Apocalypse X-Men Apocalypse News and Discussion - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Part 42

Status
Not open for further replies.
If anyone leaves it will be singer.People may come to regret that depending on what the timetable is for next X-Men film is and who ends up directing it.

In the end whats gonna happen is gonna happen whether singer directs or not because he wants to direct other things so FOX could wait for him however long it takes singer to decide he is ready to come back but is there really a point? are we saying singer is the only person who can do the job?
 
Last edited:
Cn07BIBUsAA3a9L.jpg


Sci-Fi MonStar ‏@FantasySci
Magneto has taken flight over the X-Men booth at Comic-Con.
#XMenApocalypse #SDCC2016

Cn1DfRrUsAI3IxH.jpg:small


Sci-Fi MonStar ‏@FantasySci
Storm is in the building. San Diego Comic-Con X-Men exhibit.
#XMenApocalypse

Cn0786uUIAArf_5.jpg:small
 
Last edited:
really? I think Nightcrawler and Apocalypse looked really great actually. the problem of Apocalypse was not so much the makeup in my eyes but Singer's many close up shots throughout the movie. I think he wanted to give Oscaar Isaac a chance to act under all this makeup but these close ups unfortunately mainly revealed the shortcomings of the makeup work...From a little distance Apocalypse looked fantastic. Singer should have concentrated more on the angles which actually worked great:


The only problem was Mystique's makeup especially in her scenes with Magneto in Kairo where she looked ridiculously cheap like very bad bodypaint. I am not sure if the problem was the make-up design or Jennifer Lawrence's unfortuante "skin condition"...:whatever:

Nightcrawler did look really great, I agree.

And I agree Apocalypse looked great apart from some of the close-up shots. I think Singer must have done those close-ups in the expectation that post-production would make them look perfect, but i don't think that happened.

Hoult's Beast never looks quite right to me.

And I also agree Mystique did look unconvincing in some of the Cairo scenes. Where she is on the ground leaning against a wall, you can see the neckline of the bodysuit very clearly - something else that was not cleaned up in post-production.
 
What close up shots of Apocalypse do ya mean X-Maniac, if ya don't mind me asking.
 
What close up shots of Apocalypse do ya mean X-Maniac, if ya don't mind me asking.

It's hard to remember exactly and specify a point in the movie. But I have a recollection that the close-up shots were the most suspect; my partner said the same when he saw the movie for the first time recently. He also felt it was the only film where Mystique didn't look convincing.

I think the audience mostly bought into the look/performance, though - when i was at the premiere - several people behind me giggled when Apocalypse says 'learrrrnnnning' when asked by Storm what he's doing to her TV. I don't think his line was needed at all (EDIT: though I wish the satellite dishes had swivelled a little in that shot that showed them all on the rooftops, to indicate that he was tapping into the technology)
 
Last edited:
Was reading a review of the film when I came across this quote: "Xavier’s mental capacity to communicate with everyone on the planet seems almost like a metaphor for the Internet here. To succeed, tyrants need that final piece, complete control over communications."

Does anyone else agree? If not, what do you think Apocalypse was supposed to represent in the film?
 
Was reading a review of the film when I came across this quote: "Xavier’s mental capacity to communicate with everyone on the planet seems almost like a metaphor for the Internet here. To succeed, tyrants need that final piece, complete control over communications."

Does anyone else agree? If not, what do you think Apocalypse was supposed to represent in the film?

I think the intent was to draw parallels to religion (we all know Singer was trying to pull from religious imagery for this movie). It is fitting that Apocalypse, the mutant who wants to be God, desires a power that would allow him to be in the hearts and minds of everyone.

We also know that both McAvoy and Singer see Xavier as a Christ figure.

I think the message could have been clearer if Apocalypse's power was more clearly defined and if they did more with the religious imagery.
 
If anyone is curious about the Apocalypse X-periance
http://io9.gizmodo.com/i-entered-the-x-men-apocalypse-escape-room-and-lived-t-1784014091

jn8zl2up76znaeehzi5y.jpg

You’ve probably seen escape rooms advertised on TV or around your city. They’re interactive experiences that force a group of people to work together, solve clues, and get out of a made up scenario. It’s something you’d expect to do on a Friday night, not on the floor of a convention.

