First class prequels are Hollywood mutants, crisply intelligent rather than trite – obligatory touchstones notwithstanding. X-Men: First Class surpasses that standard, rebooting a tired saga with fresh casting, well grounded plot devices and an engaging mix of resonant themes.
Marvel achieves this alchemy by putting a strong ensemble of stars in front of the behind-the-camera studs from Kick-Ass and Thor, two other smart superhero movies. As executive producing goes, that’s a lock.
Bring on the sequels! This class of X-Men are welcome back again and again.
Strong ensemble cast:
Watch for big name cameos from James Remar as a General, Ray Wise as the Secretary of State, Michael Ironside as a naval officer, Oliver Platt as a CIA sponsor of the X-Men, and of course Hugh Jackman as Wolverine. Much cheering for this last, since it is suggests that Jackman’s Wolverine will loom large in sequels with this cast.
Oh yeah, JFK and Khrushchev make important appearances via newsreel.
A Hall of Fame Holocaust scene opens the film, setting the hook deep into revenge fantasy territory and the pattern of playing off real world events. Kudos to writer-director Mathew Vaughn (he of Kick-Ass fame) and a team of terrific co-writers that includes Ashley Miller and Zack Stentz from Thor, and also Bryan Singer, who apparently brought his Nazi knowledge from Valkyrie to bear.
Engineered for fanboys, the movie features leering looks at the X-Hotties and some silly sexual frolicking. It also includes some brutally affecting violence, including a boy forced to watch his mother’s murder.
Conservation of Energy is the Law of Nature most abhorred by Comik Movies such as this.
Back in the real world, the movie takes as its grounding the Cuban Missile Crisis, suggesting that an evil genius fomented it, that there was a moral equivalence between the US and the USSR, and that superheroes were required to avert catastrophe. The reality is quite different, of course. A new profile of JFK’s first year in office, Berlin 1961, suggests that the young president’s weakness and naïveté in dealing with the Soviets set the stage for the Cuban Missile Crisis and much more. Where were the X-Men when we needed them?
Regarding BrianSez’s Review
“Kevin Bacon was da-Bomb.” Indeed.