
"And he's a provocateur, he likes to make pronouncements like that. "A big wake-up call for all of us was when Joe Casey came into the room a couple of years ago and he said 'I'm done with plot!'" said Seagle. Taking the concept back to its core, it's a show that features a kid having kid problems while also going on epic adventures as a superhero. The Ben 10 reboot, they said, is a bit like Spider-Man: Homecoming. If all of that sounds familiar, the Man of Action creators - who also work in comics - acknowledged how much it sounds like the current problems facing Marvel and DC Comics. In a weird way, these 11 minutes have afforded us to kind of get to the point, get in, and get it, to the point where I think even we were surprised that it was working as well as it was." It's like everything you want without a long, extended second act that just gets repeated again in the third act but with a fight. There's a lot of different reasons for it, but the thing we found doing the 11 minutes is that it's kind of like Ben 10 concentrate in a lot of ways. "The earlier iterations are all 22-minute stories these are two eleven minutes in a half an hour. "The format is different than it was in all of the earlier iterations," explained Man of Action's Duncan Rouleau. So we just started back over with Ben on vacation with Max and Gwen when he's 10 years old, big adventures, and then the other big difference is time." We had to pare it back down, get back down to the nuts and bolts, and kind of reboot in a way that would get young kids, like 7 years old, interested in it once again. "With Ben, while we loved everything that's happened with it, has really aged up quite a bit.
BEN 10 REBOOT CONCEPT ART SERIES
Seagle, who helped develop the series at Man of Action Entertainment, told.

"The big thing we had to do is that cartoons are wildly expensive and if you don't retain the young viewership, you won't retain the cartoon," Steven T.
