More: How The X-Men Franchise Connects and can Reboot InfinitelyĪs we explored previously in an article about our visit last summer to the set of X-Men: Apocalypse, Bryan Singer has found a way to do anything he wants with future X-Men movies. It's practically meant to be in an effort to emphasize the point that every X-Men movie can exist in the same continuity by explaining plot holes and differences away with the concept of alternate timelines. X-Men: Days of Future Past sees mutant freedom fighters in a dystopian future send Wolverine back in time to the '70s to alter the course of history and change the future, to a better "happy ending." This version of the '70s was already different than continuity explored in the original X-Men trilogy and its spinoffs, and now it's far more different thanks to the X-Men saving the day in 1973. ![]() That is, until 2014's X-Men: Days of Future Past. Time-travel is commonplace in the X-Men comics but in Hollywood, it's surprisingly not been explored in the big comic book cinematic universes. ![]() Fans can be as thankful as original X-Men director Bryan Singer that the creative and producer team of Matthew Vaughn, Simon Kinberg, and Lauren Shuler Donner pitched the idea to finally bring in time-travel to the X-Men movie universe with the sequel to First Class.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |