X-Men Origins: Wolverine Movie Review
X-Men Origins: Wolverine Review
"X-Men Origins: Wolverine" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Gavin HoodProducer : Hugh Jackman,Lauren Shuler Donner,Ralph Winter,John Palermo
Screenwiter : David Benioff,Skip Woods
Starring : Hugh Jackman,Liev Schreiber,Danny Huston,will.i.am,Ryan Reynolds,Taylor Kitsch
You have to feel sorry for the X-Men franchise. It was once the standard bearer
for comic book movies, a monopoly it managed to hold onto until Christopher
Nolan and a certain Dark Knight raised and reset the bar substantially higher.
Now, the mutant movie series is little more than a fading memory, a reminder of
when Hollywood hoped to find a way to translate favorite graphic novels into
massive motion picture successes. Oddly enough, Fox may have discovered the
secret to staying relevant in a post-Batman reboot era -- and the answer is
Hugh Jackman. Capable of carrying even the most mediocre effort, he
singlehandedly makes X-Men Origins: Wolverine an excellent start to the summer
2009 season.
As a young boy, James Howlett (Jackman) was sickly. Doted on by his doctor
father, a tragedy sends him out into the world alone -- alone, that is except
for his half-brother Victor (Liev Schrieber). After surviving several wars
together, the boys meet up with military man William Stryker (Danny Huston) and
along with a group of fellow mutants, they search the globe for an elusive
metal derived from a meteorite. When Howlett, now renamed Logan, sees the
atrocities committed in pursuit of said goal, he walks away. Six years later,
Stryker and Victor come calling, wanting their former ally to participate in an
experiment. Fusing his frame with an experimental alloy, Logan becomes
Wolverine. Unfortunately, he soon after finds himself a pawn in a much larger
crusade against his kind, with his murderous sibling front and center.
Except for the last act appearance of a rather uninspired Weapon XI, X-Men
Origins: Wolverine is an excellent example of its type. It features the
undeniable talents of its "too good to be true" lead actor, and fleshes out his
frequently topless physique with all manner of interesting individual
diversions. This is first and foremost a character study, albeit it one with
killer action sequences and a real sense of scope. What new director Gavin Hood
gives this fourth film in the franchise that both Bryan Singer and part-three
replacement Brett Ratner missed is the concept of scope. By focusing on only a
select group of mutants and not worrying if everyone gets their oh-so-sacred
screen time, a sense of depth and detail is created. We learn more about these
particular people than the participants in any other X-Men movie.
That doesn't mean Wolverine is all touchy-feely emotions and gloomy
self-absorption. The stuntwork here is impressive, though the CGI occasionally
shows through, and when pushed into questions of plausibility, Hood goes for
the cheap laugh (an old lady's nonchalant comment as a nude Jackman scrambles
across the road and into her barn). With the introduction of favored icons from
the comics that really don't pay off (including a hilarious looking Blob and
that unfathomable fan favorite, Gambit) and a last act confrontation that's
more special effects than satisfying, this is not a perfect film. But when you
look back at all the previous installments in the franchise, this one soars
straight to the top.
Certainly there will be purists who balk at how Hood and his screenwriters
mangle and manipulate the mythology, and any ending which leaves several
characters unexplained and unaccounted for can't really seal the full
entertainment deal. But thanks to Jackman, and an equally enigmatic turn by
Schreiber, X-Men Origins: Wolverine suggests that not all back stories
undermine the original material's effectiveness. In fact, this is a clear case
where history does a better job with a well-known persona than the films that
were supposed to establish him in the first place.
What's more dangerous than Wolverine? Baby Wolverine.
|
Review by Bill Gibron
|






