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Post by BigPapaJoe on Mar 2, 2017 8:41:39 GMT -5
So I saw the film. I was wondering for those who have seen it, what did you think? I thought the movie was well done, and the story was fairly good. I cared about what happened to those that were involved, however the ending left me conflicted in regards to Logan's character arc these past 17 years. I know there have obviously been some bumps in the road as far as continuity goes, but Logan has always been that tragic character to me. I just thought he would at least get a little piece of the pie when this was all over for all the crap he's had to go through. But...nope. I just had the feeling that if he had gotten through this escapade he would eventually gotten involved in something else and the same fate would have occurred. There are other questions that probably won't be answered, but I guess that isn't as important since this was Logan's story after all. So, good movie, but I just thought it was missing the Midas touch so to speak.
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Post by Warmonger on Mar 4, 2017 1:30:13 GMT -5
Just saw it
Holy hell
Jackman is stabbing dudes in the face front, right and center.
Patrick Stewart is probably guaranteed to get a Best Supporting Actor nomination.
And the little girl was really great as X-23 to boot.
This blows away any of the Nolan Batman flicks IMO. And I spoke much hyperbole in retrospect about Civil War being the best superhero movie. This stomps it and every MCU or DC adaptation.
And it really doesn't even feel that much like a superhero movie. More like a balls to the wall, badass modern western with some comic book/sci-fi elements.
9/10 and I already pre-ordered the blu-ray
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Post by Deleted on Mar 5, 2017 22:11:05 GMT -5
My wife and I saw this this afternoon. Both loved it. It may challenge the top of my list for favorite Marvel movie despite the violence and language (which for the most part I didn't think were integral to the story-the fight scenes would have been just as powerful and effective with more left to the imagination in terms of blood and body parts, but no so bad as to be gratuitous, they left the gratuitousness for the brief nudity scene in the limousine in the film). Well written, well acted, and a powerful character driven story. I didn't mind the level of violence and language, but for me they were more of a distraction from the story than an attraction drawing me to the film (but then I am of the old school Hitchcock show them less and affect them more school of thought when it comes to these types of elements in film-the audience's imagination is usually more powerful and awful than anything you can show on screen). For example, the most horrifying and most effective scene for me in all the fight scenes was the death of Pierce as he was on the ground surrounded by all he mutant kids each using their power and him being engulfed by the grass and other power effects. We didn't see any blood or flying body parts, but the cut scenes from the horror in his eyes to the anger/glee in the kids faces drove that scene home making it more powerful and effective than all the stabby stabby slicey dicey blood and body parts fight scenes. Sometimes there is little things that just throw you for a loop and I was doing fine until the little kid was standing next to Logan's grave holding the Wolverine action figure , that's when all the emotions of the film just came crashing down on me. My wife, however, was tearing up through most of the film (of the two of us, she's the bigger X-Men fan). -M
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Post by Deleted on Mar 10, 2017 10:02:17 GMT -5
I got to see Logan last night... Wow! Dark and gritty and nothing like any other X-Men movie, but absolutely brilliant. Why are not people talking about this movie everywhere? This is how the other Wolverine movies should have been!
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Mar 10, 2017 10:32:06 GMT -5
I got to see Logan last night... Wow! Dark and gritty and nothing like any other X-Men movie, but absolutely brilliant. Why are not people talking about this movie everywhere? This is how the other Wolverine movies should have been! Yeah, there doesn't seem to be a lot of buzz about it... but all the critics I've read were very positive, so there's that.
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Post by Warmonger on Mar 10, 2017 11:45:03 GMT -5
Gonna check it out again this weekend
First movie since the original Jurassic Park that I'll have revisited in the theater.
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Post by Roquefort Raider on Mar 10, 2017 11:53:52 GMT -5
Gonna check it out again this weekend First movie since the original Jurassic Park that I'll have revisited in the theater. Mine was Raiders of the lost ark... until that pesky Rogue one.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 11, 2017 19:27:10 GMT -5
I just saw it and what every said about it is true to the letter and I was stunned by the ferocity of X-23 (little girl) and I was shocked by her own brutality.
This is Wolverine at it's very best.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 20, 2017 11:13:32 GMT -5
Just watched it - first X-Men film that's really good all the way through. All the others had major weaknesses, but this one was a stormer, with some cracking performances. I agree that it's miles better than the Nolan Batflicks, but then I'm not a fan of those, so it's not much of a compliment from me - right up there with the best of the Marvel flicks, and might well be the new standard to which the rest aspire.
