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Appearances

Featured Characters: For more complete information visit the Marvel Comics Database version of this article.

Plot

For more complete information visit the Marvel Comics Database version of this article.

Cast

File:Storm4.JPG

Storm

X-Men[]

The X-Men is a taskforce from the Xavier Institute, charged with protecting both humans and mutants and trying to prevent a war between the two.

  • Hugh Jackman as Wolverine/Logan: Logan can heal quickly, a talent which led to the painful implantation of a metal coating on his bones and metal claws that emerge from each forearm. He mourns Jean Grey, with whom he is in love.
  • Anna Paquin as Rogue / Marie: A runaway mutant who has found a home at Xavier's school and love with Bobby Drake. When she touches someone, she steals their memories, their powers, and, if not careful, their life.
  • Kelsey Grammer as Beast / Dr. Henry "Hank" McCoy: A former student of Xavier's School who is now the Secretary of Mutant Affairs in the U.S. government. The Beast is covered in blue fur and has a genius level I.Q., and heightened strength and agility.
  • Daniel Cudmore as Colossus / Peter Rasputin: He can transform his skin into steel.

Brotherhood of Mutants[]

File:Brotherhood of Evil Mutants (X-Men Last Stand) 002.jpg

Brotherhood of Mutants: Juggernaut, Quill, Magneto, Multiple Man, Callisto, Pyro, Arclight, and Phoenix.

  • Famke Janssen as Phoenix / Jean Grey: A member of the X-Men who sacrificed herself to save her comrades. She possesses great telekinetic and telepathic powers which threaten to consume her.
  • Ian McKellen as Magneto / Erik Lehnsherr: Master of magnetism, Holocaust survivor, and would-be conquerer, Magneto wages war against humanity in the name of mutant superiority, a goal that often pits him against his old friend Charles Xavier.
  • Aaron Stanford as Pyro / John Allerdyce: Former Xavier Institute student Pyro can manipulate fire but cannot create it. He holds a grudge against his former friend Bobby Drake.
  • Vinnie Jones as Juggernaut / Cain Marko: The Juggernaut is a new recruit to the Brotherhood. When he builds momentum, it is nearly impossible to stop him.
  • Dania Ramirez as Callisto: She possesses superhuman speed and can sense the power levels of mutants. She is also the leader of the Omega Gang.
  • Meiling Melançon as Psylocke: An Omega with teleportation abilities. Her abilities to create psionic blades was left out of the final cut of the film.
  • Ken Leung as Quill / Maxwell Jordan: An Omega that can cover his body in porcupine-like quills. Although he resembles the Earth-616 character Quill, he is credited as "Kid Omega".
  • Eric Dane as Multiple Man / Jamie Madrox: Madrox can split himself into multiple copies of himself. He is a former criminal who joins the Brotherhoood upon being released by them.

Other Characters[]

  • Ben Foster as Angel / Warren Worthington III: He has angelic wings which allow him to fly.
  • Michael Murphy as Warren Worthington II: He is the Head of Worthington Labs, the corporation developing the cure. He is also Angel's father and wants to rid his son of his mutant abilities.
  • Cameron Bright as Leech / Jimmy: A mutant boy whose power cancels the powers of nearby mutants. His DNA is the basis for the cure.
  • Bill Duke as Bolivar Trask: The Department of Homeland Security.

Minor/Cameo Appearances[]

  • Via Saleuma and Richard Yee as Phat / Billy-Bob Reilly
  • Lance Gibson as Spike
  • Kea Wong as Jubilee / Jubilation Lee
  • Shauna Kain as Siryn / Theresa Cassidy
  • Clayton Dean Watmough as Glob Herman / Robert Herman
  • Olivia Williams as Dr. Moira MacTaggert
  • Adrian Hough as John Grey
  • Disree Zurowski as Elaine Grey.
  • Stan Lee as Jean Grey's neighbor

Alternate Posters

Notes

X-Men: The Last Stand is the third film adaptation of the X-Men superhero comic books. It was directed by Brett Ratner

The movie script was written by Simon Kinberg and Zak Penn. The previous two movies were X-Men (2000) and X2 (2003). The film was released May 26, 2006 in the United States and Canada, and one or two days earlier in approximately 22 other countries.

X-Men: The Last Stand Trailer 400 on YouTube

The movie revolves around a "mutant cure" that causes serious repercussions among mutants and humans, and on the mysterious resurrection of Jean Grey, who appeared to have died in X2. The film is loosely based on two X-Men comic book story arcs: writer Chris Claremont's & artist John Byrne's "Dark Phoenix Saga" in The Uncanny X-Men (1980), and writer Joss Whedon's six-issue "Gifted" arc in Astonishing X-Men (2004).

