It was him, but I wondered if he were in actual makeup, or if it was a CGI job.
As with a lot of these movies, I think I'll need to see it a couple more times before I really know what I think about it. But, overall, I'm unimpressed. The movie doesn't make any major blunders but it just didn't engage me as much as some of the others did. It certainly didn't come anywhere close to eclipsing X-Men: First Class as my favorite movie of the series.
I think part of that is because DOFP isn't quite as heartfelt as First Class. Every time I watch First Class, my heart totally breaks for Mystique because all she really wants is one person to love her for who she really is. And the white-hot rage driving Magneto's quest for revenge against Sebastian Shaw is quite palpable too. But in DOFP, the themes are much more vague, like "hope" & "being the better person."
And wouldn't Stryker have been older, as played by Danny Huston, he looked older than the actor playing Stryker in this film. Perhaps they should've made this guy Lt. Stryker.
That said, I would have liked a larger "team" in the final confrontation with the Sentinels, and Havok has really cool "blow 'em up" powers.
I loved it but wish I had not read all the spoilers ahead of time. There was no surprises which lessoned the impact.
and practically everyone else was killed off-screen. It seems like a terrible waste of Banshee & Emma Frost.
This movie righted all the wrongs from that abortion known as The Last Stand.
Until they brought out those stupid robots, it felt like they could only make plans for the sentinels because the current levels of tech just weren't there to bring this shite to light.
Then they roll out those things near the end that are impossible still by today's standards.
In 1973, a transistor powered Sentinel to do what they wanted it to do, would have to have been the size of a skyscraper, and it's computer brain would have occupied 70 percent of it's body yet still been barely smarter than an Ipod.
I saw the film twice. On second viewing, this was not a screen.. it was just blue tile like paper. It loos like a screen but it isn't.Until they brought out those stupid robots, it felt like they could only make plans for the sentinels because the current levels of tech just weren't there to bring this shite to light.
Then they roll out those things near the end that are impossible still by today's standards.
In 1973, a transistor powered Sentinel to do what they wanted it to do, would have to have been the size of a skyscraper, and it's computer brain would have occupied 70 percent of it's body yet still been barely smarter than an Ipod.
Dinkledge also had a plasma/laptop display in his briefcase when presenting his ideas.
I was also expecting a reveal thatn Dinklage was mutant as well, and ywah his short stature played into that.
I was also expecting a reveal thatn Dinklage was mutant as well, and ywah his short stature played into that.
That would suck for him, he would always be setting off his own detector!
This movie righted all the wrongs from that abortion known as The Last Stand.
I saw the film twice. On second viewing, this was not a screen.. it was just blue tile like paper. It loos like a screen but it isn't.Until they brought out those stupid robots, it felt like they could only make plans for the sentinels because the current levels of tech just weren't there to bring this shite to light.
Then they roll out those things near the end that are impossible still by today's standards.
In 1973, a transistor powered Sentinel to do what they wanted it to do, would have to have been the size of a skyscraper, and it's computer brain would have occupied 70 percent of it's body yet still been barely smarter than an Ipod.
Dinkledge also had a plasma/laptop display in his briefcase when presenting his ideas.
I was also expecting a reveal thatn Dinklage was mutant as well, and ywah his short stature played into that.
That would suck for him, he would always be setting off his own detector!
Yes and no. Lawrence's stardom will definitely keep elevating the character, but Mystique was already written as one of the franchise leads in First Class, which was released before Lawrence became of the biggest movie stars in the world.That reason is Jennifer Lawrence.Not to mention that it still feels odd that a character who was just a glorified henchwoman in the first three movies is now so incredibly pivotal and crucial to the story for some reason.
I think part of that is because DOFP isn't quite as heartfelt as First Class. Every time I watch First Class, my heart totally breaks for Mystique because all she really wants is one person to love her for who she really is. And the white-hot rage driving Magneto's quest for revenge against Sebastian Shaw is quite palpable too. But in DOFP, the themes are much more vague, like "hope" & "being the better person."
But those themes aren't new to the X-Men film series, they were used in the first film.
None of XMO is set in 1975, despite what that graphic says. The finale of XMO takes place in 1979, and there is on-screen text earlier that says Six Years Later which places the early scenes in 1973. Not that it helps explain why Logan was sleeping with the boss' daughter in '73 instead of being sentenced to firing squad in 'Nam. Better movie takes precedent in my book.While Origins surprisingly happens in 1975.![]()
I watched Origins again a few weeks ago, and I don't think she's ever even referred to as "Emma" in the actual movie, nevermind "Emma Frost." It's only in the end credits she's called Emma.Emma Frost is in a similar situation (two different characters sharing the same name).
Technically, the one in Origins was not called Emma Frost in the film, just in promotional materials. So when First Class came out the Origins character was already being "retconned" as just "Kayla's sister Emma". Which is better because the character displays no evidence of telepathic ability.
So you could just say it's a mutant with similar powers to Emma Frost... although Stryker does say the girls diamond powers are unique. But if Emma Frost is dead then I suppose they were.
I hope the events of The Wolverine still happened in some way, shape or form. It would suck for Logan that if after losing Jean and finding Mariko, then saving and (essentially) losing Jean again, if Logan and Mariko had never met in the new timeline. It would make sense that Yashida still would have sought Logan out when he was dying even in the new timeline, thus initiating the same chain of events.
Probably, but he might have called in the X-Men to back him up when he lost his powers. Charles would be the logical contact to find out what happened to him.
That story might have made a pretty short movie.![]()
I wonder how in the original timeline Magneto escaped from the Pentagon prison then. Mystique? Also what motivated Xavier to get back on track without the appearance of Logan.
So Azazel is dead. I suppose Mystique maybe had a little fling with him before he died (while Magneto was in prison) gave birth to baby Nightcrawler, and then abandoned him. (But that doesn't really jar with her "mutant and proud" shtick.)
My own instinct was that it happened in the equivalent timeframe to the future scenes during the rest of the movie (flying wheelchair for one thing) but Rogue, Scott and Jean seemed remarkably unaged. Must be those mutant genes!
In the real world it was a money issue. Bryan Singer wanted to have few Sentinels in the sequence when the military attacked the school in X2, but they were cut for budgetary reasons.
The Borgified Corpse said:The finale of X-Men Origins: Wolverine is set in the late 1980s, not 1979. In both X-Men (2000) & X2, various characters from Professor Xavier to Col. Stryker say that Wolverine's memory loss happened 15 years ago. Those movies took place, presumably, some time in the early 2000s, 2000 A.D. at the earliest. 15 years prior to that would be 1985.
tighr said:I think the real reason sentinels didn't appear in X2 is because no one thought to have sentinels in X2.
The Borgified Corpse said:The finale of X-Men Origins: Wolverine is set in the late 1980s, not 1979. In both X-Men (2000) & X2, various characters from Professor Xavier to Col. Stryker say that Wolverine's memory loss happened 15 years ago. Those movies took place, presumably, some time in the early 2000s, 2000 A.D. at the earliest. 15 years prior to that would be 1985.
Or the 15 years was just an estimate and turned out to be off, or it was simply retconned along the way.
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