^ What about Spider-Man 3?![]()
What annoyed me even more was that the infantry were mutants - y'know, the ones Magnet Boy is always saying are the superior form of human life and for whom he expressed such concern in the earlier movies. In this, he stands around watching mutants being slaughtered and does absolutely nothing. Queen Jean, having offed Saint Scott off-screen (not that I ever much liked either character) and gone to the dark side, stands around and does nothing. So much for Magnet Boy's absolute belief in the superiority of all mutants.If Magneto is such a fucking genius, why the did he wait until his infantry was wasted to start launching the flaming cars? Even if you don't give a damn about your infantry, that's beyond stupid.
Throw in the cop-out ending (Oh, look, X isn't really dead and Magnet Boy isn't depowered after all!Not that anyone stays dead or depowered for long in the X-universe, of course), the craptacular editing (every scene, as mentioned, does seem to last about 15 seconds), the name-checks masquerading as character appearances, the trite, cliched dialogue and the sheer stupidity of some of the characters' behaviour and...well, whatever X3 did, it didn't rock. At all. (Except for Kelsey Grammar's Beast, which rocked big time.)
Ok, in that case.It's Tuln. I didn't love the film, but on other topics, this film is VERY hated. I at least want to give it credit for trying, while still being a fun movie. I wanted a discussion on it that probed both its faults and merits, and there have been some great points made in this thread that have gotten me to think differently.
I like this line: 'Try growing those back."
The idea that Phoenix was always there and repressed? Interesting. Discussed? not much.
The idea that mutants might choose to be normal? Interesting. Played out? not much.
Phoenix does two things that make sense in this movie.
- Kill Professor X
- try to shag Wolverine
What is she doing the rest of the time? Why does she do nothing during the fight, and then join later on? After killing X, what does she do until the very end?
The Logan/Jean relationship was weak, so having him kill her was very meh. Which was not what that moment needed.
Angel's first scene was great - but you can't introduce a character with only 8 lines and expect anyone to care.
Scott's death was, as mentioned, complete ass.
When Logan spots the "cure" needles, I thought we'd get some kind of conflict around the idea of forcing it on Magneto - is it right to gouge out his eyes if it ends this? but no recognition of that idea at all - even though it was put as central when Hank resigns over the government using the "cure" as a weapon. But he's actually the one to spear Magneto...?
A very disappointing miss, all in all.
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This movie is so hated by the fans. But before I can go into0 any detail why I disagree, I must first say that the first two X-Men films create a great cinematic world for the X-Men to live in, but as films they have problems. The first film was all introductions, and the action at the end was rather bland, particularly the statue scenes. The second film, the favorite, is really good, and more time is spent on the characters, the plot and the relationships. That said, the film has an underwritten second act. I mean what were Storm and Jean doing, sitting in a plane that whole time? It was a good film.
The third film is much maligned. Despite the director's attempt to keep the films consistent in their feel, the change in directors is still obvious. However, look at Ebert's review for why I like it. It has a real challenging point, a conflict that stems from the universe these characters inhabit, but also soemthing that's relevant to our time. People say Watchmen was written as a reflection of the political situation of the Cold War, and I think that X-3 deals with many many issues of today through allegory. Bringing the Pheonix into this actually worked.. she's damn powerful, but having her move planets around would not fit in the cinematic universe. Sure the stories alternate fora while in a haphazard way, but a lot of movies do that if they have two plots. At no point does either storey become stagnant or uninteresting. I think what makes this story work is how much meat it has. In some ways it is more relevant and more important than part 2.
Any film that talks about a political "slippery slope" has got to have some merit.
Plus, how great is it to have a movie that has an antagonist that you can ompeltely agree with and side with. Magneto has a point, and you can't take that away.
The Beastwas great. Grrammer made him a complex character.
I like the subtle charcter work.. it all felt genuine. There are moments hen Magneto's respect for Charles is really apparent.
I liked the scene between Storm and Logan where it's just the two of them talking about whether he should go after Jean.
Plus, hell the action at the end, while far from the best action scene ever put on film, is very entertaining. I love the Juggernaut vs. Kitty thing, it was awesome.
I think you could write a movie around this - particularly as allegory for minorities who assimilate, who get accused of "acting white". I think it's a rich idea that got passed over for dumbassery.I think this got the appropriate amount of screen time.The idea that mutants might choose to be normal? Interesting. Played out? not much.
We never even got to hear what the characters feel about it. Rogue clearly thought it was a good idea. Will she still, if Bobby dumps her? Will Bobby find her more attractive now that they can touch, or less attractive because she's normal, because she's rejected mutanthood, which is so important to him? *Here's* your movie.
Great missed moment - Rogue is present at the final fight, and realizes she could save all those lives if she touched Jean, and still had her powers.
I don't remember this. As I remember, Jean emerged from the shuttle crash fully formed, and fully powered. Whether this is true or not, if your character can't logically allow the story to progress, you have the wrong characters or the wrong story.The problem was they went for Jean Grey scale to Full Phoenix scale with nothing in between, unlike the comics where her power slowly grew over time. That meant they couldn't logically let her fight, or it was "good night Irene" for the good guys.
