Watching X2 again, I could cry!

Agreed. One of X3's biggest flaws is that it completely ignores the development Rogue underwent in X2. The same is true for Storm, who is just as angry as she was in X2, even though Kurt really should have cured her of that. The only logical progressions are Scott's, Logan's, Magneto's, Mystique's, Pyro's (though he needed more to stress this), and, to an extent, Jean's, which is a sizable amount, which is why I ultimately think X3 got more right than wrong. Bobby would've been on that list if the majority of his scenes hadn't been cut or altered to take the focus off him.
 
chaseter said:
Rogue took off her glove because she was pissed at Magneto. He nearly killed her...what is she going to do...just sit there while they make fun of her hair? You gave one example of how Rogue was stonger. She joined the X-Men because that is the only family she has now. Her human family is disgusted by her for nearly killing that boy. She has no where to go...she now has a home. But, that doesn't mean she all of a sudden accepts her powers. Singer did a nice job setting up Rogue as the insecure mutant. Not every mutant wants their powers and that is what Rogue represented in all the movies. There was no moment in either of the first two films that showed Rogue wanting to keep her powers and accepting them and being happy with that decision. Rogue also said in X2 that she couldn't get that boy or Wolverine out of her head...they were now a part of her. She never once wanted her powers.

WRONG.

You are truly wrong. You're so wrong in with your "facts" that it's really quite hysterical. In X1 Rogue told Logan she couldn't get that boy or him out of her heard.

In X1 she started out as an insecure mutant, who was afraid of her powers and afraid of herself in general. In X2 you see her become a totally different person than she was in X1. Need I remind you?

1. Very beginning as she's sitting with Bobby and John she's laughing and seems to be very confident in herself. One of the boys tries hitting on her and she gives him the "you wish look", which was pure Rogue.

2. She stands up in the midst of confusion, fear, and orders Bobby to go back and help Logan.

3. She returns Logan's dog tags back to him. Remember in the first one he promises to come back for them? Notice in X2 how he never asked for them back? She hands them back to him FIRST which shows a sign of independence and confidence.

4. When Bobby reveals to his parents that he's a mutant she's confident and owns his father by saying "Bobby is gifted!"

5. She doesn't hesitate to drain John of his power before he literally killed everyone.

6. After she's sucked out of a plane she's not a sobbing mess or feeling afraid, you see she confidently and comfortably sits down right next to Nightcrawler and thanks him. Which results in her getting a little sneaky asking him if he could snoop on Magneto, Jean, Mystique, Logan, and Storm.

7. Magneto mocks her hairstyle and she pulls off her glove. She could've just walked away or went back to crying, but you see she stood strong and was prepared to do some damage on him.

8. She's the first to ask out of the group when are they going to get their uniforms.

9. She takes control and saves the X-Men by flying the jet. Sure, she was scared and dramatic then, but she was afraid of killing herself, Bobby, and the other X-Men as well.

10. At the end with the X-Men she's standing proud, confident, strong, and in uniform. She has a very serious look in her eye that shows she's found her place within the X-Men.

Nice try, but your little argument and defending on Rogue's cure in X3 has literally been destroyed.
 
For those who think Angel's arc make sense without any futher dev, how about if Rogue is treated the same way like Angel in X1:

In her first scene we hav Rogue nearly killing her boyfriend, to which her mom witnessed such a horrific scene.

In her next scene her mom approached Rogue with the cure but no she doesn't take it. Instead she still runs away from home to join the X-men. Even the exact same dialogue can be used as in X3

In her last and final scene in the movie Rogue suddenly developed her flying capability and resuced her mom after mutant supporters push her off a cliff.

Does this make sense....I'm not saying these events are impossible but where're the missing links?
 
You know, if you think about it, Rogue's characterization is actually pretty inconsistent in X2.

That Rogue/Angel analogy is awful. One, it distills the sequences to "this happens", which is not all we see onscreen. There is depth to what we see that ties into the thematics of the film. Two, that analogy would only work if the film in question had THEMATICS about...whatever you just made up...Rogue killing people or being afraid of doing so or whatnot. Angel's scenes fit right into the thematics of THE LAST STAND.

You can't really compare Rogue and Angel's portrayals in an attempt to whine about Angel's portrayal. Rogue was not a CAMEO or TERTIARY character. So what's the point of comparing them? What, Rogue was done better and fleshed out more than Angel? Well, that's a brilliant statement.

There's no doubt that Angel's arc is defined. He goes from point A to point B to point C. But that's it.

True, but Angel was essentially played as a cameo...so frankly, that's pretty good development for a cameo, I would say.

As a physics student, I spend a LOT of time working with graphs on the computer. If you're going to define a curve on a graph, the more points you have the more defined your curve is. If you have 2 points, you get a straight line. 3, you get an angle. 4, you get a blocky curve, etc, etc. You see where I'm going with this.

True again, but even in a two hour and fifteen minute movie, you can only have so many "points". Yes, it's a rough curve, but it's X-MEN: THE LAST STAND, not ANGEL: THE MOVIE.

Angel just wasn't fleshed out as a character.

True, but again, he's a cameo. That puts him on the same level as almost any character in the entire franchise except for Wolverine, Magneto, and in some small ways, Xavier.

Yeah, he had an arc, but that's all he had. We're supposed to take the what, four lines he had and extrapolate the rest of his thought processes?

No. The movie expects you to make the obvious connection.

