X-Men: First Class

X-Men: First Class

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Matthew Vaughn
Produced by Gregory Goodman
Simon Kinberg
Lauren Shuler Donner
Bryan Singer
Screenplay by Ashley Edward Miller
Zack Stentz
Jane Goldman
Matthew Vaughn[1]
Story by Sheldon Turner
Bryan Singer[1]
Starring James McAvoy
Michael Fassbender
Rose Byrne
Oliver Platt
Kevin Bacon
Music by Henry Jackman
Cinematography John Mathieson
Editing by Eddie Hamilton
Lee Smith
Studio 20th Century Fox
Marvel Studios
Dune Entertainment
Marv Films
Bad Hat Harry Productions
Donners' Company
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) June 1, 2011 (2011-06-01) (United Kingdom)
June 3, 2011 (2011-06-03) (United States)
Running time 132 minutes[2]
Country United States
United Kingdom
Language English
German
Russian
Budget $140[3]–160[4] million
Box office $353,624,124[4]

X-Men: First Class is a 2011 American superhero film by Matthew Vaughn and produced by Bryan Singer, based on the X-Men characters appearing in Marvel Comics. The fifth installment in the X-Men series, the film acts as a prequel for the X-Men trilogy, being set primarily in 1962 during the Cuban Missile Crisis. It focuses on the relationship between Charles Xavier and Erik Lensherr and the origin of their groups, the X-Men and the Brotherhood of Mutants. The film stars James McAvoy as Xavier and Michael Fassbender as Lensherr. Other cast members include Kevin Bacon, January Jones, Rose Byrne, Jennifer Lawrence, Zoë Kravitz, Nicholas Hoult and Lucas Till.

Announced as early as 2006, First Class entered its production on August 2010, being finished just three weeks before its premiere on June 2011. Locations included Oxford, the Mojave desert and Georgia, with soundstage work in both Pinewood Studios and the 20th Century Fox stages in Los Angeles. The film received positive reviews, praising the writing and acting and considering First Class a fresh new beginning for the franchise, and was a box-office success with earnings of $353 million worldwide.

Contents

Plot

1944: At a World War II concentration camp in Poland, scientist Dr. Klaus Schmidt observes young Erik Lensherr bend a metal gate with his mind when the child is separated from his mother. In his office, Schmidt orders Lensherr to move a coin on a desk, killing his mother when he cannot; in grief and anger, Lensherr's magnetic power manifests, killing two guards and destroying the room.

At a mansion in Westchester County, New York, young telepath Charles Xavier meets young shape-shifter Raven. Overjoyed to meet someone else "different", he invites her to live with his family as his foster sister.

1962: A vengeful adult Lensherr is tracking down Schmidt, while in England, Oxford University graduate Xavier—with Raven in tow—is publishing his mutation thesis. In Las Vegas, CIA agent Moira MacTaggert follows U.S. Army Colonel Hendry into the Hellfire Club, where she sees Sebastian Shaw, the telepathic Emma Frost, and teleporting Azazel. Threatened by Shaw and teleported by Azazel to the War Room, Hendry advocates that the U.S. install nuclear missiles in Turkey. Shaw then kills Hendry—revealing himself as Schmidt and demonstrating his de-aging, energy-absorbing power.

MacTaggert, seeking Xavier's advice on mutation, convinces him and Raven to join her at the CIA, where they convince Director McCone mutants exist and Shaw is a threat. The unnamed "Man in Black Suit", another CIA executive, sponsors the mutants—inviting them to the CIA's secret "Division X" facility. Lensherr attacks Shaw; Xavier, locating Lensherr, stops him from drowning in pursuit of an escaping Shaw, and brings him to Division X—where they meet young scientist Hank McCoy, a prehensile-footed mutant, who promises Raven he will find a "cure" for their appearance. Xavier uses mutant-locating device Cerebro to find mutants to attempt to recruit against Shaw. He and Lensherr recruit stripper Angel Salvadore; also, taxi driver Armando Muñoz, Army prisoner Alex Summers, and Sean Cassidy—who code-name themselves Darwin, Havok, and Banshee, respectively—while Raven names herself Mystique. (They also recruit Wolverine, who profanely refuses.)

