I'll cheer to that!
And on the topic of
X3 in relation to the previous X-films and
Batman Begins...here's the thing.
There's varying degrees of faithfulness when you're talking comic movies. The vast majority of them change a great many things, from organic webbing to leather costumes to Joker killing the Waynes. But you have to ask yourself "what works?" Some change works. Organic webbing, for me. I love the webshooters, but I think the scenes in
Spidey 1 were too amusing to lose for the sake of comic accuracy. I'm a comic fan, but I'm a moviegoer at heart, and I'm just looking for compelling and fun cinema. The books will always be there in their truest form.
But where you run into problems is when the source material is
better than the changes the film makes. Which is often the case. Chris Claremont and Co are simply better writers than guys like Simon Kinberg.
The biggest problem with X3 isn't even it's failure to accurately reproduce the comic storylines. It's biggest failure is this:
It fails to successfully continue the pre-established continuity of the film series. The books aside,
X3 is simply a poorly written, lousy
sequel. It either directly contradicts previous characterizations and plot threads, or simply treats them to a poor conclusion.
The first two X-Men movies weren't perfect. Far from it. But one thing they were not were bastardizations. Their biggest failing was not going
far enough with certain things. But the characters were there -
- Logan was the loner with a heart of gold, the one who would learn to work as a team (not as the
leader of the team).
- Cyclops was the boyscout. Devoted to Xavier and Jean, above all. He suffered, but he would make it through (too bad he didn't...)
- Rogue was the runaway, scared and alone but ultimately confident in herself (until X3...)
- Storm had a quiet dignity (mistaken by fools [including the actress playing her] as having "no character" - their idea of character turned out to be something far worse - a stereotypical 'tude)
-Nightcrawler; sweet, playful and deeply religious
and so on.
And the themes were there, in spades.
X3? Ugh, I'm too tired to go into it again.
Crap.

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