With the recent and continuing glut of superhero films,
including reboots and re-imaginings, the X-Men films seemed to have been
somewhat lost in the shuffle nowadays. The Wolverine seems to have been a minor
contender this summer compared to Iron Man 3 and Man of Steel. While the
quality of the six released films varies widely, it is admirable that the
franchise has run on for so long without a “hard reset” as experienced by the
Hulk, Spider-Man, Batman, Superman, and (in a few years) The Fantastic Four.
Okay, so the first three films had three different actresses for Kitty Pryde,
and Nightcrawler was jettisoned after one film, but in a world where major
characters like James Rhodes (of Iron Man) and Rachel Dawes (of Batman) are
replaced so wantonly, it’s a little refreshing to see attempts at continuity.
With Marvel Studios now being expertly shepherded by Joss
Whedon, it falls to controversial comic book scribe Mark Millar (Wanted,
Kick-Ass, The Ultimates 1 and 2) to provide guidance to Fox’s Marvel properties
(namely, X-Men and the Fantastic Four). Whatever one may think of Millar’s
work, one does have to admit that the mad Scot has a soft spot for fans,
communicating to them on his website’s forum (forums.millarworld.tv).
However, his influence on Fox’s Marvel films cannot yet be
determined, for he had little input on The Wolverine. The film was directed by
James Mangold, whose CV includes a diverse array of films such as Cop Land,
Girl Interrupted, Kate & Leopold, Identity, Walk the Line, 3:10 to Yuma,
and Knight and Day. Darren Aronofsky (Requiem for a Dream, Black Swan) was originally slated to direct the film, which
might have been interesting. Or it might have turned out as indistinguishable
from the average blockbuster as Gavin Hood’s X-Men Origins: Wolverine (Hood
also directed the brilliant South African film Tsotsi). At any rate, here is my personal ranking of
the X-Men films. Warning: There will be spoilers! (Though I will try not to
spoil too much of The Wolverine, even though you can see the final reveal
coming from a million miles away).
6. X-Men: The Last
Stand (Directed By Brett Ratner)
Many comic book fans complained that this film screwed with
the characters too much. I don’t know a whit about the comic book X-Men aside
from Millar’s run on Ultimate X-Men, but I still thought this was a poor film.
Cyclops is dispatched with little fanfare (poor James Marsden) as is Mystique,
and Xavier’s “death” doesn’t feel as impactful as it could have been.
Nightcrawler, one of the best characters from X2, is forgotten about
completely. The film is oddly dull and slow-moving until the climax on
Alcatraz, which is competently directed, but comes across as a series of
sequential video game missions. First, the minor mutants fight. Once that box
is checked, then we move on to Magneto. Only when that mission is completed
does Phoenix (AKA Jean Grey) decide to do anything. I realize that this is
dramatically sound, but the way it’s conceived and directed is clunky, thus
revealing the seams and removing any sense of organic flow.
I do love the last
shot, but it does render the rest of the film moot. This includes Rogue’s final
decision, and it’s telling that the filmmakers weren’t sure what they wanted
her to do either. They shot two versions of her final scene: one with her
taking the cure and one with her not taking it, and they didn’t decide on which
one to use until showing it to a test audience (source: DVD deleted scene
commentary). Overall, while the direction by Ratner isn’t terrible, it is
rather flat. Much more damaging is the screenplay by Simon Kinberg and Zak
Penn, which is devoid of heart and doesn’t really make me care about the
characters. Kinberg in particular has not written one movie I’ve liked, and
it’s one of the reasons I’m worrying a bit about X-Men: Days of Future Past.
I’m hoping co-writers Matthew Vaughn and Jane Goldman can balance him out. And
speaking of Vaughn, he was originally slated to direct this film, but pulled
out when he realized he wouldn’t be allowed to make the movie he wanted to
make. He was very critical of The Last Stand, and rightly so.