However, to promote X-Men: Apocalypse’s Blu-ray release, Fox created the X-Men: Tomb of Apocalypse Experience for the floor of San Diego Comic-Con. And it’s pretty fun.

I don’t want to give too many secrets away because if you are in town and want to try it, it’s a cool activity and you get a free t-shirt. Basically, though, you and about 10 people walk into a makeshift cave. The story is Moira MacTaggert has gone missing and left only her bag to solve the mystery of Apocalypse.

Groups are formed, and each one is given a set of tools. So, for example, I and another gentleman were given multiple bungie cords. What to do with them? Let’s just say this was not correct.:

rdofxrouwsxos3qlvnl5.jpg


Once we eventually figured that out, we had to solve another puzzle.

cxlgvqzxnydqixsetgmk.jpg


Once that’s solved, we got a key.

Each group has their own puzzle to solve, but since I was busy with my bungee cords, I didn’t see what the other ones were. Once the group acquires all four keys, there’s a box to unlock and in there is the savior to the world.

uycjhfokczhevkq7nvqf.jpg



Plus, all of this must happen before the sun hits the top of the gold pyramid, just like in the movie.

mjqthfhbkcoctrkgfkw8.jpg



My team won just in time and then we took this photo. Not a bad way to spend 10 minutes on the floor at Comic-Con.

cku24aa0rdyup9hzz5lz.jpg
 
I think the intent was to draw parallels to religion (we all know Singer was trying to pull from religious imagery for this movie). It is fitting that Apocalypse, the mutant who wants to be God, desires a power that would allow him to be in the hearts and minds of everyone.

We also know that both McAvoy and Singer see Xavier as a Christ figure.

I think the message could have been clearer if Apocalypse's power was more clearly defined and if they did more with the religious imagery.

In the comics, Apocalypse's powers are quite wide-ranging and very vague. I felt they were more clearly explained in the movie, as being due to the amassing of various abilities as he transferred his life-force into a new body. In the comics, he just has various nebulous abilities with no real explanation.

From what I can assess, we saw:

1) Regeneration (acquired from the mutant into whom he transferred himself in the opening prologue; seen in the film from his healing after Mystique cut his throat)

2) Technopathy (seen when he tapped into Storm's TV and when he took control of Cerebro)

3) Teleportation (seen various times)

4) Energy shields (as psychic shields that he said he put in place to stop Xavier's powers affecting the horsemen; and a physical forcefield bubble that lifted the rubble over him when he awakened, and protected him in the final battle)

5) Power amplification/acceleration (seen with Storm, Angel being transformed with metal wings, Psylocke's psi-blade intensifying, Mystique's shapeshifting scales going out of control when he grabbed her, enhancing Xavier's telepathy to reach across the world)

6) Telekinetic control of matter (mostly inorganic material such as metal, sand, stone - seen when he built pyramids in DoFP teaser, trapped people in walls, when he dissolved Caliban's gun, made the steel mill workers sink into the floor, raised the pyramid, stopped Quicksilver, removed the wall of the Cairo building where the X-Men were sheltering, constructed Magneto's helmet)

Any oddities and discrepancies? Well, what he did to Angel i am assuming was a combination of enhancement (the extra wings sprouting) and matter control (either transmuting the wings to metal or coating with metal, I'm not sure). Or maybe that was all part of the enhancement/augmentation process, into who Angel was meant to be....
 
In the comics, Apocalypse's powers are quite wide-ranging and very vague. I felt they were more clearly explained in the movie, as being due to the amassing of various abilities as he transferred his life-force into a new body. In the comics, he just has various nebulous abilities with no real explanation.

