Why do keep bringing up Superman Returns? WHAT has it got to do with X3? Is it simply because i like it?
And anyway, both critics and fans on the internet give both Spidey 3 and Superman Returns MUCH better ratings than X3, and again i disagree, the action was both meaningless AND uninteresting in X3.
I'm just trying to keep it real. You are prone to aggression and extreme over-reaction, with very little middle ground. Something is either the best thing ever or the worst thing ever in most of your statements.
Let's go over this: Singer directed X1 and X2 and then, for whatever reason, he moved on to SR. We don't really know if he'd have come back for an X3 - if SR had done astonishlngly well, he would no doubt have gone straight into an SR sequel. Therefore, X3 was not going to be a Singer movie. Especially with Fox wanting to keep to the deadline of May 2007, having contracted all the actors. You cannot just cancel a movie, not without paying everyone you have contracted. Actors had all made themselves available for X3.
Therefore, X3 was going to have different writers and a different director. And then James Marsden opted to appear in SR. Singer also spoke to some of the other people due to appear in X3, but they didn't choose to leave Fox. Therefore, X3 was taking shape as a movie that would have a different set of writers, a different director and a limited Marsden involvement. It was never going to be a Bryan Singer movie. Any new director or writers who come into a franchise are going to make something that is different to the previous movies. The directors changed on the Harry Potter movies... but this is a different set of circumstances, as JK Rowling kept everything pretty solid and connected - she was writer of the source material and had strict control of the movies. So the movies tie together pretty well. This kind of thing didn't happen with the X-franchise.
This is why I mention Singer and SR. You cannot expect X3 to follow Singer's style, because it wasn't made by Singer and Singer had zero involvement in it. No matter who made X3, it would have differed in tone and presentation from X1 and X2. Matthew Vaughn famously said he wanted the actors to forget everything they had done before in the X-movies. So even if he'd done it, there would have been variations in the characters.
This is all about being realistic. Singer left X3, so X3 is not a Singer movie and never would have been, no matter who had taken the reins.
I bet he had SOME influence, he got pai around $20 million for the movie afterall, however, out of all the people i listed, he probably had the least input in making it a poor movie.
Jackman would have had limited influence. He was more than likely given a producer credit to justify his increased salary, which was probably the highest. He may have had some say on his character, but not much else.
However, he said Singer had been approached to direct the Wolverine movie, so Fox and Jackman realise that Singer was very well suited to the X-Men franchise. In contrast, Ratner hasn't been asked back - we're not getting a Ratner X4 or a Ratner-directed Wolverine movie. I still don't think Ratner did a crap job - he didn't have time to do much more than shoot what had already been written and mapped out. Where he made a mistake was in cutting material out. He likely didn't have time to shoot or do post-production on a lot of stuff, which would explain the lack of Angel in the final battle and a lack of Colossus vs Juggernaut. However, he could have added a bit more of Angel (the novelisation has a great scene with Angel and his father chatting after Angel rescues him) and a bit more dialogue for Colossus - but those aren't massive failures: in the previous X-movies there have been characters who didn't get huge amounts of screentime or depth and who fell by the wayside because there wasn't time to focus on them fully.