Mutant X
Fox's ownership of the film and TV rights to Marvel's
X-Men characters enabled the publisher to see some of its heroes on the screen at a time when they weren't able to adapt those titles themselves, but it has also been a source of persistent complication between the companies -- and occasionally the basis for a lawsuit, as was the case when Marvel produced
Mutant X, a syndicated series about a bio-geneticist named Adam Kane (John Shea) whose remorse over having helped create a generation of mutants leads him to round up and lead a group of genetically altered heroes on a mission to protect and train mutants at risk of being harmed or exploited. The story possibilities were fairly endless, and the ratings were sufficiently healthy for three full seasons' worth of episodes, but Fox sued the various companies involved, arguing that
Mutant X was a breach of their licensing agreement. Marvel eventually settled out of court, leaving its production partners Tribune Entertainment and Fireworks Entertainment to continue fighting on their own -- and when Fireworks went bankrupt,
Mutant X died a sudden death.
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