You’ve seen the first official trailer for Marvel’s FOX mutant drama The Gifted, but the network isn’t done previewing Bryan Singer’s X-Men TV series just yet. Take a look at fresh photos from the X-drama, including a Sentinel-filled synopsis!
When Logan finally fades to black, it brings Hugh Jackman’s 17-year run as Wolverine to a close. It is an emphatic and definitive ending, not just to Jackman’s Wolverine series, but also to the X-Men franchise as a whole.
When Nightcrawler broke into the White House at the start of 2003’s X2, it felt like more than a watershed moment in the history of comic book movies; it felt like a miracle. Here was one of comics’ most fantastical characters — a blue-skinned, three-fingered German demon with a pointy, prehensile tail and teleportation powers — brought to life with all of his outlandish quirks and powers intact, showcased in a sequence that was thrilling and utterly convincing. It was something no one had ever seen before. It was truly uncanny.
There’s a lot to admire about Storm. She's not just a powerhouse and a figurehead. She’s a strong character, one of the first prominent black characters, and the first black female character to hold a major role in mainstream superhero comics. She's such a resonant and important character that it’s easy to see why cosplayers would want to adopt the mantle of Ororo Munroe.
Director Bryan Singer sure isn't shying away from giving 'X-Men' fans news and info about his next mutant movie, 'X-Men: Days of Future Past,' on Twitter. Late Friday, Singer tweeted a photo of what looks like a new rendition of Beast, the brilliant blue-furred scientist played by Nicholas Hoult in 2011's 'X-Men: First Class.'
Being more of a comic book movie fan than of the actual comic books, I think I will have to go see this movie. I'm sure it doesn't follow the original storyline, as is the case for most super hero movies or even most book-turned-movies that get released, but it still looks pretty bad ass!