X-Men 3 - the Last Stand
I certainly hope that X3 does not become a Star Trek 5: The Final
Frontier. Things like Last and Final should not take part in franchises
that leave themselves open to further storylines.
There are several classifications reviews for X3 fall into. But let's
start with the fun one first. The Fanboy Review. After dredging through
countless forums and comementaries the fanboy is typically irate about
several things in the movie. Their choral outcry of "why didn't you
read the comics before you spent $25 on that hack to write the
screenplay" is generally unanimous. As a fanboy myself I can comment
rather at length about the non-canonical directions X3 takes. But there
is no voice of soothing consolation to the fanboy out there. There isn't
someone saying anything about the fact that with so many iterations of
any given character that there are several easily adjusted versions of a
character that still make their creation canonical. There are over 13
different x-titles on the go at any given time, no fewer than 3 of them
involving the X-men themselves. The comic book has seen 5 different
decades. There have been over 100 writers for the different comics let
alone editors and pencilers. There have been 2 separate and completely
dissimilar cartoon series. So the gem of Cyttorak isn't what gives
Juggernaut his powers. Is that what makes him the Juggernaut? The
'ideal' version of Cyclops or even Wolverine is different dependant upon
the fanboy's preference of which version a writing team creates.
Adamantium or no-adamantium. Claws he had himself or adamantium steel
claws grafted to his forearms. The integral character remains the same,
however.
Closer inspection of fanboy disdain in reviews reveals that the fanboy
is upset because they have their favorite characters and those favorite
characters were not given enough screen time, treated different from how
they expected they would be, or acted in ways against how they felt the
character should act. It's funny to read the arguments rage between
those who like Halle Berry and those who like Storm. Generally
reviewers have lauded Halle Berry for her characterization and fanboys
have lamented Halle Berry's destruction of one of the most integral
X-Men characters. This reviewer doesn't believe Halle Berry is a
particularly powerful actress, but her performance as Storm in X3 was
the strongest of her work with the character yet. That being said, just
because an actor looks the part doesn't mean they will necessarily be
able to handle the part. It is my opinion that the acting was decent,
if only considered along a Halle Berry scale of acting.
Those mainstream writers and reviewers seem to have 'gotten' the movie
whether they liked it or disliked it. Universally the themes in the
movie were appreciated and considered current and important topics. Most
reviewers agree that the action is decent and the special effects are
impressive. But at a running time of 104 minutes and with mutant powers
exploding from the getgo right to the climax there develops some
confusion. It is here that those that didn't like the movie deviate
from those that did like the movie. Those that didn't like the movie
felt that with the number of themes, characters or action shots the
movie rushes too quickly for the general audience member to grasp or
retain much of what is going on. These negative reviewers, fanboys or
not, feel that lip service and only lipservice is paid to the majority
of the film sans Wolverine and Storm.
Will you enjoy this film? If you are a fanboy who idolizes Storm played
by Halle Berry, or a tried-and-true Wolverine addict then this movie is
for you. There is enough action and the characters you love will save
the day. For those of you fond for other mutants your appreciation of
the film will be diminished, lessened - but in the end this third part
follows closely on the heels of the other two and does bring about a
natural conclusion from the vision of the first two movies.
Nevertheless most fanboys have been discouraged by the movie in certain
veins because, even though some of their characters have been treated
well other character's decisions were, for them, lamentably
un-characterlike.
If you aren't a fanboy but have seen the other two films, I conjecture
you will probably enjoy yourself. The movie follows a natural course
the other two films set and continues to focus on those characters the
other two movies attended to.
My personal dissatisfaction with the movie comes from the fact that
though I see and comprehend this movie as an X-Men movie, I cannot help
but feel that it was not the X-Men movie I wanted to see. I acknowledge
the impossibility of that however; as I understand that with so many
incarnations of X-Men in comicdom there isn't a definitive for the
characters, their relationships or their origins. Even those things
that one believes are constants are, in fact, simply elements that a
reader is only most familiar with.
3.5 stars out of 4.
Kyle Gould is a University of Calgary Graduate in
English devoutly trying to make the 25,000 dollar piece of parchment
not just a glorified ink blot. Currently it would serve better as a
Rorschach test. Feel free to throw some ink his way at wkkgould@hotmail.com.