1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- X-eunt in X-asperation., 26 June 2006
Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Action without heart. Spectacle without logic. Brawn without brains.
Director Brett Ratner balances on Bryan Singer's shoulders, attempting
to hold up the mutant world Singer so reverently rendered in *X-Men*
(2000) and *X-Men United* (2003). But he falls off - and helms *X-Men:
The Last Stand*, the third in the x-franchise, with as much reverence
and talent as Bryan Singer's shoe.
Ratner and screenwriters Simon Kinberg and Zak Penn feign respect,
drawing in the fan-boys (with teaser ads featuring edgy photography and
magnificent visuals, like Angel's breathtaking wingspan; dangling the
reunion carrot of the five original Uncanny X-Men members - for the
non-mutant readers, these are Cyclops, Jean Grey, Iceman, Angel and
Beast; giving us tastes of legendary idioms, when Bobby Drake
eventually goes fully Iceman for a few seconds, or Beast exclaims, "Oh
my stars and garters!") but then tumble off the grid completely, as
they kill off half the main characters, never show the original five on
screen together, twist legacy into dramatic cliché and fulfill the
worst fears of intelligent moviegoers. *Last Stand* is not a case of
"more of the same," but TOO MUCH of the same; a runaway George Lucas
effect.
Forgetting that "He who sips from many cups, drinks of none," Ratner
loads this 104-minute movie with so much content that it implodes under
its own weight.
The government has isolated an antigen from scary Cameron Bright
(playing Leech, a mutant who negates the powers of other mutants) and
markets it as a "mutant cure," drawing mixed reactions from mutants.
Magneto (Ian McKellen) sees it as usurpation of mutants' very souls,
whilst some, like Rogue (Anna Paquin), who cannot touch anyone without
draining their life-force (and whose pink bits have been quivering for
man flesh since she met Wolverine back in *X-Men*) see it as an
opportunity for some Jagger-like satisfaction.
While Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) insults everyone back at the mutant
mansion of Professor Xavier (Patrick Stewart), Cyclops (James Marsden)
wastes his 3 minutes screen time weeping like a bitch over dead Jean
Grey (Famke Janssen). The blue-furred, Presidential Mutant Diplomat,
Beast (Kelsey Grammar, perfectly cast), attempts to find the right spin
for the antigen campaign, whilst boy-band member, Warren Worthington
III (aka Angel, played by Michael Murphy, doing Jay Mohr), uses up his
four seconds of wingspan screen time to make good on the startling
trailer and fly out on the cure.
Before anyone can say "mutant overload," Jean (with her long, luscious,
burgundy wig slightly crooked), has returned from the dead as Dark
Phoenix, had Cyclops for lunch and is hot for some Wolverine whippin'.
Magneto scorns Mystique (Rebecca Romjin) after she sacrifices her
mutancy for him, and proves to be quite the playa; no sooner dumping
the blue babe than hooking up with a Dark Phoenix.
If all this seems confusing, rest assured, it is. *Last Stand* makes
little attempt at explaining relationships, superpowers or logic
(except for a flashback which finds the two Shakespearean veterans,
McKellen and Stewart, amusingly wrinkle-free, meeting Jean as a child,
exploring the complexities of their love-hate association) and is
unapologetically for fan-boys who have continually sacrificed the love
of a good woman for plastic-bagging their comic books in chronological
order; ironic, considering the film-makers themselves don't display
much love or knowledge of these characters.
And Cyclops! Oh, Cyclops! I have never condoned the dismissive
treatment of the Uncanny X-Men's prime member. In the comics universe,
everyone respected his authoritah - but the first two Singer movies
demoted this master tactician, group leader and masculine love-interest
for Jean Grey into a metrosexual strip-o-gram. We tolerated his film
deficiencies because the films themselves lauded the X-Men legacy. With
*Last Stand,* Cyclops' pussified ousting is unconscionable.
Screen becomes clogged with super-beings who only figure how to utilize
their powers as the plot denotes, otherwise stand around doing nothing.
Only Magneto and Wolverine ever use their powers intelligently,
Wolverine usually with his shirt off; alas, his action scenes are all
too brief (and how does his singlet heal its holes anyway?). Magneto's
power is truly awe-inspiring and the vaunted Golden Gate Bridge
sequence is remarkable.
The themes of this movie offering homogeneity to those who feel
alienated and forcing homogeneity on those who wish individuality are
lost amongst the movie's many plot-holes and poorly-directed action.
For example, why was the government transporting Juggernaut, Multiple
Man and Mystique without first shooting them with the antigen? Well, so
that Magneto could rescue them, of course.
And why does Wolverine try to stop Phoenix being shot with antigen?
This would have eradicated her nihilistic death-persona and left behind
a supermodel. Instead, whilst the world is being sucked into her
destructive vortex, he opts to kill the Dark Phoenix (with his shirt
off). Seems he'd rather have a dead Phoenix than a live Jean Grey.
Economically, the *X-Men* franchise has fallen victim to its own plot
line: in order to recoup its astronomical budgets, it needs to
homogenize its product; in doing so, it kills off impact and integrity,
thereby risking *lesser* income through inferior product. This will be
the last collective X-Men production; the future of the X-Men lies in
their spin-offs. Already, *Wolverine* has stalked into pre-production.
Yet the marketers force-feed us a cliffhanger, just in case: while
Storm assumes matronly duties at the mutant school, while Beast presses
White House flesh; while Wolverine insults someone and Angel flies high
on CGI; while Rogue (cured of her deadly touch) and Iceman make the
beast with two backs in the nearest broom closet, two sidelined
Shakespearean veterans slyly find their mettle once more
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X-Men: The Last Stand (2006)
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

X-eunt in X-asperation., 26 June 2006
Author: dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Action without heart. Spectacle without logic. Brawn without brains.
Director Brett Ratner balances on Bryan Singer's shoulders, attempting to hold up the mutant world Singer so reverently rendered in *X-Men* (2000) and *X-Men United* (2003). But he falls off - and helms *X-Men: The Last Stand*, the third in the x-franchise, with as much reverence and talent as Bryan Singer's shoe.
Ratner and screenwriters Simon Kinberg and Zak Penn feign respect, drawing in the fan-boys (with teaser ads featuring edgy photography and magnificent visuals, like Angel's breathtaking wingspan; dangling the reunion carrot of the five original Uncanny X-Men members - for the non-mutant readers, these are Cyclops, Jean Grey, Iceman, Angel and Beast; giving us tastes of legendary idioms, when Bobby Drake eventually goes fully Iceman for a few seconds, or Beast exclaims, "Oh my stars and garters!") but then tumble off the grid completely, as they kill off half the main characters, never show the original five on screen together, twist legacy into dramatic cliché and fulfill the worst fears of intelligent moviegoers. *Last Stand* is not a case of "more of the same," but TOO MUCH of the same; a runaway George Lucas effect.
Forgetting that "He who sips from many cups, drinks of none," Ratner loads this 104-minute movie with so much content that it implodes under its own weight.
The government has isolated an antigen from scary Cameron Bright (playing Leech, a mutant who negates the powers of other mutants) and markets it as a "mutant cure," drawing mixed reactions from mutants. Magneto (Ian McKellen) sees it as usurpation of mutants' very souls, whilst some, like Rogue (Anna Paquin), who cannot touch anyone without draining their life-force (and whose pink bits have been quivering for man flesh since she met Wolverine back in *X-Men*) see it as an opportunity for some Jagger-like satisfaction.
While Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) insults everyone back at the mutant mansion of Professor Xavier (Patrick Stewart), Cyclops (James Marsden) wastes his 3 minutes screen time weeping like a bitch over dead Jean Grey (Famke Janssen). The blue-furred, Presidential Mutant Diplomat, Beast (Kelsey Grammar, perfectly cast), attempts to find the right spin for the antigen campaign, whilst boy-band member, Warren Worthington III (aka Angel, played by Michael Murphy, doing Jay Mohr), uses up his four seconds of wingspan screen time to make good on the startling trailer and fly out on the cure.
Before anyone can say "mutant overload," Jean (with her long, luscious, burgundy wig slightly crooked), has returned from the dead as Dark Phoenix, had Cyclops for lunch and is hot for some Wolverine whippin'.
Magneto scorns Mystique (Rebecca Romjin) after she sacrifices her mutancy for him, and proves to be quite the playa; no sooner dumping the blue babe than hooking up with a Dark Phoenix.
If all this seems confusing, rest assured, it is. *Last Stand* makes little attempt at explaining relationships, superpowers or logic (except for a flashback which finds the two Shakespearean veterans, McKellen and Stewart, amusingly wrinkle-free, meeting Jean as a child, exploring the complexities of their love-hate association) and is unapologetically for fan-boys who have continually sacrificed the love of a good woman for plastic-bagging their comic books in chronological order; ironic, considering the film-makers themselves don't display much love or knowledge of these characters.
And Cyclops! Oh, Cyclops! I have never condoned the dismissive treatment of the Uncanny X-Men's prime member. In the comics universe, everyone respected his authoritah - but the first two Singer movies demoted this master tactician, group leader and masculine love-interest for Jean Grey into a metrosexual strip-o-gram. We tolerated his film deficiencies because the films themselves lauded the X-Men legacy. With *Last Stand,* Cyclops' pussified ousting is unconscionable.
Screen becomes clogged with super-beings who only figure how to utilize their powers as the plot denotes, otherwise stand around doing nothing.
Only Magneto and Wolverine ever use their powers intelligently, Wolverine usually with his shirt off; alas, his action scenes are all too brief (and how does his singlet heal its holes anyway?). Magneto's power is truly awe-inspiring and the vaunted Golden Gate Bridge sequence is remarkable.
The themes of this movie offering homogeneity to those who feel alienated and forcing homogeneity on those who wish individuality are lost amongst the movie's many plot-holes and poorly-directed action. For example, why was the government transporting Juggernaut, Multiple Man and Mystique without first shooting them with the antigen? Well, so that Magneto could rescue them, of course.
And why does Wolverine try to stop Phoenix being shot with antigen? This would have eradicated her nihilistic death-persona and left behind a supermodel. Instead, whilst the world is being sucked into her destructive vortex, he opts to kill the Dark Phoenix (with his shirt off). Seems he'd rather have a dead Phoenix than a live Jean Grey.
Economically, the *X-Men* franchise has fallen victim to its own plot line: in order to recoup its astronomical budgets, it needs to homogenize its product; in doing so, it kills off impact and integrity, thereby risking *lesser* income through inferior product. This will be the last collective X-Men production; the future of the X-Men lies in their spin-offs. Already, *Wolverine* has stalked into pre-production.
Yet the marketers force-feed us a cliffhanger, just in case: while Storm assumes matronly duties at the mutant school, while Beast presses White House flesh; while Wolverine insults someone and Angel flies high on CGI; while Rogue (cured of her deadly touch) and Iceman make the beast with two backs in the nearest broom closet, two sidelined Shakespearean veterans slyly find their mettle once more
(Movie Maniacs, visit: poffysmoviemania.com)
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