5. X-Men Origins:
Wolverine (Directed By Gavin Hood)
Most people seem to have a seething hatred for this movie. I
don’t think it’s all that great, but I also don’t think it’s a disaster on the
level of The Last Stand. Ryan Reynolds, who can’t seem to catch a break, is
reasonably funny as pre-Deadpool, and future John Carter actors Taylor Kitsch
and Lynn Collins as Gambit and Silverfox, respectively. The film doesn’t come
together as well as it should, with a bunch of side characters who feel
shoehorned in. Logan’s relationship with Victor Creed is implausibly
inconsistent. I realize that making them either best buds or bitter enemies
isn’t as interesting, but the lack of depth to their relationship makes it seem
like Creed’s final decision comes out of nowhere. He and Logan are slicing each
other up for the whole movie, and then he just decides to leave.
The actual story of the film also takes a while to get going.
After a mawkish childhood prologue, there is a neat title sequence featuring
Logan and Creed fighting in different wars though time, but it sadly reduces
their early relationship to a montage that focuses more on the cool visuals
than on character. Then there is a lengthy excursion with Logan working for
William Stryker (the same jerk from X2) and an abbreviated introduction to
Silverfox and her relationship with Logan before Stryker returns. Then he gets
his adamantium skeleton, and before we know it, he’s flying with Gambit to
Three Mile Island for the final confrontation. It’s an oddly paced film, with
some scenes seeming to stretch on, but with the whole movie feeling like it
could have used more flesh on its bones. The connections to the other X-Men
films (particularly with Cyclops) don’t fit well onto the spine of the story.
We’ll see how director Gavin Hood does with the upcoming Ender’s Game; if
that’s a dog, then we’ll know that Hood really is suited to smaller, more character
driven films (like the aforementioned Tsotsi).
4. The Wolverine
(Directed By James Mangold)
I was actually debating whether to put this before or after
the first X-Men film. The Wolverine does have some really neat moments, and I
loved that it was set in Japan, but it was let down by the final act. I didn’t
really get into this film until Logan gets to Japan, which thankfully doesn’t
take too long. The film benefits from
two superb female characters Yukio and Mariko, a rarity in comic book films.
Neither is as great as Hit-Girl obviously, but both characters feature
surprisingly nuanced portrayals with some earned emotional moments (though I do
also like Anna Paquin in the first X-Men, dodgy accent aside). The former
disappears for a long stretch of the film and the latter becomes a damsel in
distress at the end, but both are very welcome whenever they appear. Much less
impressive is Viper, who is more annoying than threatening, and I know this is
superficial, but I was very distracted by that rather unbecoming beauty spot on
her lip (I’m not a fan of beauty spots in general). Frankly, she comes across as an asshole. Famke
Janssen as Jean Grey gets a few nice scenes. Will Yun Lee (also seen in the
prologue to the James Bond film Die Another Day) is fine as Mariko’s fiancĂ©e,
though he could’ve used more screentime and development of his arc.
The final villain is severely underdeveloped, especially
since he isn’t revealed until just before his demise. We don’t really get a
sense of what drove him to do what he did and what changed him as a person. It
certainly doesn’t help that his it’s obvious who he is long before the reveal.
Logan’s struggle with immortality is interesting, but is merely touched on
before it’s dropped. The early action scenes are mostly well done, with a neat
bullet train sequence that is unfortunately not character-based at all, as
Wolverine is fighting a bunch of anonymous henchmen. The final battle is
underwhelming, though Yukio does get some nice moments and there are some
consequences for Logan. Other pluses include Hugh Jackman’s portrayal of Logan
and the Japan setting, but in the end, the movie ended up promising more that
it delivered. The mid-credits scene, though, is pretty chill-inducing.
3. X-Men (Directed By
Bryan Singer)
This film, released in 2000, arguably set off the modern
superhero film craze. The duo of X-Men and X2, followed by the even better
Spider-Man and Spider-Man 2 (these two are the real amazing Spider-Man films), proved that superheroes in film
could be popular again. Director Bryan Singer had previously directed smaller
films like Public Access, Apt Pupil, and the superlative The Usual Suspects,
and proved he could adequately handle a big-budget blockbuster (though it took
until X2 for him to really find his stride). X-Men has a surprisingly small
feel despite a climax atop the Statue of Liberty, and the action sequences
until the end are minimal. There are some uneasy touches, like the accents of
Storm and Rogue, and a Joss Whedon-penned line (the “toad struck by lightning”
zinger) that either Halle Barry or Singer completely misunderstood (likely
both) and thus made it sound more horrible than it should have. Then again,
Whedon also wrote the film’s best line (“You’re a dick.”) The actual screenplay
by David Hayter (also the voice of Snake in Metal Gear Solid) is, well, solid.
