X-MEN: FIRST CLASS - Grading+Discussion **SPOILERS!**

Discussion in 'Science Fiction & Fantasy' started by StarTrek1701, May 31, 2011.

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How Much Did You Enjoy X-MEN: FIRST CLASS?

Poll closed Oct 28, 2011.
  1. A+ (Great Movie!)

    73 vote(s)
    35.6%
  2. A (Entertained a lot!)

    93 vote(s)
    45.4%
  3. B (Was okay, not bad)

    30 vote(s)
    14.6%
  4. C (Below expectations)

    6 vote(s)
    2.9%
  5. D (Very bad)

    2 vote(s)
    1.0%
  6. F (Intolerable, want money back)

    1 vote(s)
    0.5%
  1. Ethros

    Ethros Vice Admiral Admiral

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    Speaking of accents, maybe it was just me, but did it seem that Fassbender's accent changed towards the end of the movie? For the most part he had a English accent more or less. But it just seemed when he was talking near the end (ie. the beach scenes) it sounded more like he had an American twang.



    I'll probably see it again sometime soon, can't stop watching the trailer, so good.
    "You ready for this?"
    "Let's find out!"
    :techman:
     
  2. Gotham Central

    Gotham Central Vice Admiral Admiral

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    I'm not really an X-Men fan but I did find the film enjoyable.

    Things that did not make sense to me:

    1) Why did Xavier mind wipe Moira? Did he think she would betray him in some way? What was the point. All that did was effectively discredit her for her superiors.

    2) Why exactly did the US and Russians suddenly get all buddy buddy and decide to kill the mutants on the beach? That actually made no sense...and in the context of the Cold War actually makes even less sense. The US government discovers that mutants exist. it hires some of them...who show that they have the ability to find other mutants and recruit them into working for the US government. They put them into the field, they stop a war and then that same government decides to KILL THEIR OWN AGENTS FOR NO REASON. They had not gone rogue, they'd proven their value in the field by successfully infiltrating the Soviet Union...yet they turn on them for no reason. That plot development needed to be fleshed out more. I get that in the Marvel universe people think superpowers are scary instead of cool...but this was just illogical.

    3) How is Xavier "hiding" by opening a school at his FAMILY HOME?
     
  3. Skellington

    Skellington Part-time poltergeist Rear Admiral

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    American, Northern Irish and more than a hint of English imo. Perhaps Erik's been quite the globetrotter. (Fassbender is Geman-N.Irish, btw.)
     
  4. Pauln6

    Pauln6 Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    I was apprehensive but the movie turned out to be very good. It does play around with the characters' histories a bit but nothing too offensive. Marvel has always played it a bit loose with character ages but I think Storm, Cyclops, and Jean in X1 were meant to be a fair bit older than their comic versions. If Storm was alive in '62 then she would be 40+ in X1. Thus, making Havok 10 years older than the version of Scott we see really isn't a terrible stretch. Gambit must be quite old too following his appearance in Wolverine.

    I felt that the Beast had a nice, self-enclosed arc in X3 to the point where they wouldn't need to use him again, so using him in the prequel worked really well. Nightcrawler's story clearly isn't done though considering their choice of characters in the prequel. Banshee and Havok's training was handled well.

    Moira was the strangest one for me. It looked like her part was written for Carol Danvers and then at the last minute they bunged in Moira instead. Of all of them, she has definitely aged the best in X3, unless you include Emma Frost, who seemed about ten years younger in Wolverine... If the use Emma again I'm sure they will hand wave away the fact that she should be about sixty. If they don't, I really hope she starts to moderate her outfits...

    I'd still prefer to see X4 (I'd hate to see classic plots ending up in the past) but I admit that the prequel franchise has legs too.
     
  5. Set Harth

    Set Harth Vice Admiral Admiral

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    I hadn't thought of that...:wtf:
     
  6. archeryguy1701

    archeryguy1701 Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    I'll be giving my review tomorrow.... I went to the midnight showing Thursday completely exhausted, so I want to see it one more time before I make my final verdict. At the moment though, it is ranking very high for me.
    Temis, you might put some thought into checking the movie out. I was pretty skeptical going into it myself, part from always being a tad warry of reboot/ origins stories for characters that I already know and love (I was unsure about STXI going into that as well) and part from not being particularly sold on the trailers. It was far better than I was expecting. The guy who played Xavier did a good job and the guy who played Magneto was phenominal- he was a constant scene stealer for me.

    I think the best explanation for these two things is just the fact that the idea of mutants is such a new concept to these people. In the case of Shaw threatening the countries, no one's really sure of what he's capable of if they don't listen to him, so they're afraid of his powers or potential powers. Same thing for the Russians and Americans attacking the mutant contingent at the end. They have mutants who are capable of controlling other people, manipulating metal, appear and disappear, pretend to be anyone, shoot blasts of energy, and who knows what else. Yes, some of the mutants are good, but they also are dealing with some very bad mutants. Again, not knowing how many there are or what they're capable of, they were scared to let them go. And no one except Moira really knew what the X-men's role in stopping the war was. They had a Russian commander who blew up the freighter for reasons that no one knows and then you have a jet come out of no where and start battling a sub that no one knew about. From the US/ Russian perspective, it probably looked like two aggresive parties fighting their war in the middle of the two country's war.
     
