In the year 2000, Marvel brought one of their most famous super hero teams to the big screen. The first "X-Men" film put comic book films on the map and eleven years later super hero movies are what have defined the last decade of cinema. Fans and critics alike were less enthusiastic about the third film in the X-Men Trilogy and even more critical about 2009's spin off film, "X-Men Origins: Wolverine." Now Marvel is going back to the beginning of the franchise that started it all. Does "X-Men: First Class" spark redemption for the world of mutants? Spoiler Alert...YES!
It's the 1960s, the world does not yet know mutants exist, and...Charles Xavier (James McAvoy) is a ladies man? Indeed, we get to see a side of the wise professor (portrayed in the original trilogy by Patrick Stewart) we have not seen before during his years at Oxford with his long-time friend, Raven (Jennifer Laurence) whom X-Men fans know as the shape-shifting mutant Mystique.
Soon the setting and mood changes and we are introduced to the metal moving mutant Erik Lehnsherr (Michael Fassbender). Lehnsherr is traveling across the world hunting down the remaining Nazi's responsible for cruel experiments forced upon him when he was a boy in a concentration camp. The primary target of Lehnsherr is a fellow mutant named Sebastian Shaw (Kevin Bacon) who shot Lehnsherr's mother before his eyes. Many know Lehnsherr better by his mutant alias Magneto.
Now Shaw is plotting for nuclear war by trying to increase the tension between the US and the Soviets, ultimately resulting in the Cuban Missile Crisis. In Lehnsherr's quest was Shaw, he meets Xavier who has agreed to help the C.I.A. track down Shaw before he succeeds in starting a third World War. With a similar goal, the two men agree to work together and form a team of mutants to combat Shaw and his Hellfire Club. But the beliefs and goals of Xavier and Lehnsherr are very different and though they do not know it, the mission they go on will come to draw the battle lines between Xavier's X-Men and Magneto's Brotherhood.
A big reason that the X-Men films are so good is because the films are very character driven. Even the sequel spent adequate time to further develop each of their characters and not just the leads. For "X-Men: First Class" character development is key to the plot. For the film to work, the audience needs to know and care about the two lead characters, Xavier and Lehnsherr. We need to know their past, what they believe, and what they care about because at it's heart "First Class" is a story of how two best friends become enemies. How will we care about this story if we don't understand the characters? Well don't worry, the film's major focus is not action but the characters. And like the original film, "First Class" develops almost all of the characters...not just the big ones. This makes the emotional climax very powerful and meaningful.
Another thumbs up goes to "First Class" for the superb acting by each member of the cast. For a day or so after seeing the film I debated which actor did the better job, McAvoy or Fassbender and I really had a hard time deciding. Each actor brings something different and unique to his character. But, my final decision is this..."X-Men: First Class" is Michael Fassbender's time to shine. The reason is because of the emotion he pours into Eric Lehnsherr. His eyes, his face, his words, his tears, everything about the character is filled with Fassbender's emotion. The film begins and ends with Magneto and he is really the main character of the film; if Fassbender didn't do his job well, "First Class" would not be a great as it is.
Another thing worth mentioning is the similarity "First Class" has with films from the James Bond series. Back when the movie was filming, director Matthew Vaughn (who gave us the super-hero riot "Kick Ass" back in 2009) said that one of his goals for "First Class" was to model it after a James Bond film and after seeing it I can say that he was pretty successful. The music, the suave leads, the abundance of attractive women, the fast-paced action scenes, even the closing credits parallel elements from Bond films.
I would talk about how awesome the action and the special effects are but I will let you discover that for yourself. The big things about "X-Men: First Class" are the acting, plot, and character development. They are what makes this such an outstanding film. "First Class" rivals even the first two X-Men films (some of the best super-hero films to date) for greatness. In fact, I will say that "First Class" is the best film Marvel has dished out in seven years (since "Spider-Man 2" and "X-Men 2" came out). I give it three and a half stars out of four.
"X-Men: First Class" has a running time of 132 minutes and is rated PG-13 for intense sequences of action and violence, some sexual content including brief partial nudity, and language.
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