From an uber fan who's hip to canon and cognizant of the retcons, even to the first X-Men movie in 2000, First Class was a disappointment. I'll talk about some retcons, and ignore others, such as:
[ul][li]The really stupid and lame retard-version of Thirteen Days[/li]
[li]That the First Class isn't the real First Class[/li]
[li]Or that none of their powers actually work that way.[/li]
[li]Or that characters present in this movie are conspicuously absent in subsequent films.[/li]
[li]Seriously what the fuck? Beast didn't appear until Last Stand![/li]
[li]And Beast had a cameo in United debating the still-alive Sebastian Shaw, how could they fuck this up this badly?[/li]
[li]The part where it's fine for Magneto to drag an anchor through a ship, but can't fuck up the propellers of a submarine.[/li]
[li]Or that there are submarines that can detach from a cargo ship - that technology isn't cheap or easy. Even in 2011.[/li]
[li]Or that energy doesn't work that way. What, kinetic energy? Are you talking like, fucking friction? Really? Then shouldn't the coin sliding through his brain have given him an epiphany instead of instant death?[/li]
[li]Or that suddenly Cerebro was a CIA invention.[/li]
[li]Or that Magneto's helmet was Kevin Bacon's invention.[/li]
[li]Or that the Russians didn't have their own fleet around Cuba.[/li]
[li]So, Nightcrawler's dad, that guy, he's basically a living god as portrayed in the film. He just picks up Xavier and drops him off a cliff. Done. I mean what the fuck? Xavier can't see a bullet coming, so he's going to stop instant red death? Or gravity? Sure. Whatever. Fuck you First Class.[/li][/ul]
Here's the bottom line: I see where they were going with this. It was just done very badly. Great ideas, with terrible execution.
They wanted to explore Magneto's vengeance towards his escaped Nazi oppressors, show that he didn't come out of nowhere in 2000's X-Men. I got it.
Reshooting the Nazi Concentration Camp scene from the 2000 movie, shot-for-shot, albeit in a condensed version, just didn't work. It felt really cheap. The emotional impact from the first time around wasn't as meaningful as a repeat - and I didn't even know it was coming. But then the movie very awkwardly jumped to too many locations. I'm more interested in how Magneto escaped from Kevin Bacon than I am in seeing him kill a trio of Nazis in an Argentinian bar. What was their cooperation like? How did they fall out? Did Magneto hate Kevin Bacon the whole time? How much time did they spend together? That would have been interesting.
They wanted a dramatic historical backdrop, to emphasize the gravity of the situation. Kevin Bacon has a vendetta against humanity... because humans made him experiment and torture mutants? But wait, Kevin Bacon did that all on his own. During and after the Third Reich, Kevin Bacon was always in control of himself and his destiny. Why does Kevin Bacon have a vendetta against humanity? Yea he's a mutant-supremacist, but seeing as how it's apparent he was never at the mercy of humans, where would he build this much hostility?
So for the dramatic backdrop, they paint the picture that in addition to the escalating tensions of the Cold War, Kevin Bacon is maneuvering the two superpowers into a 3rd World War. The Cuban Missile Crises was just a proxy for Xavier and Magneto's fight against Kevin Bacon. That's brilliant! That's actually really clever, and it could have worked, if only they hadn't completely fucked everything up,
Locations and Characters
I already said that the movie jumps to too many locations. Count how many times a title card has to tell you where you are. Beyond that, individual rooms get used... at most three times. Usually, if you see a location, then that's it, you'll never see it again. Let's count the rooms you see more than one time:
[ul][li]The CIA lounge for the kid mutants.[/li]
[li]The USA/Russia situation room.[/li]
[li]The lounge and reactor room of Kevin Bacon's submarine.[/li][/ul]
And is that it? Really? I'm not asking that I see a repeat of 12 Angry Men, which is literally twelve guys in one room, for the entire movie. But that film can teach a lot of lessons. First Class has the plot moving at such a frantic pace, they never had time to use the environments. Every place they went was some throw-away location or the feature of a montage. I'm exempting the Xavier Institute training scenes because... well, it's a montage.
And then you have the characters - there were too many of them. You don't get to know anything about them. Hank and the Butterfly girl both have the same issue. Prof. X's thoughts on Jekyll and Hyde are completely applicable to the Butterfly girl, and probably not a stretch for Mystique. I think it's funny how Magneto can have two conversations with Mystique, and completely undermine decades of Xavier's propaganda. It is really pathetic how these characters are given the shallowest of arcs and depth.
They could have dropped half the kid mutants and one of the bad-guy mutants, and the story would be the same. None of the characters really mattered. Hell, if Kevin Bacon's submarine happened to be made out of plastic, Magneto wouldn't have had anything to do for the entire film. You think a plastic submarine is ridiculous? How about a nuclear submarine off of everyone's radar (sonar?) that can just operate all fine and dandy with no support fleet and no port-of-anchor. For reasons that should be completely obvious to everyone, you need more than four people to operate a nuclear submarine, and all four of those people need to at least be nuclear physicists. What does Emma Frost know about repairing faulty flaps on the ship's ballast? Nothing, because she's a pair of tits, that's what.
*** *** *** *** *** ***
And that's my first impressions.
The film reached so far, and was able to grasp so little of it. I mean, the captain of the American boat wore a helmet that had fucking captain written on it, in case it wasn't clear to the audience. Complex ideas were dumbed down so hardcore. There were too many characters stretching too little screen time.