  7. darthraidr

    darthraidr Commodore Commodore

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    D.

    this movie was just bad. it was too long, it was boring, it was cliched... i enjoyed one cameo in the film, and i am sure a couple small parts here and there. but it was easily the worse movie i've seen this summer.

    i guess it was one of the better x-men films... maybe... i dunno...i think all the x-men films are pretty mediocre (except for hugh jackman as wolverine). so it's about par for the course i guess.
     
  8. JD

    JD Fleet Admiral Admiral

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    In the comics he's his brother. Did they change that for the movie? Their father was actually Christopher Summers aka Corsair, a sometimes space pirate. They also have another brother, the mutant villain Vulcan. I haven't actually read any of the comics myself, but from I've read on Wikipedia and the Marvel Comics Database, it sounds like the Summers have a pretty crazy family.
     
  9. Admiral2

    Admiral2 Admiral Admiral

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    It still ain't there, is it?
     
  10. Lookingglassman

    Lookingglassman Admiral Admiral

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    I'm not really into Xmen, but I went to see this anyway and it was pretty good. I liked the cameo by Wolverine and how it showed why things are the way they are in Xmen.

    The best part was the preview for the upcoming remake of "Conquest of the Planet of the Apes" now being called, "Rise of the Planet of the Apes" I LOVE the Planet of the Apes!
     
  11. Evil Twin

    Evil Twin Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Saw it tonight. In a nutshell, cheesy, but fun. Gotta say I'm shocked to see so many people rating this higher than X2 (my all time favorite superhero movie.) I found X2 to be a much better written and acted movie. First Class is rather ham-fisted by comparison. Doesn't quite have the coolness and elegance of X2. But don't get me wrong, I still enjoyed it a lot and liked seeing the origin of things from the past films (despite some continuity errors ;)) and it was great seeing Professor X and Magneto in their prime. LOVED the Wolverine cameo. Totally unexpected and hilarious. :lol:

    My ranking of the films:

    X2
    X-Men
    First Class
    Wolverine
    .
    .
    .
    .
    Last Stand

    Oh yeah, I don't read the comics so... What's the relationship between Azazel and Nightcrawler, considering their similarities?
     
  12. Trekker4747

    Trekker4747 Boldly going... Premium Member

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    X-Men: First Class

    My Grade: A

    ------------------------------------------------------

    The recently bumpy X-Men movie franchise makes a bold, great, return in this movie. X-Men 3, for me, was just a lame movie with a lot of stuff I just didn't care for, Wolverine was okay but forgettable. The first two X-Men movies I found fun and entertaining but in the wake of comic-book movies having taken on a more serious form in the recent years X1 and X2's "flaws" are more apparent.

    X-Men: First Class takes place in the early late 1950s/early 1960s and follows the two men who will become friends but later push for those with special abilities beyond man in different ways.

    First we have Erik/Magneto a man who was captured as a boy in the 1940s by Nazis and held captive in Auschwitz where a German soldier would find interest in Erik's ability to control metal and manipulate Erik's emotions to capitalize on the boy's power catalyzing it by killing Erik's mother before his very eyes. Years later, after the war, Erik is seeking out the man who killed his mother but will eventually come across.

    Charles Xavier a rich, brash, and somewhat cocky man with a keen interest in genetics, mutation and doing what he can to find a way to help mutants live among humans and be accepted. When Charles and Erik meat they form a friendship and work together to help the CIA to stop a rogue band of mutants with plans of world conquest lead by the very man who killed Erik's mother. Charles and Erik's friendship begins to clash as both have different ideals on mutant kind, one wants revenge and to rise up as the genetically better people the other wants everyone to just work together.

    It all comes across very nicely as we run into other mutants in X-Men's roster who team up with the CIA for the mission and find themselves pulled by their leaders with two very different ideals.

    The movie sets up interesting dynamics between all of the characters most notably between Charles and Erik and Charles and the girl who will become the shape-shifting Mystique. Charles, as young boy, encounters a young Mystique when she breaks into his home to steal food; but he be-friends her and the two develop a brother/sister/sem-romantic relationship that becomes strained as Mystique begins to get the impression that Charles -in apparent defiance to everything he stands for- wants her to remain in a form that appears human rather than her natural form of a blue-skinned scaly humanoid.

    The movie plays well as a period piece and the climax centers around the Cuban Missile Crisis culminating into a great action scene as The X-Men are "revealed" to the militaries of the U.S. and Russia.

    Probably the movie's only "flaw" is that, for me, some of the secondary mutants used aren't interesting. It's was fine seeing Emma Frost and Beast but the other mutants used, frankly, are not interesting with the possible exception of Alex Summers. Angel and Banshee, for me, just weren't interesting enough and I'm sure there's plenty of other mutants in the X-Men franchise who could have been used.

