Exactly, though the Wolverine and Lady Death Strike scene was good
I'll tell you what I disliked about that fight; it's something that plagues a lot of superhero movies (almost all of them, actually, even X3, to an extent). It's the tendecy to set up an opponent for our hero that's so powerful that he (or she) can't possibly beat them through traditional means, so they have to use some gimmick or mechanical plot device to do it. Iron Man defeated Iron Monger by blowing up the nuclear power plant thingie, Batman ('89) beat the Joker by pulling him off a building, Superman saved Lois by nothing less than reversing time itself (take that, Post-Crisis Supes!), Spider-Man defeated Doc Ock by unmasking, Green Goblin defeated himself with his own glider, on and on
ad nauseum. I would much rather see a fight where the good guy actually just bests the bad guy squarely through higher strength, prowess, etc, then pulling out a Plot Device from his utility belt and zapping the villain with it. Admittedly, there are gimmick defeats aplenty in the comics, but there are also for more common examples of the hero defeating the villain by ordinary means than there are in movies. I'd say Batman Begins is a good example, since the train only crashed after Ra's was already subdued, and dare I say it, Daredevil did, if nothing else, feature not one but two fair fights with no gimmick defeat (although the first was marred by the silly CGI jumping). There really aren't many occurrences of a decent knockdown drag-out slugfest in the climaxes of superhero movies, and yet that should be what superhero action should be founded on. Yes, Iron Man was good, but which of these taglines sounds better? "Watch Iron Man battle Iron Monger!" or "Watch Pepper push a button that blows something up!"? See what I mean? It doesn't totally ruin the movie, but it does lessen the visceral impact of the villain being defeated. (Which was also the problem with X1--there was no final battle at all, except for the fight between Logan and Sabertooth, which was far too short, and featured too much FX over actual exchanges of blows.)
Anyway, that's what I disliked about Logan vs. Lady Deathstrike, and it's also my little rant about superhero movies in general. Certain snobbish people might think it ridiculous to say that a guy who prefers X3 has high standards, but I stand by that statement nonetheless.
So that's my opinion, take it how you will.