Jean's relationship to Logan resulting in her death? not by a mile. Her repressed attraction to him, yes. Repressed why? Because she's in LOVE with Scott! The movie never made me believe she had feelings for either of them. Disintegrating a guy accidentally and not realizing it - that's just not how I see love.Straight out of the comics though.
Better ending - Jean realizes she killed Scott by accident (maybe Logan shows her the glasses?), and kills herself.
Worse ending... still thinking.
No, Beast was a supporting character. Angel was a prop.He [Angel] worked as a supporting character, which in this incarnation was all that he was.
At least Charles got a death scene. Cyke's death was just lamer than lame.Excuse to bring in a new actor if they ever chose to, just like killing Charles was.
I remember he apologized. That's nice of him, I guess. But hardly an interesting look at morality.Yes, and did you notice the way he acted immediately afterwards? He was disgusted with himself.
The bridge scene was cool, weird physics notwithstanding. Though my favourite moment there is when the mother meets eyes with Magneto, and locks the car. Awesome. I'd have liked a little more exploration of his bloodthirstyness, though - he kills a bunch of people really casually in this movie, throwing cars through the air, dropping the bridge on people... In X1, he showed a fair bit of restraint, and was far more interesting.And we DID get some great moments, like Magneto FINALLY doing something truly Magneto in scale, and a smart-as-a-whip Kitty Pryde besting Juggernaut. Not to mention every second Beast was on-screen.
Pryde did have a great moment, undermined by some stupid humour. When you're stealing from YouTube, give up.
Frasier was great as Beast. To continue my quibbling tone, though... I always thought Beast knew that "Oh my stars and garters!" was a goofy thing to say, and he said it to exaggerate his shock at things. Saying it while looking at something really shocking sort of drains the moment of tension.
X3? what X3? there was no third X-Men film.
*sticks fingers in ears, squeezes eyes shut LALALALALALALA*
Ok, in that case.It's Tuln. I didn't love the film, but on other topics, this film is VERY hated. I at least want to give it credit for trying, while still being a fun movie. I wanted a discussion on it that probed both its faults and merits, and there have been some great points made in this thread that have gotten me to think differently.
I like this line: 'Try growing those back."
I think they should have stuck with the mutant cure story and not have tried anything with Phoenix. That would keep Cyclops & Xavier around. Beast was fine, make Angel's story relevant. Add Forge(to explain the Danger Room.) & Psylocke(To the X-Men as the teams drill enstructor. It would explain her fighing skills and make use of her telepathy) Along with Colossus, the X-Men now have a bigger team for the final fight.
Dump Kid Omega(Who?) & psudo-Psylocke and replace them with Quicksilver & the Scarlet Witch. Keep Archlight & Madrox(he was cool) and replace Calisto with a CGI'ed Caliban a la Smegol. Along with Juggy, now you have a fomittable Brotherhood. No army of mutants for Magneto, let the Brotherhood tare shit up instead.
Leech shuts down Magneto's powers, leaving Phoenix the main villain for the next sequel.
End the film with Jean rising from the lake.
Fade to black
Roll credits.
I think you could write a movie around this - particularly as allegory for minorities who assimilate, who get accused of "acting white". I think it's a rich idea that got passed over for dumbassery.
We never even got to hear what the characters feel about it. Rogue clearly thought it was a good idea. Will she still, if Bobby dumps her? Will Bobby find her more attractive now that they can touch, or less attractive because she's normal, because she's rejected mutanthood, which is so important to him? *Here's* your movie.
I think you could write a movie around this - particularly as allegory for minorities who assimilate, who get accused of "acting white". I think it's a rich idea that got passed over for dumbassery.
We never even got to hear what the characters feel about it. Rogue clearly thought it was a good idea. Will she still, if Bobby dumps her? Will Bobby find her more attractive now that they can touch, or less attractive because she's normal, because she's rejected mutanthood, which is so important to him? *Here's* your movie.
I don't remember this. As I remember, Jean emerged from the shuttle crash fully formed, and fully powered. Whether this is true or not, if your character can't logically allow the story to progress, you have the wrong characters or the wrong story.
Jean's relationship to Logan resulting in her death? not by a mile.
The movie never made me believe she had feelings for either of them.
Disintegrating a guy accidentally and not realizing it - that's just not how I see love.
At least Charles got a death scene. Cyke's death was just lamer than lame.
I remember he apologized. That's nice of him, I guess. But hardly an interesting look at morality.
Awesome. I'd have liked a little more exploration of his bloodthirstyness, though - he kills a bunch of people really casually in this movie, throwing cars through the air, dropping the bridge on people... In X1, he showed a fair bit of restraint, and was far more interesting.
Pryde did have a great moment, undermined by some stupid humour. When you're stealing from YouTube, give up.
Frasier was great as Beast. To continue my quibbling tone, though... I always thought Beast knew that "Oh my stars and garters!" was a goofy thing to say, and he said it to exaggerate his shock at things. Saying it while looking at something really shocking sort of drains the moment of tension.
I have posted several times the most basic and logical changes to the first film that I feel could have created a better film and a better franchise, and won't bore anyone again.![]()
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