ntcrawler
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X-Maniac said:Okay, well I'm glad you liked that line.
As for the cure, well I noticed Dr Rao saying 'the transformation can be a little jarring' to Angel, and wondered how she knew that. Was she basing it on seeing Beast's stunned reaction at Alcatraz?
I suppose being strapped into a gurney and having Rao approach you with a giant needle would be jarring. Beast wasn't exactly jarred though, more like astonished. But later on we do see that taking the Cure is a relatively painful affair, what with all the twitching and jerking around on the ground.
Should there be a disclaimer? "Warning: taking the Cure may cause side effects, including nausea, headaches, mood swings, violent spasms and twitching on the ground, loss of extra limbs or appendages, or clinical depression from the sudden loss of superpowers. Please check with your physician or mutation expert first before attempting"
Or on lab tests on animals?
Eh, I'd rather avoid that. The last thing we want to see are animals with superpowers or telepathic rabbits

Since Angel was supposedly the first cure subject, I guess either of those must be the case. They moved forward swiftly with the idea of the cure when Magneto's intentions became clear, but they must have done some tests, as any drugs company does... I think the film could not have gone into this in huge detail, but a line or two here or there might have helped...
Yes indeed, especially if you suggest a line like "How do we know that the cure even works?" the truth is, we don't! If anything, Worthington Labs should have done some type of publicity campaign with a couple of "cured" mutants, showing before and after pics and how they went from looking like tormented freaks from the Twilight Zone to pleasant, respectable humans along with some dialogue of how grateful and happy they are. Imagine how tempting that would then sound to someone like Beast or NightCrawler.