As a new fan of the "Dark Phoenix" series, the order of my supplementary films is also rather confusing, probably the first battle → reverse the future → X-Men 1 → Apocalypse → X-Men 2 → Men 3. That's right, I know I want to watch it in conjunction with the Wolverine series, but after reading these, especially the third one, I'm really a little hurt, and I won't consider supplementing "Wolverine" in the short term.
And Uncle Wolf looks very painful. It can be regarded as the end of the Fork Man series. In general, the mutants in the two lines did not have a good ending. If they were killed by the sentinels, or their genes were suppressed, humans would never let the mutants go. Hmm...I think Lao Wan was right all along. In "X-Men 3: The Last Stand", the war was Lao Wan's intention to destroy the antidote, many mutants charged but were killed by the antidote, while Uncle Wolf Hank and his party turned their backs to humans against Lao Wan, and even Lao Wan was needled The posthumans were still throwing needles in the direction of Uncle Hank's wolf, but Hank still wanted to protect humans when Qin ran away. At that time, he really felt absurd and even a little angry. I said, "Why are they? Can't they see so many mutants down." My sister said, "For Qin." Oh, and there's a Qin in the story. The failure of the third part is that there are two main lines, and the two have nothing to do with each other, and even the producer does not seem to have plans to merge the two lines, because there is no mention of the possibility of suppressing with antidote in the story line of Qin . Therefore, the positions of the mutants on both sides were also affected, and their actions during the war seemed inexplicable.
The supporting roles that only have a few seconds of footage are also embarrassing. For example, the son of a politician thought that refusing the antidote was to face up to his own wings, but he still couldn't get rid of the ties of family affection; the hot man was more interesting, and he was arrogant after following Lao Wan. He was violent and said that he could kill Charles at any time. He didn't seem to understand what Lao Wan was fighting for.
The last is Mystique. I read an analysis that said Mystique did not end well in both timelines. Either she was beside Lao Wan, was injected with antidote and was abandoned; The piano kills.
But I think the most attractive moment of Mystique is when Lao Wan was in prison. She went it alone and even formed her own team, clear and sharp, not afraid or caring about confronting Lao Wan.
Therefore, she who was abandoned and rebelled and retaliated in this episode... lost her pattern. Of course, it may also be that I see the order in a disordered, preconceived relationship.
I don't think 2006's ending as an X-Men will be satisfying, so there will be a later younger version.
Speaking of which, the Phoenix Girl also had a tragic fate. The story line was broken in "X-Men 3", and it was even more hasty in "Dark Phoenix".
Even if you are disappointed, you still have to look forward to restarting.
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