Get out of my mind, Liquid!
Most of the cast, including Jackman, Patrick Stewart, and
Ian McKellan, is effective, and the story does an admirable job at introducing
the characters and giving them depth and conflict. Rogue, played by the
always-welcome Anna Paquin, happily gets a lot to do here, and in many ways it
is more through her eyes than Logan’s through which we are introduced to the
X-Men. Paquin superbly portrays her sense of alienation that’s actually quite
affecting (if you ignore the fake accent which she thankfully dropped in
subsequent films), supported by a subplot with Bobby Drake/Iceman and Mystique.
In way, her character perfectly encapsulates the mutants’ struggles with
acceptance in their society. It’s too bad that she was basically ignored in the
sequels, though at least she got to feature in at least one film. Poor Cyclops
was shafted in all three. Speaking of Cyclops, the love triangle between him,
Logan, and Jean Grey isn’t quite as compelling as it could have been; Logan
does come across as an opportunistic churl, and Cyclops is a bit of a
cipher. The story chugs along at a
decent pace towards the climax, which is effectively staged. There is a sense
of Singer and the cast getting their feet wet, so the film isn’t as polished as
X2, but it’s a good introduction to these characters and their world.
2. X2: X-Men United
(Directed By Bryan Singer)
X2 improves upon the first X-Men film, with more assured
direction by Singer and a script that, for the most part, expands upon issues
only touched upon previously. It also introduces one of the best cinematic
X-Men characters: Nightcrawler. Alan Cumming gives a highly sympathetic
performance as the character grows from mind-controlled killer to insecure
outcast to hero. We get more backstory for Logan without sacrificing all the
mystery, a temporary team-up of the X-Men with Magneto, and a truly detestable
villain in William Stryker, who provides a real threat without coming across as
just annoying and toothless (see Viper in The Wolverine). The theme of mutant
acceptance is fleshed out with a scene featuring Iceman and his parents. This
time, we not only get a sense of rejection and betrayal—his stupid brother
calls the police!—but also an immediate sense of danger as Pyro attacks the
police when they arrive. It’s effective, even if it borders on preachy.
There are also some great action set pieces, starting with
Nightcrawler’s attack on the White House and continuing with a horrifying
assault by Stryker’s forces on the X-Men mansion. The X-Jet chase with the fighter
jets is kind of stupid, but is given visual interest by Storm’s “perfect storm.”
The extended climax is tense and exciting with constant reversals of fortune,
highlights being Logan’s fight with Deathstrike, Magneto’s manipulation of
Xavier in Stryker’s Cerebro, and Jean’s “sacrifice.” But the climax does drag
on for too long and seems to end several times (at 134 minutes, this is the
longest X-Men film). The scene where Stryker’s son manipulates Xavier to kill
all the mutants seems a little off and unconvincing. Maybe it’s because Xavier
gives in so easily, or maybe because the kid in that scene doesn’t act very
well (or wasn’t directed well). The final scene with Stryker drags a bit, and
the whole thing gets a little cumbersome by the end. Some of the themes are
stated in a heavy-handed manner as well. But these are only small issues that
detract only minimally from this film’s considerable strengths.
1. X-Men: First Class
(Directed By Matthew Vaughn)
Ironically, my favorite X-Men film has only one cast member
from the previous X-Men films, and it’s in a cameo—though it’s probably one of
the funniest cameos I’ve seen. Before the film came out, certain fanboys
derisively referred to the film as a choice phrase made by taking one letter
out of the word First and two out of Class (I’ll let you figure out which
letters they are.) Most of them were shut up by the final product, an
expertly-directed film featuring two elite lead performances and depth of
character beyond any found in the previous X-Men films. The few minor hiccups
include underdeveloped side characters and a wooden performance by January
Jones as Emma Frost, the former due to diminished prep time and the latter due
to who knows what. But these are vastly overshadowed by the film’s firm grasp
of character and story structure, and much of that is probably attributable to
director Matthew Vaughn.
