X2
X-Men 2 Movie Review:
The
mutants have run amok once more. As the Marvel Comic series,
"X-Men" once more hits the silver screen with
its second chapter.
This
time our "merry mutants" seem to face a new threat
to their masquerade as an amazing mutant with extraordinary
powers infiltrates the White House and attacks the President
of the United States (Cotter Smith) in the name of "mutant
freedom". This attack brings on a presidential meeting
between the president and a vicious military scientist,
General William Stryker (Brian Cox), who brings a proposal
for new legislation that will cripple every man, woman and
child mutant. That secret meeting brings forth an all out
assault on the X-Mansion just as Wolverine (Hugh Jackman)
returns from his journey up north. How will this third viewpoint
on the mutant dilemma affect the likes of teacher Charles
Xavier (Patrick Stewart) and mutant-terrorist Magneto (Sir
Ian McKellan)?
"X2"
is probably the best Marvel comics feature film adaptation
to date. Director Bryan Singer capitalizes on his story
and groundwork he laid out in the first film. There are
little or no sequel hang-ups but instead the film feels
a lot like the second chapter of a much lengthier novel.
There are many amazing leaps forward, as Singer seems to
bellow on ahead without looking back.
You
know it is always a good sequel when it doesn't feel like
you have "been there, done that". So many sequels
fall into quagmires of cliches, hang-ups, cardboard villains,
and self-cannibalization. With 15+ sequels debuting this
summer, I am sure that my theory will ring true. "X2"
is a great sequel because it builds on the original, continues
the story without typical clichés and makes you even
want to see more.
I had
always stated that I liked the first "X-Men" film
more than "Spider-man" purely because it felt
like it had more depth and wasn't an amalgamation of different
ideas. That delivery and constantly evolving range of ideas
continues in the second film. Even with two films already
made on the subject matter it only feels like we are at
the tip of the iceberg.
I really
enjoyed seeing how Singer develops the level of relationships
between the X-Men. I liked how Rogue was able to experience
her first kiss to Wolverine unlocking a key ingredient to
his secret past.
Some
of the film's more memorable moments involve the introduction
of Alan Cumming's Nightcrawler and the expansion of the
character Mystique (Rebecca Romijn-Stamos). The feature
film versions of these characters have tweaked them enough
that we almost see more humanity (good or evil) in each
them than a lot of the other mutants. Singer's expansion
and introduction of these characters shows that this isn't
completely a Wolverine movie.
Like
the first film, there are plenty of geek moments. For fans
of the comic, there will be a lot of screaming at the film
as it unlocks some of the moments and characters we remember
from the comic series. Wait till you see how the film ends.
This
is the way comic-book films should be, intelligent, mysterious
and all wrapped up in a grand vision. Its a grand
vision that makes a superhero or fantasy-genre film, Singer
definitely knows his.
It has
been a long time since I was able to watch a superhero film
with such involvement and passion. Bryan Singer's X-Men
series will probably be among the greats like Burton's Batman
and Donner's Superman. This is surely to make any comic-fan
or casual X-Men fan happy with glee.
(4.5
of 5)
So Says
the Soothsayer.
Dean
Kish
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