It was just... all so sloppy. That's my word to describe this film: sloppy.
[ul][li]The really stupid and lame retard-version of Thirteen Days[/li]
[li]That the First Class isn't the real First Class[/li]
[li]Or that none of their powers actually work that way.[/li]
[li]Or that characters present in this movie are conspicuously absent in subsequent films.[/li]
[li]Seriously what the fuck? Beast didn't appear until Last Stand![/li]
[li]And Beast had a cameo in United debating the still-alive Sebastian Shaw, how could they fuck this up this badly?[/li]
[li]The part where it's fine for Magneto to drag an anchor through a ship, but can't fuck up the propellers of a submarine.[/li]
[li]Or that there are submarines that can detach from a cargo ship - that technology isn't cheap or easy. Even in 2011.[/li]
[li]Or that energy doesn't work that way. What, kinetic energy? Are you talking like, fucking friction? Really? Then shouldn't the coin sliding through his brain have given him an epiphany instead of instant death?[/li]
[li]Or that suddenly Cerebro was a CIA invention.[/li]
[li]Or that Magneto's helmet was Kevin Bacon's invention.[/li]
[li]Or that the Russians didn't have their own fleet around Cuba.[/li]
[li]So, Nightcrawler's dad, that guy, he's basically a living god as portrayed in the film. He just picks up Xavier and drops him off a cliff. Done. I mean what the fuck? Xavier can't see a bullet coming, so he's going to stop instant red death? Or gravity? Sure. Whatever. Fuck you First Class.[/li][/ul]
Here's the bottom line: I see where they were going with this. It was just done very badly. Great ideas, with terrible execution.
They wanted to explore Magneto's vengeance towards his escaped Nazi oppressors, show that he didn't come out of nowhere in 2000's X-Men. I got it.
Reshooting the Nazi Concentration Camp scene from the 2000 movie, shot-for-shot, albeit in a condensed version, just didn't work. It felt really cheap. The emotional impact from the first time around wasn't as meaningful as a repeat - and I didn't even know it was coming. But then the movie very awkwardly jumped to too many locations. I'm more interested in how Magneto escaped from Kevin Bacon than I am in seeing him kill a trio of Nazis in an Argentinian bar. What was their cooperation like? How did they fall out? Did Magneto hate Kevin Bacon the whole time? How much time did they spend together? That would have been interesting.
They wanted a dramatic historical backdrop, to emphasize the gravity of the situation. Kevin Bacon has a vendetta against humanity... because humans made him experiment and torture mutants? But wait, Kevin Bacon did that all on his own. During and after the Third Reich, Kevin Bacon was always in control of himself and his destiny. Why does Kevin Bacon have a vendetta against humanity? Yea he's a mutant-supremacist, but seeing as how it's apparent he was never at the mercy of humans, where would he build this much hostility?
So for the dramatic backdrop, they paint the picture that in addition to the escalating tensions of the Cold War, Kevin Bacon is maneuvering the two superpowers into a 3rd World War. The Cuban Missile Crises was just a proxy for Xavier and Magneto's fight against Kevin Bacon. That's brilliant! That's actually really clever, and it could have worked, if only they hadn't completely fucked everything up,
Locations and Characters
I already said that the movie jumps to too many locations. Count how many times a title card has to tell you where you are. Beyond that, individual rooms get used... at most three times. Usually, if you see a location, then that's it, you'll never see it again. Let's count the rooms you see more than one time:
[ul][li]The CIA lounge for the kid mutants.[/li]
[li]The USA/Russia situation room.[/li]
[li]The lounge and reactor room of Kevin Bacon's submarine.[/li][/ul]
And is that it? Really? I'm not asking that I see a repeat of 12 Angry Men, which is literally twelve guys in one room, for the entire movie. But that film can teach a lot of lessons. First Class has the plot moving at such a frantic pace, they never had time to use the environments. Every place they went was some throw-away location or the feature of a montage. I'm exempting the Xavier Institute training scenes because... well, it's a montage.
And then you have the characters - there were too many of them. You don't get to know anything about them. Hank and the Butterfly girl both have the same issue. Prof. X's thoughts on Jekyll and Hyde are completely applicable to the Butterfly girl, and probably not a stretch for Mystique. I think it's funny how Magneto can have two conversations with Mystique, and completely undermine decades of Xavier's propaganda. It is really pathetic how these characters are given the shallowest of arcs and depth.
They could have dropped half the kid mutants and one of the bad-guy mutants, and the story would be the same. None of the characters really mattered. Hell, if Kevin Bacon's submarine happened to be made out of plastic, Magneto wouldn't have had anything to do for the entire film. You think a plastic submarine is ridiculous? How about a nuclear submarine off of everyone's radar (sonar?) that can just operate all fine and dandy with no support fleet and no port-of-anchor. For reasons that should be completely obvious to everyone, you need more than four people to operate a nuclear submarine, and all four of those people need to at least be nuclear physicists. What does Emma Frost know about repairing faulty flaps on the ship's ballast? Nothing, because she's a pair of tits, that's what.
*** *** *** *** *** ***
And that's my first impressions.
The film reached so far, and was able to grasp so little of it. I mean, the captain of the American boat wore a helmet that had fucking captain written on it, in case it wasn't clear to the audience. Complex ideas were dumbed down so hardcore. There were too many characters stretching too little screen time.
It was just... all so sloppy. That's my word to describe this film: sloppy.