With the success of the X-Men and Spider-Man franchises, it seems that both second Marvel Comics superhero has a movie in readying stages. However, Marvel\\'s other than superhero teams have a slight hurdle: they portion their traducement with different having mass appeal Hollywood subject: fondly-remembered TV shows. Let\\'s describe them unconnected...
THE AVENGERS
On television: Quirky succession from the sixties, in which the fearfully British John Steed (Patrick Macnee) and assorted offsiders, as well as Cathy Gale (Honore Blackman) and Emma Peel (Diana Rigg), battled varied sci-fi goofballs. Best villains: the Cybernauts, a thicket of cutthroat robots.
In the comics: Superhero group, published since the sixties, supreme repeatedly led by the snootily American Captain America. Every Marvel superhero collect the X-Men seems to have been an Avenger at numerous instance. Best villain: Ultron, a bloody android.
Prospects: The risible book was spun off into a favorite alive TV series, but since the horrendous 1998 motion picture (based on the TV exhibit), the label \\"Avengers\\" is likely box-office contaminant.
THE DEFENDERS
On television: Riveting 1960s court drama, featuring a father-son unconscious process squad.
In the comics: Riveting 1970s and 1980s superhero comic, featuring a bunch of guys who would dangle out together, fighting by and large wizardly bad guys.
Prospects: Some of the comic-book Defenders (including the Hulk and, forthcoming soon, the Sub-Mariner and the Silver Surfer) are picture show heroes. If they are successful, a team-up is the synthetic adjacent maneuver.
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THE INVADERS
On television: Maximum paranoia, \\'60s style. David Vincent (Roy Thinnes) had to run away from aliens who considered necessary to yield over and done with the world, covert as humans, patch testing to caution a dubious Earth people.
In the comics: Marvel\\'s maximal heroes of World War II - that is to say Captain America, the Sub-Mariner and the first Human Torch. While they were all grassroots vertebrae in the 1940s, they lone worked both in a melancholy series, prototypal published in the 1970s.
Prospects: How going on for a crossover? Aliens attack Earth and tussle superheroes during World War II? Hey, it could work!
THE CHAMPIONS
On television: Silly (but fun) British superhero ordering of the sixties.
In the comics: Los Angeles-based superhero rotation of the decennium. One of the first-year teams to be led by a female person (the Black Widow, a defected Russian spy), on near Ghost Rider, Iceman and others.
Prospects: Neither of them lasted longish. If a exultant TV ordering (like The Avengers) or comic passage (like Captain America) can bomb at the movies, who\\'d deprivation to show one of these also-rans?
ALIAS
On television: The adventures of Sydney Bristow, high-school beginner cum superspy. First shown in 2001; off 2006.
In the comics: The adventures of Jessica Jones, superhero cum investigator. First published in 2000; she inactive in 2005.
Prospects: Either would make a good starring duty for Jennifer Garner. Time to get started!
Origins:
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