Okay. The Dark Phoenix wins. I got that. So because she's a cold and evil force, that means she can't talk?
She did talk. When she did, she said things that were important. She just didn't talk a whole lot, ostensibly because she was less human, and didn't need to. And as Dark Phoenix, what's there for her to talk about? How evil and powerful she is, and how she can't be stopped, as she did in the comics.
Magneto very strongly implied she was a weapon, and was being used, and she just takes it?
Magneto implied that if humanity tries to cure them, they have weapons. She was just one of them. That isn't really "strongly implying" that she was being used so much as that she was on their side, though yes, he clearly wanted to use her power. She went with him, and with them, of her own accord, though, and this is made fairly clear. She didn't want to be controlled, at all, and Magneto's Brotherhood was all about fighting against being controlled by the government, who was using the cure as a weapon.
What's stopping her from killing Magneto and everyone else like she did to Scott?
What EVER stopped her from killing anyone she was around?
If they wanted Jean to be pure evil than... give her something evil to do. Oh standing around being pushed into a cure storyline that we have no indication she even cares about is just great writing. You'd think if she was so evil she would have bigger plans and goals than to follow an old man around killing a kid.
She had a posessed freakout in the X-Mansion with Logan, displayed a ridiculous amount of power when she "rose" at Alkali Lake, killed Scott, and then killed Xavier in grand, and rather destructive, fashion. That's not evil enough for you until the true might of her powers is revealed later on?
She cares about the cure for the obvious reasons...that she doesn't want to be cured or controlled. There's a reason Magneto said "I think you want to give her the cure", and kept on that tack when speaking with her throughout the film. It's pretty damn clear why she went with the Brotherhood. To ensure the cure didn't become a reality.
Funny, when I read the Dark Phoenix Saga it didn't feel very redundant. And I don't get how it would be unfaithful... Jean struggles until the very end... maybe you should read it again.
I don't recall that at all, at least in the context of Dark Phoenix. Not to any serious degree.
Yeah, they never really focused long enough on Jean to even see a twitch of the eyebrow.
Well, that's certainly not true.
Take Jean away from the final battle and it wouldn't even make a difference.
Come on now. Don't start saying ridiculous things.
I wanted to feel her presence and be afraid of her inevitable freakout... but I didn't because the character wasn't connected to the conflict at all.
You didn't feel her presence and the potential of her powers during the scene with Scott, the fairly massive scene with Xavier, and her lapse of control with Magneto? Enough to go "Wow, wonder what she's really capable of?" That's on you then, I think. Her character was clearly connected to the cure conflict. Several times. Magneto and Xavier discussed it, both in the sense of the real cure, and the sense of Xavier's proposed "cure". She was standing at Magneto's side when he railed against the cure. And when the army tried to cure her...look what she did to them. It's obvious how she's connected to the conflict.
Jean gets mad at Magneto when she suspects he's using and controlling her. Well DUH!! In his speech he tells the crowd they have their weapon, and than looks at Jean. Apparently Phoenix is evil and stupid.
Why is she evil and stupid? She was right there with him. When he says weapons, he's talking about mutant powers. But he's not just talking about her. He's talking about all of their potential, especially hers.
Oh how I wish Famke could have acted more in the movie. Anyone could have done the "acting" she did. Anyone could interpret her looks anyway they wanted, but what's the point when the makers of the movie didn't even know what to do with her?
Yes, her acting can be interpreted. That's the beauty of a subtle performance. Anyone could have acted the way she did?
Nah. Could a lot of actors? Sure. A lot of actors can do a lot of things.
What's your point?
The filmmakers clearly knew what they wanted to do with her. You just don't like it.
Because she's a pure evil force. Those kind of people don't do anything. Yeah right. Or maybe it's because she's unpredictable and that's scary! Or maybe it's to give other characters more screen time in a 100 minute film.
The scene is pretty clearly designed to show how far gone she is that she first reaches out subconsciously, then ignores Logan's attempts to help her and toys with her ability to take away Magneto's power, which is his greatest fear.
It builds tension.
What did you want, exactly?
For her to eat a sun?
For the filmmakers to have a random 10 million dollar "destruction" sequence in the woods to show that she's capable of destroying things? Which we already know?
Because Jean is a character that's been developed for two films already, and one of the first X-men. Because people care about her, and is a character beyond just evilness. Phoenix being evil is just part of Jean's story in the DPS, it isn't the only thing. But appearantly the character who we've seen evolve so much, who sacrificed her life to save everyone, is nothing more than an evil shrew.
So if people cared about her for two films, why wouldn't they care about the horrible thing that happens to her in X3?
I'm iffy on how you, or anyone else, would get the idea that she's just plain evil. She failed to control her power. That doesn't neccessarily make her evil so much as it makes her sick.
