I'm confused Nell. You say you were happy to see Vaughn go yet you were happy with the end product of X3 that included many of Vaughn's original ideas. What original ideas did Ratner bring to the table besides changing the battle at Al-catraz to take place at the end of the film? You can't rationally say that Vaughn was horrible for X3 and Ratner did a great job when Ratner didn't change too many things from the original script.
I wasn't around for the production, so I don't know what drastic changes (if any) were made. All I know is that the ideas that I have heard that Matthew Vaughn had were absolutley horrible, downright laughable. With Vaughn out of the picture, Kinberg and Penn were able to get rid of his horrible ideas (Stacy X, Leech in a backpack, Danger Room that makes absolutley no sense)... unfortunatley some of the horrible ideas remained, such as killing Cyclops and Xavier.
Unfortunately, it doesn't look like you've changed much since last January. This is why I was better off not knowing about you apologizing for your rude behavior a few months back. It's obvious that your apology didn't mean anything.
K...
Yes, we all know that you irrationally are pro-Ratner and anti-Vaughn even though the script Vaughn used wouldn't have been too different from what Brett ended up using.
Irrationally pro-Ratner? What is so irrational about it? Sounds to me like YOU GUYS are the ones trying to make yourselves feel better about not liking the film. What is irrational about defending someone who I believe offered up a good product?
What was so good about the script?
The general plot was the most exciting story of the 3 films, with the most epic and most exciting action sequences of the entire trilogy.
Was seeing Wolverine and Storm get most of the screentime for the X-Men good?
It wasn't a problem. It's a movie. Not a comic book. You gotta have your frontline characters. They were the obvious choice. Jean and Magneto also got tons of focus and screentime as well.
Could you explain to me how the title of the film applies to any of the core characters of the film? Who was the last stand for? Not Magneto because he gets his powers back at the end of the film. Not for all the mutants who were cured because if the cure doesn't work for Magneto it may not work for any mutants. Not for Xavier because he comes back after the credits. Not for the X-Men because racism against mutants still exists and since Magneto gets his powers back he can build another army to start another war or skirmish(cough. Weak shirmish.). Not for Cyclops because his character was barely in the movie and after he died he was too unimportant for any of the X-Men to notice he was missing. Finally, not for Jean Grey because she doesn't really take a stand for anything. She just wanders around the film sometimes aimlessly and kills people.
We're arguing about the title now?
It's called "The Last Stand" because this is the war that has been building up for 2 movies already. And people
do take a stand.
Wolverine finally chooses a side.
Storm firmly takes a stand on her beliefs.
Beast makes his choice and takes his stand on the situation.
Magneto builds his army and fights for what he believes in.
Iceman, Kitty Pryde, and Colossus all step up to the plate and grow up, becoming X-Men and not just kids anymore.
Could you explain to me how Wolverine could logically be madly in love with someone he barely knew?
Um, if you know anything about human emotions, most of the time they never are logical.
I have fallen "in love" at first sight before. Is it true love? No. But the feelings are there enough for me to desire that person, to want that person. It wasn't "true love" in the movies though, that is why the feelings aren't returned.
Could you explain to me why Magneto decided to let Wolverine go after he discovered the location of his base?
Um, well he flung him quite a distance away. Perhaps he didn't realize that Wolverine was there to listen to the entire speech. Perhaps he thought his trip through the woods would render him a bit more incapacitated. Maybe you're just thinking about the movie a bit too hard and picking at it a bit too closely.
Could you explain to me why Magneto thought it was better for Pyro to go off on another mission when he could have used him during the fight at Jean's house?
Well, the disappearance of Pyro in this scene actually
didn't make sense.
I never claimed the script to be 100% perfect. But neither were Singer's scripts. Afterall, there is a huge moment where the audience is expected to just accept it, when somehow Sabretooth knows exactly where Wolverine and Rogue are in Canada (Magneto and the Brotherhood have no Cerebro to track down mutants over great distances), for Xavier to know that Sabretooth is tracking a mutant, and sends the X-Men to grab Wolverine (Cerebro only shows Xavier where mutants are, not what their intent is, and surely Xavier isn't on Cerebro 24 / 7 tracking down anyone and everyone that might be associated with Magneto and where they might be) only for Magneto to have been after Rogue all along, but there would have been absolutley no way for him to A. know where Rogue was, or B. even know anything about Rogue period.
Sometimes, you just accept those falacies for the greater good of the story.
Could you explain to me what the overall theme of the film was?
I don't think that superhero movies are meant to be extremely deep and metaphorical. But if anything, I think it comes down to being who you want to be. The X-Men are against the cure, but they are willing to fight to protect it. Rogue maybe gave up who she was but she became who she wanted to be. And that's probably more important than sticking with what you were born with just because it's how you were born. Do I agree with the choice? No. But I don't see it as "give up who you are to fit in" like you do, when throughout 2 movies now, what she was isn't what she wanted to be.
