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X-Men 1

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  • And You Thought It Would Fail: Executives were certainly nervous about a costly movie starring a group of superheroes who had never been on the big screen before. And for frame of reference, this was a time when the failure of Batman & Robin was still fresh in everyone's minds, when Superman's fifth movie languished in Development Hell, and when the only successful Marvel movie had been 1998's Blade. Of course, there are stories (per Moriarty over at Ain't It Cool News) that executive Tom Rothman really opposed this project.
    "I've spoken to at least ten people close to the production who have provided me with laundry lists of the ways that Rothman tried to fuck up the first film. Remember when they cut the budget and moved up the release date on the first X-MEN? You know why? Rothman was cutting his losses. He really, truly anticipated that the film would come out and vanish without a trace, and he would finally be rid of what he saw as a corporate albatross. Instead, the film clicked, and on the second film, Bryan Singer and his writers and the producers were all able to muster enough muscle to get Fox to give them the room they needed to make something even better."
  • Awesome Music: The end credits theme by Michael Kamen.
  • Broken Aesop: A major theme was the Fantastic Racism towards mutants by humans. However, one of the taglines for the movie was "Trust a few. Fear the rest." Imagine this being applied to any real life minority group.
  • Fan-Preferred Couple: Logan/Rogue is much more popular than Logan/Jean or Bobby/Rogue. The shippers Took a Third Option indeed.
  • Genre Turning Point: The film's opening scene with a brutal depiction of a concentration camp is now widely viewed as the moment people first saw that comic book movies could be more than just cheap action schlock.
  • Harsher in Hindsight:
    • Mystique sabotages Cerebro to put Xavier into a coma. Since X-Men: First Class is part of the same continuity, this means Mystique tried to kill a man whom she grew up with and loved as a brother and did not part with on hateful terms—and she did it all just to further an agenda.
    • Likewise the scene where Mystique impersonating Iceman convinces Rogue to leave the school because everyone hates her. Considering her defection in the prequel trilogy over feeling she won't be accepted, it's likely she knew exactly how Rogue was feeling and what buttons to press.
    • Now that we know from X-Men: First Class how Erik's mother died and how Charles became a paraplegic, Magneto's contempt towards guns here makes perfect sense.
    • In X-Men: First Class, it initially seems odd that Charles wouldn't encourage Raven to pursue a formal education (she sardonically responds to Amy's "What do you study?" with "Waitressing"), but when you recall what Mystique had said to Senator Kelly ("People like you were the reason I was afraid to go to school as a child"), then it becomes very clear that she and Charles were extremely fearful about the possibility that she might lose control of her power while in class.
    • Professor X's line "Experimentation on mutants—it's not unheard of" becomes more chilling when you take into account Bolivar Trask's examination and dissection of mutants in X-Men: Days of Future Past. Xavier would be thinking more specifically of Banshee's death and the torture Mystique endured before she managed to escape Trask Industries in the original timeline.
  • Heartwarming in Hindsight: Professor X tells Logan, "I give you my word that I will use all my power to help you piece together what you've lost, and what you're looking for." Wolverine doesn't know it yet, but what he's truly looking for is right in front of him. As X-Men: Days of Future Past demonstrates, Xavier is the person who gives meaning to Logan's existence; the "master" to his "samurai," so to speak. This is especially true in the Alternate Timeline, where Wolverine has settled down as a history teacher at Charles' school, and is genuinely happy—probably the happiest we've seen him in the entire film franchise. Days of Future Past makes it clear that it's Xavier—and not Jean Grey, as The Wolverine might have you believe—who is the most significant figure in Logan's life during his post-amnesia years.
  • Hilarious in Hindsight:
    • Jean Grey tells Professor X that Logan's healing ability "makes his age impossible to determine. He could very well be older than you, Professor." She doesn't realize what a gigantic understatement this is because both X-Men Origins: Wolverine and X-Men: First Class have established that Wolverine is about a century older than Xavier! (James Howlett was born in the early 1830s while Charles' birth year is the early 1930s.)
    • Wolverine’s now iconic introduction ended up mirroring Spider-Man’s in his film that came out two years later, the only difference being the roles of the reigning champion of a cage fight and the challenger being reversed (here, Wolverine is the champion, whereas, Spider-Man 1 has Spider-Man as the challenger).
    • Cyclops sarcastically asking if Wolverine would rather dress in yellow spandex is not only a Mythology Gag, but becomes prophetic with Deadpool & Wolverine where he's in his usual yellow costume.
  • Ho Yay:
    • For a movie trying to set up a Jean/Logan romance, he sure does have a lot of tension and relationship development with Scott. Scott saves him from the exploding truck, they start off incredibly tense and dislike each other, their insults start to take a lighter and more joking tone in the final act (particularly Scott's Actually Pretty Funny reaction to Logan flipping him off with a claw), and Scott is visibly worried over Logan at the end, insisting he take a shot to save him when Jean thinks it's too dangerous. Their interactions with Jean are a more sparse and tame in comparison.
    • At the end of the movie, Jean tells Logan that Rogue is “quite taken” with him. Logan rebuffs the notion by saying his heart belongs to someone else. Jean tries to explain things wouldn’t work between them before Logan cuts her off and asks about the Professor. While in the context of the franchise, Logan is obviously talking about Jean, the scene outside of context makes it seem like Logan is in love with Xavier instead.
