It is clear from the outset of what is roughly the first 13 minutes of Dark Phoenix that it is attempting to be a different kind of X-Men movie. Described for months by writer-director Simon Kinberg and producer Hutch Parker as something more “intimate” and emotionally dramatic than 2016’s bombastic X-Men: Apocalypse, it was only when the first action sequence of Dark Phoenix was screened at New York Comic Con that the effect they’re going for became truly apparent.
The sequence obviously pulls influence from X-Men #101, the issue which introduced Jean Grey’s alternate personality, the Phoenix (then not so dark), however everything about the way the sequence is treated by Kinberg’s film is evocative of the real-life space shuttle Challenger tragedy in 1986 (the film is set in 1992)… except now with superheroes coming to the rescue.
While we were not shown the opening credits, which apparently will set the stage as to what the X-Men have been up to in the nine years since Apocalypse’s setting, it becomes quickly apparent that Charles Xavier’s School for Gifted Youngsters have become the toast of American life, mostly because his X-Men are now heralded as the superheroes they’re often depicted as in the comics. This is a notable departure from the way the X-Men were always depicted as a covert, paramilitary unit operating without the government’s consent in the Bryan Singer X-Men movies, but it is in-keeping with many other variations of X-comic book lore, and perhaps more aptly is comparable to the way the Avengers are usually depicted as everyone’s hero to lean on in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
Yet where Dark Phoenix is clearly attempting to differ is in an aspect that Kinberg later emphasized during a NYCC Q&A as one of the director’s most important duties: tone. The general tone of Dark Phoenix’s X-Men introduction is that of almost a thriller as much as an adventure. Genuinely, I suspect many comic book fans will be surprised how much they’ll enjoy seeing the X-Men act like regular heroes ready to fly into the blue yonder and beyond because they’re heroes, and not because they’re trying to save mutantkind. But while this is certainly more traditional superhero territory, there is very little in the way of self-referential humor intended to alleviate tension or create a sense of a knowing smirk at its own silliness, which generally is the modus operandi of MCU superhero movies, especially during the first act. Returning a bit to the gusto of X-Men: First Class, Kinberg also seems to want to imbue a sense of earnestness to the material. So when realizing astronauts are in trouble, stakes are placed on the tightly edited sequence by Nicholas Hoult’s Beast, who immediately tells Charles that he doesn’t believe the X-jet is safe to travel beyond the Earth’s atmosphere. Yet when the president calls, Charles overrides that decision and the X-Men are soon launching off to space to the first strings of Hans Zimmer’s take on an X-Men theme. The music is audibly different from the more traditionally triumphant John Ottman theme in the past several X-films. Sounding in a single pass to my layman’s ear more than a bit like Interstellar, complete with a haunting ticking refrain that is more chorus here, Zimmer’s music could (and may) be recorded on an organ with the way it reaches with a rising sense of doom and uncertainty as the X-Men travel into space.
However, for comic fans, it is remarkably refreshing the way that Jean and Cyclops (Tye Sheridan) are framed during this whole opening action sequence. While I’ve always been a fan of Famke Janssen and James Marsden’s take of the characters in the older films, they were usually treated as two-thirds of a love triangle existing solely to be interrupted by Hugh Jackman’s Logan. Here, Jean and Scott are simply shot and interact… like Jean and Scott, and Turner and Sheridan have chemistry.
But the scene-stealer during the opening sequence, before things get cosmic, remains Evan Peters’ Quicksilver. Once in space, the action sequence begins borrowing from the visuals of Gravity, complete with the rotating chaos of a disintegrating space shuttle (it’s been thrown into disarray by a passing solar flare). While the special effects we viewed were not finished, the concept includes a bit already teased in the Dark Phoenix teaser where the solar rays envelope and are then consumed by Jean Grey’s body, almost like the spirits of antiquity passing through Belloq in Raiders of the Lost Ark. Notably this does not appear to be the scene teased in the first images of Dark Pheonix from earlier in the year (Jean neither turns into the Phoenix in this scene or incinerates her clothes).
As a whole, these 13 minutes were an impressive corrector over the Dark Phoenix trailer from last month. Whereas that footage relied on the familiar narrative beats of the X-Men franchise as a whole, watching these scenes tonight gave me a much greater appreciation about what differences Dark Phoenix is bringing to the material. Other than Matthew Vaughn’s First Class, no X-Men movie I can recall has treated the X-Men as so simply and altruistically heroic, nor quite as attuned in their teamwork. Yet the emphasis on trying to create earnest suspense, even with brightly colored superheroes in space, also lets the movie stand somewhat apart from the familiar territory treaded by so many other superhero movies flooding the market right now.