave. The book has spawned a number of spinoff titles and mutants have become both prevalent and popular within the comic world. Marvel has continued to produce the book under a number of creative teams but due to its popularity and status as a sales leader is the subject of strident editorial control and obligatory crossovers.
Despite their popularity as a comic book, it was years before they got their own TV show (an animated cartoon on Fox and a second one called X-Men: Evolution on WB Network[?]), and years after that until they got their own live action movie (2000, directed by Bryan Singer for 20th Century Fox.) In 2003, a massively hyped sequel X2: X-Men United[?] came to theaters. The movie grossed the 4th highest weekend gross of all time and the largest world gross of all time.
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