Days of Future Past Official Rate and Review DAYS OF FUTURE PAST

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9.5/10

I love this movie,My new favorite X-Men film that actually surpasses X2 IMO and instantly one of my top favorite CBM in general,Loved the ending with the OT cast so much!

This felt like a true X-Men comic movie
 
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Just saw it again! First time was preview screening, this was public screening.

Fantastic! Even better this time than the first viewing. Most of my niggles faded away totally. A really solid movie, I can possibly push this from 8/10 to 9/10 now.

From a structural/pacing standpoint, it needed another action scene somewhere in the middle where it's very plotty/talky (and the man along from me yawned and was asked by his mates if he was bored).

From a personal standpoint, I'd have liked a bit more dark-future stuff. I also would have liked to have seen that specific trailer shot where Storm, Wolverine and the others are slowly walking when arriving at the monastery, it was a beautiful shot that made Halle look especially regal. They used another angle in the movie and it wasn't as good.

And I still think Kelsey-Beast didn't look as good as he did in X3.

Love those Zimmer-esque/Inception-esque bass notes when Magneto is doing his stuff.

Auditorium was packed, everyone seemed to love it. Comments overheard included 'It's all about the fast guy', 'That fast guy was amazing' and 'Man, she was hot' (presumably J-Law).

:hyper::bow::highfive:
 
It looked almost exactly like in the comics and definitely like an adult Beast from the past
 
Loved it! This was a nice Birthday present for me today! Now I want a stand alone X-men film just with the original cast now that we have Jean and Scott back! Now Scott can be the future leader of the X-men!!!

Of course I want the sequel with the First Class cast as well! We also need a new origin Wolverine story now too!
 
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So, my friends want to go see this tonight. I'm not an X-Men fan, but I did enjoy X2 alot, while I hated the rest. I haven't even seen the last Wolvering movie, because I was so disappointed with First Class, which was another highly rated movie from the critics. So, will I enjoy this movie if I hated First Class, or will I like it because I liked X2?
 
So, my friends want to go see this tonight. I'm not an X-Men fan, but I did enjoy X2 alot, while I hated the rest. I haven't even seen the last Wolvering movie, because I was so disappointed with First Class, which was another highly rated movie from the critics. So, will I enjoy this movie if I hated First Class, or will I like it because I liked X2?

I'd guess you will like it if you liked X2.

It's not as quirky as First Class.

But, ultimately, you will like it if you like it!
 
X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014)
Director: Bryan Singer
Cast: James MacCavy, Hugh Jackman, Michael Fassbender, Jennifer Lawrence, Ellen Page, Patrick Stewart, Ian Mckellan
Rotten Tomatoes: 90% at 178 reviews and counting
Grade: B

X-Men: Days of Future Past, the 7th film in the X-Men franchise and the third directed by Bryan Singer, starts off in a dystopian future (2020 ?) where robots (hereafter: sentinels) designed to protect humanity in a war against the mutants have turned against all of humanity upon deciding that they were the enemy, just like in The Terminator, The Matrix, special episodes of Star Trek Voyager and The Outer Limits, and myriad sci-fi stories elsewhere. In order to fight this awful future, Kitty Pride (Ellen Page) sends Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) back in time to prevent it from ever happening, by preventing an assassination. The movie then becomes about Wolverine stealing young Wolverine's body for a few days, putting together a team in the past to prevent an assassination, change the future, and to do so fast enough such that Wolverine's body in the future is not killed by sentinels prior to changing the future. Specifically, they need to prevent Mystique (Jennifer Lawrence) from assassinating Bolivar Trask, and thus this is a Hugh Jackman adventure movie where the struggle is over the soul of Jennifer Lawrence, the two biggest stars in the cast are front and centre.

This movie is high octane, the camera never focuses on anything for more than a few seconds unless it's a pretty person's face, and we get countless, brief action scenes across both timelines whose subsequent resulting repairs would no doubt lead to an unprecedented boon in infrastructure spending. The movie's well-shot, and fun in places. The sentinels from the future are really badass warriors, in a way they're too badass as their comprehensive invincibility ends up removing all dramatic tension and replacing it with a relaxed resignation of impending doom.