From what I can assess, we saw:

1) Regeneration (acquired from the mutant into whom he transferred himself in the opening prologue; seen in the film from his healing after Mystique cut his throat)

2) Technopathy (seen when he tapped into Storm's TV and when he took control of Cerebro)

3) Teleportation (seen various times)

4) Energy shields (as psychic shields that he said he put in place to stop Xavier's powers affecting the horsemen; and a physical forcefield bubble that lifted the rubble over him when he awakened, and protected him in the final battle)

5) Power amplification/acceleration (seen with Storm, Angel being transformed with metal wings, Psylocke's psi-blade intensifying, Mystique's shapeshifting scales going out of control when he grabbed her, enhancing Xavier's telepathy to reach across the world)

6) Telekinetic control of matter (mostly inorganic material such as metal, sand, stone - seen when he built pyramids in DoFP teaser, trapped people in walls, when he dissolved Caliban's gun, made the steel mill workers sink into the floor, raised the pyramid, stopped Quicksilver, removed the wall of the Cairo building where the X-Men were sheltering, constructed Magneto's helmet)

Any oddities and discrepancies? Well, what he did to Angel i am assuming was a combination of enhancement (the extra wings sprouting) and matter control (either transmuting the wings to metal or coating with metal, I'm not sure). Or maybe that was all part of the enhancement/augmentation process, into who Angel was meant to be....

Oh the movie was an improvement on the comics yes, but it still isn't enough I think. When I say clearly defined, I mean we should know the limits of his power. Villains are almost always more interesting when they have limitations, plus it avoids the whole plot hole of 'If this villain is so powerful, why didn't he do this and this and this?'

I think making Apocalypse just have his iconic 'changing the molecular structure of his body' power would have drawn a clearer distinction between him and Xavier (which we all know was the intent of Singer and Kinberg). The mutant who wants to be a God and be in the hearts and souls of everyone is stuck with a purely physical power, while the Christ-like mentor figure has the potential to actually make himself a God by having access to everyone's mind but doesn't use it.

As it is, Singer has tried to explain why Apocalypse has so many powers, but it still hasn't done anything to make him more interesting.
 
Oh the movie was an improvement on the comics yes, but it still isn't enough I think. When I say clearly defined, I mean we should know the limits of his power. Villains are almost always more interesting when they have limitations, plus it avoids the whole plot hole of 'If this villain is so powerful, why didn't he do this and this and this?'

I think making Apocalypse just have his iconic 'changing the molecular structure of his body' power would have drawn a clearer distinction between him and Xavier (which we all know was the intent of Singer and Kinberg). The mutant who wants to be a God and be in the hearts and souls of everyone is stuck with a purely physical power, while the Christ-like mentor figure has the potential to actually make himself a God by having access to everyone's mind but doesn't use it.

As it is, Singer has tried to explain why Apocalypse has so many powers, but it still hasn't done anything to make him more interesting.

I don't know if i can agree with that.

There's an analogy you are totally missing:

Apocalypse wanted to be God - omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent - but he only had the first one of those qualities, while Xavier offered the other two.
 
I don't know if i can agree with that.

There's an analogy you are totally missing:

Apocalypse wanted to be God - omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent - but he only had the first one of those qualities, while Xavier offered the other two.

You can still be omnipotent while still having a defined powerset.

Having the power to control the molecules of your body alone gives you

- Regeneration
- Shapeshifting
- The ability to change size and mass
- Durability/invincibility
- Enhanced strength and maybe even speed
- Altering your limbs to become weapons (like in the comics)

Jean as Phoenix (in the movies) is omnipotent while having very clear powers: Telekinesis and telepathy, just at a subatomic level, and her power manifests as a fiery aura. In the comics it's a little more vague, but it is still very clearly telekinesis and telepathy (Claremont emphasized that it was her telekinetic control over atoms that allowed her to change her dress at a whim and change a tree into a golden statue, for example). Later she would branch out to having control over life and death (tied to the Phoenix's theme of death and rebirth), and in her ultimate incarnation, the White Phoenix of the Crown, control over realities. She doesn't suddenly have enhanced strength for example, unless it is explicitly stated she is using her telekinesis to augment her own strength.

There's an in-universe justification for why Apocalypse has a random assortment of powers that are not tied to each other, but it's all very muddled and frankly, make things uninteresting and opens up plot holes.