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Post by Warmonger on Mar 23, 2017 10:31:05 GMT -5
What an awesome opening scene
(NSFW...obviously)
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shaxper
CCF Site Custodian
Posts: 22,870
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Post by shaxper on Mar 26, 2017 20:26:47 GMT -5
Holy sh**
Saw this today, and it blew me away. It hit me particularly hard as I feel many parallels with Logan right now -- that adamantium bullet in the pocket but a child who needs you -- but the film is just an all out masterpiece. I'm a die hard Next Gen fan and Shakespeare fan, so I've seen all of Patrick Stewart's finest acting moments, but this trumped them all, and Jackman and the girl were equally stunning. Fox has never been comfortable with the superhero genre; I find myself discussing that a lot in my X-Men film review thread. With Deadpool, they succeeded by making the genre overtly silly and tongue and cheek. Here they run in the opposite direction entirely. This is a drama, only loosely bearing a resemblance to any kind of licensed superhero property. Honestly, Jackman's Wolverine here reminded me more of Bill Bixby's Incredible Hulk than anything he'd done with Logan previously, and that was a television series that was only superhero-related in the absolute loosest of ways.
I cried A LOT during that film. Not just a tear or two; hard core crying, and I still choke up when thinking about certain parts again.
Minor details with the film:
- The X-23 kids are exactly as dangerous or as helpless as the script needs them to be at any given point. In the beginning, Laura can take down an entire squad of soldiers that are armed to the teeth. By the final act, the entire X-23 gang is running helplessly from a gang of abductors that has only a few more people than them and doesn't appear nearly as well armed.
- How did the other kids get to Eden? No adults present other than Logan.
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Post by Warmonger on Mar 26, 2017 21:48:13 GMT -5
Holy sh** Saw this today, and it blew me away. It hit me particularly hard as I feel many parallels with Logan right now -- that adamantium bullet in the pocket but a child who needs you -- but the film is just an all out masterpiece. I'm a die hard Next Gen fan and Shakespeare fan, so I've seen all of Patrick Stewart's finest acting moments, but this trumped them all, and Jackman and the girl were equally stunning. Fox has never been comfortable with the superhero genre; I find myself discussing that a lot in my X-Men film review thread. With Deadpool, they succeeded by making the genre overtly silly and tongue and cheek. Here they run in the opposite direction entirely. This is a drama, only loosely bearing a resemblance to any kind of licensed superhero property. Honestly, Jackman's Wolverine here reminded me more of Bill Bixby's Incredible Hulk than anything he'd done with Logan previously, and that was a television series that was only superhero-related in the absolute loosest of ways. I cried A LOT during that film. Not just a tear or two; hard core crying, and I still choke up when thinking about certain parts again. Minor details with the film: - The X-23 kids are exactly as dangerous or as helpless as the script needs them to be at any given point. In the beginning, Laura can take down an entire squad of soldiers that are armed to the teeth. By the final act, the entire X-23 gang is running helplessly from a gang of abductors that has only a few more people than them and doesn't appear nearly as well armed. - How did the other kids get to Eden? No adults present other than Logan. That ending shot is absolute perfection They couldn't have given Wolverine/Jackman a better sendoff if they tried. I've already seen it twice, and hell, I might just go see it a 3rd time before it leaves theaters. The action and violence feels like a throwback to the Paul Verhoeven Robocop/Total Recall days. And the drama was as hard hitting as you could possibly hope for in a superhero film.
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Post by Warmonger on Mar 27, 2017 10:54:07 GMT -5
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Post by spoon on Apr 9, 2017 9:05:43 GMT -5
Patrick Stewart is probably guaranteed to get a Best Supporting Actor nomination. He should, but I doubt he will. Academy voters seem to have a reluctance to admit great performance can occur in super-hero and sci-fi films. Heath Ledger's win in The Dark Knight and Sigourney Weaver in Aliens are just about the only exceptions.
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Post by Warmonger on May 23, 2017 13:43:03 GMT -5
The wife said my blu-ray was delivered to the house about 2 hours ago. Counting down the minutes until I get off work and can go home and watch it again.
And to my surprise, evidently a black and white version is included! Awesome!
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