The film tells about a small number of old mutants and new mutants, and the time setting is 2029, which is 12 years later. I won't talk about the routines of starting and turning. I believe that everyone who pays attention to my film reviews will learn some film and television vision.
In fact, Marvel is quite realistic here. It starts with saying that Logan works as an Uber driver in a remote place, and then buys medicine for himself and the old-fashioned Professor X. Their residence is on American soil by a Chinese-funded institution. It has to be said here that basically Hollywood movies now talk more or less about China.
This movie made me feel, oh, it turns out that superheroes also have to worry about chai, rice, oil, salt, sauce, vinegar and tea. It turns out that superheroes also have old days, which reminds me of the old film "U-571" more than ten years ago. Bottom line: Heroes are just ordinary people who do extraordinary things at extraordinary times.
Ordinary people have to worry about firewood, rice, oil and salt, and ordinary people have to rush for life. This is life. Heroes are no exception. After all, they are just ordinary people just like you and me.
Because of old age, Professor X suffered from brain degeneration. Because of old age, Wolverine's healing ability is also declining. This really echoes the old Chinese saying: "Lian Po is old, can he still eat?" Of course they Obviously can eat.
Then there is Wolverine's daughter Lola, X-23 in the comics, who is the one who inherits the title of Wolverine in the New X-Men. At the end of the film, the old Wolverine was finally defeated by the ravages of the years, and finally died. However, the passing of a group of old heroes is the rise of a group of new heroes.
The film sighs the impermanence of the world, but also makes people sigh the preciousness of family. Really, please cherish the people around you.
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