Development[]

Bryan Singer , the director of the first two X-Men films, left the project during preproduction in order to direct the film Superman Returns. He was joined by X2 screenwriters Dan Harris and Michael Dougherty and composer/editor John Ottman. Matthew Vaughn was hired as the new director for the project. He cast Kelsey Grammer as the Beast and Vinnie Jones as the Juggernaut, but family issues reportedly led him to withdraw before shooting began. Vaughn was replaced by Singer's friend Brett Ratner[1], who was among those originally considered to direct the first film — and coincidentally was considered by Warner Brothers to direct the 2006 Superman project before it evolved into Superman Returns.

  • On June 13, 2005, a review of an incomplete early draft[2] of the screenplay posted by Drew McWeeny from Ain't It Cool News sparked controversy from fans, due to certain main characters' storylines; however, that draft was the very first of over two-dozen drafts the film went through and has had numerous changes happen to the storylines.Empty citation (help) 

Production[]

  • X-Men: The Last Stand began shooting in August 2005 and ended in January 2006. Much of X-Men: The Last Stand was filmed in Vancouver, Canada. According to associate producer Dave Gordon, "This is the biggest production ever filmed in Canada. It used to be X2, now it's X3."[3] The final battle between the X-Men and the Brotherhood of Mutants was originally scripted to take place in Washington, D.C., but Ratner opted to change the location.[4]
  • The film had some interesting production issues. A replica of a section of the Golden Gate Bridge was built for one sequence[5] originally in the middle of the movie, but Ratner decided it would create a more dramatic climax if moved to the end. 65+ year old actors Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen had their faces completely "de-aged" by complex keyframing (no CGI elements were used, only photographed skin/bone structures). A technique called "digital skin-grafting" was employed to make them look 20 years younger in the first scene flashback.[6]
  • Angel's wings were initially too heavy for Ben Foster, and were remade using foam.[7]
  • Many of the actors performed some of their own stunts.Empty citation (help) 

The whirlwind wire-stunt performed by Halle Berry during one fight scene reportedly caused Berry to become so nauseated that she vomited. The crew actually had to bring in buckets for her before shooting her scenes.[7]

Casting[]

File:Xmen 3 wolverine3.jpg

Wolverine

Many of the cast members from the previous two X-Men films returned, the major exceptions being Alan Cumming (Nightcrawler) and Kelly Hu (Lady Deathstrike) from X2, who both signed two-film contracts (Wolverine kills Hu's character in the second film). James Marsden (Cyclops) also appeared in The Last Stand, despite reported scheduling conflicts with the June 2006 movie Superman Returns.

Halle Berry stated during interviews for X2 that she would not return as Storm in the third film unless the character had a significant presence comparable to the comic-book version. Brett Ratner also felt Storm required a larger role and there was little difficulty reaching an agreement.[8]

New cast members portraying X-Men include veteran TV actor Kelsey Grammer (Beast), Ben Foster (Angel), and Ellen Page (Kitty Pryde, the third actress to play the character). New cast members portraying the Brotherhood of Mutants include Eric Dane (Multiple Man, whose name appears in Stryker's files in X2), former British footballer Vinnie Jones (Juggernaut), Dania Ramirez (Callisto), Ken Leung (Kid Omega), Meiling Melançon (Psylocke), and Omahyra Mota (Arclight, credited as simply Omahyra). The character Dr. Moira MacTaggert, who appears in the film, is not listed in the official press notes' cast list and goes uncredited in the finished film. She is played by actress Olivia Williams .

Alan Cumming was reportedly uncomfortable with the long hours he had to take with the Nightcrawler makeup but still planned to return for X-Men: The Last Stand. However, the part for Nightcrawler was so minimal, he felt it was not worth it to go through the long and costly makeup process when he was barely in the film, and the character was cut.[3] He did agree, however, to do voice work for the character for the video game based on the film.

The sergeant directing defensive preparations before the Brotherhood assaults Alcatraz Island is played by Gunnery Sergeant R. Lee Ermey, a former U.S. Marine Corps non-commissioned officer who became a military adviser for films and frequent military character actor.

X-Men co-creator Stan Lee and writer Chris Claremont have cameos in the film's opening scene as neighbors in Jean Grey's old neighborhood. Respectively, they are credited as "Waterhose man" and "Lawnmower man".

Filmmakers considered using the Beast character since the first X-Men movie, but budget constraints ruled him out; however, Steve Bacic is identified as Hank McCoy when he appears on a television screen in a cameo role in X2.

