Contains spoilers for X-Men: The Last Stand.
Note before: I am yet to see The Wolverine.
The X-Men franchise (including the Wolverine films) is now seven films long, the longest running continuous comic book world. But with that there have been several up and downs, X3 andWolverine: Origins were the undoubted low points, whereas X2 is considered one of the genre's best.
Following on from the enjoyable First Class, but wary of being burned before, I went into Days of Future Past with fairly average expectations. The cast was superb, arguably one of the best ever assembled in the genre, but still there was a nagging feeling about what could go wrong.
The set up for DOFP starts in the far future, where mutants have been hunted and almost completely wiped out, only a few remain, pursued by an army of Sentinels (robots that can adapt to any mutants powers).
Professor X (Sir Patrick Stewart) comes up with an idea to send himself back to when the Sentinels were first conceived and to change the past. But unable to go himself as the journey would kill him, Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) who can regenerate and heal quickly, offers to go and is charged with altering the future by changing the events in 1973.
As I touched on earlier, the cast for this is filled with some of the best out there. But as with all of team X-Men films, a few characters are given precedence over the others and their decisions and arc is the main journey the film takes. In this the journey that is the most interesting and affects the story the most is Mystique (Jennifer Lawrence) a shape shifter, who can mimic anyone and who also happens to be a highly trained assassin. It is, or was, her decisions in the past that are crucial ones to altering the future.
Michael Fassbender and James McAvoy, Magneto and Professor X respectively, continue to give us interesting interpretations of the characters played by Sir Ian McKellen and Stewart. But far from making them just younger clones of these characters, we are given almost completely different people, although McAvoy’s portrayal is somewhat closer to his older partner's than Fassbender. Fassbender gives us an angrier and possibly, a more short sighted version than McKellen, but what the two men do together, is hint at the journey that Magneto has in front of him.
As with all time travel films there is an inherent risk of a plot developing so big that if it’s focused on, it could tear the whole plot apart. However, that is never really a big problem with the DOFP, as it doesn’t give the audience the chance to dwell on it to much, and by just sending back the consciousness of Wolverine, it restricts and puts up barriers for Wolverine to overcome.
But perhaps the biggest problems for the story was the glossing over, or maybe I just missed it, but the apparent ressurrection of Professor X, who died at the end of X3, but if this, at the start follows on from that world, as the deaths of other X-Men in that film are mentioned, then surely Professor X should still be dead, or at least inhabiting the body he transferred into.
If anyone can answer this I would greatly appreciate it.
As well as this film is directed by Bryan Singer, it is certainly a return to form for him. This film is a triumph for the writers, mainly screenwriter Simon Kinberg, who seems to be in charge of X-Men franchise when it comes to telling its stories. While the past certainly takes precedence of the future time line, he always manages to keep us aware of the stakes in both worlds and has linking events to really cement their connectivity.
Arguably the best X-Men film since X2, this is a much needed return to form for the franchise, which is set to go into full on disaster mode with the already announced X-Men: Apocalypse coming in two years.
Yes the continuity between the series is hanging by a thread, but it is such a mess that you really just have to go with it. But I’ll let it all go if we get a Mystique spin-off.
Director: Bryan Singer
Writers: Simon Kinberg (story and screenplay), Jane Goldman (story) and Matthew Vaughn (story.