Oh and anyone who thinks Origins Wolverine is still in continuity, even in the pre-DoFP timeline clearly hasn't seen Deadpool yet.
I have seen
Deadpool twice. I agree that
Deadpool &
X-Men Origins: Wolverine are mutually exclusive. However, for continuity purposes, I choose to disregard
Deadpool. There's really nothing in
Deadpool to tie it into the
X-Men movie continuity. Aside from Deadpool himself, the only other
Deadpool character to have appeared in any of the
X-Men movies is Colossus. And Stefan Kapicic's version of Colossus from
Deadpool is completely different from the version played by Daniel Cudmore in
X2, X-Men: The Last Stand, &
X-Men: Days of Future Past.
Now, if they ever put this new version of Deadpool into a new
X-Men movie or have a movie-established version of one of the
X-Men characters appear in a
Deadpool sequel, then I may have to rejigger my thinking a bit. (Given the box office success of
Deadpool, it's probably inevitable.) But until then:
Deadpool is NOT an X-Men movie!
Admittedly,
X-Men Origins: Wolverine is probably the worst as far as dumping in characters that would later appear much earlier in
X-Men: First Class &
X-Men: Days of Future Past. In addition to "Emma," Stryker's prison also includes a redhead with his mouth covered (Banshee?), a guy trying to move really fast (Quicksilver?), and a guy in the middle of a tornado (Riptide?).
Based on the unit decal on Logan's helmet in the Origins opening, he was a member of the Army's 29th Infantry Division on D-Day. After V-E Day the 29th remained in occupation at Bremen through the end of 1945, and never went to Japan.
Speculation: Sometime while fighting in Europe, either Logan or Victor or possibly both suffered battle wounds which would kill a normal person. To keep their mutation a secret, they then faked their own deaths and somehow established new identities as soldiers with a different unit that went to Japan.
It was also specifically stated by Xavier in the first film that that he was 17 when he initially met Erik. It doesn't seem to me that he's meant to be so young in First Class when their first meeting is shown. It was furthermore implied by Stryker in United that Wolverine didn't have claws before he gave them to him. I think you just have to "squint" on details like that from the first trilogy of films.
I agree that you have to "squint" on certain details. But, frankly, the line about Xavier being 17 when he first met Magneto is one of the very few that I don't have even a kind of explanation for. Most of it, even if a stretch, can fit if you want it to.
As for Stryker, when he said, "You were an animal then and you're an animal now. I just gave you claws," I figured he was speaking metaphorically. Furthermore, he seems to be playing fast & loose with the truth in general in his scenes with Wolverine. Example:
Wolverine: "You took my memories. You took my life!"
Stryker: "You act as if I stole something from you. As I recall, it was you who volunteered for the procedure."
X-Men Origins: Wolverine shows this to be, at best, a half-truth. Wolverine did volunteer for the adamantium experiment but only because he'd been falsely led to believe that Kayla had been murdered. And he certainly did not volunteer to have his memories erased by being shot in the head with adamantium bullets. It's a canny attempt to manipulate Wolverine on Stryker's part. It doesn't ultimately work, but he can lie with impunity since Wolverine doesn't really remember any of it.
Doesn't get you around the above, not to mention a lot of other things like Xavier's being crippled in 1962, whereas he was walking around in the 80s in The Last Stand. (I know Future Past sought to paper this over a bit with the serum that let him walk while suppressing his powers, but it still doesn't really fit since he clearly HAS his powers in his ambulatory scenes in both Origins and Last Stand. On the other hand, they did also show in the DOFP airport scene that he is capable of projecting an image of himself upright while in reality being wheelchair bound, so that helps...but then you still have to assume something different from what was intended in X3 and Origins, that Xavier wasn't actually physically present for those scenes and it was merely a projection. It would seem the serum was also intended to explain Hank's human appearance in X2, but then why would he be so amazed at and tempted by the boy's power to suppress his beastly appearance in Last Stand?)
Here's my theory on that: In
X-Men: Days of Future Past, Beast says that Xavier takes too much of the mutant suppressing serum. Perhaps, in the mid/late 1980s, Xavier experimented with taking smaller doses of the serum which allowed him to walk while still giving him a more limited form of his telepathy. Eventually, his immune system developed a resistance to the serum and he had to stop using it entirely.
Because the serum eventually lost its potency, Beast had become reluctantly resigned to never achieving human form again. So, the possibility of a new cure in
X3 was a surprising temptation for him. But, presumably, the "cure" created by Worthington Labs eventually wore off too. This explains how Magneto got his powers back (and Rogue in the Rogue Cut of
X-Men: Days of Future Past).
So am I the only person who actually like J-Law's Mystique?
No. She was one of my favorites in
X-Men: First Class, which is my favorite film out of the entire franchise! Personally, I don't have a problem with making more movies about her, although I think it would be better if they were team movies, not solo-films.