My big problem with Angel (and really with X3 in general) was that the majority of the character depth was left to us to fill in the blanks. We were supposed to read between the lines and figure it out, when all we really wanted was more screen time and interaction with other characters.

You're supposed to read between the lines to get the message of the film. It was written that way on purpose. As has every major characterization or thematic element in the entire franchise. Almost none of the thought processes have been explicity stated.

But then all of a sudden he loves his mutancy, why exactly?

Who says he loves it? The point of the scene is that he would rather find his own answers than let others tell him how to feel. He and Rogue make up the "choose for yourself" message thematic of the film.

And Worhtington Snr says to Angel "We've talked it about son" during the cure scene, indicating Warren junior has already agreed to take the cure sometime in the recent past maybe. But then what made Angel do a total turnaround? Did go flying and love the freedom, did he save someones life that he couldnt have without his wings, we just dont know, and will never know, and IMO thats poor filmmaking.

I think it's pretty obvious, given how hesitant he looks coming into the lab, that he was never very keen on the idea in the first place. That "curing" himself was not the answer, but that he let his father tell him what to do. Until the moment he "broke free".

And X-Maniac, you mentioned earlier that Angel rejecting the cure is a classic 'coming out' scene, i totally disagree with this, how can it be a coming out scene if his father has known he was a mutant for 10 years? There is nothing to come out about is there.

It's not so much a coming out scene, it's a "This is who I am, you've tried to change me, but I'm not going to change, I'm going to deal with it, and so should you" scene.

But then all of a sudden he loves his mutancy, why exactly? And Worhtington Snr says to Angel "We've talked it about son" during the cure scene, indicating Warren junior has already agreed to take the cure sometime in the recent past maybe. But then what made Angel do a total turnaround? Did go flying and love the freedom, did he save someones life that he couldnt have without his wings, we just dont know, and will never know, and IMO thats poor filmmaking.

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.

He decided to take matters into his own hands. To live his own life, without others telling him what to do. Who CARES what the details of that were? Do we see the ONE moment that made Cyclops follow Xavier's dream? Do we ever see ONE moment or scene that shows why Wolverine does a complete turnaround from who he was in X-MEN?

Haha, that's true. But in all honesty I don't think the writers ever intended for people to read much detail into the film. They prob just wanted to deliver a cool, action-packed summer flick. And that's what we got.

You got a cool, action-packed summer flick with social depth.

The only thing that disappointed about Angel's character was his decision not to travel to Alcatraz with the X-Men.

Ah, but clearly he did travel to Alcatraz with the X-Men.

If he had helped in the final battle, it would further illustrate that he has grown used to his powers and actually accepts them as a blessing, rather than a curse.

What he did in terms of rescuing his father in the middle of a warzone would tend to indicate that, wouldn't it? I think it's a little unrealistic to expect a fairly unexperienced kid to suddenly go into battle with the X-Men.

And I disagree. We are given the opportunity to feel for the characters, for example, The Kitty/Bobby/Rogue relationship. We saw that expand and develop, and followed Rogue's logical reasoning to have the cure to be closer to her boyfriend. That made sense, and we were able to feel what the character was feeling as she went through her particular story.

And the Storm/Headmistress of the school aspect. At the beginning we saw Storm training the younger students, displaying her skills as a leader and as a mentor. Later on, Xavier admits that he would chose Storm to become the new Headmistress of the school, displaying his trust in her to lead his beloved school. And when Warren enters, and Storm stands up and defends the school, it shows that she does care and she has a duty to fulfil and a promise to her mentor to carry out.

We saw Storm go all through this, as a quiet, fearful young woman in X1, into a self-assured, proud fighter in X3.

Agreed. That's development.

Well i'm just assuming as the movie never told us and thats my point about it, we dont spend enough time with the characters.

Ok, but what would be "enough time" in a two hour movie? Honestly. Some things we would like to see...simply are not feasible. We didn't really spend "enough" time with the characters in X2 either, did we? And yet, it's hailed as one of the greatest superhero films of all time. Why? Because while we didn't spend "enough" time with characters, we spent quality time with them. I think the same could be said of X3.

But they didnt seem like peopl who had an uneasy relationship when Angel walks into the room to be cured, they looked like two people who have good relationship together. Hence the father asking "How are you son?" And then he keeps assuring him it'll all be okay. They didnt seem like two people who have had a really troubled relatioship until the moment Angel break free.

Try watching that scene again. There's obvious tension there. About the time his father starts talking to him like a child...you should be able to see the "troubled relationship" you speak of.

Your kidding with these supposed arcs right? What did we see of the Rogue/Kitty/Boboy arc, Kitty(a character we know barely anything about, hence we dont know why Bobby is attracted to her) and Bobby go skating, so Rogue goes to get the cure. ****ing terrible, not to mention comic book Rogue would NEVER take the cure. AND she went from someone gaining more and more confidence in X2 back to a scared little girl in X3, some character development that is.

Prove to me that Rogue actually gained much more "confidence" in X2. She used her powers more, to be sure. A couple pissed off stares does not character development make. Ok, she was there with the X-Men in the White House. That's great. In the one moment where her character could have grown, she was still a scared little girl, almost crying when she landed the X-Jet. She had a long way to go.

And Storm was already a strong warrior in X2, was it not she who rescued the children and stopped cerebro when Magneto switched it?