Reception[]

X-Men: The Last Stand grossed $45.5 million domestically for the third-highest opening day after Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest ($55 million) and Revenge of the Sith ($50 million).[9] It is ranked fourth among film debuts having generated an estimated $122.9 million domestically during its four-day Memorial Day opening weekend. The website The Numbers notes that the film's weekend gross "equals the record for the fewest number of days taken to earn $100 million, joining four other movies that achieved the feat in three days."[10] However, the film suffered a significant drop of 66.9% in its second weekend,when its box office take fell to $34.0 million.[11] As of July 4, 2006, the film has grossed $230 million in North America (highest of 2006) and $433.4 million globally (3rd highest of 2006).[9] It is also the 5th highest grossing comic book adaptation of all time, and the highest grossing of the X-Men series.[9] It became the first film of 2006, and the 67th film in history, to pass the $200 million mark at the North American box office on the weekend of June 9, 2006. And it is the first X-Men movie to pass 200 million outside of the United States. X-Men: The Last Stand is one of the few third installments in a series that out grossed its predecessors, Return of the King being another example.

Reviews of the film have generally been mixed, with the film review website Rotten Tomatoes giving the film a 57% approval rating.[12] The film review aggregate site Metacritic also reported mixed reviews with a score of 58/100.[13] Ebert & Roeper gave the film two thumbs up, with Ebert stating "I liked the action, I liked the absurdity, I liked the incongruous use and misuse of mutant powers, and I especially liked the way it introduces all of those political issues and lets them fight it out with the special effects."[14] Some film critics, however, considered the third film to be of lesser quality than the previous two. Justin Chang from Variety said the film is "a wham-bam sequel noticeably lacking in the pop gravitas, moody atmospherics and emotional weight that made the first two Marvel comicbook [sic] adaptations so rousingly successful."[15] Frank Lovece of Film Journal International said, "A risk-taking script with genuine consequences elevates this ... above the lackluster direction of Brett Ratner, whose competent mechanics move the story efficiently but with very little soul."[16] Lawrence Toppman of The Charlotte Observer, said, "Director Brett Ratner can't make chicken a la king out of chicken droppings, and that's what writers Simon Kinberg (XXX: State of the Union) and Zak Penn (Elektra) supply."[17]

Adaptations[]

Novelization[]

The novelization of the film, written by comic book writer Chris Claremont, was released on May 16, 2006.[18] The novelization of the movie differs significantly from the film.

Trivia

  • The events of this movie occur in 2006.[19]

See Also

Links and References

Character Credit Gallery[]

References

  1. Scott Bowles (May 24, 2005). Franchise's fans reverse stand on new director. usatoday.com. USA Today. Retrieved on 5 June, 2006.
  2. Moriaty (June 13, 2005). AICN EXCLUSIVE! X3 Script Review! Plus An Open Letter To Tom Rothman And Fox Stockholders!!. Ain't It Cool News. Retrieved on 5 June, 2006.
  3. 3.0 3.1 George A. Tramountanas (February 23, 2006). "X-Men: The Last Stand" – Dave Gorder - The Super-Associate Producer. comicbookresources.com. Comic Book Resources. Retrieved on 5 June, 2006.
  4. Tom Russo (May 2006). Cover Story: X-Men: The Last Stand (Page 3 of 4). premiere.com. Premiere. Retrieved on 8 June, 2006.
  5. Hugh Hart (April 23, 2006). INDUSTRY BUZZ. sfgate.com. San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved on 5 June, 2006.
  6. Daniel Robert Epstein (May 25, 2006). Brett Ratner, Director of X-Men: The Last Stand. ugo.com. UGO. Retrieved on 6 June, 2006.
  7. 7.0 7.1 IANS (May 25, 2006). Gear up to meet mutant heroes in 'X Men 3'. nowrunning.com. nowrunning.com. Retrieved on 6 June, 2006. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "nowrunning.com" defined multiple times with different content
  8. Daniel Robert Epstein (May 24, 2006). Halle Berry of X-Men: The Last Stand. ugo.com. UGO. Retrieved on 6 June, 2006.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 TOP SINGLE DAY GROSSES. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved on 2006-06-06.
  10. The Numbers. The Numbers. Nash Information Services. Retrieved on 2006-06-06.
  11. X-Men Broken Up By Rom-Com Defeat. Comingsoon.net. Retrieved on 2006-06-05.
  12. X-Men: The Last Stand (2006). Rotten Tomatoes. IGN. Retrieved on 2006-06-26.
  13. Metacritic - X-Men: The Last Stand (2006). metacritic. Retrieved on 6 June, 2006.
  14. Roger Ebert. X-Men: The Last Stand (PG-13). rogerebert.com. Retrieved on 2006-06-05.
  15. Justin Chang (May 22, 2006). "X-Men: The Last Stand". Variety (Reed Business Information). http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117930584?categoryId=31&cs=1. 
  16. Frank Lovece (May 22, 2006). X-Men: The Last Stand. Film Journal International. filmjournal.com.
  17. Lawrence Toppman (May 22, 2006). A silly, stale 'Last Stand'. The Charlotte Observer. ae.charlotte.com.
  18. Claremont, Chris. X-Men: The Last Stand. Del Rey. ISBN 0345492110. 
  19. X-Men: 25 Moments. Retrieved on 12 April 2014.
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