But yes, part of Jean Grey, The Dark Phoenix, IS somewhat evil in its lust for power and desire not to be controlled.
Seeing a little of Jean show through adds so much. It shows that she's a complex and three dimensional character.
And we saw that in the film. In the scene with Logan, and in the scene with Xavier. And the struggle by itself isn't really that complex or three dimensional. It's just a Jekyll/Hyde Two/Face persona type struggle. The psychology behind that is what makes the character complex. And we did see that in the movie, the psychology and the relevance to the struggle. So I think we got the complex character to some degree.
We should feel conflicted on whether we feel bad for her, or condemn her (something I would love to see a character besides Wolverine do!). But no, this character is flat and all the complexity is taken out.
Speak for yourself. I felt kind of bad for her, since she's a genuinely good person with a serious monkey on her back that made her do terrible things.
Dark Phoenix is pure evil, yeah, but Jean isn't.
What's your point? Perhaps your friend you spoke of is an idiot, then, since he associated the posessive force that was Dark Phoenix with JEAN, despite the fact that the nature of Dark Phoenix was outright explained in the film.
In the DPS, Jean was the main character, not phoenix. All throughout the movie she fights with herself. First she is manipulated by the Hellfire Club, becomes Jean again, gives in and is evil, then she enters a psychic battle with Xavier and mental blocks are placed suppressing DP and Jean comes through. On the moon Phoenix comes back, Jean struggles, realizes there is nothing that can stop her, and kills herself.
As I recall, she's still Phoenix when she struggles against Mastermind's illusions. As soon as she's freed from them, and overcome by her power, and unable to control it, she becomes Dark Phoenix and doesn't turn back again or do much in the way of struggling against Dark Phoenix until the psychic barriers are placed by Xavier. Now, in the comics, at this point, Jean does struggle against the Phoenix Force in the "battle with Xavier", and we did see that element reflected in the film in a slightly different capacity. And she obviously controls her powers enough over the course of much of the film until the moment with Magneto and until she's overcome with rage at the end of the movie. She even calls out to Logan as Jean. So what's the issue, exactly? That you don't get to hear her say "Wow, it's such a struggle to control my powers"? We've SEEN that outright SHOWN and explained in the film. So it seems the "struggle" idea is very much there, and even represented in a similar context as it was in the comics. The Shi'ar isn't there of course, but the moment where she fights the Phoenix Force and gives Logan an opportunity to end her life is her "sacrifice" element. Her choosing to die a human VS a god or a godlike destructive force. It's right there. T
Those elements are all in the film. They're just not spelled out with dialogue. Nor should they have had to have been, because it's a film.
Maybe you would find that redundant, but I found it compelling and complex. "Jean Grey could have lived to be a god, but it was important that she die as a human." That quote sums up the DPS, and was absolutely not translated into the movie AT ALL.
There comes a point when if you just show the same thing over and over, the complex element becomes expected and predictable. There's got to be character development, and Jean has to succumb to Dark Phoenix for this to happen. Had Jean struggled constantly with the Dark Phoenix, and always been struggling, and fighting to be normal again, there would have been very little surprise factor or drama to her actually overcoming it in the end, because this would have been expected by the audience. Having her fail to control it, to succumb to it and become lost in it, as she did in the comics, is a bit more dramatic for the character, and more satisfying in terms of a story element.
Maybe you would find that redundant, but I found it compelling and complex. "Jean Grey could have lived to be a god, but it was important that she die as a human." That quote sums up the DPS, and was absolutely not translated into the movie AT ALL.
Sure it was.
Or did you not see the godlike destructive force allowing herself to be touched by the love of a friend, and allowing herself to be killed to save everyone?
You mean change them back to EXACTLY how it was at the beginning of the series? Yeah that's great. Let's keep on watching movies where you know nothing matters because by some magic it'll just revert back to how it always was. That's what bringing back all the dead characters and taking away the cure would do.
No, of course I don't mean change them back to exactly how it was. How could things EVER be the same?
I don't think you've thought this through in the context of the X-Men mythology. How would Rogue having known what it was like to once not have the curse of her powers, and Cyclops coming back to life, knowing what it is to die and lose the love of his life to an evil force, and Jean coming back after having been Dark Phoenix be "the same as it was in the beginning"?
I would hate it if a new movie came and made everything in these movies moot (though I did hate a lot of X3). People hate retcons for a reason.
I don't see how these would be retcons.
-The film pretty much shows that the cure isn't permanent.
-We never see Cyclops die.
-And Phoenix obviously has some sort of ability to be reborn.
-Xavier transfers his consciousness, etc.