That's not neccessarily a "warrior", though. I think people wanted to see the Storm who could take a punch and throw one. The Storm who was willing to kill, who was willing to do whatever it took to get the job done. Who was take-no-prisoners. We saw her develop into that Storm in X3.

Not too mention that its ALWAYS been Scott that xavier looked to to take over the school.

Scott was a changed man.

Exactly, most of the characters in the final battle we know barely anything about, so how are we meant to give a **** about them?

You're not. This isn't SAVING PRIVATE RYAN. It's X-Men. You're not supposed to neccessarily CARE about the X-Men in the final battle, in those terms. You're supposed to care about their CAUSE. Give a **** about what they're FIGHTING for.

Fair point. But the Rogue that was set up in the end of X2 would NEVER have taken the cure, either.

Where is that ever implied?

So it's a lose-lose situation. The Rogue from the beginning of X1, maybe. But the Rogue from the end of X2? No way in hell.

Why?

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.

Exactly. People who b itch about the lack of development or character motivation in X3 amuse me, because X-MEN and X2 (and almost any ensemble film) are largely devoid of this kind of thing except for the main characters.

At the end of X2, Rogue was getting stronger. Speaking up for herself (like how she took off her glove when Magneto made a comment on her hair). She joined the X-Men at the end of the film.

Bobby was also at the White House...and what the hell did he do to deserve an X-uniform? Xavier needed bodies.

If anyone can't see that, then you obviously missed a very crucial development for this character.

Bryan Singer's films were no more about obviously developing secondary characters than Ratner's X3 was. Did Nightcrawler have any development? Cyclops? Even Magneto? These movies are, first and foremost, about who characters are and what they do and why, not neccessarily how each of them changes.

And to have Ratner just backpeddle Rogue like that was laughable. The gradual evolution of her character would for her to not accept the cure and be comfortable with her mutation, which was a recurrent theme throughout the first two movies (and at the end of the second, something Rogue was contending with).

Gradual. And predictable, and hardly impactful. Could there be a more boring, cliche end to Rogue's arc? She goes to the cure clinic line...and every audience member "knows" she won't take the cure. And then she DOES, and instead of going "aww, generic movie moment", the audience starts to think about why she did. Much more impressive, I think.

If I may put my opinions out there, I don't believe Singer was setting Rogue up to be cured in the future movies.

I'm hard-pressed to believe Singer really cared deeply about Rogue's development. He gave her some stuff to do, and a conflict, but didn't seem to interested in her actual "struggle" or development of it.
 
Nell2ThaIzzay said:
Or, he could cut them off now, and not have to worry about it when they get bigger.

There are many gay people who hide their homosexuality, not because they are ashamed, but because they are afraid their families won't accept them. Many gay people even actually get married to people of the opposite sex, have children, and start families. Not because they are ashamed, but because they will believe their family will be, and they've lived their entire life hiding it and denying it, in order to find that acceptance.
A "coming out' scene has already been done with in the previous movie there isn't a need to repeat the same message. For ur pts above, a 'cured' Rogue who end up unhappy with herself taking the cure might be a better metaphor for such dilemma.
 
And uh, why would she be unhappy with herself? She made her choice, she made it for her reasons...so why would she suddenly be unhappy that she could no longer kill people by touching them?
 
Umm... if Angel was a cameo, then why was he on the poster? Why is he on the DVD case? Why did they take publicity stills? They don't do those things for cameo roles.
 
Because a character in a leather suit with wings...is more visually interesting than just a character in a leather suit. He's visually interesting.

And I said he was ESSENTIALLY a cameo. Clearly he had a role, just a smaller one.
 
... said:
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.

Well back to the thing where Fox is evil, it was probably because of them that the scenes of Scott as a teenger blasting his highschool bathroom apart and young Ororo in Africa being not filmed (because it was too expensive, or whatever) didnt Bryan SInger even want to film them during X2 to put on the x-mne 1.5 dvd. Those were scenes, that explained their backstory alittle

how ironic, i was watching Alien 3 tonight and i just realized "whoa, it was another movie ruined by studio execs f-ing around with a 3rd movie and screwing it royally" however, i do enjoy watching it, and also x3.

this was just the point i wanted to make, and this can go unnoticed amongst your fighting over who was set up to do what by the 3rd movie
 
I'm not sure where to put this, or if anyone is interested in reading it. This is Singer’s forward in the just released book X-Men: The Characters and Their Universe.

Some people might not know this, but I arrived a little late for the X-Men party. It was already a crowded room, filled with white hair, bald heads, blue fur, and lots of yellow spandex. There seemed to be hundreds of mutants, while their fans numbered in the millions—and they were very, VERY passionate. This party was over thirty years old, and when I walked in, it felt like one of those classic moments where the record player scratched, the music stopped, and everyone fell deathly silent. All eyes were on me. Watching. Waiting to see what I would do.

It was awkward at first. I had never read an X-Men comic book. Back then, Nightcrawler was just another name for a worm. Wolverine and Sabretooth could have been sports teams, and Rogue and Mystique sounded like women’s perfumes. And those were just their codenames, never mind their real names, histories, conflicts, and an endless amount of powers.

Unfortunately, there wasn’t a family album or users manual to this complex universe, so instead of shyly standing in a corner, I dove in. I met everyone. I read the comics and watched the cartoons until I was as blue in the face as Beast. What I quickly discovered was that beyond the telekinetics, shapeshifters, and teleporters, X-Men contained a very poignant and relevant human story, one about outcasts.