WHY does he need exactly 4 Horsemen if he can do everything himself? Maybe he wants the Horsemen for symbolic reasons? Why couldn't he just assemble an army of powerful mutants (i.e. more than 4) to protect him when he's going through the transference? If we delved deeper into that it could be interesting, but we don't. There's a reason why this question keeps popping up on 'Things in X-Men Apocalypse that don't make sense'. Remember, the idea that the 4 Horsemen are biblical comes from our comic book knowledge so it doesn't apply, and the biblical themes are barely touched on long enough for people to infer.

WHY can't he just create a massive telekinetic shield over the pyramid in Cairo to stop the X-Men from entering? I mean if he is powerful enough to build an entire pyramid by himself, and powerful enough to conjure a telekinetic force field that pushes away all the debris around and above him during his awakening, what's stopping him?

WHY can't he just teleport to Xavier after the transference ritual was interrupted and started wasting time standing around yelling for Charles to come out?

Thematically, you want to show CLEARLY that Apocalypse is NOT omniscient and omnipresent, except some audiences still seem to think that Apocalypse is subtly brainwashing the Horsemen that's why they are so compliant and have their personalities stripped from them for the second half of the movie. Apocalypse already feels pretty omnipresent if he is able to teleport to wherever he wants, able to seduce people into joining him just after 5 minutes of talk, and the tension of him achieving omnipresence is derailed after we already have gotten two scenes (the Cerebro scene and the scene where he uses Xavier to talk to the entire world) where he already has experienced omnipresence without actually possessing the power.

First rule of storytelling: Never make either your villain or hero too powerful unless you have a very good reason to, otherwise the story becomes reduced to who has the most power to outmatch each other in a fight (which this movie already fell into re: Phoenix vs Apocalypse). And that's generally pretty boring to tell a story with unless you're the type of comic book fan who likes pitting comic book characters against each other.

TLDR; Apocalypse having so many random powers is not a problem in itself, but it gets compounded by muddled writing and themes that are so clearly there but never given a chance to breathe that it can become a sticking point and starts taking you out of the story.
 
Last edited:
Oh the movie was an improvement on the comics yes, but it still isn't enough I think. When I say clearly defined, I mean we should know the limits of his power. Villains are almost always more interesting when they have limitations, plus it avoids the whole plot hole of 'If this villain is so powerful, why didn't he do this and this and this?'

Since when has any film featuring superhumans (villains or heroes) 'clearly defined' their limits? Are we expected to see some computer screen showing such a thing, or a caption along the bottom of the screen?

Secondly, human/superhuman limitations can't be so neatly determined. People can exceed, or fail to reach, their own previous limits in different circumstances, such as stress, fatigue, illness, drugs or a life-or-death situation.

Whether comics, or movies, or our reality, you will always see variations in what are thought to be the limits of a person/character.

We are always hearing 'why did/didn't XX do this or that' when it comes to comic book adaptations. It's been raised several times regarding the X-Men movies over the years when what someone did in one scene is compared with what they did or didn't do in another scene. And now you're just walking into the trap.

It involves full-on nitpickery and pedantry, which brings me to your latest post...


You can still be omnipotent while still having a defined powerset.

Having the power to control the molecules of your body alone gives you

- Regeneration
- Shapeshifting
- The ability to change size and mass
- Durability/invincibility
- Enhanced strength and maybe even speed
- Altering your limbs to become weapons (like in the comics)

Maybe Singer will address this on the commentary track but your suggestion still ends up with multiple abilities in one person as a result of the molecular control power, so it's no real improvement.

And at what point in the movie would 'control of molecules' be explained in some expository manner? It would also make him, in effect, a super-Mystique.

And how would the limits of each of those things above (size, mass changes, etc) be determined? How would we know he couldn't make himself 40,000 feet tall and just stomp on an entire country.

Whether it could/would have worked better is moot anyway.

I'm happy enough with what we got and it would have strayed beyond 'show not tell' if there had been some point where his powers had been determined - we saw what he could do and an intelligent viewer could assemble that information.

