Super Mutants Everyone Can Relate To: The X-Men
The Cast of Freaks and Femme Fatales The noble Prof. X (Stewart) and his X-Men are the heroes, while the
villains are lead by Magneto (McKellan) and comprise the Brotherhood
of Evil Mutants. Heading up the Brotherhood is Sabertooth (Tyler Mane),
a brutal beast-like being with the strength of seventy men. Mystique
(Rebecca Romijn-Stamos) serves as the team's shape changing sentinel
of sin, while finally, Toad (Ray Park), with his high-hopping abilities,
marks the dim-witted good soldier for the evil side. The original
X-Men team of Cyclops, Jean Grey, Angel, Beast and Iceman were not
the team chosen for the comic's first mission into theatres.
This cinematic X-Men team, guided by Prof. X, consists of Cyclops
(James Marsden), the young general. Jean Grey (Famke Janssen), one
of the most powerful telepaths and telekintics in the world, who also
plays the love interest for Cyclops. Rogue (Paquin), who is a young
mutant, and the African American weather-controlling mutant, Storm
(Berry), who is the proper allegory between the hatred for the mutants
and racial bigotry. The final X-Men member, Wolverine (Hugh Jackson),
with unbreakable metal claws, an ability to heal quickly and the furious
temper of a wild animal, surfaces as the center character to The
X-Men movie tale.
It is these characters that everyone involved in the new feature
film hope will compel moviegoers as they do comic book fans. Producer
Lauren Shuler Donner states, "The characters are the reason X-Men
has been such a popular comic for over 30 years. There are so
many great heroes and villains within the series that one of the toughest
parts of developing the film was choosing the characters on which
to focus." Many meetings and conferences between the filmmakers
and writers where held to determine the proper balance of characters
for the tale they wanted to tell. The film is a completely original
tale that did not happen in The X-Men comic book universe (even
though Marvel has released comic book prequels to explain the movie's
discrepancies to picky fans). However, both Avi Arad and Lee have
stated the film is true to the characters and themes of the comic
book world.
When asked about the film's central hero, Lee brags in classic
comic book granger, "Wolverine is one of the most compelling
characters in comicdom, maybe even fiction." In the feature,
Wolverine comes to the school for gifted children to be trained by
Prof. X. He's a loner and swiftly locks horns with the wise professor
and elder students. "He's an anti-hero hero," Lee says.
"People always love anti-heroes. You know he's got a good
heart deep down, but he's rough and tough and rebellious and
unpredictable. He's powerful yet vulnerable. And you take a combination like that and you have a character that audiences love."
This
combination has made the Canadian-born crusader one of the most popular
of all the X-Men. Numerous comic book series and specials have been
based on the gruff guardian of mutated youths. In the comic world,
this loner has always had a soft spot for tormented teens, taking
on young female sidekicks like Jubilee (which comic book fans might
see glimpses of in the film's version of Rogue). The struggle
between his tough exterior and gentle heart is a classic characterization
much like other popular movie heroes like the Terminator, Rocky and
every single character John Wayne ever played. He could be called
a modern cowboy torn between his life as a lone drifter and doing
the right thing. Arad describes Wolverine as symbolizing the "objective
part of being a mutant. Initially he doesn't care and then he
understands you cannot stand on the side. You have to take a point
of view. You have to decide which way the world is going."
In The X-Men feature, the way the world is going pivots between
two opposite philosophies: mutants living peacefully with humanity
vs. mutants, as the next step in human evolution, ruling the human
race. The characters Prof. X and Magneto represent these two polar
points of view. Prof. X and his X-Men fight for peace among mutants
and humans even though humanity resists at every turn. Magneto, with
his power of magnetism, and his Brotherhood feel that survival of
the fittest means the fit mutants should rule the weaker humans. Magneto
shunned by humanity sets out to rule it. Like many isolationist groups
in the world today, Magento views mutants as the superior race and
the rightful heirs to the world. Whereas, Prof. X feels educating
the general population will bring about harmony.

























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