There are times when we all feel like mutants. Whether it’s the first day at a new school, a new job, or leaving the nest and venturing out into the real world, our lives are dotted with periods where we just don’t fit in. For most, the awkward moments might be temporary, but for some, they seem to last a lifetime. In our world this isolation might be a matter of race, sexuality, or religion—various factors that cause us to feel like an outsider, even among friends and family.

These themes of identity and the struggle of a minority are what appealed to me the most. It gave the comic book a heart—a message. Something that made me feel oddly comfortable among these misfits. I saw a bit of myself in these characters, and in a way, I became one of them.

So while my introduction to the X-Men came a little later than others and might have been a little awkward at first, it was the beginning of a friendship that has lasted to this day. A book like this might have made the introduction a little easier, but whether you’re a lifelong fan or a new recruit like I was, think of the following pages as the “X-Men family album” that I never had. Just don’t be too surprised if you find yourself becoming one of them.

- Bryan Singer
 
LastSunrise1981 said:
WRONG.

You are truly wrong. You're so wrong in with your "facts" that it's really quite hysterical. In X1 Rogue told Logan she couldn't get that boy or him out of her heard.

In X1 she started out as an insecure mutant, who was afraid of her powers and afraid of herself in general. In X2 you see her become a totally different person than she was in X1. Need I remind you?

1. Very beginning as she's sitting with Bobby and John she's laughing and seems to be very confident in herself. One of the boys tries hitting on her and she gives him the "you wish look", which was pure Rogue.

2. She stands up in the midst of confusion, fear, and orders Bobby to go back and help Logan.

3. She returns Logan's dog tags back to him. Remember in the first one he promises to come back for them? Notice in X2 how he never asked for them back? She hands them back to him FIRST which shows a sign of independence and confidence.

4. When Bobby reveals to his parents that he's a mutant she's confident and owns his father by saying "Bobby is gifted!"

5. She doesn't hesitate to drain John of his power before he literally killed everyone.

6. After she's sucked out of a plane she's not a sobbing mess or feeling afraid, you see she confidently and comfortably sits down right next to Nightcrawler and thanks him. Which results in her getting a little sneaky asking him if he could snoop on Magneto, Jean, Mystique, Logan, and Storm.

7. Magneto mocks her hairstyle and she pulls off her glove. She could've just walked away or went back to crying, but you see she stood strong and was prepared to do some damage on him.

8. She's the first to ask out of the group when are they going to get their uniforms.

9. She takes control and saves the X-Men by flying the jet. Sure, she was scared and dramatic then, but she was afraid of killing herself, Bobby, and the other X-Men as well.

10. At the end with the X-Men she's standing proud, confident, strong, and in uniform. She has a very serious look in her eye that shows she's found her place within the X-Men.

Nice try, but your little argument and defending on Rogue's cure in X3 has literally been destroyed.

Allen drops the bomb in 5...

4...


3...


2...


1...


0...

.
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.
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I agree with you. Completely. You're totally spot on about Rogue's arc in the trilogy. I couldn't agree with you more.
 
BMM said:
I'm not sure where to put this, or if anyone is interested in reading it. This is Singer’s forward in the just released book X-Men: The Characters and Their Universe.

Dude, what you posted, that was great dude.

What Bryan Singer said in that piece is exactly the impression I get from him when watching his films.

The fact that he wasn't a fan to begin with, but after doing his research, he didn't take the easy way out.

He could have taken the comics at face value and made them a typical superhero flick with a bunch of fancy powers, and flashy costumes, and big explosions. But he took the time to dig beneath the surface, to find out what these characters are truly about. He treated them with respect, and he brought them to life in a way that made everyone take notice, and take them seriously.

Sure, he may have lacked in a few places that Ratner more than made up for, but for the simple fact that he, as someone who wasn't a fan, paid it enough respect to actually dig beneath the surface and give these characters some true meaning to separate them from your typical, generic superheros like Spiderman, Fantastic 4, or Hulk. And for that, all of us X-Men fans should feel proud of that.
 
chaseter said:
Rogue took off her glove because she was pissed at Magneto. He nearly killed her...what is she going to do...just sit there while they make fun of her hair? You gave one example of how Rogue was stonger. She joined the X-Men because that is the only family she has now. Her human family is disgusted by her for nearly killing that boy. She has no where to go...she now has a home. But, that doesn't mean she all of a sudden accepts her powers. Singer did a nice job setting up Rogue as the insecure mutant. Not every mutant wants their powers and that is what Rogue represented in all the movies. There was no moment in either of the first two films that showed Rogue wanting to keep her powers and accepting them and being happy with that decision. Rogue also said in X2 that she couldn't get that boy or Wolverine out of her head...they were now a part of her. She never once wanted her powers.

She said that in X1 NOT x2 were her chracter became more confident. You want more examples, here:

1) Convincing Boby to go back and help Logan in the mansion

2) Letting Bobby kiss her after initially being scared to let him

3) Telling Bobby's parents that "Bobby is gifted.....you should see what he can do." Sticking up for her boyfriend in a difficult situation.

4)Stopping Pyro's rampage at Bobby's house

5) Asking for a uniform

6) And the most convincing of all, flying the X-Jet, therefore helping the X-men.

7) Oh and one i forgot, the look she gives one of the guys Pyro is pissing of at the start when he is giving her the eye. She looks at him as if to "There's no way you could have me honey!"

