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X-men (2000)

Movie Review

By Srijan KunwarPublished 2 years ago 5 min read
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Evolution must go hand in hand with Professor Xavier, who wants to use his power to help the earth, or Magneto, who wants the genes to conquer the earth.

Keep in mind that Hollywood did not take heroic films very seriously before this movie, especially since the 1997 Batman and Robin debate. Surprisingly, even real-time X-Men acquaintances ended years of development hell.

It can also be said that the first Live-Action X-Men film is also one of the most influential comedy movies ever. A superhero movie with a real ambition is not very common in Hollywood; "X-Men", "The Dark Knight" and the first two Spider-Man films are among the highlights of the current genre. Just three years after the release of "Batman and Robin" as a death knell for a comic book series, the X-Men gave us a series of powerful, dignified, and sometimes unsafe transformations against evil.

Before the X-Men, I knew Superman and Batman in their series, but X-Men changed my view of what powerful heroes can be and what they can do. The X-Men may be a heroic film, but when it came out in 2000, it couldn't stand up to the other blockbusters of its kind. The artist tried to find a way out by going through it, and the X-Men were taken aback by the way he tried to make ordinary audiences accept things that comic book fans take for granted.

X-Men is a film that I can't say I like but I still can't say I hate it, I just got to watch it and nothing else, nothing more or less. Of course, there are some really bad movies, but if you are not a fan of comic book heroes, you can live without seeing the X-Men.

Because of this, it makes sense to re-evaluate all 11 current X-Men movies, anyway, starting with the 2000 X-Men blockbuster. Next time we will look at the first sequel of the X-Men, even now it is considered better than the first. As the new Fox X-Men film approaches its summer release, check out the previous movies in the series, starting with the one that started it all.

X-Men is a 2000 American hero film directed by Brian Singer and screened by David Haight, based on the story of Singer and Tom De Santo. The movie is based on the Marvel comedy band with the same name. Among the actors are Patrick Stewart, Hugh Jackman, Ian McLean, Halle Berry, Famke Jensen, James Maisden, Bruce Davidson, Rebecca Roman-Stamos, Ray Parker, and Anna Paquin. The film depicts a world in which the unknown half of humanity has changed, and they have superhuman powers that make them afraid of ordinary people.

X-Men happened in the near future. The most powerful reforms are divided into two camps: the human opponents and those who want to protect us. There are two loneliness variants among them: Mary, aka Rogue (Anna Paquin), and Logan, aka Wolverine (Hugh Jackman). When Xavier realized that Magneto might be behind one of them, they teamed up with Wolverine and the thieves to stop Magneto and his ever-changing brotherhood.

Director Brian Singer and screenwriter David Haight made some bold moves at the start of "X-Men". In X-Men, the film focuses only on a few characters, and there are many X-Men villains and villains in the real comedy, forcing them to fight the main plot, which Wolverine turns into a victim. hero. The script is great, but I can't find any more pleasure in it. Magneto bombarded politicians and world leaders to transform them into converts. The structure is very simple. The X-Men is very similar to a movie driven by characters. But like I said I don’t think characters like X-Men are so well translated into movies.

Some of the elements, such as the intimate associates of Magnetos (Frog and Sabretooth), seem to be too moral to exist in the film-created world. The film, perhaps surprisingly, is offensive when it comes to female actors, which goes well with Ratners M.O.

Wolverine is the main character of the film, a good artist choice. He plays the beloved villain, with precision and determination, who considers himself a hero of the changing genre, and his times with Patrick Stewarts and Charles Xavier are among the highlights of the film. With lots of clever jokes and personal conversations, as well as humorous love (or love triangle) featuring the ordinary Jean Gray (Famke Janssen), and father/daughter and father/son relationships.

Brian Singer has put forth great effort to create an X-Men universe that is full of themes of racism, isolation, and the fear that is so prevalent in comedy and cartoons. Brian Singer did his best to make all the film scenes memorable. The film boasts of FX miracles - a bullet delay, Armageddon at the train station, a fight between Wolverine and him - but the artist deserves to be applauded for giving the X-Men a ghost aura in honor of his source.

In this version of the X-Men proverb, the mutant hysteria is inspired by Senator Kelly (Davison's) McCarthy's style campaign that supports the requirement for dynamic registration - a law that will expose changing people and separate them from society. Two converted leaders stand up to deal with this growing hatred, one for good and the other for evil. The X-Men have changed and failed, brought to the fore by the love of Professor Charles Xavier (Patrick Stewart), who can read minds and influence the thinking of others.

It does not matter; Mind Reading Xavier leads his revolutionary battles to destroy Magneto, and that is history or most of it. His real heroes are a boring team, it is a shame that only Wolverine seems to have found the power of charisma. Fortunately, the X-Men do not rely solely on the show, though much, especially for various heroes, (sometimes) creative ways of expressing them and the continuous action sequences they emphasize. involving damaging access (and multiple repetitions, shocking postures, and at least one bad line).

Yes, it’s hard to see the first class without comparing or comparing this repetition of the X-Men with those we encountered a decade or so ago, but as McAvoy advises Stewart’s cool and cool mind, the new collection is almost solid. McLaren points out the height of Fassbender and Ian. Long before Charles (James McAvoy) and Eric (Michael Fassbender) became deadly enemies, the First Class brought comedians to the story of the origin of their favorite X-Men character, This is a thing of the past. Brian Singer directed the first comedy adaptation of Marvel comics superhero combat as the main character. It is also the first time Hugh Jackman has been hailed as the famous Wolverine actor, with "Star Trek" actor Patrick Stewart as Professor Charles Xavier, and the Lord of the Rings star who succeeded Ian McLean as a revolutionary Magneto.

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About the Creator

Srijan Kunwar

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