Jean as Phoenix (in the movies) is omnipotent while having very clear powers: Telekinesis and telepathy, just at a subatomic level, and her power manifests as a fiery aura. In the comics it's a little more vague, but it is still very clearly telekinesis and telepathy (Claremont emphasized that it was her telekinetic control over atoms that allowed her to change her dress at a whim and change a tree into a golden statue, for example). Later she would branch out to having control over life and death (tied to the Phoenix's theme of death and rebirth), and in her ultimate incarnation, the White Phoenix of the Crown, control over realities. She doesn't suddenly have enhanced strength for example, unless it is explicitly stated she is using her telekinesis to augment her own strength.

The subatomic thing does give her a lot of leeway that is very undefined.

The comics had her powers going all over the place. For instance, she summoned lightning before leaving the earth to fly off into space. Her TK was never shown to include weather control, nor was her firebird before or since shown to depend on the energy of lightning.

But anyway, that's Phoenix...

There's an in-universe justification for why Apocalypse has a random assortment of powers that are not tied to each other, but it's all very muddled and frankly, make things uninteresting and opens up plot holes.

It's not muddled. We're told he has amassed various powers and through the course of the movie we are shown what they are. Some, like teleportation and control of matter (sand/walls) are pretty obvious. Some, like shielding the horsemen from Xavier's reach, are directly explained in dialogue.

WHY does he need exactly 4 Horsemen if he can do everything himself? Maybe he wants the Horsemen for symbolic reasons? Why couldn't he just assemble an army of powerful mutants (i.e. more than 4) to protect him when he's going through the transference? If we delved deeper into that it could be interesting, but we don't. There's a reason why this question keeps popping up on 'Things in X-Men Apocalypse that don't make sense'. Remember, the idea that the 4 Horsemen are biblical comes from our comic book knowledge so it doesn't apply, and the biblical themes are barely touched on long enough for people to infer.

He needs four horsemen to protect him during the transference (as seen in the prologue and as he explains later in Cairo), and also as disciples/followers because he has a God complex - it must be reassuring for such a person to have a small group of henchmen to convince themselves they are en route to controlling the whole world/universe. What leader doesn't want supporters who back their cause?

Why four? The real world Bible tells of the four horsemen of the Apocalypse so it's pretty much set in stone. We could hardly suddenly have 7 horsemen of the Apocalypse. The four seem to represent the main destructive forces of the ancient world, the things that most threatened the balance of civilisation in those times. Conquest (or sometimes Pestilence), War, Famine and Death are the usual names for the four. Whether the number is symbolic, ritualistic, magical, numerological or has deeper historical interpretations doesn't really matter, the movie was marrying itself to the ancient Biblical tale and i don't think there's anything wrong with that. Again, you're being far too literal.

WHY can't he just create a massive telekinetic shield over the pyramid in Cairo to stop the X-Men from entering? I mean if he is powerful enough to build an entire pyramid by himself, and powerful enough to conjure a telekinetic force field that pushes away all the debris around and above him during his awakening, what's stopping him?

He was never shown as being able to project a physical shield over anything other than himself (unlike the woman horseman in the prologue). Nor was it indicated that he could create or sustain a shield of such a size (it would be pretty vast).

This is pure nitpickery.

WHY can't he just teleport to Xavier after the transference ritual was interrupted and started wasting time standing around yelling for Charles to come out?

He doesn't know where he is. He can sense him through the connection but doesn't have a physical location.

Thematically, you want to show CLEARLY that Apocalypse is NOT omniscient and omnipresent, except some audiences still seem to think that Apocalypse is subtly brainwashing the Horsemen that's why they are so compliant and have their personalities stripped from them for the second half of the movie.

Well, there is some weight to that thought, because Apocalypse's voice changed at the time he recruited each of his horsemen, and i feel there was some mesmeric/persuasive/controlling effect going on.

Apocalypse already feels pretty omnipresent if he is able to teleport to wherever he wants, able to seduce people into joining him just after 5 minutes of talk, and the tension of him achieving omnipresence is derailed after we already have gotten two scenes (the Cerebro scene and the scene where he uses Xavier to talk to the entire world) where he already has experienced omnipresence without actually possessing the power.