Did it make sense for Jean to irrationally kill cyclops and irrationally spare Wolverine multiple times?
Yes. You seem to think that human reactions and instincts are formulaic, or mathematical or something, when they aren't. Do you react identically to every situation that arises? No. Then why should Jean?
The Phoenix is the instinctual, animalistic part of Jean. She reacted by instinct against Wolverine. The situation with Xavier was a bit more threatening to her than anything that Wolverine posed. She didn't "spare" him. She lashed out. She just didn't destroy him. It's not irrational in the least bit.
Did it make sense for Jean to irrationally join Magneto's army?
It wasn't irrational.
Jean was no longer Jean... she was an animalistic, instinctual side of Jean. She couldn't go "home", because "home" she would have been "caged" and locked up.
Magneto offered her encouragement to be what she was, to be free. As a human, you still want that emotional grounding. As a being of instinct, Magneto provided her with the more appealing situation, because he encouraged her to be free, instead of trying to cage her and control her.
Did it make sense for Jean to stand around doing nothing for the majority of the time she was with the brotherhood?
Yes. The majority of the time she was with the Brotherhood, Magneto was giving speeches, and rallying his troops. There was really nothing for Jean TO do.
On Alcatraz, it made sense for her to stand around, because there was no direct threat to her. Just because she -can- do something doesn't mean she wants to. She was perfectly content with watching her minions do her bidding.
Did it make sense for JEan to all of a sudden try to destroy everyone and everthing on Al-catraz at the very end when she could have done this earlier?
It's not "Al-Catraz", it's Alcatraz. It's minor, it's semantics, and it's the same kind of nitpicking I accuse you of doing with this movie, but Jesus Christ it's annoying me.
Yes it did make sense, because now she was directly threatened. As a creature of instinct, she lashed out.
Did you think it was a great idea to show Magneto getting his powers back which made the cure conflict of the whole story irrelevant?
No, I think that was a bad idea, and I never claimed the movie to be 100% perfect. I do have my own complaints with it.
Did you think it was a great idea to show Xavier at the end which destroyed the emotional impact of his death?
See above.
Did you think it was a great idea to mischaracterize multiple characters in the film?(Cyclops, Storm, Xavier, Wolverine, Magneto)
I think that Storm was the only one really mischaracterized, and then she's been done wrong since the beginning.
Cyclops was misused, not mischaracterized. When he was on screen, his character was nailed down pat. Through all 3 movies. Same with Magneto. Same with Xavier.
There were some points where Wolverine was out of character in this one, giving inspirational speeches and such (they should have kept the original speech, from the trailer), but for the most part he was very much in character as well.
Did you think it was a great idea to underdevelop multiple characters in the film?(Leech, Callisto, Arclight, Quills, Colosus, Angel,)
Not all characters get to be fully developed. There are such things as background characters. These were all background characters. They didn't need development.
Angel deserved more, because he was a focus part of the main plot. He was done wrong.
Everyone else... I don't see a problem with how little they were used.
Did you think it was a necessary to give Wolverine multiple fight scenes of getting his ass kicked?
Why not? You have to show conflict. The hero can't just go through whooping everyone's ass with no struggle, or else there is no suspense. The hero has to go through turmoil so that there is a real threat.
Did you think it was believable for Magneto to show no grieve towards the fate of one friends, while grieving for the death of a former friend, and then later sparing the life of an enemy he has no respect for who just discovered his base?!!!! I personally thought the Magneto we got in X3 was an emotionally unstable strategical moron.
Yes.
Magneto thinks that mutants are superior beings. Plain and simple. When Mystique was cured, he showed some remorse for what happened. But at the same time, she was now an inferior creature in his eyes. The way he handled it was not out of character at all.
Also, Magneto does respect Xavier, even if they have different viewpoints. They were always close friends. Much closer than any friendship he shared with Mystique. His reaction seemed very appropriate to me - grief over the loss of his friend, but accepting it as a neccesary loss to further the cause of mutantkind.
Did it make sense for Magneto to waste an army on Al-catraz when he and Jean could have destroyed Al-catraz all by themselves?
Yes. I have already explained in detail why your idea would not be a smart tactical move, but you're too hard headed to want to listen.
Did it make sense for Magneto to want to destroy the source of the cure but, keep some of the cure to use on other mutants?
Yes. Who was going to prove to be a threat to him? Without the cure, the humans no longer had a weapon against him. But he has been beaten by the X-Men before, and obviously they will be standing in his way. He's going to want some kind of defense against them.
