That trailer hit me right in the feels. The
X-Men films have generally had excellent trailers, even when some of the films themselves have been less than stellar, but this one really hit me on an emotional level in a way none of the others have. Seeing Logan and Charles so frail, vulnerable, desperate, and alone in a way we've never seen them before, not even facing imminent death in
DoFP, really carried some dramatic weight and gave this film a sense of gravitas that is surprising for a superhero film. The panning shot around the interior of the truck with Charles in the back hanging on for dear life while Logan tries to drive them out of danger was fantastic.
Then you get Johnny Cash's haunting rendition of
Hurt to put the capper on the whole thing and really drive home the emotional sucker punch. Perfect song choice given the events of the film and the mental, physical, and emotional state of our heroes. Every time I want to complain about its overuse in trailers, movies, and TV shows, it just grabs me and sets the mood of the scene or trailer so well that the complaint doesn't register.
So, from what I gather from the trailer and the
Apocalypse stinger, Caliban is using his mutant tracking ability to help Mr. Sinister's Essex Corp. goons, led by Robot Hand Guy, in hunting down the last remaining mutants on Earth, and Logan's young girl clone X-23 is somehow integral to preventing total mutant extinction? Is that the gist of it?
I haven't read the
Old Man Logan comic, but looking at the Wiki description, it seems nuttier than an elephant turd and full of unusable characters due to rights issues, so I doubt too much of it will be adapted. Though this part seemed like it might be relevant:
Throughout the story it is reiterated that the "Wolverine" persona died the day the villains attacked, and Logan has refused to use his claws ever since. Via flashbacks it is revealed that on the night the attack happened, a group of forty supervillains apparently attacked the X-Mansion. Unable to locate his teammates, Wolverine slaughtered the attackers to ensure the safety of the mutant children. As the last "attacker" was killed, Logan realized that the entire assault was an illusion created by Mysterio, and his perceived enemies were actually his fellow X-Men. This destroyed him emotionally and mentally, and he fled the Mansion and wandered away to a train track in shock and shame. Though he made a subsequent suicide attempt by allowing a freight train to run him over, Logan could not actually kill himself, but had effectively killed "Wolverine".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Man_Logan
Mysterio is probably owned by Sony since he's primarily a Spider-Man villain, but you could use any reality warping mutant instead to convince Wolverine he's killing an invading army when he's actually killing his own mutant friends and students instead. That would be a pretty messed up beginning and a justifiable explanation for his withdrawal from the world.
It is kind of a bummer that they went through all the trouble to save mutant-kind in
DoFP only to simply have them all wiped out again a few years later by Mr. Sinister's faction. Feels like everything was a big waste of time, and I wouldn't want them to go through another time travel plotline to reset things all over again if they change their minds and wants to bring back the older, established actors at some point in a new
X-Men/spinoff or
Deadpool film. Oh, well, we'll wait and see how that plays out.
Anyway, fantastic trailer, and I'm really looking forward to this movie. It seems to be breaking new ground for an X-Men and a Wolverine movie, which is good. The last two Wolverine movies were mediocre, to say the least, so hopefully this will make up for it.