7.0
Two mutants, Rogue and Wolverine, come to a private academy for their kind whose resident superhero team, the X-Men, must oppose a terrorist organization with similar powers.
Hugh Jackman
Logan / Wolverine
Patrick Stewart
Xavier
Ian McKellen
Magneto
Famke Janssen
Jean Grey
James Marsden
Cyclops
Halle Berry
Storm
Anna Paquin
Rogue
Tyler Mane
Sabretooth
Ray Park
Toad
Rebecca Romijn
Mystique
Bruce Davison
Senator Kelly
Matthew Sharp
Henry Guyrich
Brett Morris
Young Magneto
Rhona Shekter
Magneto's Mother
Kenneth McGregor
Magneto's Father
Shawn Roberts
Rogue's Boyfriend
Donna Goodhand
Rogue's Mother
John Nelles
Rogue's Father
George Buza
Trucker
Darren McGuire
Contender
Carson Manning
Waterboy #1
Scott Leva
Waterboy #2
Aron Tager
Emcee
Kevin Rushton
Stu
Doug Lennox
Bartender
David Nichols
Newscaster #1
Malcolm Nefsky
Stu's Buddy
Sumela Kay
Kitty
Shawn Ashmore
Bobby Drake
Katrina Florece
Jubilee
Alex Burton
John Allerdyce
Quinn Wright
Lily Pond Kid
Daniel Magder
Boy on Raft
Matt Weinberg
Tommy
Madison Lanc
Tommy's Sister
Stan Lee
Hot Dog Vendor
Marsha Graham
Newscaster #2
Amy Leland
Cerebro (voice)
Adam Robitel
Guy on Line
David Lawrence Brown
Lead Cop
Ben Jensen
Sabretooth Cop
Tom DeSanto
Toad Cop
Todd Dulmage
Coast Guard
Dan Duran
Newscaster #3
Elias Zarou
U.N. Secretary General
David Black
President
Robert R. Snow
Secret Service
David Hayter
Museum Cop
Cecil Phillips
Security Guard
Dave Allen Clark
Newscaster #4
Deryck Blake
Plastic Prison Guard
Ilke Hincer
Translator
Ron Sham
Translator
Jay Yoo
Translator
Grigori Miakouchkine
Translator
Eleanore Comes
Translator
Giuseppe Gallaccio
Translator
Rupinder Brar
Translator
Abi Ganem
Translator
Joey Purpura
German Soldier
Manuel Verge
German Soldier
Wolfgang Müller
German Soldier
Ralph Zuljan
German Soldier
Andy Grote
German Soldier
Eric Bryson
Cop (uncredited)
Ben Champniss
Jewish Prisoner of War (uncredited)
Cheryl De Luca
Mother on Train (uncredited)
Jeremy Durgana
Student (uncredited)
Wesley Finucan
Man at Train Station (uncredited)
Kyler Fisher
Extra (uncredited)
Brandon Marc Gagne
Bar Patron (uncredited)
Matthew Galliford
Ellis Island Dignitary (uncredited)
Gary Goddard
Man at Beach (uncredited)
Matt Granger
Weapon X Program Surgeon (uncredited)
Cyprian Lerch
Police Officer (uncredited)
Donald MacKinnon
Student at Xavier School (uncredited)
Brian Peck
Hot Dog Stand Patron (uncredited)
Peter Schindelhauer
German Soldier (uncredited)
Jimmy Star
Police Officer (uncredited)
Daniel Vivian
Canadian (uncredited)
Quentin Wright
Student at Xavier School (uncredited)
Director, Story
Bryan Singer
Screenplay
David Hayter
Story
Tom DeSanto
September 19, 2018
8
***“X-Men” laid the foundation for all the great Superhero flicks to come***
I think the X-Men films have been so popular because the X-Men dare to be different. The concept of the X-Men strays far from superhero conventions. If you approach the X-Men films thinking you're getting something akin to Superman, Spider-Man or Batman, forget it.
The unique concept of the X-Men is that humanity is starting to evolve to the next level and a small percentage of humans all over the globe are starting to manifest superhuman powers from the mutant "X" gene. Two mutant leaders, who are old friends, take totally contrasting positions: Charles Xavier starts a school for mutant youths in upstate New York. His attitude is positive and his goal benign. Eric Lensherr or Magneto, on the other hand, is fed up with the paranoia of non-mutants. He starts a "Brotherhood of Mutants" with an attitude of superiority. Unfortunately, power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
You could say that Xavier takes the approach of Martin Luther King Jr. while Magneto goes the route of Malcolm X, an interesting comparison.
Although everybody has their favorite, I feel all three films in the original trilogy are of the same general quality: "X-Men" (2000), "X2: X-Men United" (2003) and "X-Men: The Last Stand" (2006).
"X-Men" naturally lays the foundation by introducing the principle characters and the plight of the mutants. Wolverine and Rogue are introduced and slowly develop an interesting big brother/little sister type relationship. They come into contact with both Magneto's Brotherhood and Xavier's school and nobly opt for the latter. Magneto's bunch includes Sabertooth, Toad and Mystique, while Xavier's team includes Cyclops, Jean Grey and Storm, as well as adolescents Iceman and Pyro. Both groups of mutants meet and tussle at Liberty Island in New York Harbor, which is the weakest part of the film, but not bad.
When "X-Men" debuted in 2000 it was easily the best comic-to-film adaption since "Superman" (1978) and "Superman II" (1980). It was the precursor to all the great superhero films that came out in the 2000s and has only lost some of its allure due to the quality of many of those films.
The movie runs 1 hour, 44 minutes with several interesting deleted scenes available.
GRADE: A-