If you cant see that Rogue was becomming more confident in X2, then you need to watch it again.
 
Wow. Having Bryan write the forward shows how much Marvel respects his contribution to their franchise. Bravo. It is a well deserved honor. :woot:
 
Especially after Singer left X3 like that. For Marvel to still respect him and what he did with the X-Men franchise (and how he literally affected Marvel's movie staple) just shows the humility in them.

Call me crazy, but I still have a very small inkling of hope that one day Bryan Singer might return to do an another X-Men movie. Far-fetched, I know, but one can dream, can't he?
 
If Wolverine and Magneto go well and prove to be popular, I'm hoping that Fox will sign Singer on for another sequel. Here's hoping.
 
Nell2ThaIzzay said:
I agree with you. Completely. You're totally spot on about Rogue's arc in the trilogy. I couldn't agree with you more.

hug.gif
 
The Guard said:
You know, if you think about it, Rogue's characterization is actually pretty inconsistent in X2.

That Rogue/Angel analogy is awful. One, it distills the sequences to "this happens", which is not all we see onscreen. There is depth to what we see that ties into the thematics of the film. Two, that analogy would only work if the film in question had THEMATICS about...whatever you just made up...Rogue killing people or being afraid of doing so or whatnot. Angel's scenes fit right into the thematics of THE LAST STAND.

You can't really compare Rogue and Angel's portrayals in an attempt to whine about Angel's portrayal. Rogue was not a CAMEO or TERTIARY character. So what's the point of comparing them? What, Rogue was done better and fleshed out more than Angel? Well, that's a brilliant statement.
He was Cameo?!

Talk about overstaying your Cameo.

The Guard said:
True, but Angel was essentially played as a cameo...so frankly, that's pretty good development for a cameo, I would say.
Cameos have arcs? Dam Stan lee has been getting ripped off then.

The Guard said:
True again, but even in a two hour and fifteen minute movie, you can only have so many "points". Yes, it's a rough curve, but it's X-MEN: THE LAST STAND, not ANGEL: THE MOVIE.
Maybe if Wolverine didn't have so many dam points we could expand on some of those other lines. ;)


The Guard said:
True, but again, he's a cameo. That puts him on the same level as almost any character in the entire franchise except for Wolverine, Magneto, and in some small ways, Xavier.
So your saying the main character of the X-MEN are WOLVERINE AND MAGENTO and Barely Xavier?..................You should not be in this forum.


The Guard said:
No. The movie expects you to make the obvious connection.
talk about half ass.


The Guard said:
You're supposed to read between the lines to get the message of the film. It was written that way on purpose. As has every major characterization or thematic element in the entire franchise. Almost none of the thought processes have been explicity stated.
Sounds too me like TLS pretty much left most of the movie for us to imagine in our heads and make up. :)


The Guard said:
Who says he loves it? The point of the scene is that he would rather find his own answers than let others tell him how to feel. He and Rogue make up the "choose for yourself" message thematic of the film.
I'll agree with that.



The Guard said:
I think it's pretty obvious, given how hesitant he looks coming into the lab, that he was never very keen on the idea in the first place. That "curing" himself was not the answer, but that he let his father tell him what to do. Until the moment he "broke free".
So he could of backed down at any moment but for the convenience of the story he did at that last second. You know what considering this is a movie i let that one slide but it's still doesn't make his arc fell half ass.



The Guard said:
It's not so much a coming out scene, it's a "This is who I am, you've tried to change me, but I'm not going to change, I'm going to deal with it, and so should you" scene.
But it's not a coming out scene. I'm glad you managed to get all that out of it too, the movie went by so quickly i was still in a mid breathe when that scene ended.


The Guard said:
He decided to take matters into his own hands. To live his own life, without others telling him what to do. Who CARES what the details of that were? Do we see the ONE moment that made Cyclops follow Xavier's dream? Do we ever see ONE moment or scene that shows why Wolverine does a complete turnaround from who he was in X-MEN?

No we saw too many of Wolvies moments. And Cyke was there from the Get go which was not all that great but it pretty much spoke for itself. His prison scene in X2 would of helped out his development but thank FOX for the missed.




The Guard said:
You got a cool, action-packed summer flick with social depth.
Darn i must of missed that second part over the time frame and mindless explosions. Hey Eric throw some cars and i'll light them for s#!ts and giggles.


The Guard said:
Ah, but clearly he did travel to Alcatraz with the X-Men.
Of course he hid in the cargo......the back of.......he flew..........wait how did he get there?


The Guard said:
What he did in terms of rescuing his father in the middle of a warzone would tend to indicate that, wouldn't it? I think it's a little unrealistic to expect a fairly unexperienced kid to suddenly go into battle with the X-Men.
Of course it only took 5 seconds and bluntly told what needed to be told, thus leaving more time for Wolverine.



The Guard said:
Agreed. That's development.
Of course it's development i mean it just disregards everything Singer set up but none the less it's still development......