I've got mixed feelings on this. I kind of like the period piece (but not, more later), it reminded me of the magnificent X-Men First Class (2011), which I consider the last really good comic book movie. Whereas First Class took place before and during the Cuban missile crisis and indeed was a story that could take place in no other time period, Days of Future Past largely takes place in the aftermath of the Vietnam war and the Paris peace conference. However, in this case, unlike for the previous movie, there is absolutely no reason for that to be the time period. There's nothing about the plot that dictates that the assassination of Bolivar Trask take place in 1973, Bryan Singer simply took a moment in history well-remembered by Americans and one that was after 1962 in order to establish a setting for this movie, its artificial and indeed it feels artificial. Other than the hairdos and glasses and some of the clothing, it doesn't feel like a period piece the way First Class did. I quote from Devin Fararci's otherwise positive review of X-Men: DoFP.

Devin Faraci said:
X-Men: First Class reveled in its period; Days of Future Past feels constrained by it. Where Matthew Vaughn went full Mad Men in his depiction of the world - with some era-appropriate comic book scifi flourishes - Singer is bored by tube TVs and combination safes. Bolivar Trask displays his Sentinel designs on an LCD flatscreen, while Cerebro is now housed in that same 90s brushed metal basement it was in the first film. The Sentinels themselves have nothing of the space age about them and rather look like Steve Jobs designed them. Singer’s inability to give in to the aesthetic of the time - which results in some mildly anachronistic feelings that younger audiences won’t even notice - reflects his whole take on the X-films in general. He’s doing whatever he feels like doing, not what’s right or what fits.
http://badassdigest.com/2014/05/22/x-men-days-of-future-past-movie-review/

After the initial setup, we have Wolverine back in the 1970s, he needs to stop Mystique from assassinating Trask, the movie progresses in a predictable and formulaic manner. His first attempt to stop an assassination succeeds, but makes things worse because the entire world sees the mutants engaging, this scares the public and emboldens and empowers Trask. The first-generation sentinels are then activated, and we learn that Mystique's magic blood is the missing ingredient needed to turn these sentinels into the scary sentinels we see in the future. This then leads to a latter confrontation near the white house.

The movie closes with an awful, cross-cut climax that makes very little sense. In the dark future, sentinels are attacking the X-Men, only this time the sentinels are less invincible and can actually be damaged or seemingly destroyed, they have gotten weaker even though Xavier said previously that the future has probably been made worse by the first failed assassination attempt. In the past, Magneto decides to attack the president, so he lifts up a baseball stadium, and surrounds the white house with it so that nobody can get in. When I saw the shot of the stadium surrounding the white house, I just burst out laughing in the theatre, it was such a ridiculous and ultimately impotent attempt to one-up the disaster porn and the stakes-raising we've seen in the climax of other recent blockbuster movies. We then have a fight with some sentinels (that Magneto somehow controls?) that are far too advanced for 1973. Magneto proceeds to attack the president (a Richard Nixon that is inferior to the one seen in Zack Snyder's Watchmen) but is stopped by Mystique. Mystique then considers killing Trask, but Xavier convinces her not to on the basis that killing will make her a bad person. She doesn't kill Trask, in a change of heart that is not earned by the story's development but is simply a result of Xavier nagging her until she changes her mind, and because of that the world moves on peacefully and abandons its anti-mutant program in spite of the fact that Magneto just killed tens of thousands of people in Washington DC.

Young Magneto is actually shoehorned onto the plot, which is a huge problem. We're told at the beginning that he will be needed to stop the future, but everything we're shown tells that he only worsens the problems, he slows down the progress of the heroes, and at no point is he needed. He could have been needed if he had contributed to Mystique's change of heart, but there is none of that. Magneto doesn't really fit into the story at all except to create action scenes. At the end, he's blown up Washington DC (which will look cool to young kids) yet somehow the audience is supposed to accept that the world will move on quite happily, holding hands from that point forward with the anti-mutant defens program stopped. This movie manages to do an inferior job of the post-destruction repercussions than Man of Steel and Captain America: The Winter Soldier.