Finally, what epic action sequences are you talking about. What's funny about your epic action sequence statement is that Simon called X3's action epic. He compared the action sequences to Return of the King, Saving Private Ryan, Empire Strikes back, and Braveheart. Are seriously trying to convince us that X3's action was on par with those films?
And so what if I did compare it to those films? What is it to you?
For the record, I don't believe it's as epic, at least not as epic as
Return of the King. But I wasn't expecting
Return of the King. Just because Kinberg said it, doesn't mean you have to buy into it.
Return of the King is on a completely different level, in EVERY aspect of film making. I took an "I'll believe it when I see it" approach to expecting
X-Men: The Last Stand to be on the level of
Return of the King. I never anticipated it.
What we did get I still found to be very powerful and epic.
Nice class act Nell. So now the opinions of the haters are mindless. Don't expect me to ever take your opinions serious anymore.
No, the negative opinions of the film
aren't mindless. But the whining and crying is nothing more than acting like a spoiled child who didn't get their way.
And you never took my opinions seriously anyways (nor the opinions of anyone else with a positive view of the film). You blindly dismiss them as impossible lines of thinking. You've never taken my views seriously, so don't expect the same courtesy in return.
Could you please explain to me how quoting statements made by these people is an attack on them personally? An attack on them personally would be to tell lies about them. I haven't done that and to my knowledge most of the X3 haters haven't done this either. What you have a problem with is you can't stand the fact that there are many people who have legitimate reasons for disliking this film. For some bizzare reason you take these criticisms personally and see them as an attack on you. That is disturbing.
What good can possibly come from your tactics?
Your only purpose is to take people down - those who made the film, and those who have a positive view of the film. It is not constructive criticism in the least bit. It's crying like a spoiled child because mommy wouldn't buy you a candy bar.
When have I ever said that I have a problem with what is stated above?
Your actions say all that need to be said.
I find it really funny how you can take the criticisms of your opinions so personally. If you truely are this thin skinned then you should stop coming to these forums and all the other forums you might contribute to because it's obvious that debating with a considerate demeanor is impossible for you.
No, it's quite possible for me. I just need to be in a conversation with someone who isn't going to act like a spoiled brat when things don't go exactly their way, which is exactly how you've acted with all of your "commentaries" to try to bring this film down. What you do does no good for anyone. It's just a bunch of complaining that gets nobody anywhere.
The reason thelastsunrise and others have called you out is because you made a ridiculous claim about Matthew Vaughn and then you didn't provide a source. How were you expecting us to react?
Well, the xverse forums which had the Penn and Kinberg interviews are shut down. At least those particular sections of the forum.
But, just as LastSunrise always says towards me... if your opinion is really that strong, then what I say about Matthew Vaughn shouldn't matter, right?
No arguments here except that you once again referred to one of Vaughn's ideas as absurd when Ratner took alot of his ideas and included them in the film. This is totally hypocritical.
And you did the exact same thing, recently claiming the "original" script was quite dynamic... yet it includes much of the same that you come on here now complaining about. Why was it dynamic under Vaughn, but trash under Ratner? Sounds hypocritical to me...
What the heck are you talking about? Matthew Vaughn is not my guy. Singer was my guy. I'd much rather have Singer direct X3 than Vaughn and Ratner. After seeing how crappy X3 turned out I would have liked to see if it would have been better with Vaughn directing. I'm not upset at you criticizing Vaughn. However, I do have a problem with you making up lies about him and acting like a complete hyprocrite when Ratner took most of the script that Vaughn created with Penn and Kinberg.
I've stated no lies. I have stated the reasons why I do not want Matthew Vaughn anywhere NEAR the X-Men, and why I am glad he left. If you don't want to believe the things I say about him, that's your perogotive. I know what I have read about him, I know the things that he has said, and I know how I view the things that he said.
What's your point? Many of us didn't get into these kinds of arguments before X-Men 3 came out. This doesn't negate the level of contempt you and many X3 lovers have shown towards the X3 haters during the past year.
You have stated you weren't around before
X-Men: The Last Stand came out. Don't act like it was peaches and cream around here. It wasn't.
The same arguements that are going on now, were going on back then, because people were upset with aspects of the script. People were criticising Kinberg, Penn, and Ratner, because of their bodies of works previous to
X-Men: The Last Stand. The original AICN script review was negative, and everyone followed with that like lemmings. I was one of the only optimistic ones around these parts, myself and a few others. For the most part, there was nothing but doubt and concern over the production of this film, and people upset with the script and the filmmakers involved. I never once got into heated arguements like this with those people that had doubts. Because even though we disagreed, everyone kept it civil. Except for TheVileOne. And kurosawa. But they are a different matter altogether.
Blah blah blah. I already responded to this drivel.
"I already responded to this" needs to become your catchphrase, because you do it anytime anyone disagrees with you as your way of dismissing their arguement completely.