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X-Men 3: The Last Stand Review

Monday, May 29th, 2006 at 11:02 pm

The more I think about it, the more I am convinced that director Brett Ratner just does not like the X-Men. Why else would he take a perfectly healthy franchise, so brilliantly conceived by his predecessor, Bryan Singer, and completely and utterly destroy it?

X-Men 3: The Last Stand has the largest ever Memorial Day weekend opening. In the trailer, we see glimpses of Angel, Beast, a mutant “cure”, and above all, the return of Jean Grey as the “Dark Phoenix.” The fact is, it was too good to be true. Everything in X3 seems artificial. For those familiar with the X-Men series, the film’s story makes reference to the Dark Phoenix and Apocalypse plotlines, strung together by overly computer-graphics dependent action sequences, and emotional character development artificially charged through repeated death and losing-of-purpose-in-life.

In the end, this really wasn’t a film, it was a spectacle for the fans. With Bryan Singer, you walk away with a sense of the characters, the weights they carry, and all the beauty and subtly of who the characters are. X3 is all about the money. They inserted all the X-Men things that Bryan Singer missed to trick fans into going to see the film. I’m sorry to say, Angel and Dark Phoenix were complete cop-outs. In fact, remember that fire we saw in Jean Grey’s eyes in X2 foreshadowing Phoenix? Well…they forgot the fire. Instead they decided to make her really ugly and wear a poofy dress. And that Sentinal they promised? You only get to see a head.

I’ve also never seen such a bad use of visual effects. Seriously, the film felt more like a Siggraph technical demo rather than a movie. It really was 100 minutes of particle effects. I felt like I was being punished for screwing up the particle effects on the final project for my graphics class. It was like, every scene of the movie, something had to be incinerated, or floating around or something out of the ordinary. If they cut out some of the effects, maybe they could’ve paid someone to actually think of something cooler for Phoenix to do…or say.

X2 set up such a promising sequel. This was just upsetting.

D Movie
B- Action
C+ Visual Effects
F Character Development
D Story

5 Responses to “X-Men 3: The Last Stand Review”

I enjoyed the movie on a purely superficial level, but it bears no real comparison to the first two films in any way. The whole Jean/Pheonix thing was a let down on so many levels. After it ended, I felt like nothing really happened.

Ratner being attached to Superman Returns lends that film some promise. Considering I’m not exactly a fan of Superman, however, I really wish he just stuck around for the third X-Men film.

good to meet you at CA in montreal.

¿how’s your team doing - did you get to watch them on the flight home?

and as for X3, i think you said it all.

&Rew.

Just dropping a line to say HI. =)

Ah~ yea, I heard this movie was nothing in comparison to the other two. =/ I, on the other hand, have yet to see it for myself, but I think I’ll hold up on that until it comes out on DVD or something.

Hope you’re summer’s going well.

I liked it! I guess I don’t pay too much attention to technical flaws and such…

[...] Girl Meets Geekdom » X-Men 3: The Last Stand Review In the trailer, we see glimpses of Angel, Beast, a mutant “cure”, and above all, the return of Jean Grey as the “Dark Phoenix.” The … Ratner being attached to Superman Returns lends that film … http://www.sallyhuang.com/2006/05/x-men-3-the-last-stand-review/ [...]


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