@MirrorNoir
The X-books were THAT dire, at the time before Morrison took over
Gonna be honest, Morrison's stuff wasn't an improvement at all. As clinically stupid as stuff like
X-Men: the Twelve could be, it wasn't painful to read. Morrison's run was like pulling teeth. Everything about it sucked--even the art, at least when Quietly was on board.
It's funny, I hear this defense all the time: "Yeah, Morrison's run isn't very good in retrospect, but think about what the state of X-Men was before he was hired!" It's like...sorry? Is that supposed to make his pretentious horeshit any less unreadable? I can at least forgive the prior writers for simply having bad ideas. Morrison has horrendous ideas, but was also possessed by such colossal narrative aspirations that when he fails, his failures dwarf any of his predecessors.
I can forgive an idiotic comic. I can't forgive an idiotic comic trying to smart, only for the end result to be more retarded than even something Rob Liefeld would write.
Once Morrison accepted he wouldn't be allowed to throw Jean under the bus and ruin her character
What are you talking about? He did that
anyway. Jean not only makes out with Wolverine at the literal start of the run--thus undercutting ANYTHING in that Emma Frost Affair Subplot--but then has her spewing things the real Jean Grey would never say, like "humans want to be more like mutants so they can feel more oppressed". And let's not forget her heroic "ownage" of Emma Frost by making her relive all of her past trauma. If any other writer pulled this shit, they'd be labeled an Austen-level Pariah and hounded out with pitchforks. But because it's Morrison, he gets a free pass.
acknowledged that Scott was a shit human being
That wasn't the point of Cyclops's character during this run, even by Morrison's admission. The idea was that Cyclops was acting well outside of his usual boundaries because he'd been recently possessed by Apocalypse. Morrison admitted as much in a recent interview celebrating
New X-Men's anniversary.
Magneto needs to be a mass murdering super-villain for the basic premise of the X-Men to work
And just like all of Magento's murderous antics since the start of the 90s, that doesn't align with the character's history during Trial of Magneto
or his tenure as a teacher in
New Mutants. If you're going to start the character back up again on his warpath, you'd need better justification than what Magneto provided.
His terrorist revolutionary screeds in
New X-Men are even more farcical when you realize that he shared a building with Cassandra Nova in the basement for God knows how long, and despite her
literally causing the kind of genocide he's dedicated his life to stopping only a few weeks prior, he doesn't even attempt to get revenge. A literal Mutant Holocaust happens on Genosha, and Magneto doesn't do a fucking thing about it.
Remember how I said Morrison's an undiagnosed retard? Shit like this is why.
Cassandra Nova is a lame villain, Beast's revamp looked sucked, his rape of Polaris's backstory because he couldn't be bothered to read her full introduction arc only the issues of it drawn by Steranko was super lazy and insulting, and the fact that he tossed out all of Emma's character development because he wanted to write a cunty X-Men member ruined the character since it became her default version going forward
If Morrison's pitch to Mark Powers is any indication,
New X-Men actually could have been a LOT worse. He actually wanted to use Rogue in his initial version of the story--but because he believed that no woman with Rogue's superpowers would have any self-confidence (real progressive world-view of the opposite sex there, Grant), he wanted there to be some kind of timeline shenanigans where the Southern Belle we all know and love gets killed off, and replaced with a Goth, depressed, PTSD-ridden Rogue to be the new, permanent status quo version of the character. But since editorial denied his request, he projected all of the narrative intentions he had for Rogue onto Angel--and if her toxic, unlikeable, gratingly irritating characterization is any indication, we were spared quite possibly the most unlikeable version of Rogue ever written.
That's where
X-Treme X-Men definitely comes out on top. For whatever faults it had, it had the decency to treat Rogue with respect, and shield her from Morrison's autistic narrative urges ruining her character. Of course, Peter Milligan would do that and more with Rogue in
his shitty run on Uncanny during the Reload Era, by introducing that "Holy-shit-what-the-fuck" love triangle between Rogue, Gambit and fucking
Mystique of all people.
I'm starting to think there needs to be some kind of restraining order in place to keep talentless British Hacks far the fuck
away from X-Men. They seem to have all the worst ideas...at least the worst ones outside of Jason Aaron's.