As an aside, I have no idea what went on with Bolivar Trask in this movie. He is the brains behind the Sentinel program, yet somehow not assassinating him is what prevents the sentinels from advancing. It's stated by the plot, but it's not demonstrated or earned in a logical manner. He gives a two sentence speech about two thirds of the way into the movie, where he says that he doesn't hate mutants, he admires them and wants to work with them. Somehow this means that saving his life will save the future, but this is also the same guy who is designing anti-mutant weapons and has experimented on live mutants and killed them.

Ultimately, this movie's convoluted and nonsensical plot and weak character arcs are held up by a musical score that effectively forces the emotions the director wants us to feel, good acting, passable cinematography, and average-to-above-average action sequences. It's not going to be a classic, but it's fun in the moment, in parts.

Grade: B
 
Literally just watched FC again and I still think it is better than DoFP but DoFP is an excellent movie.

First Class is a substantially better movie.

- Every character earns their role, there is nobody shoehorned onto the plot;
- The movie takes place in 1962 because it tells a plot that could take place in no other time, and it feels like 1962. DoFP takes place in 1973 because that's a meaningful year to the audience, but it doesn't feel like 1973.

See Devin Faraci's review, he agrees that FC > DoFP with extended arguments.
 
Long drive, just got home, so a short review. Okay, a long one. No spoilers.

Disappointments: The movie is packed, and moves quickly from one scenario to another without giving us much breathing time. Some things weren't explained that I hoped, and some explanations seemed too much of plot devices...

Positives:...which ultimately don't matter much if at all, because the movie convinced me that "It's OK". Actors (everyone) sold absolutely everything and the movie suspended my disbelief for me. That's how I felt - I didn't have to struggle to do it myself.

Pacing was excellent. Hopelessness, action, humor, dialogue and drama were handled very well, and in a manner we don't usually see. The structure of this film feels refreshing. It's not something you've seen hundred times before, almost as if they wen't with their own pattern instead of following some established formulas.

Normally shoving things that are meant to evoke every emotional response possible into one movie just doesn't work and makes it hard to define a tone. DOFP handles it with ease. You sense the grim future, it's instantly clear how things are. When things are serious, you're in. When DOFP is pondering, you ponder with it. When it's funny, it's naturally funny. It isn't forcing a joke on you, it LETS you have that joke through exceptional character handling.

It's really damn weird how effortlessly everything just rolls along and works. This should not work as well as it does. It shouldn't, but it does. I experienced every possible emotion. Even when something didn't please me or disappointed me a little, something came along, hid it under a rug and stomped that little annoyance to death, allowing me to stay in the movie.

DOFP rolls forward fast. Some feel there's not enough action. I say there's certainly enough. Some say there's too much talk, I say: if McAvoy and Fassbender have a 10-hour dramatic conversation as Xavier and Magneto, I wan't to witness that. I'd pay for that.

Some things could/should require more setting up, explanation or focus, and I'd gladly pay for an extended edition, but as it is, DOFP doesn't feel broke, sloppy or unfinished. It's surprisingly solid. In the end, I was rewarded. How many times after seeing a movie you feel you aren't rewarded, that you didn't get a satisfactory ending? DOFP manages to reward you and tease you at the same time.

And Ottman's music...best it's ever been. Absolutely fantastic.

Cinematography is beautiful. Technically great job.

DOFP is the new king of X-movies for me. Not perfect, as I said, but as a fast-paced, exciting (and more easy to follow than some reviews claim) story with plenty of emotional weight, nice touches, love for its own movieverse/characters and fanservice, DOFP is a really wonderful achievement. Thank you Bryan Singer, you finally got your "X3". Also thank you Kinberg, you proved something with this movie. Hopefully you keep it up, don't let this be just a happy accident.

10/10. Move over X2, you did wonderfully, but you can take a well-deserved breather.
 
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First Class is a substantially better movie.

- Every character earns their role, there is nobody shoehorned onto the plot;
- The movie takes place in 1962 because it tells a plot that could take place in no other time, and it feels like 1962. DoFP takes place in 1973 because that's a meaningful year to the audience, but it doesn't feel like 1973.

See Devin Faraci's review, he agrees that FC > DoFP with extended arguments.
Unless I'm being paid to do so...
 
Faraci's is a good review, but I'm biased since I was happy to see that he independently arrived at a lot of the points that I was making.
 
