X2: X-Men United Movie Review
X2: X-Men United Review

"X2: X-Men United" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Bryan SingerProducer : Lauren Shuler Donner,Ralph Winter
Screenwiter : Michael Dougherty,Daniel P. Harris,Bryan Singer
Starring Patrick Stewart, Hugh Jackman, Ian Mckellen, Halle Berry, Famke Janssen, James Marsden, Rebecca Romijn Stamos, Brian Cox, Alan Cumming, Bruce Davison, Anna Paquin, Kelly Hu, Aaron Stanford
The mutants are back in town in the first big sequel of 2003 -- a year that
promises at least a half-dozen Brand Name Sequels (nearly all of which,
surprisingly, I'm anxious to see). X2 probably won't be the best of the bunch,
but it certainly isn't the worst. Like the original X-Men, the sequel is a lot
of good, clean fun, full of vibrancy and memorable comic book antics, but
ultimately it's a bit of a letdown due to too many squandered opportunities and
an exhausting running time.
X2 picks up an indeterminate amount of time after the original ended. Wolverine
(Hugh Jackman, looking strangely clean cut) is still trying to figure out his
past. Magneto (Ian McKellan) is trapped in his plastic prison. And Jean Gray
(Famke Janssen) is having bad dreams about something wicked coming on the
horizon.
It's not long before Professor X (Patrick Stewart, visibly relieved to be
finally free of Star Trek's shackles) is kidnapped, the Mutant Academy is
raided by feds, and the X-Men are scattered to the winds as they find
themselves on the run from Johnny Law. They're trying to figure out what evil
plan a military guy named Stryker (Brian Cox, aptly cast) has in store for them
and humanity, and why he has such an axe to grind against mutants.
All will be revealed, but not until a grueling 2 hours, 15 minutes later. X2
goes down so many roads and throws out so many subplots that it's just plain
tiring. If you thought you had a handle on the original dozen or so good guys
and bad guys, get ready to assimilate another four more, including a boyfriend
for Rogue (Anna Paquin) and the best new character in the series, the
teleporting, blue, and German mutant called Nightcrawler, played with shocking
effectiveness by Alan Cumming. (Yes, Alan Cumming is now a superhero.)
The story hinges on an uneasy alliance between the X-Men and Magneto's camp
(hence the "X-Men United" part of the title), which provides some unique
opportunities for the old enemies to interact without hurling battle cries at
each other. As usual, the bad guys steal the show, especially McKellan's dry
insults and shapeshifting Mystique actually getting to take the form of the
actress who plays her (Rebecca Romijn-Stamos).
The bulk of the film is fun and genuinely entertaining, but so much of it is
just throat-clearing, long-winded attempts to give Storm (Halle Berry)
something to do or work the comparatively boring Cyclops (James Marsden) into
the film. Is it because Cyclops has a lame mutant ability (shoots energy from
his eyes) or because Marsden never broke through as a real star that he has so
little screen time? Well, it's during X2's more lifeless moments that you find
yourself with time to ponder these questions. Much of X2 is old hat, comprising
many of the same fights and the same events from the original.
In the end, I enjoyed X2 more than the original, which was ultimately too
focused on setting up the whole mutants vs. humans thing and had a clichéd
ending you saw from frame one. X2 has some surprisingly touching moments and
some surprises to boot (I won't spoil them for you here, but I guarantee other
critics will -- be warned). Those endless subplots even end up having a
purpose, by setting up a number of avenues to take us into X3.
God help us all.
X2 gives us a blockbuster DVD set, two discs of material, including two
commentaries, behind-the-scenes footage of a couple of fight scenes,
deleted/extended scenes, and a lot of interesting X-Men backstory material. For
the comics junkie this is one DVD not to be missed.
Eat lead! (It'll make more sense after you see the movie.)
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Review by Christopher Null
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