The Guard said:
Ok, but what would be "enough time" in a two hour movie? Honestly. Some things we would like to see...simply are not feasible. We didn't really spend "enough" time with the characters in X2 either, did we? And yet, it's hailed as one of the greatest superhero films of all time. Why? Because while we didn't spend "enough" time with characters, we spent quality time with them. I think the same could be said of X3.
I accepted X2 was too revolve around Wolverine, I know that God loves Man kills does not focus alot on Cycke and Storm. So i was ok with it. However, Wolverine Weapon X and God Loves Man Kills smoothly worked with each other and didn't seem forced together or like they where battling to be the main story. But too even have a story try to overwhelm to Pheonix Saga was but a first mistake, then have the Saga fall and slaughter for the means of a cure story whose characters involved never even got enough time to let the issue sink in, Is A HUGE MISTAKE. and i think alot of critics out there agreed. Even the less comic book fanatic ones. Oh and your definition of quality time is Tell what we needs to be told and get it over with huh?



The Guard said:
Try watching that scene again. There's obvious tension there. About the time his father starts talking to him like a child...you should be able to see the "troubled relationship" you speak of.
I saw it coming from Angel not his dad.


The Guard said:
Prove to me that Rogue actually gained much more "confidence" in X2. She used her powers more, to be sure. A couple pissed off stares does not character development make. Ok, she was there with the X-Men in the White House. That's great. In the one moment where her character could have grown, she was still a scared little girl, almost crying when she landed the X-Jet. She had a long way to go.
HOLD ON HOLD ON!!! YOU HAVE THE NERVE TO CLAIM THAT ANGEL'S 5 LIVED LITTLE LINES WHERE MORE THAN ENOUGH TO DEFINE HIM, BUT ALL THE THINGS ROGUE DID IN X2, YOU SAY DID NOT MAKE HER STRONGER AS A CHARACTER!?!

Is your head out of your butt yet?


The Guard said:
That's not neccessarily a "warrior", though. I think people wanted to see the Storm who could take a punch and throw one. The Storm who was willing to kill, who was willing to do whatever it took to get the job done. Who was take-no-prisoners. We saw her develop into that Storm in X3.
No i wanted a strong presence Storm one who voiced her opinion not whined it out like a bad screeching Siren. I never like Halle to begin with but if anything i think her X2 role was perhaps the best. Her 4 lines said had more impact in X2 than her whine fest in X3. Everything seemed to conveniently forced for the sake of expanding a role.



The Guard said:
Scott was a changed man.
Thank You Mr. Penn and Kinberg
Because that's really staying true to the source.



The Guard said:
You're not. This isn't SAVING PRIVATE RYAN. It's X-Men. You're not supposed to neccessarily CARE about the X-Men in the final battle, in those terms. You're supposed to care about their CAUSE. Give a **** about what they're FIGHTING for.
That is the worst BS i have ever heard.



The Guard said:
Where is that ever implied?
Read Last Sunrise post and actually use your brain to examine what it means.


The Guard said:
Seriously go read the post and don't overlook it for the sake of your argument.



The Guard said:
Exactly. People who b itch about the lack of development or character motivation in X3 amuse me, because X-MEN and X2 (and almost any ensemble film) are largely devoid of this kind of thing except for the main characters.
So we are to expect character development from films where there is only one main character?


The Guard said:
Bobby was also at the White House...and what the hell did he do to deserve an X-uniform? Xavier needed bodies.
He was one of the first five X-Men (Not one of the reasons i'm happy about) and was around during all the crap 4rm X2.



The Guard said:
Bryan Singer's films were no more about obviously developing secondary characters than Ratner's X3 was. Did Nightcrawler have any development? Cyclops? Even Magneto? These movies are, first and foremost, about who characters are and what they do and why, not neccessarily how each of them changes.
Nighcrawler had more development in 2 lines than Angel did in say 6.
Besides the pacing of the film let his lines actually sink in.


The Guard said:
Gradual. And predictable, and hardly impactful. Could there be a more boring, cliche end to Rogue's arc? She goes to the cure clinic line...and every audience member "knows" she won't take the cure. And then she DOES, and instead of going "aww, generic movie moment", the audience starts to think about why she did. Much more impressive, I think.

OOOhhh, The shock Factor at the cost of a character, Yea, i'm real impressed. How original of them. :whatever:

Could there be a more inconsistent end to Rogues arc?

While we are at it, let's kill of 2 prominent characters, and by that time, it won't be predictable that Wolverine will save the day. :whatever:


The Guard said:
I'm hard-pressed to believe Singer really cared deeply about Rogue's development. He gave her some stuff to do, and a conflict, but didn't seem to interested in her actual "struggle" or development of it.

Then clearly we see things differently.
 
The Ones said:
Wow, Nell certainly has changed his attitude.

No I haven't.

I still love X-Men: The Last Stand. I think it's a great X-Men film, despite everything I didn't want to happen actually happening.

But I do completely agree that Rogue was becoming more confident in X2, and being set up to actually learn to accept her powers, and her place as a mutant.

And her arc in X-Men: The Last Stand was actually pretty brilliant with her contemplating the cure... but when she was actually cured, her arc was totally ruined.

Knowing that both versions of the scene were filmed, everytime I watch the movie, and the scene of Bobby going into Rogue's room comes on, I'm always hping that somehow the non-cured version will show up. And it doesn't. And I feel sad.

Yea, I have that version on the DVD... but because it's not in the theatrical version, it's not canon, and it doesn't count.

What they did to Rogue hurts me as an X-Men fan, and I'm not even a Rogue fan at all really.

But because I agree that they totally butchered one aspect of a character doesn't mean I've changed my attitude. On the whole, I still absolutley love X-Men: The Last Stand, and for it's own reasons I find it on par with X2.
 
Nell2ThaIzzay said:
No I haven't.