  • Jerkass Woobie:
    • Magneto is the film's main villain and is willing to sacrifice an innocent young woman in order to further his goal of mutating mankind, but his tragic backstory of being sent to a concentration camp during World War II makes it impossible not to feel at least some sympathy for him.
    • Senator Kelly is an anti mutant racist but he gets kidnapped by Magneto and turned into a mutant himself, which causes him a ton of pain throughout the movie. By the end of the movie it's hard not feel bad for him since even though a group of mutants helped him, another made his life a living hell until his horrific end.
  • Magnificent Bastard: Erik Lehnsherr is a Holocaust survivor who believes mutants will suffer the same injustices unless they strike first to establish mutant superiority. Founding the Brotherhood of Mutants as Magneto, he later kidnaps Senator Kelly to test his machine that turns humans into mutants like him, while also having Mystique take Kelly's place in the government. Magneto plans to use Rogue to power the machine, and later captures her by having Mystique convince her that Xavier and the rest of the school have turned against her. Imprisoned and forced to help William Stryker, Magneto escapes and joins forces with the X-Men to stop him, before using Stryker’s son to try to force Charles to kill all non-mutants. Magneto uses Jean Grey to attack the Worthington Labs facility making a mutant cure, even at the cost of Charles's life, something that saddens him greatly. Though temporally depowered, Magneto later returns to help save the world from the Sentinels and reconciles with Charles, before helping send Logan back in time to prevent the Bad Future.
  • Narm:
    • Mystique kidnapping Senator Kelly is a serious scene, but her using her feet to threateningly grab his face causes it to lose some impact. Kelly looks like he is more disgusted at having a blue mutant's bare feet on his face, and Mystique looks more like a mistress dominating a slave with a foot fetish rather than an experienced agent kidnapping a politician.note 
    • Storm's Pre-Mortem One-Liner to Toad. Throughout the film, Toad was supposed to keep bragging about things a toad can do, but the lines were cut during production. As a result, Storm's quip lost all of its impact and instead sounded like a specially silly one-liner.
  • Portmanteau Couple Name: "Rogan" for Rogue/Logan.
  • Questionable Casting:
    • At the time, Hugh Jackman as Wolverine, but only to those who grew up on the comics and animated series. The character is famous for being a 5'2" Pint-Sized Powerhouse, while Jackman is a 6'2" Mr. Fanservice. He made up for it by totally owning the role.
    • Halle Berry got lots of backlash for being too light-skinned to play Storm, who has a Kenyan mother and an African-American father in the comics, while Berry is half-white. She too eventually won people over (her "do you know what happens to a toad" line notwithstanding).
  • Relationship Writing Fumble: Logan and Rogue. They gave romantic vibes in their interactions, leading the viewer to think that they would end up like that. The film does at least lampshade it towards the end by making it look more like Rogue had a crush while Logan views it as more of a familial relationship (either Like Brother and Sister or else seeing Rogue as an adoptive daughter of sorts). By the sequel Bobby even has mild jealousy when Logan returns.
  • "Seinfeld" Is Unfunny:
    • At the time of its release, both critics and mainstream audiences highly praised the film for bringing comic book movies back into a positive light. With its grounded and realistic look and gritty tone, it helped give the previously dead genre a jolt of life. Nowadays, many modern audiences criticize it for having clunky dialogue, a rushed pace, bland production design, and rather dull fight scenes in comparison to many of today's more polished and epic superhero movies. Still, the film at least deserves to be admired and respected for its bold take on a genre that was then considered to be box office and critical poison and would help lay the groundwork for other superhero films to bounce off of and compare.
    • On a related note, people who didn't grow up with this film can find its almost active contempt for its source material a turn-off given the prevalence of the Marvel Cinematic Universe and its much more faithful takes on (most of) its prominent characters. It should be noted, however, that even getting the film we got was a miracle as by the 2000's, when the film was made, the X-Men were on a decline in popularity following 90's burnout, unlike the expanding MCU franchise from the mid-to-late-2010s and early-2020s. A decline that this film managed to fix almost by itself. And while the tone and costuming definitely come from an attitude of trying to "fix" the X-Men, the film does ultimately keep one of the most important facets of the X-Men comics: exploring persecution in a way that kids and adults can relate to.
    • In recent years the costumes have received an incredible amount of flack for being boring, homogenous black leather suits as opposed to the more vibrant and varied costumes of the comics. Superhero costumes before the first X-Men film, barring maybe the original Superman films, have always had a bad time being translated to screen and many of the comic costumes would have looked ridiculous if translated faithfully. The black leather, while dull, did at least provide a sense of unity amongst the looks of the X-Men which gave a greater sense of being a team and, well, did look cool at the time. Nowadays, many costumes in modern Superhero movies are able to capture the proper balance between realistic and comic book faithfulness, for better or worse.
  • They Wasted a Perfectly Good Character: Sabretooth is fairly non-descript in this film, despite his animosity towards Wolverine being one of the most famous rivalries in comic book history. Sure, the two have a couple of fight scenes together, but the only significant interaction Creed has with any member of the X-Men is his creepy lust towards Storm. Understandably X-Men Origins: Wolverine would attempt to fix this by giving him a larger role in Logan's backstory.
  • Values Resonance: For a film released in 2000, it became relevant among autism and LGBT rights advocates for treating equality among the many queer and autism-coded X-Men.

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