AVEITWITHJAMON said:
But we dont see that do we, what makes him feel secure about his mutancy, we never know, he's lived with his father for those same 10 years and i doubt his father gave him an easy time about being a mutant.
Well this sentence just sums it up, we are not sure so we are meant to guess, thats poor film making, they just wanted to get to the next action sequence and you making excuses means it was poorly executed.
Some characters just do not have huge back stories in an ensemble movie about opposing teams of people. We never really find out why Storm, Cyclops and Jean are at the school or why they do what they do (we finally get some backstory on Jean in X3), we never find out why Sabretooth, Toad and Deathstryke do what they do, we never really find out much about Nightcrawler's story and motivations except he has faith that helps him survive. Only that dialogue on the plane gives us any clue about who he is.
Some characters exist as what is called a 'foil' - a secondary character who helps us understand a major character by providing a contrast. Nightcrawler's faith contrasts with Storm's apparent lack of it, and she later appears to have found some faith at the end when she and Kurt teleport into Dark Cerebro. It's a fairly small, some might say feeble, example of character growth but it is there.
Kitty is similarly there to provide a contrast to Rogue, to incite a change in Rogue's character. The scenes with Bobby made Rogue do something dramatic. Thus, Kitty served her purpose in the storyline in creating a character development in Rogue - who decided to get cured. (Regardless of whether you agree with Rogue taking the cure - and i don't - that was Kitty's main storyline purpose and it's as clear as day).
I know you are very fond of SR and how you appear to be able to read things into scenes when we are not actually told anything, you know you often have to imagine how someone is thinking, how Superman felt when he found Krypton's remains, what Lois might have felt while he was gone. There wasn't a lot of information if i recall correctly. So you must also do the same in other movies, including X3, when the information isn't handed to you directly.
Angel has obviously had wings growing for ten years. His father's been trying to find a cure, because he has the financial resources to do it, but since there has been no way to get rid of the wings, Angel has had them all this time and is probably not continually hacking himself to pieces in the bathroom. He had learned how to conceal them with straps and a big coat, he had got on with his life for ten years. Warren's dad's search for the cure is like the parents of a gay teenager trying desperately to get their son/daughter to go to counselling or electric shock therapy or to get them married or in a straight relationship. In the end it's like forcing that person to deny what they actually are. And usually they snap and in a dramatic outburst, they make a big decision. Which is what happened with Angel in the movie. He came out, he decided he wasn't going to have any more of these endless attempts to make him 'normal'.