The Avengers: United They Stand
The Avengers: United They Stand is an animated series based on the Marvel Comics superhero team Avengers. It consists of 13 episodes, which originally premiered on October 30, 1999, and was produced by Avi Arad. It was canceled on February 26, 2000.
The series features two founding members of the team, Ant-Man and the Wasp, and introduces Wonder Man, Tigra, Hawkeye, Falcon, Vision and Scarlet Witch.
Plot
The series features a team broadly based on the roster for the 1984 Avengers spin-off series The West Coast Avengers, composed of the Wasp, Wonder Man, Tigra, Hawkeye, and Scarlet Witch, led by Ant-Man/Giant-Man, with the Falcon and the Vision joining in the opening two-parter. For undetermined reasons, the Avengers' "Big Three" were not regular fixtures in the series – Captain America and Iron Man made only guest appearances in one episode each, while Thor did not appear outside of the opening titles. Captain America appears in one episode, "Command Decision". The story involves the Masters of Evil and a flashback to Captain America defeating Baron Zemo. Iron Man, meanwhile in the episode "Shooting Stars", helps the Avengers thwart the Zodiac's plan to send a radioactive satellite crashing to Earth.The series features many of the Avengers' major comic book foes, including Ultron, Kang the Conqueror, Egghead, the Masters of Evil, the Grim Reaper and the Zodiac, as well as associated characters such as the Swordsman, the Circus of Crime, Namor, Attuma, Agatha Harkness, and the Salem's Seven.
The show made several fan-friendly references to aspects of the characters' comic book history that were otherwise not expanded upon for the uninitiated, such as the Falcon and Captain America's partnership, Hawkeye's partial deafness or Namor's half-breed nature. Beyond this, however, the series bore little in the way of similarity to the comics, mainly due to its wholesale redesign of the cast, characterized by asymmetrical costume design and the most infamous element of the series – Ant-Man, Wasp, Hawkeye and Falcon all wore suits of battle armor, which they donned in Super Sentai-inspired "power-up" sequences. Also in this incarnation, Tigra is an athlete who underwent genetic treatments to give her a competitive edge. These treatments went awry, leaving her with the form and abilities of a cat.
Principal cast
- Linda Ballantyne – Wasp/Janet Van Dyne
- Tony Daniels – Hawkeye/Clint Barton, Aries, Aquarius, Brutacus
- Graham Harley – Edwin Jarvis
- Ray Landry – Raymond Sikorski
- Carolyn Larson – The Computer
- Stavroula Logothettis – Scarlet Witch/Wanda Maximoff
- Hamish McEwan – Wonder Man/Simon Williams
- Gerry Mendicino – Taurus/Cornelius Van Lunt
- Martin Roach – Falcon/Samuel Wilson
- Ron Ruben – Vision
- John Stocker – Ultron
- Rod Wilson – Ant-Man/Giant-Man/Dr. Hank Pym
- Michael Yarmush – Announcer
- Lenore Zann – Tigra/Greer Grant Nelson
Additional voices
- Denis Akiyama – Dr. Chris Johnson
- Philip Akin – Attuma
- Oliver Becker – Absorbing Man
- Wayne Best – Scorpio
- Normand Bissonette – Ringmaster
- Dan Chameroy – Captain America/Steve Rogers
- Conrad Coates – Remnant Leader
- Rob Cowan – Boomerang
- Carlos Diaz – Tiger Shark
- Francis Diakowsky – Iron Man/Tony Stark
- Paul Essiembre – Swordsman
- Nigel Hamer – Gemini
- Ken Kramer – Kang the Conqueror
- Robert Latimer – Egghead
- Julie Lemieux – Gemini
- Stephen Ouimette – Nicholas Scratch
- Susan Roman – Moonstone, Dragonfly
- Tate Roswell – Andrew Wilson
- Allan Royal – Grim Reaper
- Elizabeth Shepherd – Agatha Harkness
- Phillip Shepherd – Baron Zemo
- Raoul Trujillo – Namor
- Peter Wildman – Cardinal
- Peter Windrem – Whirlwind
Additional characters
- Natalia Romanova/Black Widow No. 2 and 5
- Baron Strucker #2
- HYDRA #2
- Nathan Garrett/Black Knight #4 – Nathan Garrett appears and attempts to steal a device from the organization A.I.M.
- Doctor Doom #4 – He attempted to execute the Avengers and Black Knight.
- A.I.M. #5
- The Collector – He chooses to preserve a good population of Earth as he feels the planet is on the verge of ending. Although the Avengers escape, some citizens on Earth prefer to stay with The Collector.
