Yeah it’s not bad. It was fun
to watch and just about gets to the quality level of X-Men and X2, which I
suppose is something we should all be happy about in light of the third X-men
installment and that other Wolverine film.
There are a good amount of
stupid moments:
“what was done to me – what I
am can’t be undone” - err yeah it can,
remember that third X-Men film where they figured out how to remove your
mutation? You were there, the events haunt you to this day…
On that point, framing the
film in Logan’s emotional trauma following the events of “The Last Stand” is
probably the best part of this film. The Last Stand suffered mainly because it
lacked any kind of focus and “Origins” was just a shameless cash-in. Making
this film about Wolverine recovering from the events of the third X-Men
installment, gives it a meaning that goes beyond “let’s have a big fight.”
Also, making Wolverine an
emotionally vulnerable character is the way to go. X2 gave the impression that
Wolverine was so traumatised by the event of being filled with Adimantium, that
he suppressed the memories of who he was. Of course this was changed by
“Origins” which asked us to swallow that Wolverine lost his memory as a result
of shot in the head, causing damage to the memory centre of his brain…to
digress slightly from this review, that makes no sense. His power is to heal
from anything and you’re saying that destroying a particular section of his
brain will erase his memories.
If he can heal his physical
body from anything to restore it to the condition it was in before and there is
a physical part of his brain where his memories are stored, then destroying it
wouldn’t do anything. It would heal and be exactly the same as it was before,
memories and all.
Saying that Logan was so
emotionally damaged by certain events of his life is a far more plausible a way
of him becoming the Wolverine that we see in X-Men and all the films that
follow it. It’s also an important message about people; even those who are
literally invincible can be destroyed when something horrific enough is done to
them.
This is exactly what “The
Wolverine” does and it moves to get the character back on track, in time for “Days
of Future Past.”
So anyway, it’s alright, not
great by any stretch of the imagination, but alright, which will do after the
last Wolverine-centric films.
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