*Disclaimer: Bryan Singer again. This was the
first film of his that I ever saw, and I really loved it. Singer is one whose
films I have a hard time watching now, and, since X2 is the film I probably have the fondest memories of, it’s the
one that was the biggest bummer to lose. Obviously, the worst thing about
predators like Singer, by far, is what they did to their victims, but another
thing about them that sucks is that their crimes retroactively taint things I
really liked.*
I’d say this is probably still my favorite X-Men movie. Days of Future Past is pretty darn good, and that Quicksilver scene is a thing of beauty, but for me, United is where it’s at. It has some great action sequences and pretty decent character work, and the stakes feel real and immediate throughout.
An
attack on the White House by an assailant bearing the slogan “Mutant Freedom
Now” spurs a host of new anti-mutant measures, both in the legislature and
through less official channels.
Professor X’s school is set upon by those intent on harming the
students, forcing many on the run or into hiding. In order to combat the new opponent rising up
against them, the X-Men form an uneasy alliance with Magneto and his
mutant-superiority supporters.
Foremost
for me, this movie has such a “lived-in” feel.
For maybe the only time in the franchise, the school really, genuinely
feels like an actual school for mutants.
The characters use their powers for the big stuff, obviously, but they
also use them for little, everyday things that people with powers would do in
real life. I love these casual moments,
like a nameless student using his technopathy to channel-surf, or Bobby cooling
Wolverine’s drink with his freezing powers.
We also get more exploration of the personal and/or social impact of
being a mutant – there’s a difficult coming-out scene, and (awesome) new
character Nightcrawler has a neat conversation with Mystique regarding their
physical abnormalities.
The
action is pretty topnotch. The opening
scene – Nightcrawler’s attempt to assassinate the President – remains the X-Men
gold standard for me, and I love the big prison break and Wolverine’s climactic
fight. Apart from that there are a lot
of other good, tactical uses of mutant powers in action scenes. I especially like the attack on the school,
where we see a varied range of defenses, and the film culminates in a nice
tag-team effort.
A few
new cast members of note here. I’ve
already mentioned Nightcrawler a few times, and Alan Cumming is just
great. With relatively limited
screentime, he conveys the loneliness, exploitation, and guilt Nightcrawler has
experienced due to his mutant genes.
Also, both he and his powers look amazing! Bobby and Rogue’s friend John (a.k.a. Pyro)
is technically in the first movie,
but there, he’s more of a one-off sight gag than a character. In this film, he gets actual characterization
and a new actor, none other than Aaron Stanford (Birkhoff on Nikita and Cole on 12 Monkeys.) I was
interested in John and his fraught character journey, thanks in large part to
Stanford’s performance, back when I first saw United, and now that I’m a much bigger fan of Stanford’s other work,
the character grabs me even more.
Finally, we have non-mutant scientist William Stryker. I’ve liked Bryan Cox ever since seeing him in
Kings, and here, as always, he’s
reliably good.
Warnings
Comic
book violence, language, brief sexual content (including naked Mystique,) and
thematic elements.
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