strength

Jeffery 2022-03-22 09:01:11

I think this movie is very well made. It mainly talks about mutants. Mutants are a powerful group, and most humans are afraid of them. I can divide this movie into three factions, one is Professor X’s X-Men, one is Magneto, and the other is Human Government. I am very impressed by the three shots. One is in the third episode of the true story. Human scientists have developed an antidote for Gene X, which can turn mutants into ordinary humans, and then some mutants will come to ask for this. A kind of antidote, and some mutants came to march and said, "We don’t need an antidote!" The other was what Professor X said to Jin in the runaway before his death, "You have a very powerful force, it’s you Did you control the power? Or did the power control you?” There is another scene where Professor X and Magneto were training in the first battle. He said to Magneto that “True power is not anger, but Between peace and anger." I think this series of films interprets a very good question, and that is the nature of power. Power can give us strength, or it can lead us to destruction, and power can make others fearful. With fear, war will inevitably occur. I think Professor X has played a leading role in this movie. He makes the power peaceful and can guide others. In this movie, he is a sacred symbol. Magneto is like an unguided wolf. Perhaps his original intention was not wrong, but he went the wrong way.

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Extended Reading

X-Men: First Class quotes

  • Erik Lehnsherr: My fellow Mutants! The real enemy is out there.

  • Erik Lehnsherr: [to Mystique] If you're using half your concentration to look normal, then you're only half paying attention to whatever else you're doing.

    [pause]

    Erik Lehnsherr: Just pointing out something that could save your life.

    Erik Lehnsherr: You want society to accept you, but you can't even accept yourself.