When Frost meets with a Soviet general in the USSR, Xavier and Lensherr capture her—and learn of Shaw's intentions to start World War III and trigger mutant ascendency. Meanwhile, Azazel, Riptide and Shaw attack Division X—killing everyone but the mutants, and offering them the chance to join him. Angel accepts; when Darwin fights back, Shaw kills him. With the facility destroyed, Xavier takes the mutants to train at his family mansion. McCoy devises protective uniforms and a stealth jet. In Moscow, Shaw compels the general to have the Soviet Union install nukes in Cuba. The Cuban Missile Crisis ensues, with U.S. President John F. Kennedy instituting a blockade to stop the tranfer of missiles to Cuba. Shaw, wearing a helmet that foils Xavier's telepathy, accompanies the Soviet fleet to ensure the missiles arrive.

Raven seduces Lensherr, who convinces her to embrace her mutant nature. She refuses McCoy's cure—and the cure backfires on McCoy, rendering him a leonine beast. Though ashamed of his new appearance, he pilots the mutants and MacTaggert to the blockade line. During the ensuing battle with Shaw, Lensherr takes Shaw's helmet, allowing Xavier to immobilize Shaw. Lensherr tells Shaw that he shares his exclusivist view of mutants—then adds, "but you killed my mother", and, despite Xavier's objections, kills Shaw by forcing his Nazi coin through his brain. Fearing the mutants, the fleets fire on them. In a struggle, Xavier keeps Lensherr from destroying the fleets with their own missiles. MacTaggert fires at Lensherr, and a deflected bullet hits Xavier in the spine. Lensherr, remorseful, leaves with Angel, Riptide, Azazel, and Mystique—who advises McCoy to "proudly" embrace his mutant nature.

A wheelchair-bound Xavier and the mutants return to the mansion, where he intends to open a school. MacTaggert promises never to reveal his location and they kiss; at the CIA later, she denies having any clear memory of recent events. Finally, Lensherr—wearing a uniform and the helmet, and calling himself Magneto—breaks Frost from confinement.

Cast

Hugh Jackman reprises his role as James "Logan" Howlett / Wolverine in an uncredited cameo in a bar, dismissing an approach by Xavier and Lensherr to join them. Jackman said he accepted the offer to appear because "it sounded perfect to me", particularly for Wolverine being the only character with a swear word. The cameo took about eight takes during a two hour shoot on the Fox Studios lot in Los Angeles and the actor changed his line in an ad-lib from "fuck off" to "go fuck yourself".[34]

Production

Development

In April 2006, one month before the release of X-Men: The Last Stand, writer Zak Penn revealed he was contracted to write and direct a spin-off.[35] He explained in 2007 that "the original idea was to have me do a young X-Men spin-off, a spin-off of the young X-Men characters. But someone came up with a pretty interesting idea [...] it was this guy who worked with me named Mike Chamoy, he worked a lot with me on X3. He came up with how to do a young X-Men movie which is not what you'd expect."[36] Penn compared the idea to the comic book series X-Men: First Class,[37] and Josh Schwartz was writing the screenplay in May 2008.[38] Schwartz's writing assignment also included the possibility of directing of X-Men: First Class,[39] but Fox approached Bryan Singer, director of X-Men and X2, in October 2009.[40] The original idea was to green-light the film depending on the success of X-Men Origins: Magneto,[41] but Singer added elements of the Magneto spin-off, merged into a new script by Jamie Moss.[40] Singer denied using Sheldon Turner's script for Magneto as inspiration to write his draft of First Class,[42] but the Writer's Guild of America arbitration still credited Turner for the film's story, while Moss and Schwartz's collaborations ended up uncredited.[43]

In addition to Moss, Ashley Edward Miller and Zack Stentz were hired to rewrite the script. Miller compared it tonally to Singer's work on the first two X-Men films.[44] Singer dropped out of the director's position in March 2010 due to his commitment to a Jack the Giant Killer adaptation. He formalized his duties from director to producer.[45][46] Matthew Vaughn signed on as Singer's replacement in May 2010. With his hiring, Fox announced a June 3, 2011 release date,[47] and Jane Goldman was hired for another rewrite.[48] Vaughn wanted to model X-Men: First Class after the 2009 Star Trek film, taking the franchise in a new direction with a fresh, young cast.[49] An action scene that was to have been set in a dream sequence with revolving rooms was scrapped after the release of Inception.[50] The 1960s setting of X-Men: First Class was technologically inspired by the James Bond films of that era, also adding to the international feel of the characters. The X-Men costumes looked much more as they did in the original comics compared with the first three films.[51]

