05/30/2006 3:28 PM
Posted by Skwid
X-Men III: The Last Stand
The best part of this movie-going experience was the teaser trailer for
Snakes On A Plane, or more specifically, the mixed reaction of the audience, with a portion applauding and hooting, and the rest completely baffled (one guy behind me actually said "Are they joking? Is that actually coming out?"). This is not meant as a harsh judgement of the movie...it just couldn't top my delight in that moment.
X-Men III is a movie-universe-only film. Leave your comic/cartoon-based preconceptions and character knowledge with the other half of your ticket-stub, because they could seriously damage any enjoyment you might wring out of this film, and there are some juicy bits of mutant tastiness to be had. Oh...and be prepared for some losses...OK, a lot of losses. Like, "Oh my God, they did not just do that" losses. Followed by "What? But they already...in one movie?" losses.
The story begins with a very well-done flashback sequence to the days when Charles and Erik were chums, seeking out Mutants being their mutual cause, and Jean Grey being one of thier first and most impressive finds (Stan Lee's cameo was particularly cute in this one). After a brief (and probably confusing for non-fans) Angel introduction, We're brought into the current timeline. Scott is a broken man, haunted by dreams of Jean's death. Magneto and Pyro are still on the loose, but Mystique has been captured again. We're introduced to a Hank McCoy played adroitly by Kelsey Grammer as a former scientist turned diplomat and cabinet-level appointee as head of Mutant Relations (although his reading Scientific American seemed a bit lightweight of a choice...Nature, maybe?). The crisis-evoking event of the day is a new drug kept hush-hush through FDA approval until it could be presented for public use...a drug which supresses all mutant characteristics, and is being marketed as a cure. Of course, this provokes massive turmoil among the mutant community, and Magneto is quick to take advantage.
And that's pretty much as far as I can go without some degree of spoilage, which I'd rather not do. As I implied earlier, I'm somewhat divided on this film. As a fan of action movies in general, and superhero movies in particular, this episode provided a lot of the right kind of stuff. I'd say it's inferior to either of its two predecessors, but not terribly so, and some of the effects (Okay, I can't help a little spoilerificness...I particularly liked
ROT-13: Cubravk'f cbjref) were spectacular. The comic fan in me, though, hates this movie. It hates what it does with major characters, it hates the way certain characters are portrayed, and it particularly despises one decision made by the X-men (
ROT-13:Ornfg naq Fgbez nterrvat gb hfr Gur Pher ba Zntargb. Nofbyhgryl fgbznpu gheavat. Ybtna V jbhyqa'g unir nf zhpu bs n ceboyrz jvgu, ur'f na hggre centzngvfg; ohg V pna'g frr gur Bebeb be gur Unax V xabj sebz gur pbzvpf znxvat gung pnyy.) I can put that aside enough to enjoy the film, but it saddens me that its creators felt those choices were necessary, and it damages my impressions overall.
If you aren't a die-hard fan of the comic, go get your first decent dose of Summer action, and enjoy the show. I, for one, won't mind a repeat viewing at some point down the road. If you can't divorce yourself from your preconceptions of this story and these characters, you might want to give it a miss. It will probably just irritate you. It might even infuriate you. Choose wisely...Oh, and stay through the credits!
Lyric: Told the Northern Lights to keep shining