I come home from seeing It.

In 2000 Bryan Singer helped revive the comic book genre with X-Men and In 2003 he presented one of best comic book films ever with X2 now his long awaited return to director's hair after helping to oversee First Class Is eather best In series or best since X2.I am still not sure on which one.

I did feel If this Is final film for the Original cast apart from Hugh jackman the
future scenes should have been longer If Singer viewed this as part Star Trek VI-swan song and part 2009 Trek-creation of new timeline

Hugh Jackman Is as great as ever.He got some of best reaction from audence.

James MCavoy Is great but he has gone 2 films now playing a xavier that fans of films,Comics,and animated shows wouldn't recongize.But with Patrick stewart In film you can get away with that.Still even though he IS great he needs to be playing the iconic Xavier In Apocalypse.

Michael fassbender does great under SInger's direction.You totaly buy him as younger version of Ian Mckellen's Magneto.

I have been somewhat critical of Jennifer Lawrence as Mystique In First Class
but she did fine under Singer's direction however I will admit that I still
perfer Rebecca Romijn as Mystique

Nicholas Hoult however I find a disappointment.I feel they just continued him from FC and unlike with Mcavoy there Isn't a payoff for audence.
Kelsey Grammer's cameo at end makes It clear that for now Grammer was better Beast

Peter Dinklage Is fine as trask.I liked him better than some reviewers said.

For Halle Berry's short screentime they made good work of her powers and audence gasped In my theatre
when she was killed

Since I consdier Ellen Page to be one of few highlights of last stand she was
good here
Even though most of her screentime Is putting hands around wolverine

As for new mutants I felt Blink and Bishop were the best.I liked Blink's power
display.Omar Sy Is bishop straight out of late 1990's comics.

Iceman's Iceform Is so much better than In Last Stand and I loved the icesled.Colossus armour Is most comic accurate than it ever has been.

I love the fact how good Even Peters Is at quicksilver and the hints of him
being Magneto's son

Now I have mixed feelings on ending since I am not big fan of reboots and don't like idea of Singer's past directed X-Men films being erased from Contunity
I feel like bringing cast back for ending doesn't hold much if films we saw them In didn't happen.having said that I felt Famke Janssen has never looked more like jean from Comics than she did here.While i am glad to see James Marsden as Cyclops i hated his new visor
but as long as they keep age of characters consent with other films at least for major characters I can still view the films as part of same series

When they showed the weapon X In clips I noticed they used X-Men and X2.The only CLip from origins was when sabretooth broke off bone claws.I really couldn't tell any from the wolverine and they used clips with jean from X1-3

as for post credit scene
I can understand why some might think it was female but i could make it as male as apocalypse plus I made horsemen in distance but i can understand some might miss them
 
I saw it last night and it's probably my favourite superhero movie since X2. This movie is challenging since it has so many different characters and moving pieces, but they pulled it off in a way that didn't feel overcrowded or confusing. I'm going to go into detail on why I think it's so successful by talking about the past, future, and the ending. SPOILERS.

Xavier, Magneto, and Mystique make up the emotional core of the movie, and it's where most of the heart and heartbreak comes from. Xavier is broken and has abandoned the mutant cause to live as a junkie in the rundown X-mansion with Beast. His choice between his legs and his telepathy was powerful and well acted by McAvoy. The exchange between the two Xaviers was smartly done, nicely acted, and well directed. I really enjoyed the use of Cerebro and when he controlled others to talk to Mystique.

Magneto's extremism is depicted here in some of the most visually impressive scenes in the movie. While he has fair criticisms of Xavier and the reasons why they are lifelong friends are on display, Magneto comes to total villain territory. I have to say, Magneto using the Sentinels as weapons against the humans was ripped right from the comics and was one of my favourite parts of the movie. Magneto weaving those iron bars through Wolverine was brilliant in its gruesome irony. Michael Fassbender played the part brilliantly (and looked great) and wore one of my favourite costumes in all of comic book movies.

Mystique was really elevated to the same level as Magneto and Xavier, and while its not comic book accurate, it really works in this movie. Her goal is to kill Trask out of revenge and outrage for his torture and experimentation on mutants. While on a path to murder, she's not as villainous as Magneto making her a third option. Jennifer Lawrence gave a great performance as Mystique, legitimizing her as a character beyond her sexualization in the OT. It was great to see Mystique return to action scenes, to balance out her more emotional core.

