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2* ActingForTwo: Creator/JessicaChastain plays both the D'Bari alien Vuk and Margaret Smith, the woman Vuk shapeshifts into the likeness of for disguise.
3* ActorLeavesCharacterDies: Given Creator/JenniferLawrence's disinterest in the series, many were not surprised when Mystique was KilledOffForReal.
4* ApprovalOfGod: Creator/ChrisClaremont has praised the film.
5-->''"Thanks to [Simon Kinberg and Sophie Turner] for bringing Jean's story so wonderfully to life! Essentially true to the original comics story, it turned the focus of the X-film from Charley & Eric (& Hank & Raven) to the students, to Scott (& Ororo & Kurt) & most of all, to Jean and did so brilliantly."''
6* BTeamSequel: Creator/BryanSinger didn't return as director, though he did serve as producer during development and pre-production. His name was then removed from production and credits amidst the sexual assault allegations.
7* BillingDisplacement:
8** Creator/JenniferLawrence gets third billing here. [[spoiler:She dies at the midpoint of the movie.]]
9** Creator/SophieTurner, who plays the movie's titular character, is given ''fifth'' billing.
10* BoxOfficeBomb:
11** ''Dark Phoenix'' cost $200 million to produce with an additional $150 million in print advertising, but it only managed to gross $252 million. It represented an absolute franchise low in terms of opening weekend grosses, and a final domestic and global total beneath the original ''[[Film/XMen1 X-Men]]'' film -- $296 million worldwide, in 2000 dollars -- which makes ''Dark Phoenix'' the lowest-grossing installment of the main series, and the second lowest-grossing film, including spin-offs (it only grossed higher than ''Film/TheNewMutants'').
12** According to ''Deadline Hollywood'', the reasons for the movie's financial failure included [[TroubledProduction an inflated budget due to extensive reshoots]], lack of interest in the prequel series [[ContestedSequel after the mixed reception]] of ''Film/XMenApocalypse'' (along with some audiences seeing either ''Film/XMenDaysOfFuturePast'' or ''Film/{{Logan}}'' as a proper ending for the film series), [[InvisibleAdvertising lack of promotion and the marketing campaign being muddled]] (a result of [[ScrewedByTheNetwork lay-offs related to the Disney-Fox merger]]), [[SummerBlockbuster and the release date being in June, where there was tons of competition]]. The film needed to make about $500 million to be considered profitable, [[https://deadline.com/2019/06/dark-phoenix-bombs-at-the-box-office-reasons-why-1202629749/ and was expected to lose Fox $100 million to $120 million]] by the time that the final total is tallied. [[note]]The article originally calculated those figures to measure the loss if the movie was able to reach $300 million to $325 million; the final total for the film came up significantly short of that, making losses worse than their initial expectations.[[/note]] [[https://deadline.com/2020/04/box-office-bombs-2019-list-1202918753/ (Later reports suggested that the total loss was $133 million, making it the biggest flop of 2019.)]]
13** In another, [[https://www.cbr.com/dark-phoenix-bomb-harder-fantastic-four/ rather depressing analysis]], the movie earned only ''slightly'' more domestically in its entire lifetime than ''Apocalypse'' earned in its '''opening weekend''' (and that movie was a ''domestic'' flop), and lost even more money than the universally-maligned 2015 ''Film/{{Fantastic Four|2015}}''. (While ''Fantastic Four'' was less expensive and ''Dark Phoenix'' outgrossed it, the massive budget of the latter film made it a bigger loss for Fox.) [[https://variety.com/2019/film/news/disney-earnings-miss-the-mark-stock-slides-1203293891/ When Disney addressed lower-than-anticipated earnings for the third quarter of their fiscal year]], they singled out ''Dark Phoenix'' as one of the key reasons that they came up short, in spite of also releasing the record-shattering ''Film/AvengersEndgame'' in that same quarter (a movie which, contrary to ''Dark Phoenix'', performed vastly above already-high expectations and topped ''Film/{{Avatar}}'''s worldwide gross record). As a result, Disney announced that it would take a more direct role in green-lighting films released under the Fox brand (though it was likely intended from the get-go, with or without the failure of ''Dark Phoenix'').