I still love X-Men: The Last Stand. I think it's a great X-Men film, despite everything I didn't want to happen actually happening.

But I do completely agree that Rogue was becoming more confident in X2, and being set up to actually learn to accept her powers, and her place as a mutant.

And her arc in X-Men: The Last Stand was actually pretty brilliant with her contemplating the cure... but when she was actually cured, her arc was totally ruined.

Knowing that both versions of the scene were filmed, everytime I watch the movie, and the scene of Bobby going into Rogue's room comes on, I'm always hping that somehow the non-cured version will show up. And it doesn't. And I feel sad.

Yea, I have that version on the DVD... but because it's not in the theatrical version, it's not canon, and it doesn't count.

What they did to Rogue hurts me as an X-Men fan, and I'm not even a Rogue fan at all really.

But because I agree that they totally butchered one aspect of a character doesn't mean I've changed my attitude. On the whole, I still absolutley love X-Men: The Last Stand, and for it's own reasons I find it on par with X2.

What i meant was on the last few pages, you usualy put up a fight and an argument, for you to agree to a user's post totaly knocked me off guard
 
LastSunrise1981 said:
WRONG.

You are truly wrong. You're so wrong in with your "facts" that it's really quite hysterical. In X1 Rogue told Logan she couldn't get that boy or him out of her heard.

In X1 she started out as an insecure mutant, who was afraid of her powers and afraid of herself in general. In X2 you see her become a totally different person than she was in X1. Need I remind you?

1. Very beginning as she's sitting with Bobby and John she's laughing and seems to be very confident in herself. One of the boys tries hitting on her and she gives him the "you wish look", which was pure Rogue.

2. She stands up in the midst of confusion, fear, and orders Bobby to go back and help Logan.

3. She returns Logan's dog tags back to him. Remember in the first one he promises to come back for them? Notice in X2 how he never asked for them back? She hands them back to him FIRST which shows a sign of independence and confidence.

4. When Bobby reveals to his parents that he's a mutant she's confident and owns his father by saying "Bobby is gifted!"

5. She doesn't hesitate to drain John of his power before he literally killed everyone.

6. After she's sucked out of a plane she's not a sobbing mess or feeling afraid, you see she confidently and comfortably sits down right next to Nightcrawler and thanks him. Which results in her getting a little sneaky asking him if he could snoop on Magneto, Jean, Mystique, Logan, and Storm.

7. Magneto mocks her hairstyle and she pulls off her glove. She could've just walked away or went back to crying, but you see she stood strong and was prepared to do some damage on him.

8. She's the first to ask out of the group when are they going to get their uniforms.

9. She takes control and saves the X-Men by flying the jet. Sure, she was scared and dramatic then, but she was afraid of killing herself, Bobby, and the other X-Men as well.

10. At the end with the X-Men she's standing proud, confident, strong, and in uniform. She has a very serious look in her eye that shows she's found her place within the X-Men.

Nice try, but your little argument and defending on Rogue's cure in X3 has literally been destroyed.

1. She is still a teenage girls. Even girls with physical deformities have their moments. Doesn't change the fact she can't kiss him.
2. No, she does not order him...she loves Logan, she only wants to help him. If she is all powerful and accepting of her powers, she could have went back and saved him by herself. After all, as you say she is confident of her powers and knows that they can save millions... She only snaps at Bobby, she does not order him in any fashion.
3. Sure Rogue is more confident, she now has a home and a family. Plus Logan said he would get them when he came back...he was just trying to reassure her. But that doesn't change the fact that she doesn't want her powers.
4. She is trying to defend her boyfriend...would you let a girlfriends parents chew her out for something she didn't do, or would you stand by her? Bobby is gifted and so is Rogue...but Bobby's powers don't harm people and he can get close to those he loves. Rogue is also acting out at the fact that her parents rejected her.
5. Would you stand by and let someone kill people? Or would you do something about it? Insecure or not, that is just pure human emotion and response. Notice the look Pyro gives her...pure disgust and she knows it.
6. That is pure and utter BS. She screams for her life and is still uneasy when she is bamfed back into the plane.
7. Would you back down from a fight? Would you just walk away from the person who tried to kill you and physically altered you only to make fun of it.
8. Still doesn't change the fact her powers kill and she can't get close to those she loves.
9. She didn't use her powers whatsoever in that scene. Powers or not, she still flew the plane.
10. Was anybody else cracking jokes at the White House? I forgot to look and see if Cyclops was playing cards.

Lastly, these aren't facts...neither are yours. They are purely opinion. Therefore, you can't debunk opinion as either right or wrong. You merely assert your own opinion that you think is right.

Rogue used her powers once in X2 to save people. If she was so confident and happy of her mutation...don't you think she would be using them often for the good of mankind? Her hair is a constant reminder of the horor that took place at Liberty Island. She will never forget the ones she hurt...they live in her head forever. She can never get close to the ones she loves...she can never physically be with Bobby or have kids. How is that out of character to want to be cured. Her mutation runs along the lines of physical mutations. It is not wrong for those people to want to be accepted and not persecuted?
 
