X-Men Movie Review
X-Men Review

"X-Men" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Bryan SingerProducer : Lauren Shuler Donner,Ralph Winter
Screenwiter : David Hayter
Starring Patrick Stewart, Hugh Jackman, Ian Mckellen, Halle Berry, Famke Janssen, James Marsden, Bruce Davison, Tyler Mane, Rebecca Romijn Stamos, Ray Park, Anna Paquin
Well, comic book freaks can take a breather, as another sci-fi fantasy hits the
big screen, this time in the long-awaited, highly-anticipated,
it-better-be-good X-Men.
Without too much regret, I can say that X-Men will be palatable to fans and
newbies alike. It's not a great film, but it will probably follow the arc of
the Superman and Batman movies -- tons of sequels of variable quality until an
abrupt and dismal end a decade later.
The film is largely focused on introducing the very idea of the X-Men to the
audience. In the "not too distant future," the human race has mutated to the
point where various members of it find themselves endowed with superhuman
abilities: telepathy, walking on water/through walls, regeneration, and the
like are commonplace. As with most modes of difference, the mutants find
themselves vilified by the public, and a Senator (Bruce Davison) launches a
crusade to mandate "mutant registration."
How the group of X-Men came to be is unclear, but we do know that Professor
Xavier (Patrick Stewart) is their leader and that he's wealthy beyond belief,
funding an apparently tuition-free school for mutant kids where they can
harness their powers in peace. Professor X (X-Men, get it?) recruits adults,
too, with monikers like the laser-eyed Cyclops (James Marsden), the
weather-controlling Storm (Halle Berry), and the telekinetic Dr. Jean Grey
(Famke Janssen) -- the only X-Person who doesn't have a nickname. Together,
the X-Men peacefully oppose the government's anti-mutant tide, while battling
the "evil" Magneto (Ian McKellan), a concentration camp survivor that can
control metal with his mind.
Soon the film begins to turn around newcomers to the X-Men -- the super-tough
Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) and the power-stealing Rogue (Anna Paquin) -- and a
Magneto plot to capture them consumes the rest of the movie. Ultimately it is
revealed that Magneto's plan is to give all the human leaders of the world a
mutation of their own, through a contraption he's built that will be unveiled
at a conveniently-timed "World Summit" on Ellis Island. Whew!
Strangely enough, X-Men is not as complicated as it sounds. In fact, its major
flaw is that it spends the bulk of an hour simply explaining what mutations
are, who the good guys and bad guys are, and what their respective powers are.
Everyone has two names -- a real one and a nickname like "Sabretooth" -- and at
least one has the power to shift shape (an unrecognizable Rebecca Romijn-Stamos
with no lines in her own voice). The exposition is necessary to have the movie
make sense, but it weighs the film down with a tedium that takes you completely
out of the action.
That aside, X-Men's biggest flaw is that all mutants appear to be stupid beyond
belief. Xavier and Magneto are presented to us as genius arch-rivals, but the
plots Magneto cooks up to capture the enemy are straight out of an old "Batman"
TV show episode. Why go to all the trouble to trick one mutant and poison
another when you can just send your shapeshifter in to do the dirty work? Why
can't Professor X figure out why Magneto is interested in Wolverine? I suppose
questioning the logic of a movie called X-Men makes me sound a bit nutty, but
there it is.
While fans will appreciate the largely accurate portrayal of the team (with the
notable exception of Rogue being played as a barely pubescent teenager), inside
jokes like cracks about Wolverine's yellow Spandex will be lost on most of the
audience.
Ultimately, X-Men is a reasonably entertaining movie, but it's one that started
to bother me the moment I left the theater. Here's why: The X-Men want to
stop a potential war between humans and mutants, and Professor X thinks Magneto
is brewing this war up. But Magneto isn't doing anything of the sort. He's
cooked up this machine that will give mutations to humans -- and therefore a
better understanding of mutants, and ergo, no war. Magneto has a great idea!
If his machine worked right, everything would have been peachy. The fact that
it doesn't feels inserted by one of the half-dozen uncredited screenwriters
just to make the movie a little less nonsensical.
Anyway, I predict the legacy of X-Men to be this: 1) There will undoubtedly be
a sequel. 2) It will be a whole lot better than the original. Vive la
difference.
Dr. X: A man so egomaniacal he puts his initial on his doors.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





