Yes them being young and starting out when most contemporary heroes are also pretty new to their roles is almost entirely different to them starting out when other heroes have already been saving the world and getting adored and/or despised by the public for years and actually over a decade. Let alone if/when you have (as probably will happen) them outright looking up to the older established heroes.
Another significant issue with starting them and having them be real young (teenagers/HS) is that the actors (even newcomers) probably won't want to do more than a few films so if you have two or three solo HS years films and three crossover appearances you wouldn't ever get the adult experienced versions (or in just one film) short of recastings. That would be a lot less of a problem if the MCU started having a lot fewer crossover appearances but that's unlikely.
The Harry Potter films were an inspiration for Marvel Studios Spider-Man and may be for its X-Men but actors being willing to do a Harry Potter-length series/character portrayal seems unlikely.
What I love about the X-Men is that, even when they first started, they had no reason to look up to established heroes because they were neglected by the established heroes. The Avengers never come to the X-Men's apartment and dance around the great power-great responsibility speech. The Avengers go around saving everyone BUT mutants, and that creates enmity, not admiration. They are not Spider-Man just because they're young. I also don't know of younger actors passing up on deals, because young actors are like Tom Holland, and while the X-Men start as high schoolers, they graduate from HS in I think issue 7 of their first comic. Just because someone is 17-19 doesn't mean that they aren't an experienced adult by the end of the movie. I think a lot of the discussion here is sort of like EXPERIENCED ADULTS or PERPETUAL CHILDREN, and honestly, I take that as validation. If I say "I'd like to see these characters established over the course of 1 film instead of starting pre-established" and the response from you, and others, is "I don't want to wait 3 films to see them established" then that suggests that there's not really a problem with my suggestion.
True. Although to get to a certain level you also need experience in your field. The guy on his first day at the job might be the most assertive person in the world but he won't be able to confidently talk about things he has no knowdege of yet. In the way you're talking even some 12 years olds who are on the path to greatness were plenty assertive at that age but you don't get taken seriously until you have something to back that up. Even those middle aged corporate CEOs who are as confident as they come wouldn't get taken seriously on their first mission if they run into Cap and co without field experience.
I think that's the rub, right, I don't forsee Cyclops running into Cap on his first mission. Or second, or third. Whether there's a montage of missions like The First Avenger, or really only two big fights like Iron Man 1, I expect to see the X-Men's adventure into becoming superheroes, and that on-screen experience be why Cyclops stands toe to toe with Cap (assuming he's still alive) when X-Men crosses over with the Avengers, which, again, will not be at the beginning of the first X-Men movie. The core, in my mind, of Cyclops' issue with Cap is that Cap can't/won't do what Cyclops does. That's a lot more powerful if we've seen it than if Cyclops doesn't even do what Cyclops does, but just says he's done it.
To reiterate, this is/should be a big, worrying deal. Feige and others at Marvel seemed to think that at least with Spider-Man high school age meant incompetent or minimally competent, literally have to be saved by another hero twice though he can then succeed and save the day at the end of the film.
True, but there's a difference between being 15 and self taught and being 18 and taught by Charles Xavier. So it's not quite the worry unless you're convinced that young = just like Spidey. I get when people just make those assumptions, like, you're not evil or silly for thinking that, but it's not necessarily a well founded concern either.
Thank f***.
We don't need origin upon origin yet again, especially in the mcu. Enough with the origin porn. I've no interest in waiting another decade just to get the team to the place the audience wants to see them.
No one wants a decade, but in the MCU, even characters that start with their powers, like Spider-Man or Black Panther experience origin-like story arcs where they come into their own as heroes on screen because, for a number of reasons, it works. It doesn't take a decade though, it takes one film. I don't think X-Men will or should be any different.
I bet Feige is very relieved that this timely deal is going to spare him the hassle of having to make a Black Knight movie. lol
This. I'm excited for X-Men as well, but this, effectively, is the end of the broadening of the MCU that really elevated the Avengers into household name that they just weren't ten years ago.
I could never have predicted that mini-series would become an avenue for us to get a wealth of new material, but when they mentioned big budget it sounded hopeful. And now that they will be competing with the likes of Netflix and Amazon Prime for streaming shows they will be screaming out for content. And if they get this stuff right from the outset it could be the case that the GA chooses to watch all of it as one huge supporting show to the films, rather than treating them all individually and picking and choosing in the way that regular shows find themselves.
Yeah, in a perfect world there's a X-Men movie series (and maybe a Wolverine series) as well as an Xavier's School Disney Streaming series. That's kinda the only way they'll have a shot at doing justice to both the breadth and depth of the X-Men corner (half?) of the universe.
Fancast I'm proud of right now:
Will Poulter (Maze Runner, Bandersnatch) as
Scott "Cyclops" Summers
You need someone to humanize a dick. And Cyclops is a dick, he's a fricking basketcase, can't keep a marriage, can't make friends, total OCD anal retentive, but goddamnit he can make a battle plan and be cool calm and collected under fire. A dead on sniper and highly disciplined, you need someone like Poulter who has been humanizing the worst technically correct people since he himself was a 16 year old just learning the trade. 25 years old.
Cyclops is also the greatest case in point I can think of to say:
The LEAD of the movie is NOT the LEADER of the X-Men At least not necessarily. And getting this confused is why the Singer films had to gut Cyclops because they couldn't understand the idea that the protagonist doesn't necessarily come up with the plan. Avengers, on the other hand, got this right, knowing that just because RDJ is driving the action, doesn't mean that he's capable or that the movie is best served by him being the one giving the orders. Cap is best for that. Cyclops would be similar.
Oh, and just for the record, Saoirse Ronan was in the running for Jean Grey for Apocalypse, but maybe didn't match up well in the screen tests with Tye Sheridan.
Saoirse Ronan (Lady Bird, Hanna, The Host) as Jean Grey, the Marvel Girl
I really don't feel any explanation here is needed. She looks the part and is an absolutely incredible actress. 24 years old.
But that's not controversial... here's one I think would change the game:
Jeffrey Wright (West World, Hunger Games: Catching Fire) as
Charles Francis Xavier aka Professor X
I know, I know, Xavier's White, I get it, his father's old money New England, and we're used to him as a British guy because Patrick Stewart is f'ing awesome. That, I'm afraid is why Xavier needs a strong clearly different direction, and connecting him to the actual struggle for equality that the X-Men got their initial relevance from will do that. Bonus, it doesn't at all impede his father from being old money New England (seeing as how "White" people can have "Black" children), but actually suggests it away from a British background, bringing with it the unspoken tension that can come from that kind of writes itself. Now you see Cain Marko feels he's the rightful son, don't you? More importantly than the elephant in the room, Wright's a phenomenal actor and his voice carries a gravitas to the kind of exposition Xavier has to do that works, and if we're honest, that's kind of his job on Westworld, Hunger Games, Source Code and etc. He's really good at it. Wheelchair experience a plus, and he's one of the few accomplished Black actors that hasn't already gotten a supporting role in the MCU outside of Will and Zel, and TBH, I don't see them doing MCU stuff, much less for multiple movies. And yes, for the record, he looks good bald. 53 years old.