"X-Men: The Animated Series" Nightcrawler (TV Episode 1995) Poster

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9/10
Nightcrawler and God
Mike138831 May 2010
Warning: Spoilers
This is what I like and appreciate from this animated series, it's filled with great stories, characters and morals. In this episode we see Gambit, Rogue and Logan goes out for a ski holiday in Paris, arriving there Logan hear the rumors about demon in the local town. Getting curious, he went to investigate it and reach down the ministry, where they discover the demon; none other than known to his fan as The Nightcrawler, a mutant who was born with scary appearance and teleportation power.

Nightcrawler find redemption and answer in God's name, and decide to stay in the ministry with the help from several pastors. It's such a great episode, we see how ignorant people can be, Logan's belief and integration of religion. Bless the writer!
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10/10
Religious Faith in Animation
Scaarge7 May 2012
Warning: Spoilers
The plot in this episode is a fairly standard "X-Men discover new mutant who is feared because of his power, but in time the mutant is discovered to be not evil but misunderstood." What makes this episode outstanding, not only in this series but in almost all of episodic television, is the treatment of religion.

Most TV shows that tackle religion fall into two distinct camps: 1. Overt hostility to faith, with the view that those who have religious convictions are either deluded fools or hypocrites; and 2. Inept evangelizing, insisting that all tenets of a given faith must be treated as unbending laws, and that those tenets must be accepted without question.

This episode takes a different approach, showing that religious faith can be a source of personal strength and moral value, and that this viewpoint can provide a pathway through which one's life purpose may be found. The episode doesn't criticize and it doesn't preach; it doesn't offer a facile answer, and it allows the characters, in the end, to keep their unchanged world-views (for the most part).

What this story does do so well is simply show the actions born of religious faith, alongside those of personal honor, and how they strive for a common goal--in this case, an end to hostilities. And because the show is so direct and non-judgmental, it is all the more profoundly moving for simply stating its case and allowing the viewer, like Wolverine, to see the choices available and the paths one's life might take.
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