14* ChannelHop: Because Disney completed its purchase of 20th Century Fox prior to the film's release, they inherited the film's distribution rights.
15* ContractualObligationProject: Since the movie was already filmed when Disney acquired Fox, the larger company had to honor their new subsidiary's release schedule, even with Marvel beginning to internally discuss plans to reboot the ''X-Men'' franchise into the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse.
16* CreatorBacklash: Creator/AlexandraShipp, who portrays Storm, had some [[https://lrmonline.com/news/wondercon-alexandra-shipp-storm-on-dark-phoenix-and-her-character/ choice words]] about [[TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodCharacter feeling that Storm is underused]] in this movie and ''Film/XMenApocalypse''. She also gave Creator/MarvelStudios [[DamnedByFaintPraise a rather backhanded compliment]] in the same exchange, noting that her version of Storm would likely end up being a background character in a big team-up movie:
17-->'''Shipp:''' [[DistinctionWithoutADifference I would and I wouldn't]] [be a fan of joining the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse], because Storm barely has anything to say as it is. I don’t know about you all (other actors), but, like, we never talk. So it would be really nice if we weren’t piled into yet another jam-packed cast, in which you only see me in the back of the shot like [[PrecisionFStrike fucking]] Sasquatch.
18* CreatorBreakdown: Creator/JenniferLawrence ended up taking a two-year break from acting due to feeling that people had gotten "sick of her" after the film released. She also felt that she didn't put as much effort in as she should've, which explains Mystique's rather wooden acting throughout the film.
19* DeletedRole: Daniel Cudmore's role was cut in the final version of the film.
20* DyeingForYourArt:
21** Like [[Film/XMenApocalypse the previous film]], Creator/JamesMcAvoy shaved his head for the film (after filming the 1975 scene with young Jean in advance, he has his ''[[Film/XMenDaysOfFuturePast Days of Future Past]]'' haircut in it) and for the ''Film/{{Split}}'' sequel, ''Film/{{Glass|2019}}''.
22** Creator/JessicaChastain bleached her red hair for the film.
23** The blonde Sophie Turner has the same red hair from previous films, spilling over from ''Series/GameOfThrones''.
24* ExecutiveMeddling:
25** Director Simon Kinberg wanted to re-film the original climactic sequence to add more X-Men to a scene that otherwise would have just had Professor X, Cyclops, and Phoenix in it, but Fox deemed it too expensive to rebuild the absolutely massive sets that they made for the sequence -- thus resulting in the train sequence.
26** While Disney's acquisition of Fox did not affect the content within the film, [[ScrewedByTheNetwork it did adversely affect the movie's marketing campaign]], as a number of positions were vacated and were replaced by temporary workers. Disney did attempt to give the movie a last-minute marketing push after the merger had been completed, but they did not spend as aggressively to promote the release. One insider says that the film's lone premiere in Los Angeles was done with an eye to controlling cost -- a bit of economizing that annoyed the film's creative team.
27* FlipFlopOfGod:
28** After ''Film/BatmanVSupermanDawnOfJustice'', Music/HansZimmer said he was done scoring superhero films. Then he came back in the genre to score ''Dark Phoenix'', and shortly afterward, signed on to co-compose ''Film/WonderWoman1984''.
29** It was always stated that ''Dark Phoenix'' was to be the beginning of many films to come, but after Disney's buyout of Fox was officially completed, Simon Kinberg changed his tune to the movie having always intended to be the swan song of the series.
30* FollowTheLeader: An odd example of this happening in the same franchise -- ''Dark Phoenix'' eschewing ''X-Men'' from the title was inspired by ''Film/{{Logan}}'' doing the same thing. Then again, many international releases ''and'' the home video ones brought the franchise name back.