I was a fan of Vaughn before First Class (he also directed
Layer Cake, Stardust, and Kick-Ass), but was worried about how his anarchic
sensibility would fit into the more mainstream world of X-Men. There are some
more conventional elements, such as the side characters, but Vaughn was able to
bring a sense of unpredictability and even harshness into the X-Men films. From
the first scene with Sebastian Shaw (Kevin Bacon) and a young Magneto to Shaw’s
demise, the aforementioned cameo, some of Magneto’s early acts, and not one but
two scenes set at sex parlors, the film is at the higher end of the PG-13
rating. (The Wolverine undoubtedly benefited from the trail blazed by Vaughn in
First Class). But beyond these superficial elements, Vaughn also devotes extensive
time to building the relationship between Charles Xavier (James McAvoy) and
Erik/Magneto (Michael Fassbender). The script, a rewrite by Vaughn and Jane
Goldman from a previous draft by Ashley Edward Miller and Zack Stentz, mines
the richness between the two mutants as much as a major superhero film can. The
scene where Charles helps Erik move the radar dish is my favorite scene in the
whole X-Men series—a perfect combination of despair, triumph, and release.
Despite these explorations, the film never drags, and even the scenes with the
“sidekick” mutants are entertaining. Jennifer Lawrence also does a stellar job
as Mystique, creating a charismatic character who still has a ways to go before
she becomes the Mystique of the first three X-Men films. Her relationship with
Hank McCoy/Beast (Nicholas Hoult) is understated, and the inner conflicts of
both characters deeply affect that relationship. Vaughn and the actors do a
great job of bringing the characters—especially Charles, Erik, Mystique, and
Beast—to life.
It wouldn’t be a major superhero film without action, and
Vaughn proves that he is one of the best action directors working today. All of
Erik’s early scenes are filled with suspense and brutality, including the boat
scene where he runs into Charles. Shaw’s attack on the mutant compound exceeds
the mansion attack in X2 in terms of terror, thrills, conflict, and emotion.
The last half hour of the film is a cornucopia of exhilarating action,
nail-biting suspense, and emotional release. Unlike in X2, the pace never drags
and all the various action scenes are masterfully conceived and put together.
Vaughn always shows the action clearly, his unobtrusive camera work letting the
thrills stand on their own. There is no shortage of great moments, including
Banshee’s method of flying, the sub lift, and the final confrontation with
Shaw. Even after the “boss” is defeated, there is still a threat, and it
relates to Erik’s character. And he is stopped not by a slash of adamantium
claws or a bursting dam, but by himself when he realizes what he’s done to
Charles. It all culminates in an emotional apotheosis that, while not
spectacular or tear-jerking, is entirely fitting. I know I sound like a raving
fanboy, but I do enjoy this film a lot, and I do acknowledge its mentioned
weaknesses (yes, “mutant and proud” is pretty cheesy). It’s not even my
favorite comic book or superhero film, and it’s actually my least favorite of
Vaughn’s four films. But I still like it, and I can’t really apologize for
that.
The Future
Next up is X-Men: Days of Future Past, directed by Bryan
Singer and written by Matthew Vaughn, Jane Goldman, and Simon Kinberg. As it
features both the First Class cast and the original cast in a time travel
story, there is a risk that the film could become a bloated mess. I would be a
little more excited about the film if Vaughn were directing (he originally was,
but left, and to top it off, he’s not doing Kick-Ass 2 either) or if Kinberg
wasn’t involved (unfortunately, he’s working on a Star Wars film too, though
not Episode VII). Though admittedly, most of the original cast is probably in
the film because of Singer. The Usual Suspects was a high peak early in
Singer’s career, and one could argue that X2 was a later, somewhat smaller peak
that he hasn’t matched since. After X2, Singer went on to do Superman Returns,
Valkyrie, and Jack the Giant Slayer. Not a lot to inspire confidence there, but
maybe he can reach his earlier heights again. There’s a lot of expectation for
this film, and as it’s always a bummer to be disappointed, here’s hoping that
Singer delivers.
See also Ranking the X-Men Film Scores on the other blog.