But he's not omnipresent. He clearly says that Charles holds the key to being "everyone, everywhere" - something Apocalypse is not. Being able to transport to locations is not the same as omnipresence.

First rule of storytelling: Never make either your villain or hero too powerful unless you have a very good reason to, otherwise the story becomes reduced to who has the most power to outmatch each other in a fight (which this movie already fell into re: Phoenix vs Apocalypse). And that's generally pretty boring to tell a story with unless you're the type of comic book fan who likes pitting comic book characters against each other.

He had to be shown to be an extremely powerful force/character. But still, he can't take over the world unless/until he has Xavier's powers added, that much is pretty clear.

TLDR; Apocalypse having so many random powers is not a problem in itself, but it gets compounded by muddled writing and themes that are so clearly there but never given a chance to breathe that it can become a sticking point and starts taking you out of the story.

Some things could have been done better, but I think Apocalypse's powers, intentions and role are really not that muddled.
 
And I agree Apocalypse looked great apart from some of the close-up shots. I think Singer must have done those close-ups in the expectation that post-production would make them look perfect, but i don't think that happened.
IMO Apocalypse looked better in close shots than from longer distance.
 
I thought Apocalypse looked best when his eyes were white. Looked more menacing. But I agree, at times his facial make-up looked liquidy and caked on.
 
Since when has any film featuring superhumans (villains or heroes) 'clearly defined' their limits? Are we expected to see some computer screen showing such a thing, or a caption along the bottom of the screen?

Has there been any other comic book franchise with a multitude of potentially overpowered characters like X-Men? (let's focus on comic book movies as an example of superhuman movies for the sake of comparison). The MCU until recently (with the introduction of Scarlet Witch) only had characters with physical abilities or who rely on technology. Thor was a Norse God of Thunder who wields a super powered hammer. Spider Man had all the abilities of a spider. Hulk turns green and grows big when he's angry. Even if limits are not clearly defined, we still know the general area of what their powers should entail.

Scarlet Witch could potentially fall in this trap, but the writers seem pretty insistent on keeping her powers limited to telekinesis and slight psychic abilities, because it's easier to write a story knowing what her limits are.

Superman is the only one I know who comes close to be comparable to Apocalypse in terms of the multitude of random powers they have, and I can't speak for Superman because I've never watched those movies.

Apocalypse as written in the movie, with his in-universe justification of having all sorts of powers because they were taken from other people, could sprout insect wings at any moment and fly and it would still be adhering to the rules established in-universe. And that's... fine, but it's pretty lazy writing. He can use any power as a cop out of any situation and all we can do is shrug and say 'Well, he must have gotten it from some mutant somewhere'.

I have to add this is not an area I'm an expert in though because I'm not a fan of comic book movies in general, X-Men just happen to be the only one I like XD. This is why I'm approaching it from a film screenwriting perspective in general, and am not gonna give a pass just cause it's a comic book movie.

Secondly, human/superhuman limitations can't be so neatly determined. People can exceed, or fail to reach, their own previous limits in different circumstances, such as stress, fatigue, illness, drugs or a life-or-death situation.

Whether comics, or movies, or our reality, you will always see variations in what are thought to be the limits of a person/character.

'Reality is no defense for fiction'. (I'm gonna annoy the hell out of you but I've just attended a screenwriting seminar so I'll be using what I've learned from it a lot, bear with me).

A story is obviously different from reality. Just because we as humans need to eat food does not mean we need to see our characters eat anything. We gloss over it because it's not important to the story, nor is it interesting.

Same applies here. Just because limits can vary in real life does not mean it makes for an interesting or coherent story.

We are always hearing 'why did/didn't XX do this or that' when it comes to comic book adaptations. It's been raised several times regarding the X-Men movies over the years when what someone did in one scene is compared with what they did or didn't do in another scene. And now you're just walking into the trap.

It involves full-on nitpickery and pedantry, which brings me to your latest post...

Again, not an expert in comic book movies. The only major X-Men movie example I can think of is Magneto in X3, with him not dropping the bridge atop Alcatraz Island, and I guess complaints about X3 Phoenix in general. But notice how they are both from a script written partially by Kinberg and in a movie already riddled with bad writing all around?