You're telling me people would hate seeing Rogue actually have to learn to deal with and appreciate her powers, Cyclops and the ties to Sinister and his parallells to Jean's experiences, the new version of Xavier, who is much darker and more manipulative, with more gray moral areas, and Jean Grey having to deal with what she did as Dark Phoenix?
We all get Jean wasn't Jean anymore and was complete evil with no chance of redemption. The problem is: 1) that's not complex or compelling in terms of Jean's character and portrayal 2) That's not faithful to the DPS or the character of Jean.
The film never says she was completely evil, or that she had no chance of redemption. It suggests otherwise, in fact.
What people mean by Wolverine being Jean's "one true love" is that in X3 only Wolverine was shown to love her throughout the movie. Of course Scott does, but he died so early on that it doesn't even matter. Storm, Beast, the students don't care for her apparently.
"It doesn't matter".
See, that's the attitude I don't understand. Arguably the best and most touching romantic moment between Jean and Scott was in X3. But it doesn't matter at all that it was there because Scott died? So...romance, friendship, etc don't matter when people die? Is that what you're telling me?
But not only does Wolverine care for her, he romantically loves her with a passion that torments his very soul! Oh the drama!
This condemnation of melodrama is coming from an X-Men fan?
Do I not realize the circumstances surrounding X3? I think the following paragraph, which you've quoted and addressed on its own terms rather than WITH the paragraph prior to it as I intended (my fault I guess, should have been clearer), would suggest that I have... settle yourself down and re-read that post with the understanding that I have X-3 and quite like it in its own way...
Fair enough. I was iffy on why you'd even make a silly statement like "At least Singer was smart enough to work with Fox, while Ratner wasn't" if you understood the nature of the X3 production process, and Ratner's role in it.
As for lack of depth, I was meaning more in terms of the cameos and in subtleties within perfomances (particularly in X-2). If he couldn't come out and give a character decent enough respect in that regards he wouldn't use them (i.e. I doubt we'd have seen Juggernaut in that incantation under Singer).
Despite the fact that there were also a number of depthless cameos in X-MEN and X2, and we saw a pretty depthless Sabertooth, Toad, and Lady Deathstrike in X-MEN and X2 under Singer?
The only noteable exception to this is Cyclops... and that was a biggie. BUT, if we are to believe Singer on that, he was supposed to have a far bigger role in his version of X-3... and knowing the hard-on he has for Marsden, I believe him.
Ah, but would FOX ever have allowed that?
The one in the train where Logan says that he's going as well? Because that's rather ambiguous as to whether he actually meant it and did plan on leaving himself... Which I like, because it leaves the character more open to interpretation. Singer then developed this to show a bond primarily with Rogue, which I like and is in character as an eventual process (for the sake of a movie you couldn't really pace it much better). It also makes his "you aren't doing this for a boy?" discussion with Rogue in X-3 fit perfectly.
Ambigious or not about his intent to stay with the team, I'm talking about the fact that the "big brother" element was there from the beginning, and you know that. You made statements to the effect that this was a "sudden occurrence" in X3.
What I don't like is the general boy scout, bigger brother attitude towards ALL of them based on assumed experience with the kids (which happened off camera... anyway you slice it, that's bad writing - and ultimately it comes down to Ratner as the director to not let **** like that go down. You pick it up and add scenes to show this development of the link between him and the younger characters with time... and there was none of that).
1. How is that on Ratner when the script was already set?
2. How does this:
Bobby Drake: There's only six of us, Logan.
Logan: Yeah. We're outnumbered. I'm not gonna lie to you. But we lost Scott. We lost the professor. If we don't fight now, everything they stood for will die with them. I'm not gonna let that happen. Are you?
Bobby Drake: [shakes head]
Logan: Then we stand together... X-Men, all of us.
in any way rely on an assumed relationship with the younger X-Men? (We do see that he HAS experience with the children, both in X-MEN, X2 and in X3 as well)
It only relies on the idea that if they don't stand up for what Xavier believed in, an angle all the kids are inherently tied to and then tied to again during the funeral scene, that everything they stood for will die with them.
They are intended to become X-Men, which is clear from the first moments of the film. He's been with Iceman and Rogue since X2. He's worked with Storm as well. Why wouldn't he logically be allowed to speak to them, and recognize the fact that they're all X-Men, in that fashion?
Ultimately, "yes" the version of Wolverine we see in X-3 is a plausible outcome (reliant somewhat on assumptions being made on the viewers end) but its not a version I'm particularly happy with (to me I think he went TOO far down that road to the point of almost coming across as the boyscout) and I think it could have been visualised better if he WAS to take that route - which to me was not the best idea in the first place.
Really? What assumptions does the film's version of the character rely on?