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DVD : X-Men [2000]

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X-Men [2000]
starring: Patrick Stewart, Hugh Jackman, Ian McKellen, Famke Janssen, James Marsden
directed by: Bryan Singer

List Price: £12.99
Childrens Toy Shop Price: £4.98
You Save: £8.01 (62%)
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Availability: Usually dispatched within 11 to 14 days Audience Rating: Suitable for 12 years and over
Binding: DVD
EAN: 5039036004848
Format: PAL
Label: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Manufacturer: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Number Of Discs: 1
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Region Code: 2
Release Date: June 21, 2004
Running Time: 100 minutes
Studio: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Theatrical Release Date: July 14, 2000
Sales Rank: 3227




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X Men 2 [2003] X-Men - The Last Stand [2006] X-Men 3: The Last Stand [2 Disc Edition] [2006] Spider-Man [2002] The Matrix [1999] see more
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Editorial Review:

Amazon.co.uk Review:
Although the superhero comic book has been a duopoly since the early 1960s, only DC's flagship characters, Superman and Batman (who originated in the late 1930s) have established themselves as big-screen franchises. Until now--this is the first runaway hit film version of the alternative superhero X-Men universe created for Marvel Comics by Stan Lee, Jack Kirby and others. It's a rare comic-book movie that doesn't fall over its cape introducing all the characters, and this is the exception. X-Men drops us into a world that is closer to our own than Batman's Gotham City, but it's still home to super-powered goodies and baddies. Opening in high seriousness with paranormal activity in a WW2 concentration camp and a senatorial inquiry into the growing "mutant problem", Bryan Singer's film sets up a complex background with economy and establishes vivid, strange characters well before we get to the fun. There's Halle Berry flying and summoning snowstorms, James Marsden zapping people with his "optic beams", Rebecca Romijn-Stamos shape-shifting her blue naked form, and Ray Park lashing out with his Toad-tongue. The big conflict is between Patrick Stewart's Professor X and Ian McKellen's Magneto, super-powerful mutants who disagree about their relationship with ordinary humans, but the characters we're meant to identify with are Hugh Jackman's Wolverine (who has retractable claws and amnesia), and Anna Paquin's Rogue (who sucks the life and superpowers out of anyone she touches). The plot has to do with a big gizmo that will wreak havoc at a gathering of world leaders, but the film is more interested in setting up a tangle of bizarre relationships between even more bizarre people, with solid pros such as Stewart and McKellen relishing their sly dialogue and the newcomers strutting their stuff in cool leather outfits. There are in-jokes enough to keep comics' fans engaged, but it feels more like a science fiction movie than a superhero picture. --Kim Newman



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Awesome Film In It's Own Right
I used to love this film when I was younger. I've never read the X-Men comics though I did watch some cartoons based off them when I was a kid so I had a vague idea of what X-Men was about even if I wasn't a huge fan. I don't know how true the characters are to their comic book selves, or whether the film itself feels like X-Men, but this film is good enough to be able to stand alone and be recognised in its own right, not just as an interpretation of the comics.

The plot was interesting enough and fast paced, the characters were introduced very well, some of the casting was superb (Ian McKellen, Patrick Stewart and Hugh Jackman all play their parts with believability), and as a whole the movie held together well and was fun to ... Read More:



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - You see the numerous models and yet ...
The special effects are good. The characters are simple and varied enough to make us like that universe of monstrous mutants that look just like us but can turn into whatever they want. Welcome to Carrie, Christine, Firestarter, the Tommyknockers and many other Stephen King paranormal beings and situations. Of course, this film adds to that berserk universe a good old American wrapping but with a twist. The statue of liberty standing on its nice little island as the symbol of what it is called after and yet looking like a stiletto stabbing the sky and jutting out of a flat no man's seascape. The twist is in the fact that it is this very statue that is going to be the epicenter of the destruction of all the heads of states assembled at the United ... Read More:



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - To me, my X-Men
X-Men could have been a bit of a disaster, it had brand recognition amongst the core sci-fi and superhero fan sets but as a concept was relatively unknown to Joe Public. The director, Bryan Singer, was best known for low budget movies and ensemble character pieces and the cast was (at the time) pretty bargain basement. As it was though it all worked out rather well.

Based on Marvel's franchise about mutants born with an "x-factor" who struggle to protect a world that hates and fears them X-Men had plenty of scope. Adding to that the opportunity to use probably the finest comics character ever created (Magneto) there was also less pressure because, as stated previously, the public had few expectations. The film wisely opens with Magneto ... Read More:



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Quality action
The opening shots depict a bleak concentration camp and a family being seperated. As the rain pours down and the parents are dragged off through the mud, a boy reaches out; his pain drawing the metal of the gates towards him until he is crudely beaten with the butt of a rifle and knocked senseless.

The beginning suggests that this film will take the exploration of discrimination of the x-men comics seriously and this is continued through Washington hearings as a senator whips up public support for the labelling of 'mutants'.

This is an action film that takes its subtext seriously; it develops slowly allowing actors time to structure their roles. It boasts a fine cast. Patrick Stewart and Ian Mckellen are heavyweight performers ... Read More:



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - ok
this is solid and watchable but a bit anticlimatic as the film never gets in to first gear

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