X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014)
- the_captain

- Jun 1, 2014
- 2 min read
Updated: Jul 31, 2019

With X3 being a total missed opportunity and First Class an ok to mediocre prequel/reboot effort, Days of Future Past is a vast improvement over the last two instalments, but then when Marvel reinstated director Bryan Singer – the man whom instigated quality and respect for the franchise in the first place, that was always going to be the case. But despite also for the first time including super sonic mutant, Quicksilver showcased in a utter film stealing sequence, it’s not a total celebration, and while it entertains significantly, it also confuses and leaves you wanting more.
With some excellent set pieces, solid acting, entertaining (yet crazy) plot, an occasionally stumbling script even for the genre, and an ending that seems to be made literally just to confuse the audience, it still doesn’t reach the overall quality and direction of the best X-Men film so far, X2. Will any of them? Sentinels finally make an appearance in two different forms; one is brutal and excellently realised, the other more of an undercurrent with little screen time. Satisfactory for fans then I suppose?
Wolverine is – once again – the franchise face and dominates the film in many ways basically (despite the story actually being about Raven). Luckily Jackman is as charismatic as ever, but for hardcore fans, there is still a plethora of Mutants showcased, but don’t expect much from some of the other original cast; Halle Berry’s Storm and Ian McKellan’s Magneto barely register with only a few lines and about ten minutes of screen time. Patrick Stewart’s Professor X only has a little more to do. The focus is not meant to be on them though, and given the film is set in the past for most of it's running time (duh), James MacAvoy and Michael Fassbender reprise their roles from First Class with aplomb and are fun to watch. Peter Dinklage is a welcome addition. Besides the aforementioned appearance of Quicksilver, Raven/Mystique owns the film though. Jennifer Lawrence brings back the kind of sass, sexuality and yes, brutality last seen in the character from Rebecca Romijn in X2.
Overall a solid blockbuster and a good return to form for the franchise for the fans. The impeding follow-up will no doubt/hopefully improve even more with Singer still at the helm, but as it stands, Days of Future Past is without question one of the three best of already bloated comic book movie saga. But I could just say (again) it’s worth it just for Quicksilver’s jaw dropping, hilariously crafted Pentagon jail break scene too. Because it was.



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