Production
The Avengers roster for the cartoon is loosely based upon the roster for the 1984 Avengers spin-off series The West Coast Avengers. Notably absent from the lineup are the traditional core members: Captain America, Iron Man, and Thor, who were originally prohibited from appearing in the series due to licensing issues. Story editor Eric Lewald has commented on their absence and had said "We want this to be a team of Avengers, instead of making it 'Captain America and the Avengers' or 'Thor and the Avengers. We prefer to have a balanced team of superheroes rather than a superstar on the team." However, Captain America and Iron Man each made one guest appearance, while Thor did not appear outside of the opening sequence.
The decision to pair Scarlet Witch and Wonder Man up as a couple was based upon the storyline then running in the Avengers comic in which Scarlet Witch resurrects Wonder Man to serve as her protector after an evil sorceress transforms the planet into a medieval world under her control. During their time together, the two fall in love and become a couple.
In the promotional images of the series, and the action figure photos, Hawkeye didn't wear a mask. However, in the series and the final version of the figure, he wore a mask similar to that he wore during the Avengers: The Crossing storyline.
This series was commissioned by Fox in the wake of the success of Batman Beyond. In order to attempt to emulate Batman Beyond, changes were made to the Avengers franchise as the series was set in the future. Myrick explained that they were "setting the series about twenty-five years in the future" and that "New York City will be a mix of future and contemporary looks, sort of the way the city looked in the movie Blade Runner but not as dark." The Avengers were also featured wearing elaborate armor costumes when they went into battle. Myrick explained, "The armor will give them the capability to go into different environments like extreme heat or cold, or underwater, or outer space, and it'll enhance their abilities." The Avengers also featured an "A" on their costumes that was like a Star Trek comlink, where they could hit it and communicate with each other and the mansion's computer.
Episodes
The following list reflects the correct viewing order of The Avengers: United They Stand episodes, according to Marvel's official site.Proposed second season
Tentative plans for additional episodes featured Hawkeye's return to the carnival where he grew up, as well as an episode exploring how the Scarlet Witch discovered her powers were made. Plans also included guest appearances by the X-Men, utilizing the Toronto-based cast from the 1990s series as a few of them already worked on this show. Other proposed episode plots include Bruce Banner appearing to help the team when Ant-Man fell ill to gamma radiation exposure during a fight with the villain Egghead, Thor and his brother Loki in a two-part episode. However, all plans were scrapped when the show had stopped production.DVD release
On May 21, 2007 Maximum Entertainment released the complete series on Region 2 DVD in the UK. The 2-disc boxset features all 13 episodes of the series. The series remains unreleased on Region 1 DVD.Reception
The series received negative reviews by the critics and fans. It holds a 5.2/10 rating at the Internet Movie Database. It was heavily criticized for its complementary toy line. Each member of the Avengers wore special battle armor that was not used in the show. This was because producers of the show wanted to feature different battle armor rather than using the Avengers' regular battle armor. However, TV.com was more positive, with a 7.3/10 rating.Merchandise and media
Toys
released a line of action figures for the cartoon series. The figures included Ant-Man, Captain America, Falcon, Hawkeye, Kang, Tigra, Vision, Ultron, Wasp and Wonder Man. Air Glider and Sky Cycle vehicle toys were also produced. In the promotional images of the series, and the action figure photos, Hawkeye didn't wear a mask. However, in the series and the final version of the figure, he wore a mask similar to that he wore during the Avengers: The Crossing storyline.Comic book
The Avengers: United They Stand comic book series by Ty Templeton and Derec Aucoin was published to accompany the series. Due to low sales it lasted only seven issues.The first two issues are set before the series premiere, Avengers Assemble, Part 1 & 2. No. 1 has the Avengers injured by an early version of Ultron. This issue was used to explain the armor worn by Hawkeye, Wasp and the Falcon in the series, which uses Pym Particles to reduce the pain caused by injury. It is mentioned by Hawkeye that Hank built his own armor after his legs were broken by Dragon Man, and felt no pain in his legs until he removed the armor. No. 3 takes place after the premiere as the Vision is being interviewed about his membership. He is also briefed on how Wonder Man and Hawkeye joined the team.
The Black Panther would appear in No. 1 and 6–7 of the series. In No. 1 he is among the Avengers who are injured by Ultron. Because of that, he refuses to rejoin the team until Hank steps down from being leader. Captain America appears in #6–7 as well. Quicksilver is mentioned twice in the series. In issue 1, Wanda is shown writing a letter to him. Issue 3 shows him in the flashback alongside Captain America, Hawkeye and Scarlet Witch.