Describing his thought process toward the material, Vaughn said he was motivated by "unfinished business" with Marvel, as he was involved with both X-Men: The Last Stand ("I was totally excited about doing X3 and basically co-wrote the script with [Simon] Kinberg and Zak Penn. We did that in six days together, and then storyboarded the whole movie ... and then, like an idiot, thought that I didn't have enough time to make the film I wanted, so I had to leave. I sort of regretted that ever since.")[52] and Thor ("I worked on the screenplay with Mark Protosevich and was beginning to start do concept work and stuff on it and then I realized that they weren’t going to commit to making it as quickly as I would have hoped for.").[53] When Fox invited Vaughn for the "chance to reboot X-Men and put your stamp all over it", he first thought the studio was joking, but he accepted due to the 1960s setting.[52] Vaughn declared that he was enthusiastic than with The Last Stand for not needing to keep on with somebody's work, but having the opportunity to "start fresh", declaring that "My main goal was to make as good a film that could stand on its own two feet regardless of all the other films. However, I thought anything that worked in all the other movies, and I could have some fun with nodding towards, I would. But my main rule was, You know what, we're trying to reboot and start a whole new X-Men franchise and therefore, making a film work on its own two feet was far more important than trying to be referential to the prior movies."[53] He said, "It's not like the other X-Men movies, which I think is important. I think they need to sort of take on a new... you know, what Batman Begins did for all those Batman movies? We bloody well need it. I'm not saying it's going to be as good as Batman Begins, but it's the same sort of attitude."[54] Goldman added the film was kind of an "alternate history" for the X-Men, saying that while rebooting he writers did not want to go fully "against the canon of the X-Men trilogy", comparing to the various approaches the comic had in over fifty years of publication.[55]

The film cost approximately $160 million to produce before tax breaks,[56] with the eventual cost around $140 million.[3]

Filming

Principal photography began on August 31, 2010, in Oxford, England, which included St Aldate's street and some of the University of Oxford's buildings, lasting for two days.[57] Production then moved to Pinewood Studios in Iver,[58] and to Georgia in October, including Jekyll Island, Thunderbolt and Savannah,[59] after sites in Louisiana, North Carolina[60] and West Michigan were considered.[61] Jekyll Island was chosen over Tybee Island after a producer reviewed the locations on Google Earth and thought the water near Jekyll looked more blue.[60] Palm trees were buried into the island's sand so it would look more like a tropical beach, but the cold weather caused many of the palm trees to become brown or die only days into the shoot, necessitating significant digital color correction from the visual effects team.[21] Additional location shooting took place in Russia.[51] A section of the plot is set in the Argentine coastal city of Villa Gesell, but was filmed elsewhere in the country.[17][62] Washington, D.C., the Mojave Desert and Fox's stages in Los Angeles also served as locations.[17] The main part of production ended in December, but additional photography continued into April 2011, leaving only three weeks to finish the film before its scheduled premiere in June.[63] The tight schedule due to Fox setting a release date which needed to be met lead Vaughn to declare that he "never worked under such time pressure".[64]

Vaughn said he shot the film in anamorphic "to create a widescreen experience, which is emblematic of '60s movies, such as the James Bond films". Visual effects supervisor Matt Johnson added that for the lighting of the digital interior of Cerebro, "keeping with the '60s vibe, we put in some old school elements such as lens flare and chromatic aberration and edge fringing."[17] The aesthetics of the decade were also invoked by designers Simon Clowes and Kyle Cooper of Prologue Films, who were responsible for the end credits and tried to do something that "could be done with traditional optical". The credits animation depicts DNA strands through simple geometric shapes, drawing inspiration from both Saul Bass and Maurice Binder's work in the Bond films.[65]

Effects

First Class employed 1,150 shots of visual effects,[11] which were done by six companies:[17] Rhythm & Hues was responsible for Emma Frost, Mystique and Angel, as well as set extensions; Cinesite handled Azazel, the visuals for Cerebro and environment effects; Luma Pictures did Banshee, Havok and Darwin; Moving Picture Company did Beast, Riptide, and the scene where Shaw's yacht is destroyed and he escapes in a submarine; Digital Domain created Sebastian Shaw's powers, and Weta Digital was responsible for the climatic battle in Cuba.[21] The overall coordination was provided by visual effects designer John Dykstra, who said the biggest difficulty was the tight schedule - "It was slightly less than a year and I've never done anything like that before (Spider-Man was frequently two years)."[11] British company 4dMax employed special 3D scanners to digitize data of the sets and actors which would be used by the effects companies.[17] This allowed for computer-generated sets such as the mirrored nuclear reactor where Magneto battles Shaw -[11] to which the effects team used the mirror maze fight in Enter the Dragon as a reference - and the dome lab walls of Cerebro. Digital models of Washington and Moscow were also created based on photographs of the actual cities,[21] with the Russian one in particular having vehicles and military hardware based on videos of a 1962 Red Square, and a digital army doing an actual Soviet-style march. With the exception of scenes featuring the actors on ships - shot in a small bridge set - and the X-Jet - done on a set replicating the front two-thirds of the aircraft, which was mounted atop a roller wheel so it could be spinned - the naval battle was entirely digital, featuring a simulated ocean and high resolution 3D models of the X-Jet, Shaw's submarine and 16 warships. The designs were mostly based on real vehicles, with the jet being a modified SR-71 Blackbird, the submarine a combination of various models from the 1940s and 50s, and replicas of the actual US and USSR fleets in the 1960s - though a few were not in service in 1962, and a certain Soviet cruiser was a larger version of the Kresta I and II, leading Weta to dub it the Kresta III.[17] Practical effects were still used whenever possible, such as having most of the objects young Erik throws after his mother shot actually on location, actors and stuntmen being dangled from wires, and using real explosions and light effects as reference for Havok's beams.[9]