    The movie also comes across -to -me- as a hard reboot of the X-Men franchise as much of it contradicts information revealed in the other X-Men movies (all set decades after this movie take place.) For example, Alex Summers (Havok) appears in this movie as a young adult even though he's supposed to be the younger brother of Scott Summers (Cyclops) who not only appears as a teenager in Wolverine (set in the late 70s) but is a young man in the X1-X3 (set in the 2000s.) X3 had sequence set in the 1980s or 1990s with a able-bodied Xavier, still friends with Erik, still going around interviewing prospective mutants. This movie has the two getting their falling-out in the 1960s. Wolverine also shows a middle-aged and still able-bodied Xavier in the 1970s. (Wolverine also shows, apparently, a young Emma Frost a decade after this movie is set where she's a 30-something year old woman.)

    This movie contradicts all of that so it seems, to me, that this is hard-reboot of the franchise that is ignoring all of the previous movies and setting its own path.

    Which is all fine and good as this was a movie I fully enjoyed though it also felt "rushed" as it seems the Xavier/Erik friendship and falling out could've been stretched out over a trilogy of movies as it's implied in the other movies that the two worked together very closely and were friends for a very long time, here it seems like a matter of months.

    But it's all well done and you can certainly see the brash, naive, dreams Xavier has and where Magneto's hate for humans comes from. So I give it an "A", only downgraded from A+ due to murky continuity with the other movies, using a couple of "weak" mutants and what seemed like a truncated time-line on the friendship between the two friends who'd fight each other on opposite sides of a war, yet still remain friendly to one another.

    There's also one great cameo in the movie that wasn't expected for me, though it happened right when I began to wonder why they never learned of him, and another good cameo that also wasn't expected.

    X-Men fans, comic-book fans should find plenty to enjoy in this movie.
     
  13. Aeolusdallas

    Aeolusdallas Captain Captain

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    Azazel is Nightcrawlers father and Mystique is his mother
     
  14. ColeMercury

    ColeMercury Lieutenant Commander Red Shirt

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    Or maybe his uncle?
     
  15. HoneyBLilly

    HoneyBLilly Commodore Commodore

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    I was thinking uncle too.

    Or cousin.

    And I really need to stay away from this thread since I can't see it yet. :scream: Oh well . . . I can live with that.
     
  16. UssGlenn

    UssGlenn Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Well if they wanted to, there's no reason they couldn't have them reconcile for a while before having another falling out. I don't think Erik has done anything so horrible yet as to prevent that.
     
  17. throwback

    throwback Captain Captain

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    May 27, 2011
    The film was okay. The aspect of the film that I didn't like is when both the American and Soviet fleets launched a combined military strike against the mutants. I thought the depiction of the fleets and their leaders was too Hollywoodish and less real life.
     
  18. Obiwanshinobi

    Obiwanshinobi Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Just got back. I thought this movie was pretty fuckin awesome and still stand by my Pre-emptive A+!

    That first scene with young Erik was all kinds of awesome. Surprised he didn't attempt to take Shaw out right then and there though. Fassbender as Magneto was excellent. Loved the bit with the stabbing of the hand, throw, retract and restab the hand.

    McEvoy's Xavier was pretty well done. He did a good job.

    How did the Russians know to build the antitelepath helmet in the first place? I was actually anticipating some kind of mention to Project Omega Red, but that probably doesn't happen until way later anyways.

    Logan's (Pre adamantium) cameo was a nice touch. "go fuck yourselves..." priceless.

    Rebecca Romain O'Connor's cameo was also unexpected.

    Shaw and his cronies seemed a little too mustache twirly for my taste. But Azazel had some pretty cool sequences with the teleporting and dropping of agents. That was Badass! Riptide was kind of a bland goon. Harry Leland would have been a wiser choice. And instead of Angel Salvator, they should have used Sunspot's father since he was a Hellfire Club member. Darwin, was well canon fodder like somebody mentioned earlier.

    As for the Emma Frost, January's performance seemed slightly on par with Kelly Hu's Deathstrike. Only with slightly more personality. Just slightly. I'm not sure why Bryan Singer's female sidekicks come off kind of wooden.

    All in all I loved this movie, my girlfriend didn't enjoy it as much as she did Thor. I thought it was way better than Thor, personally. There seemed to be alot more at stake in this movie.
     
  19. Trekker4747

    Trekker4747 Boldly going... Premium Member

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    Well, Erik is partly responsible for Charles getting crippled -though the movies suggest they mostly remained on "friendly" terms after their separate ideologies took hold. It also seemed this movie wanted to show us the "breaking point" between the two when their separate beliefs broke them from working together.
     
  20. BenRoethig

    BenRoethig Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    To prevent her from giving up the location during interrogation, especially since the CIA had Emma Frost in their custody.

    Like it made no sense for us and the Soviets to come together for the common threat of the Nazis during WWII? The world isn't black and white.

    They also proved a handful a powerful mutants had weapon level power and considered them to be a potential threat.