Otherwise, the good X-Men movies have made attempts to address and clearly define what are the limitations of our characters' powers. I may be remembering wrongly but this leads to my next point.

When a movie is overall written well, plot holes when it comes to power levels can be glossed over because the overall product is so good it pulls people in the story that they buy it and just gloss over the plot holes.

What is nitpicking but an inability to be drawn into the story and buy what's going on? When the writing is shaky, a viewer is left unsure what they can gloss over in the story and what they can just accept (again a lesson learned from the seminar). Dismissing people's nitpicks I think is not helpful. The nitpicks are there and show that there are aspects of the story that can be written tighter. It's whether you allow those nitpicks to affect your enjoyment of the story or not. People nitpicking usually does not mean that they do it for the sake of it, they do it because they cannot buy the story.

Maybe Singer will address this on the commentary track but your suggestion still ends up with multiple abilities in one person as a result of the molecular control power, so it's no real improvement.

But we know generally what their multiple abilities should entail. An Apocalypse according to my suggestion won't suddenly have psychic powers or weather controlling powers.

And at what point in the movie would 'control of molecules' be explained in some expository manner? It would also make him, in effect, a super-Mystique.

And would a super-Mystique be a bad explanation? You've literally just summed it up in a single phrase. Would draw an ever closer parallel during the scene when Apocalypse confronts and chokes Mystique.

And how would the limits of each of those things above (size, mass changes, etc) be determined? How would we know he couldn't make himself 40,000 feet tall and just stomp on an entire country.

Again, that's where limits come into play. You've clearly defined what his powers are, now show us what his limits are. It's screenwriting, anything is possible as long as it's executed well.

I'm happy enough with what we got and it would have strayed beyond 'show not tell' if there had been some point where his powers had been determined - we saw what he could do and an intelligent viewer could assemble that information.

And I respect that, but it obviously hasn't worked for a majority of critics. Again you're assuming that clearly defining powers involves a giant exposition scene. It doesn't. It just involves a few lines at most, and powers that adhere to the rules of those few lines and powers which make the character interesting. Again, it's now common knowledge even among casual audiences that an overpowered take over the world bad guy is boring.

Except the intelligent viewers are coming up with contradictory interpretations of what's going on. That is the very definition of muddled. Are the Horsemen brainwashed, or are they of their own free will? Everyone has their own opinion on it.

The subatomic thing does give her a lot of leeway that is very undefined.

And there's a reason why the writers had to limit her by making her crazy and constantly fighting a presumed internal battle with Jean. And when she does finally cut loose, she is quickly dispatched.

Apocalypse spends an entire movie being of his own agency with his powers at his disposal, but he still fails to accomplish anything threatening. Havok's death and the Mansion explosion wasn't even directly attributed to him.


It's not muddled. We're told he has amassed various powers and through the course of the movie we are shown what they are. Some, like teleportation and control of matter (sand/walls) are pretty obvious. Some, like shielding the horsemen from Xavier's reach, are directly explained in dialogue.

Again, he could sprout insect wings and fly (in addition to his teleportation, telekinesis etc) and we wouldn't be able to say anything. Not muddled maybe, but a cheat certainly.

Why four? The real world Bible tells of the four horsemen of the Apocalypse so it's pretty much set in stone. We could hardly suddenly have 7 horsemen of the Apocalypse. The four seem to represent the main destructive forces of the ancient world, the things that most threatened the balance of civilisation in those times. Conquest (or sometimes Pestilence), War, Famine and Death are the usual names for the four. Whether the number is symbolic, ritualistic, magical, numerological or has deeper historical interpretations doesn't really matter, the movie was marrying itself to the ancient Biblical tale and i don't think there's anything wrong with that. Again, you're being far too literal.