31* FranchiseKiller: ''Dark Phoenix'' effectively crushed any argument that could've been made about letting the ''X-Men'' continue in a direction separate from the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse. Beforehand, Disney and Marvel actually made it clear they intended to [[ContinuityReboot start fresh]] with the IP by making a reboot in the MCU following the acquisition of 20th Century Fox, and Fox sold the film as a finale; after the movie released, this proved to be the right call to make.
32* FriendshipOnTheSet: Creator/JessicaChastain and Simon Kinberg became friends on the set of this film, and collaborated further with ''Film/The355''.
33* GodNeverSaidThat: Jessica Chastain was assumed by virtually everyone, from media outlets to fans, to be playing Lilandra after it was announced she was playing the BigBad of the film, but it was never explicitly stated to be the case by Fox, which led to Chastain herself revealing that she wasn't the character over social media. The truth ended up being a little more complicated, as Chastain '''was''' initially hired to play Lilandra before the intended two-part film was condensed into one movie, and her character was altered. Chastain has said ''she'' didn't even know her character's name until she saw the movie herself.
34* InMemoriam: The end credits includes the message "In memory of Creator/StanLee".
35* InvisibleAdvertising: [[https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/we-were-wrong-behind-dark-phoenix-foxs-dismal-x-men-franchise-finale-plans-1216859 One of the stated reasons for the film's poor box office performance]] was a lack of awareness on the film. One tracking service never had an ''X-Men'' movie have a "definite awareness" score below a 90 out of 100 points; ''Dark Phoenix'', conversely, never got higher than a 75. One anonymous executive noted how surreal it was for ''Film/{{Rocketman|2019}}'' to have a higher level of awareness with general audiences.
36* PlayingAgainstType: Creator/JessicaChastain is rarely the villain, aside from ''Film/CrimsonPeak''. It also marks the first blockbuster role for her since ''Film/TheHuntsmanWintersWar''.
37* PosthumousCredit: The film gives an executive producer credit to Creator/StanLee, who passed away seven months before the movie was released.
38* RealitySubtext: The [[Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse Mutant Containment Unit]] end up taking the Mutants away. It's no surprise that the scenes involving this organization were reshoots added after Disney's acquisition of Fox was formally announced.
39* ReleaseDateChange: The film was initially set for release on November 2, 2018, but got moved back to February 14, 2019 to accommodate reshoots and ''Film/BohemianRhapsody'' (coincidentally directed by Creator/BryanSinger) took its slot. And ''then'' it was moved back ''again'', to June 6, 2019, just a day after its first trailer and poster ([[TheArtifact with the February 14th date on it]]) were released. ''Film/AlitaBattleAngel'' took its place. [[note]]The move of ''Alita'' into the spot previously reserved for ''Dark Phoenix'' was due to a direct request [[https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/we-were-wrong-behind-dark-phoenix-foxs-dismal-x-men-franchise-finale-plans-1216859 from]] James Cameron, who did not want the film to compete with the 2018 holiday season's blockbusters, which included ''Film/Aquaman2018'' and ''Film/{{Bumblebee}}''. As Cameron is Fox's highest-profile director, with both ''Film/TerminatorDarkFate'' and the ''Film/{{Avatar}}'' sequels on deck, the studio was not in a position to argue.[[/note]]
40* TroubledProduction: If [[https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/we-were-wrong-behind-dark-phoenix-foxs-dismal-x-men-franchise-finale-plans-1216859 this article]] is anything to go by, ''Film/DarkPhoenix'' had lots of behind-the-scenes turmoil.