Music

Henry Jackman wrote the score, which draws inspiration from John Barry's work in the James Bond films as "Matthew saw Magneto as an early James Bond, we wanted to update that Barry-esque feeling for our 21st-century". Jackman started his work with a "Superman-style theme", which is only featured in the final parts of the film as Vaughn thought it was too "successful and triumphant" for a disjointed and up-and-coming team. So for the reminder of the film, Vaughn reworked the theme into a stretched version in half time. The themes for Magneto and Shaw have similarities to reflect their "perverted father-son" relationship, with even a seamless transition during the scene where Shaw is killed to represent Lensherr's full transformation into Magneto.[66][67] The British band Take That provided the film's official song, "Love Love", played during the end credits. Frontman Gary Barlow said that the song was picked by Vaughn - who had previously featured the band's song "Rule The World" in Stardust - during a visit to Barlow's house, as the director "felt it summed up the tone of the movie."[68]

Reception

Box office

The premiere for X-Men: First Class happened at the Ziegfeld Theatre in New York City, on May 25 2011.[69] A week later, on June 3, the film had its wide opening. In North America, the film opened on approximately 6,900 screens at 3,641 locations, debuting atop the weekend box office with earnings of $55.1 million across the three days,[70][71] including $3.37 million at its Friday midnight launch.[72] This opening was much lower than the opening weekends of X-Men: The Last Stand ($102.7 million), X2: X-Men United ($85.5 million), and X-Men Origins: Wolverine ($85.0 million), but it was slightly higher than the original film ($54.5 million).[71] Executives at 20th Century Fox said they achieved their goal by opening with about the same numbers as the first X-Men film and that it was an excellent start to a new chapter of the franchise.[70] First Class also opened 8,900 locations in 74 overseas markets, which brought in $61 million during the weekend - standing third in the overseas ranking behind Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides and The Hangover Part II. The film opened atop the box office in twenty countries, with the biggest grosses being in the United Kingdom ($9 million, including previews), France ($7.1 million), Mexico ($5 million), South Korea ($5.4 million ) and Australia ($5.1 million).[73] In its second weekend X-Men: First Class dropped 56.2%, the second smallest second weekend drop in the franchise behind X-2: X-Men United (53.2%), and came in with an estimated $24.1 million, in second place to Super 8.[74] Overseas, it raised to number two behind Kung Fu Panda 2, with $42.2 million.[75]

The film grossed $146,408,305 in the United States and Canada as well as $207,215,819 internationally, bringing its worldwide total to $353,624,124.[4]

Critical response

The film has received strongly positive reviews, with the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes showing 87% freshness and a rating of 7.4/10 from 231 reviews counted as of November 15, 2011, the consensus being "With a strong script, stylish direction, and powerful performances from its well-rounded cast, X-Men: First Class is a welcome return to form for the franchise."[76] On Metacritic, the film received 65 out of 100 based on 37 reviews.[77]

Before May 24, the movie was screened for Internet film critics. Brendan Connelly of BleedingCool.com said it "contains some of the briskest and most efficient storytelling I've seen in any recent blockbuster. An awful lot happens, and awfully quickly at times, but it's all clear and while some nice moments might be over in the blink of an eye, this can only reward repeat viewers."[78] Den of Geek's Michael Leader said that "despite all the ropey posters and off-putting promo material, X-Men: First Class manages to be a summer movie with something to say. Let's just hope they don’t run this one into the ground, too, because I dread seeing an X-Men: Economy Class down the line."[79] However, Simon Miraudo of Quickflix.com was less favorable, stating that "just when [Vaughn] starts to have a little fun, you can practically feel him pull back, lest he get too campy or weird."[80]

