The final film in the
other X-Men series that started so smartly with “First Class” may not have the
high emotions (and difficulty) of “Avengers: Endgame” recently but still ends
in its own special way.
Aside from a lot of the
reviews, “Dark Phoenix” is an exciting climax to this specific series of Marvel
characters, both improving on “X-Men: Apocalypse,” while also eliminating the
memory of the lowest “X-Men: The Last Stand” (which also took the Chris
Claremont/John Byrne’s 1980 Dark Phoenix series as their inspiration).
It’s nowhere near being
one of the best in the franchise (Days of Future Past, X2 or the previous
mentioned First Class) but it does bring a nice method of closure that has its
own type of emotions. Disney now has the rights of Fox along with the MCU, and
there is that sad feeling of losing actors of the talent of Michael Fassbender
and James McAvoy, who won’t have any future roles.
Rob Carnevale said in
his review, “Set in 1992, the film finds the X-Men going all Thunderbirds and
heading into space at the request of the US President to rescue the crew of a
stricken space shuttle.” However, while they are able to save all the
astronauts, one of the mutants, Jean Grey, played by Sophie Turner, absorbs all
the cosmic force that was going to obliterate the shuttle, giving her even more
strength that she had before.
As she has difficulty
having this control, her past comes back to trigger this, resulting in violent
amounts of anger that puts the lives of her close ones in series danger.
Carnevale notes, “If
there’s a major flaw in writer-director Simon Kinberg’s film it’s that it
attempts to fit in a lot in a relatively short space of time for a modern
superhero film. Where the likes of The Avengers have had anywhere between two
and a half to three hours to wrap things up, Dark Phoenix unfolds in under two.”
Carnevale continues, “It
means that Kinberg has less time to juggle the action with the emotion and only
really offers fleeting moments of psychological exploration. Grey’s internal
battle, as she tries to make sense of her own troubled past, is perhaps played
a little too quickly and doesn’t give Turner enough to work with to create a
genuinely gut-wrenching emotional arc. But there is still enough to make her
journey worth taking.”
Meanwhile, McAvoy shows
just how great an actor he is by doing a lot by doing so little. Carnevale
notes, “His Charles Xavier in this film is a shell of his former self – a
leader prone to drinking and egotistic risk-taking, who finds himself at odds
with his own ‘family’ at several points. There is arguably more of a journey
for him to go on in this film, and McAvoy grasps the opportunity, albeit with
less screen time than usual.”
Fassbender’s Magneto,
despite being turned into a side character, remains as cool and mysterious as usual,
while Kinberg does well to give most of the characters a moment in the spotlight – if not
emotionally for everyone, then at least during the film’s climactic fight on a
train where they get to show off their super powers.
Mentioning that, a
final scene between Fassbender and McAvoy is nicely seen and beautifully
played, ending with it that sense of emotion that we’re definitely saying
goodbye to two old friends.
Carnevale said, “Another
plus is how X-Men: Dark Phoenix also delivers some genuinely rousing set
pieces, most of which revolve around Grey and her powers. But an early
confrontation in the suburbs is well handled and delivers one of the film’s few
genuine shocks, as is a confrontation between Grey and Magneto in New York.”
The final train fight,
where the film’s main villain, played by Jessica Chastain, plays a main role,
is similarly well set up, though without the sense of danger that maybe made
the climax of “Avengers: Endgame” such a great example.
Carnevale said, “Hence,
while falling short of that kind of classic status, Dark Phoenix still deserves
to be celebrated on its own merits. It does bring a decent sense of closure, it
excites on a visceral level, and it still manages – albeit on a smaller scale –
to explore some weighty and relevant issues: feminism is touched upon [albeit
glibly], while the metaphor for the X-Men as outsiders or people who may be
viewed as different is relatable and highly relevant.”
Seeing the downhill
slope that this franchise looked like it was going in following “X-Men:
Apocalpyse,” Kinberg has created something of a Phoenix-like rise of his own
to satisfy that fans, if not critics, can say goodbye to McAvoy, Fassbender, Turner,
Jennifer Lawrence, Nicholas Hoult, Tye Sheridan, Alexandra Shipp, Kodi
Smit-McPhee, Evan Peters and the rest.
I don’t agree with the critics
on this movie. It’s not as bad as everyone is saying it is. I personally think
this movie did a better job with the Phoenix story than “X-Men: The Last Stand,”
it was slow with a lot of dialogue instead of relying on so much action (which
is a nice welcome), and the mutants that were in this movie all did their part
instead of standing around doing nothing, which a lot of these movies were
guilty of doing. Personally, I think this is still a good movie, even if I do
think this may be one of the lower ones in the franchise. So I will give this
film the benefit of the doubt and rate it with a 9. Don’t listen to the
critics, go see the movie and judge for yourself.
Thank you for joining
in on my review today, stay tuned this Friday for the finale of “Parody Month.”
I wasn't sure how I felt about this film, but you convinced me the haters were wrong. Love checking out these superhero movies reviews.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, and thank you for reading my superhero movie reviews
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