41** The trouble began when Fox executives looked at the poor critical and commercial reception for ''X-Men: Apocalypse'' and felt that the film was an anomaly of what was otherwise a consistently well-performing franchise, rather than evidence that audiences were growing frustrated with its creative direction. In a desperate attempt to win back the fans' trust, Fox decided to reboot ''ComicBook/TheDarkPhoenixSaga'', which they previously tackled with the aforementioned ''The Last Stand'' to disastrous results. Recurring series producer Simon Kinberg was chosen to direct in his feature film debut due to his aforementioned work as a fill-in director on ''Apocalypse''. Although Kinberg had the backing of the stars (including Jennifer Lawrence, who reportedly refused to do the film unless Kinberg directed it), fans were more skeptical given how Kinberg co-wrote ''The Last Stand'', never directed a prior feature film from start to finish, and lost some credibility for his role in the infamous ''Film/FantasticFour2015'' reboot.
42** According to the [[https://www.movienewsnet.com/2019/06/11/dark-phoenix-x-men-troubled-production/ reports]] the story was planned to be told in 2 films, but when Disney announced its purchase of Fox in 2017, Fox made the abrupt decision to only make one film. The abrupt decision was made just 2 months before finishing pre-production and when the 2-part script was already written, so it had to be rewritten in a hurry to compress everything into a single film. The film was also planned to be released in a season other than Summer because it was designed more as a psychological character study and not a summer blockbuster.
43** Filming went smoothly, but once Fox executives got to see a rough cut, both them and Kinberg agreed that the film needed extensive reshoots. Unfortunately, the reshoots didn't occur for ''over a year'' since Fox had to renegotiate many of the actors' contracts. It was during this time that UsefulNotes/RupertMurdoch, having grown disillusioned with the trend of media consolidation, decided to sell Fox and its entertainment assets to Creator/{{Disney}}, which owned Marvel Comics and would almost certainly move to put the characters in the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse. Since the deal wouldn't be finalized for nearly a year-and-a-half, Fox was forced to continue on with the film. The reshoots ended up resulting in the film moving up its release date by several months. All this was happening as the marketing campaign was rolling out.
44** Then things went to hell. Creator/JamesCameron, who was writing and producing ''Film/AlitaBattleAngel'' for Fox, complained that his film was scheduled to open against ''Film/MaryPoppinsReturns'', ''Film/{{Aquaman|2018}}'' and ''Film/{{Bumblebee}}'', fearing a box office slaughter from all three. Consequently, Fox moved up ''Dark Phoenix''[='=]s release date by ''four months'', making it a summer blockbuster, while giving ''Alita'' the February slot originally reserved for ''Dark Phoenix''. Several Fox executives, including current studio head Emma Watts, rebelled against the move, but were overruled. As the merger with Disney closed, many of the film's marketing staff were forced out in the post-merger shakeup, resulting in the film's campaign lacking any sort of message or direction. Not helping matters was that the film, instead of hype building, faced either apathy or merciless mocking on the Internet before its release, seeing it as a ContractualObligationProject in a franchise that was doomed to end in the merger's aftermath.
45** The end result was a disaster both critically and commercially. The final film was a critically-panned mess that received a lower Rotten Tomatoes percentage score than ''both'' ''The Last Stand'' and ''X-Men Origins: Wolverine''. Fan concerns about Kinberg's lack of experience were validated as even the most generous critics singled out Kinberg's weak direction as a major flaw. Financially, the film was a massive bomb that opened with a whopping $33 million on its opening weekend in America, the lowest opening ever for an ''X-Men'' film. Things got worse when bad word-of-mouth lead to the film experiencing a second weekend drop of ''71.5%'', the worst for the genre since ''[[Film/BatmanVSupermanDawnOfJustice Batman v Superman]]'' three years prior. The lack of legs was further exacerbated by the film being pulled from over 1,600 theaters in its third weekend. The film effectively ensured any thought of the ''X-Men'' film franchise continuing in its current capacity would be dashed.
46** The last nail on the coffin came when Disney disclosed a $170 million loss in its studio division for the company's third financial quarter, specifically calling out ''Dark Phoenix'''s poor performance as the main reason for the quarter's weaker-than-expected results. Consequently, Disney moved to gut whatever autonomy Fox had left post-merger, taking a direct role in green-lighting films for the brand and shelving almost every film from the studio in the early stages of development indefinitely. The only films that escaped the purge were those connected to valuable IP (i.e. ''Film/{{Avatar}}'', ''Franchise/PlanetOfTheApes'', etc.), Fox Searchlight fare and those that Disney chose to move to other brands in their portfolio.
