Sunday, March 09, 2014
Mutant X Season One
Mutant X was a guilty pleasure when it first came out on late night TV
and watching it now on DVD an exercise in nostalgia. It was like so many
other shows of the era a Canadian production shot in Vancouver with the
seaside cliffs and downtown office towers very much in evidence. This
re-issue is as bare-bones as it gets in "full-screen" TV Aspect with no
sub-titles and no supplemental materials.
The well-built stars of the show engage in extremely athletic martial
arts fisticuffs in a seemingly invincible fashion. Their double helix
and other toys are the stuff of science fiction. Their computer skills
are still cutting edge a decade and a half later. The show is one part
contact sports, one part soap opera, one part high tech. The ensemble
cast seem to enjoy working with each other. The show lasted only three
seasons.
and watching it now on DVD an exercise in nostalgia. It was like so many
other shows of the era a Canadian production shot in Vancouver with the
seaside cliffs and downtown office towers very much in evidence. This
re-issue is as bare-bones as it gets in "full-screen" TV Aspect with no
sub-titles and no supplemental materials.
The well-built stars of the show engage in extremely athletic martial
arts fisticuffs in a seemingly invincible fashion. Their double helix
and other toys are the stuff of science fiction. Their computer skills
are still cutting edge a decade and a half later. The show is one part
contact sports, one part soap opera, one part high tech. The ensemble
cast seem to enjoy working with each other. The show lasted only three
seasons.