Wolverine was solid in this movie. He provided a lot of comic relief, which was fine. He's not my favourite character by far, so I wonder how Wolverine fans feel about his bone claws. Stryker's impact was particularly well done and did a good job making me forget about Origins. Beast's appearance was much better here than in First Class, and his movements looked more animalistic. He didn't have a lot to do otherwise. Quicksilver stole every scene he was in. Bryan Singer directed another classic prison break! Trask was somewhat underdeveloped, but Dinklage made him standout more than if the movie cast another Senator Kelly, Stryker, etc type actor. I thought the actor who played Nixon was pretty good.

The future scenes were extremely depressing and exhilarating. Blink had the coolest power display and I can see her being a breakout character. It was great seeing Colossus and Iceman getting the most action scenes so far in the franchise. Warpath and Bishop jumped straight from the comics. Storm looked good and was pretty fiercely posed, but had very little to do. Her death had an emotional punch however, particularly due to how Singer shot it. Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen were once again brilliant in their roles. Stewart shined in his talk with his younger self, while McKellen is still getting visually awesome action scenes.

The Sentinels were phenomenal. The 70s Sentinels were so comic book accurate that I fanboyed out in the theatre. The future Sentinels were horrifying, just like everything in that future. The way their face opened up was disturbing. The whole atmosphere disturbed me more than most apocalyptic futures do, probably due to its basis in discrimination. The time loop created by Kitty and Bishop was a great way to show the threat of the Sentinels.

Now for the ending. Even going into the movie without any spoilers I knew the future would be changed. That didn't make the final scenes in the future not extremely suspenseful and outright sad. But when the future changed my heart exploded. I couldn't believe it. Seeing Grammar was a pleasant surprise. I liked Rogue's brief cameo since it brought back so many good feelings from X1 and X2. Seeing Jean alive solidified this movie as one of my favourites of all time. It's probably one of my favourite moments in the entire franchise now. She's a personal favourite of mine and I hate how she was treated in X3 and The Wolverine (even though that wasn't really her). Seeing Cyclops was icing on the freaking cake. The status quo was essentially brought back to the X2 days and I couldn't be happier because of it. It was a giant FU to Ratner and X3.

Bryan Singer saved this franchise. So much of this movie reminded me of X2 just in directing style alone. Mystique sneaking into Trask's office was so reminiscent of X2. Even the tour in the Pentagon reminded me of the tour of the White House in X2.U Using "footage" from the 70s cameras made me feel like I was in that time period. The music was amazing. It's just like X3 never happened, which is a blessing.

And finally, I can't believe how spoiled we were with the end credits scene. I didn't expect to see that much

I did have some slight critiques. JFK being a mutant was glossed over and made me say "wut." Typical of the Bryan Singer X-men movies there was some science and mechanics that didn't make sense. Like Magneto's machine in X1 and the Dark Cerebro panels in X2, the time travel wasn't explained in a way that made a lot of sense (even though I can see how that might work). I can forgive this since it never bothered in Singer's other X-movies. Trask's underdevelopment was a little disappointing.

If you didn't want to read all of that I'll finish with this. I loved the movie because it felt like X2, had an emotional core, captured the heart and soul of the X-men, and felt ripped out of the comics. It evoked nostalgia and made me feel like how I did when X2 came out. It actually felt like an X-men movie, something First Class did not feel like.

A+
 
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When they showed the weapon X In clips I noticed they used X-Men and X2.The only CLip from origins was when sabretooth broke off bone claws.I really couldn't tell any from the wolverine and they used clips with jean from X1-3


I don't remember the clip of Origins
Sabretooth?

HUH? I must have really missed it or it went by fast. I saw Xmen 1, 2 and it seemed like the tank from Origins that Wolverine was in and old ass Stryker.
 
BTW! I saw a trailer to a new Mathew Vaughn film KINGSMAN (at my screening the other day) and it reminded me of the First Class look.

he is very good with those sorts of films, it reminded me why he was a good choice for that specific time frame and sort of film..
 
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