In 2014, the old X-Men movie characters and the younger cast joined forces through some time-traveling Wolverine shenanigans in a movie called "Days of Future Past". In my opinion it was fantastic, and the perfect sendoff for the original cast, with an almost Star Trek VI like depiction of all the characters alive and well at Xavier's School for gifted youngsters. It was the perfect note to end Patrick Stewart and Hugh Jackman's X-Men careers with.
Then came "Logan".
-sigh-
"Logan" is totally unnecessary, and yet it is the final time we see these characters. It's also super dark and gritty and features an older Wolverine poking fun at how the comic books were "never like" how his adventures went. Pretty rude, since without those comics these movies wouldn't even exist. These are minor problems though, compared to what comes next. We find out that ALL the X-Men are dead, Professor X is killed by some clone of Wolverine and then buried in a ditch on the side of the road (!?) in the most disgraceful disservice to a character on film that I have EVER seen, and Wolverine himself dies fighting his own clone, and is buried by a bunch of mutant kids in a field somewhere. What else happens in this movie? I have no idea, the rest was totally forgettable and the cliff notes above are the lasting damage this film did to the X-Men film legacy.
AND YET. For some reason Sir Patrick Stewart fawns over this film like it was some great triumph of drama, when his character said and did nothing of any consequence, and had the most anticlimactic death scene in the history of cinematic superheroes. I really don't understand. This wouldn't be so bad if he didn't play Xavier in Logan. You could write the story so Xavier was all a hallucination of Logan's mind, or hell, replace Xavier with another X-Men character altogether. Or just have Logan be ON HIS OWN. He's a loner after all, why the hell is he dragging poor Charles Xavier along anyway, especially after the deaths of the rest of the X-Men? Really, this movie as it is should NEVER have been made, and "Days of Future Past" should have been the final say on the old X-Men cast.
But thats just like, my opinion, man. What are your thoughts?
Then came "Logan".
-sigh-
"Logan" is totally unnecessary, and yet it is the final time we see these characters. It's also super dark and gritty and features an older Wolverine poking fun at how the comic books were "never like" how his adventures went. Pretty rude, since without those comics these movies wouldn't even exist. These are minor problems though, compared to what comes next. We find out that ALL the X-Men are dead, Professor X is killed by some clone of Wolverine and then buried in a ditch on the side of the road (!?) in the most disgraceful disservice to a character on film that I have EVER seen, and Wolverine himself dies fighting his own clone, and is buried by a bunch of mutant kids in a field somewhere. What else happens in this movie? I have no idea, the rest was totally forgettable and the cliff notes above are the lasting damage this film did to the X-Men film legacy.
AND YET. For some reason Sir Patrick Stewart fawns over this film like it was some great triumph of drama, when his character said and did nothing of any consequence, and had the most anticlimactic death scene in the history of cinematic superheroes. I really don't understand. This wouldn't be so bad if he didn't play Xavier in Logan. You could write the story so Xavier was all a hallucination of Logan's mind, or hell, replace Xavier with another X-Men character altogether. Or just have Logan be ON HIS OWN. He's a loner after all, why the hell is he dragging poor Charles Xavier along anyway, especially after the deaths of the rest of the X-Men? Really, this movie as it is should NEVER have been made, and "Days of Future Past" should have been the final say on the old X-Men cast.
But thats just like, my opinion, man. What are your thoughts?