X-Men: Days of Future Past – Movie Review 
Director: Bryan Singer
Genre:  Action
Run Time:  132  minutes
Release date:   May 23, 2014 (United States)
Cast: 
1.       Patrick
Stewart, 
2.       Ian McKellen,
3.       Hugh
Jackman, 
4.       James
McAvoy, 
5.       Peter
Dinklage, 
6.       Evan
Peters, 
7.       Omar Sy, 
8.       Bingbing
Fan,
9.       Michael
Fassbender, 
10.    Jennifer
Lawrence, 
11.    Halle
Berry, 
12.    Nicholas
Hoult, 
13.    Anna
Paquin, 
14.    Ellen Page
Review: The franchise "X-Men" mostly a profession or only useful for Marvel comics fans
who are well versed with the characters and their traits. And it is no different.
"X-Men: Days of Future Past", the seventh in the series is by far the largest and most ambitious chapter, bringing the characters of the first four installments: "X-Men" (2000), "X2: X Men United "(2003)," X-Men: The Last Stand "(2006) and" X-Men Origins: Wolverine "(2009).
With a weak story without consequence, which serves as both a suite and a mash-up for a blockbuster summer entertainment.
The film begins in a post-apocalyptic period in which giant robots, called "Sentinels" are programmed with one goal: find and destroy the mutant powers.
As the story rolls on, the X-Men are losing the war, and desperate times call for desperate measures.
With its future seemed dark and the end seems imminent, the rest of the X-Men - Magneto (Ian McKellen), Professor Xavier (Patrick Stewart), Storm (Halle Berry) and Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) - assembled in China. Here they discover that Kitty Pryde (Ellen Page) itself to travel in life has taken through time. This output would dream of changing this.
So they come up with an idea to Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) back to the 1970s to a mutant Rogue Mystique (Jennifer Lawrence) prevent murder Bolivar Trask (Peter Dinklage), a military scientist who kill mutants pioneer guards will result in a typical visit all these guards killing everyone in the future.
It is in this scenario that Wolverine is forced to join the young Magneto (Michael Fassbender) and the young Professor Xavier (James McAvoy) and convince them that their union can save the world, and thus change the present.
The mission is much more complicated than it looks and is as complex, emotionally.
Hugh Jackman as Wolverine, Professor Xavier James McAvoy, Michael Fassbender as Erik Lensherr and Jennifer Lawrence as Mystique reptile, a central character in this story, providing considerable class and the emotional resonance with the human drama.
The support of the entire distribution of Patrick Stewart, Ian McKellen, Nicholas Hoult, Halle Berry, Shawn Ashmore and Peter Evans as Quicksilver aggressor is a funny jailbreak sequence, cement shares very seriously the Home screen . Appearances aside, the characters are not emotionally.
With an overdose of the serious and the ridiculous, the plot manages to keep pace and intensity commendable. History is full of high exposure, time travel, love triangles and betrayal. They all piled into a coherent, complex plot elements arrogant as an allusion rather bizarre to the JFK assassination and major inconsistencies with numerous secondary characters comprising diluting the focus of the plot. This also tends to cause confusion at a time.
Although screenwriter Simon Kinberg is mired with gaps of plot and logic awkward leaps, editor John Ottman has done an admirable job of compiling disorder. This is because the director Bryan Singer X-Men universe well enough to call an extraordinary stories.
The first half is entertaining enough, but drags a bit in things packaging, but the amazing graphics ensure you get value for your money. It has the best slow flow that deserves to be seen at the cinema. The 3D effect is not only improving your viewing experience.
"X-Men: Days of Future Past", the seventh in the series is by far the largest and most ambitious chapter, bringing the characters of the first four installments: "X-Men" (2000), "X2: X Men United "(2003)," X-Men: The Last Stand "(2006) and" X-Men Origins: Wolverine "(2009).
With a weak story without consequence, which serves as both a suite and a mash-up for a blockbuster summer entertainment.
The film begins in a post-apocalyptic period in which giant robots, called "Sentinels" are programmed with one goal: find and destroy the mutant powers.
As the story rolls on, the X-Men are losing the war, and desperate times call for desperate measures.
With its future seemed dark and the end seems imminent, the rest of the X-Men - Magneto (Ian McKellen), Professor Xavier (Patrick Stewart), Storm (Halle Berry) and Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) - assembled in China. Here they discover that Kitty Pryde (Ellen Page) itself to travel in life has taken through time. This output would dream of changing this.
So they come up with an idea to Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) back to the 1970s to a mutant Rogue Mystique (Jennifer Lawrence) prevent murder Bolivar Trask (Peter Dinklage), a military scientist who kill mutants pioneer guards will result in a typical visit all these guards killing everyone in the future.
It is in this scenario that Wolverine is forced to join the young Magneto (Michael Fassbender) and the young Professor Xavier (James McAvoy) and convince them that their union can save the world, and thus change the present.
The mission is much more complicated than it looks and is as complex, emotionally.
Hugh Jackman as Wolverine, Professor Xavier James McAvoy, Michael Fassbender as Erik Lensherr and Jennifer Lawrence as Mystique reptile, a central character in this story, providing considerable class and the emotional resonance with the human drama.
The support of the entire distribution of Patrick Stewart, Ian McKellen, Nicholas Hoult, Halle Berry, Shawn Ashmore and Peter Evans as Quicksilver aggressor is a funny jailbreak sequence, cement shares very seriously the Home screen . Appearances aside, the characters are not emotionally.
With an overdose of the serious and the ridiculous, the plot manages to keep pace and intensity commendable. History is full of high exposure, time travel, love triangles and betrayal. They all piled into a coherent, complex plot elements arrogant as an allusion rather bizarre to the JFK assassination and major inconsistencies with numerous secondary characters comprising diluting the focus of the plot. This also tends to cause confusion at a time.
Although screenwriter Simon Kinberg is mired with gaps of plot and logic awkward leaps, editor John Ottman has done an admirable job of compiling disorder. This is because the director Bryan Singer X-Men universe well enough to call an extraordinary stories.
The first half is entertaining enough, but drags a bit in things packaging, but the amazing graphics ensure you get value for your money. It has the best slow flow that deserves to be seen at the cinema. The 3D effect is not only improving your viewing experience.
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 By  10:36:00 AM
10:36:00 AM 
 

