X-Men: Days of Future Past
Directed by Bryan Singer
Released May 23, 2014
Before I was into movies in the way I am now, I was a big fan of comic books. The characters I followed most consistently and closely were the X-Men, and the original films in the series came out at just the right time. Though the first film diverged in a number of ways from the comic book, I enjoyed it, and I liked the second as well. I wasn’t as fond of the third or of the recent reboot that took the story back in time. The latest film, “X-Men: Days of Future Past,” is considered a sequel to both, and while it’s an improvement on both, there’s still a bit too much going on.
This film begins in a devastated future where mutant-hunting sentinels scour the Earth for the last remaining mutants. Kitty Pryde, Storm, Professor X, Magneto, and Wolverine are a few of the survivors who fight to stay alive. A combination of powers and technology enables them to send someone back in time to prevent a crucial event that led to all that happened to create this future, and Wolverine, with his healing powers, is the obvious choice to make this tremendous journey. Setting the film in two times means rewriting history as events occurs in both the past and the future.
This plot is jam-packed with action and a bevy of characters, some of whom appear only for a moment yet receive top billing, and it’s all very ambitious. Only despair and regret remain as the precious few fight for survival in the future, while the younger mutants don’t really know who they are just yet. Professor X and Magneto are the two characters who appear in both times, and it’s interesting to see young actors James McAvoy and Michael Fassbender opposite veterans Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen.
This film is nominated for an Oscar for Best Visual Effects, the film X-Men film to earn that honor. There’s no denying the awesomeness of each time some random face morphs into Mystique or when each mutant is shown using his or her powers. The story as a whole never quite feels tight enough, and it’s all just a matter of surviving long enough, or changing the timeline, to make it to the next film. I hope that forthcoming “X-Men: Apocalypse” tackles the Age of Apocalypse, though it’s possible that condensing a major comic book event into one movie may prove just as tough as fitting everything from Days of Future Past into this overloaded film.
B
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