That's why I say I think Rogue's "character arc" was kind of inconsistent in X2. And why I don't think Bryan Singer and the writers were really that interested in showing a clear-cut direction or marked development for Rogue, like they were for Jean, Wolverine, and even Pyro. Rather, they showed how people react in certain social situations.
 
chaseter said:
1. She is still a teenage girls. Even girls with physical deformities have their moments. Doesn't change the fact she can't kiss him.
So she is drastically changing her life over a moment?
And she can't live without a kiss? i mean she already did kiss him, sure it's not like that will be forever remembered but..............i wonder how nuns do it. :)

chaseter said:
2. No, she does not order him...she loves Logan, she only wants to help him. If she is all powerful and accepting of her powers, she could have went back and saved him by herself. After all, as you say she is confident of her powers and knows that they can save millions... She only snaps at Bobby, she does not order him in any fashion.
Umm, regardless they where not mutants, not much she could of done and what would of been the point of draining bobby to use his powers? Why not just have him go? She did't know what she was up against. Mr. Whydidn'tshedoit. :p


chaseter said:
3. Sure Rogue is more confident, she now has a home and a family. Plus Logan said he would get them when he came back...he was just trying to reassure her. But that doesn't change the fact that she doesn't want her powers.
No it doesn't but in the comic book she doesn't want them eitehr but she still keeps them for the good the have done for others (exceptl maybe Carol Danvers :p)

chaseter said:
4. She is trying to defend her boyfriend...would you let a girlfriends parents chew her out for something she didn't do, or would you stand by her? Bobby is gifted and so is Rogue...but Bobby's powers don't harm people and he can get close to those he loves. Rogue is also acting out at the fact that her parents rejected her.
and that's showing confidence standing up for yourself and someone else. How is this an argument against at what LS said? :huh:

I guess if you where Rogue you would be quick to take the cure, it's ok to be selfish sometimes, but i would not be so quick to do so. :p sorry, i'm not saying your bad just that ppl are different and this is an adaptation, these actors are potraying arleady written characters, one of which has had the oppurtunity but never did take the cure. So why should she do it in the adaptation?

chaseter said:
5. Would you stand by and let someone kill people? Or would you do something about it? Insecure or not, that is just pure human emotion and response. Notice the look Pyro gives her...pure disgust and she knows it.
SO IT'S NOT LIKE SHE WAS DEAD SCARED! Maybe a little And some ppl do panic under the stress and do nothing just so you know.

chaseter said:
6. That is pure and utter BS. She screams for her life and is still uneasy when she is bamfed back into the plane.
Yea but with all the crap she has gone through you would think that if Xavier where to offer her a spot as an X-Men she would say HELL NO, yet she doesn't.

chaseter said:
7. Would you back down from a fight? Would you just walk away from the person who tried to kill you and physically altered you only to make fun of it.
I wouldn't but alot of ppl have and lot of ppl do. Maybe because they want to act like the bigger person or because they are scared, but you can't assume that everyone would stand up to Magneto in this situation. ;)

chaseter said:
8. Still doesn't change the fact her powers kill and she can't get close to those she loves.
Still doesn't change the fact that they have saved lives and can't save many more.

chaseter said:
9. She didn't use her powers whatsoever in that scene. Powers or not, she still flew the plane.
Yea and that's still a sign of courage.

chaseter said:
10. Was anybody else cracking jokes at the White House? I forgot to look and see if Cyclops was playing cards.
ACTUALLY!! Nightcralwer has a funny little smirk on his face, Cyclops is weeping, Storm is using her powers, so there are a good range of different emotions, and Rogue just showed Strength and her new valor.


chaseter said:
Lastly, these aren't facts...neither are yours. They are purely opinion. Therefore, you can't debunk opinion as either right or wrong. You merely assert your own opinion that you think is right.
As you do too. Regardless opinions in quantity perhaps do not make them right but do mean they are more effective with reasons. In this case alot of ppl are willing to argue that she should of not been cured, you want to be proven wrong, then start a poll.

chaseter said:
Rogue used her powers once in X2 to save people. If she was so confident and happy of her mutation...don't you think she would be using them often for the good of mankind?
Because they gave her the oppurtunity to do so. You make it sound like it's the characters fault she got cured and not the writers.

or in this case Rothman idiot daughter and Ratner

chaseter said:
Her hair is a constant reminder of the horor that took place at Liberty Island. She will never forget the ones she hurt...they live in her head forever.
Besides Cody, maybe bobby and logan, who did she hurt?


chaseter said:
She can never get close to the ones she loves...she can never physically be with Bobby or have kids. How is that out of character to want to be cured. Her mutation runs along the lines of physical mutations. It is not wrong for those people to want to be accepted and not persecuted?
Im not saying she should not want to be cured, I'm sure she in the comic book even still wants it, but it's about what's better not just for you but for thsoe around you. If keeping her powers mean she can one day save the life of the man she loves, is it better she get knocked up have his kids and not save him and end up a single mother?

So now i know that if i ever get the chance to change who i am so i won't be mocked or ridiculed i'll do it, i'll be sure too tell my cousin too that he doesn't have to be gay anymore, so our homophobic latin family can accept him. :whatever:
 
gambitfire said:
So now i know that if i ever get the chance to change who i am so i won't be mocked or ridiculed i'll do it, i'll be sure too tell my cousin too that he doesn't have to be gay anymore, so our homophobic latin family can accept him. :whatever:

That's a good point...and that is why the cure storyline is so controversial. It suddenly introduces the possibility of people being able to change, or being forced to change.

I too would have preferred her NOT to take the cure... but.....I can still argue for why she might have done it. The whole situation changed in X3 with Kitty becoming prominent, which created tensions in the relationship.
 

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