47* WhatCouldHaveBeen:
48** K-pop singer Music/{{Rain|Singer}} was considered for a role in the film but he turned it down due to scheduling conflicts.
49** Mystique and Magneto were not originally intended to appear as Creator/JenniferLawrence implied in several interviews that she was done with playing Mystique, though she said in an [[http://www.digitalspy.com/movies/x-men/news/a837415/jennifer-lawrence-x-men-dark-phoenix-mystique-return/ interview]] that she had a change of heart as she didn't want fans to be confused if her character got the ChuckCunninghamSyndrome treatment.
50** Creator/AngelinaJolie was considered for the role of Vuk. Surprisingly enough, her estranged husband Creator/BradPitt was considered to play Cable in ''Film/Deadpool2''. He ''did'' appear as [[spoiler:The Vanisher, [[DeathByCameo albeit not for very long]].]]
51** ''Dark Phoenix'' was originally going to be the start of another trilogy, much like how ''First Class'', ''Days of Future Past'', and ''Apocalypse'' all featured prominent time periods[[note]]the 60s for ''First Class'', the 70s for the past segments of ''Future Past'', and the 80s for ''Apocalypse''[[/note]], with ''Dark Phoenix'' covering the 90s, and (presumably) its two sequels would've covered the 2000s and 2010s.
52** In earlier cuts of the film, Vuk (Creator/JessicaChastain[='=]s character) is referred to as Lilandra, suggesting that originally, the D'Bari were going to be the Shi'ar. Kinberg felt that the Lilandra storyline would draw attention away from the main cast, and instead chose to use the D'Bari (who, in the comics, were wiped out by Jean's actions).
53** Creator/TyeSheridan has confirmed that at one point, the aliens would've been the Skrulls instead of the D'Bari. Presumably, Chastain's character would've been Veranke the Skrull Queen had that not been changed.
54** A cameo from Creator/HughJackman as Wolverine was considered, but scrapped due to a combination of reasons: Kinberg felt that the age gap between Jackman and Turner would've made interactions between Wolverine and Jean Grey creepy; Kinberg refusing to just include a one-off cameo, saying that if he included Jackman, it would've distracted audiences from Jean's journey; and Kinberg feeling that doing so would also cheapen the feeling of finality that ''Logan'' had for the role.
55** The original ending would've been a massive space battle, with Jean fighting off the alien invaders above the Earth. The ending had to be completely reshot and changed to the train battle - in spite of rumors that it was in order to avoid similarities to ''Film/{{Captain Marvel|2019}}'', [[https://screenrant.com/xmen-dark-phoenix-original-ending-civil-war/ Simon Kinberg said he instead wanted to draw away from]] ''Film/CaptainAmericaCivilWar'', given that it also had a rift among the heroes.
56** The original plan was for the plot to be split into two films: ''Phoenix'' and ''Dark Phoenix'', thus giving the audience a chance to "fall in love" with Jean in the first one as she blossoms and comes into her own with the power of the Phoenix only to "have their hearts broken" by her FaceHeelTurn in the second. With how rushed the final storyline was being crammed into one film, it the two film approach might have been the wiser one.
57* WordOfGod: Simon Kinberg [[https://www.digitalspy.com/movies/a27878499/x-men-dark-phoenix-jean-grey-alive/ confirmed]] that [[spoiler:Jean survived in the final battle against Vuk, thus confirming her fate is indeed a ForegoneConclusion, given that she's alive in the epilogue of ''Film/XMenDaysOfFuturePast'']].
58* WorkingTitle: ''Phoenix'', ''X-Men: Supernova'', ''X-Men: Teen Spirit'', and ''X-Men: Pulsar'' were all listed as codenames for the film.

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