How does the movie marry itself to the Biblical tale? Conquest/Pestilence, War, Famine and Death weren't even mentioned in the movie. A character that think he's a god, and a brief exposition scene which suggests that he is at least related to Biblical myth, is not marrying itself to the Biblical tale. It's gesturing broadly at a theme that the movie wants to explore but ends up not actually exploring. The Angel vs Demon dichotomy in Angel and Nightcrawler, and shots of people in prayer, again are gestures. They are not a story.

This movie is not a biblical story at all. That was Singer and Kinberg's intention, and it does not come through. That's what I mean by muddled. Listening to them talk about their intentions with the movie is more interesting than the movie itself. The movie is essentially about a superpowered egomanic being awakened, gathering four henchmen and trying to take over the world. That's it. No commentary on religion, none on cults, nothing. Just hints of themes.


He was never shown as being able to project a physical shield over anything other than himself (unlike the woman horseman in the prologue). Nor was it indicated that he could create or sustain a shield of such a size (it would be pretty vast).

This is pure nitpickery.

Again, nitpickery is the result of a movie that is already shaky to begin with. Especially from someone like me, who NEVER nitpicks at movies if the end result is good.


He doesn't know where he is. He can sense him through the connection but doesn't have a physical location.

That's inferred. There's no actual dialogue that supports it, considering he teleported all four Horsemen to the concentration camp in one scene, Cairo in another, all without a connection.

Well, there is some weight to that thought, because Apocalypse's voice changed at the time he recruited each of his horsemen, and i feel there was some mesmeric/persuasive/controlling effect going on.

And that defeats the purpose of Singer and Kinberg's intentions, which was to explore the concept of a cult and how it preys on the weak. Taking away people's agency is not an interesting direction with which to take a cult, it reduces it to something supernatural and cannot be compared to real life. Again, muddled.

He had to be shown to be an extremely powerful force/character. But still, he can't take over the world unless/until he has Xavier's powers added, that much is pretty clear.

Which the scene with the missiles (a fantastic scene) already did. I was just browsing TV Tropes the entire day, and it pointed out if Apocalypse just did the transference immediately without wasting any time giving a grand speech to the world, he would have succeeded.

Now this could be an interesting if that scene serves to explore his egomaniac personality but A) it's generally accepted that egomaniac villains by themselves are already cliche B) we don't do much with his egomania (not as well as it's handled by say, Voldermort in the Harry Potter books where we delved deep into his personality).

Some things could have been done better, but I think Apocalypse's powers, intentions and role are really not that muddled.

I think we have to agree to disagree. We just fundamentally disagree. XD I'm having fun though.

It doesn't help that the screenwriting seminar I just attended has made the flaws in the writing stand out even more to me. If you can gloss over it, more power to you, but the screenwriting rules broken here are indisputable IMO.
 
Last edited:
maybe if we havnt seen x1-x3 xmen apoc would be better.....when i did watch it, it feels like im having de ja vu's.
 
Shipp would have looked more interesting with blue eyes.
 
While I do agree that there was a sense of been there done that with Apocalypse, this was mostly deliberate. This was the final movie in a six film saga so there were intentional references and homages to previous movies and as a fan of the franchise I appreciated that, it tied things together nicely.

I want to see a fresh start now though, i really enjoyed Apocalypse and think it stayed true to the grounded in reality tone of the other movies. Now I think there's a lot of opportunity to go in an exciting, new direction. They have the younger cast established now so I'm hoping they'll continue with them. I'd like the movies to be in a modern setting with a new villain. They will have to figure out what they're going to do with Wolverine but they can take some time with that. My worst case scenario would be if they try and reboot X-Men entirely in Deadpool's world. I HATED Deadpool, I don't like the character, I found the comedy incredibly forced also. I can see how people liked it but if Deadpool wants to feature X-Men it has to acknowledge the X-Men universe as it is now.

As I said though I think it's exciting to see what direction the movies go next.
 
thats what im sayaing this movie for me is ok really ok..this movie is made for the fans not for the critics tho mathur f677ers critics are old.....i really understand what singer and co are doing with this movie...
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Users who are viewing this thread

Staff online

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
202,265
Messages
22,075,540
Members
45,875
Latest member
shanandrews
Back
Top
monitoring_string = "afb8e5d7348ab9e99f73cba908f10802"