Among the major trade publications, Tod McCarthy of The Hollywood Reporter described the film as "audacious, confident and fueled by youthful energy", and said that "director Vaughn impressively maintains a strong focus dedicated to clarity and dramatic power ... and orchestrates the mayhem with a laudable coherence, a task made easier by a charging, churning score by Henry Jackman...."[81] Justin Chang of Variety said the film "feels swift, sleek and remarkably coherent", and that "the visual effects designed by John Dykstra are smoothly and imaginatively integrated...."[82] Frank Lovece of Film Journal International lauded "a wickedly smart script with a multilayered theme that ... never loses sight of its ultimate story, and makes each emotional motivation interlock, often shockingly playing for keeps with its characters. This is not a kids' movie, unless your kid is comfortable with an opening ten-minute sequence set in a harrowing World War II concentration camp and told entirely in subtitled German."[83]

In consumer publications, Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly lauded "the kind of youthful, Brit-knockabout pop energy director Matthew Vaughn absorbed from his previous collaborations as producer of director Guy Ritchie's bloke-y larks", and found McAvoy and Fassbender "a casting triumph. These two have, yes, real star magnetism, both individually and together: They're both cool and intense, suave and unaffected, playful and dead serious about their grand comic-book work."[84] Peter Howell of the Toronto Star called it "a blockbuster with brains" and said Vaughn "brings similar freshness to this comic creation as he did to Kick-Ass, and manages to do so while hewing to the saga's serious dramatic intent."[85] However, Betsy Sharkey of the Los Angeles Times bemoaned its "misplaced and misplayed ambition", and felt that its "moments of greatness ... are fleeting, ultimately undone by a frustrating mire of multiple plots, overreaching special effects, leaden ancillary players and world-ending military standoffs that have all the tension of a water balloon fight."[86] Roger Ebert, straddling, called it "high-tech and well-acted" but merely "competent weekend entertainment. It is not a great comic book movie."[87]

Awards and nominations

Year of ceremony Award Category Recipient(s) Result
2011 NewNowNext Awards Next Must See Movie Nominated
National Board of Review Awards[88] Spotlight Award Michael Fassbender (Also for Shame, A Dangerous Method, and Jane Eyre) Won
Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards Best Actor Michael Fassbender (Also for Shame, A Dangerous Method, and Jane Eyre) Won
2011 Teen Choice Awards[89] Choice Movie Breakout: Female Jennifer Lawrence Nominated
Choice Movie Breakout: Female Zoë Kravitz Nominated
Choice Movie Villain Kevin Bacon Nominated
Choice Movie Chemistry Film Nominated
Choice Movie: Sci-Fi/Fantasy Film Nominated
2011 Scream Awards[90] The Ultimate Scream Film Nominated
Best Scream-Play Film Nominated
Best Fantasy Movie Film Won
Best Director Matthew Vaughn Nominated
Best Fantasy Actor James McAvoy Nominated
Best Fantasy Actor Michael Fassbender Nominated
Best Fantasy Actress Jennifer Lawrence Nominated
Best Villain Kevin Bacon Nominated
Best Superhero James McAvoy Nominated
Breakout Performance: Female Zoë Kravitz Nominated
Breakout Performance: Male Michael Fassbender Nominated
Best Cameo Hugh Jackman Won
Best Ensemble Film Nominated
Best Comic Book Movie Film Nominated
2012 2012 People's Choice Awards[91] Favorite Action Movie Film Pending
Favorite Ensemble Movie Cast Pending
Favorite Movie Superhero Jennifer Lawrence Pending
Favorite Movie Superhero James McAvoy Pending
Central Ohio Film Critics Association Awards[92] Actor of the Year Michael Fassbender (Also for Shame, A Dangerous Method, and Jane Eyre) Pending

Home media

X-Men: First Class was released on DVD and Blu-ray September 9, 2011 in the US, and in the UK on October 31, 2011.[93] The home release topped the sales charts in both the United States [94] with approximately 385,000 units - [95] the Blu-ray version holding sixty-percent of this total -[96]- and the UK, with 150,000 units.[97]

Potential sequel

Fox envisions X-Men: First Class as the first film of a new trilogy.[46]

Notes

  1. ^ The onscreen credits spell the character's name as "Lensherr". However, previous X-Men films, the film's official website and the Marvel Comics web page for the character spell the name "Lehnsherr".

References

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