X-Men (film series)

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

An adaptation of the X-Men comic book franchise to the silver screen, which pretty much singlehandedly revived superhero movies for the 2000s.

The first film, called simply X-Men, was released in 2000. It was followed by two sequels, X2: X-Men United in 2003 and X-Men: The Last Stand in 2006. See their pages for more details.

Rather than continuing the series chronologically from there, FOX decided to film a series of Spin-Offs and Prequels, starting with X-Men Origins: Wolverine and continuing with the much more critically acclaimed X-Men: First Class. The Wolverine was released in 2013 and X-Men: Days of Future Past was released in 2014. Deadpool, the first R-rated entry, was released in February 2016, followed by its 2018 sequel Deadpool 2. X-Men: Apocalypse was released in May 2016. Logan, the final Wolverine film was released in March 2017. Deadpool 2 was released in May 2018. Dark Phoenix and The New Mutants were the last two films before Disney bought 20th Century Studios and decided to integrate the characters into the Marvel Cinematic Universe.


Tropes used in X-Men (film series) include:
  • Absurdly Sharp Blade: Wolverine's claws, and Lady Deathstrike's talons. Wade Wilson's katanas.
  • Adaptational Attractiveness: Wolverine. He's played by Hugh Jackman, whereas in the comics the character was the butt of jokes about his short height. Rather than an ill-mannered thug, Movie!Wolverine is a James Dean-esque bad boy.
    • Inverted with Magneto. While not ugly by any means, he's considerably older than the character in the comics and much less physically imposing. While Magneto was a buff, chiseled White-Haired Pretty Boy in the comics, in the movie his white hair is the result of him being seventy-something years old. Justified, since the movies don't have the comics' sliding timescale or the multiple instances of him being de-aged and re-aged and had to make him the realistic age of a Holocaust survivor.
      • This gets rectified when you see him in First Class.
  • Adaptational Weakling:
    • Wolverine has a healing factor, as he does in the comics, but he can still be incapacitated if a strong enough blow hits him, or Rogue has to borrow his powers to save her life. Decapitation can kill him, and The Wolverine movie showed that science could suppress his healing abilities or remove the adamantium grafted to his bones.
    • Rogue in most versions grows from a nervous teenager that lacks control of her life-absorbent powers to a straight-up badass that can fly or take on Apocalypse. While Rogue gains more confidence in X2: X-Men United to the point that she uses Pyro's powers to keep him from burning police officers alive, X-Men: The Last Stand has her change course. She finds out there's a cure for her powers, a gift she never wanted, and it's being administered a few miles away. After thinking about it, and talking with Wolverine who tells her that she should do it for herself and not for her boyfriend Bobby, Rogue decides to become normal. She doesn't regret it, smiling when showing she can touch Bobby without hurting him.
    • The Juggernaut in X-Men: The Last Stand; Kitty made him her bitch! Okay, she had to outsmart him with Leech's help, but it was still... Pretty embarrassing for someone who, in the comics, has gone toe-to-toe with the Hulk. Not to mention he seriously blew his chance to make a good first impression, telling Magneto (who sprung him out of jail) to "Let me out of here, I need to pee!".
  • All There in the Script: Some characters are never named.
  • Barbie Doll Anatomy: Mystique has no visible nipples or genitalia in her standard form. Then again, her true form is basically a scaly blue creature, so nipples wouldn't have been necessary in either case.
  • Anti-Hero: Wolverine.
  • Anti-Villain: Magneto honestly believes what he's doing is in mutants' best interest.
  • Audible Sharpness: * SNIKT!*
  • Badass: Plenty, particularly in the Wolverine spinoff (Victor Creed, Gambit, Deadpool...)
    • Also Mystique in the first three movies, especially considering she has neither super-strength nor a healing factor.
  • Badass Longcoat: Sabretooth has had one in both his appearances.
  • Beat Them At Their Own Game: Magneto is very fond of this one - in X2 he reverses Stryker's machine to target humans rather than mutants, and in First Class he throws the US and Soviet navies' own missiles back at them. Threatening to shoot cops with their own guns in the first X-Men movie may also qualify
  • Big Bad: Magneto and William Stryker alternate between the four movies. In First Class it's Sebastian Shaw.
  • Big Bra to Fill: All of the women.
  • Big No - Wolverine does it three times: The Last Stand: After killing Jean. Origins: When his father dies, and later when his Temporary Love Interest dies.
    • Magneto has a Big Nein in X-Men First Class.
      • Which is odd, considering he's Polish and would probably instinctively revert to that language.
      • Not really, as quite a lot of Poland's pre-World War 2 inhabitants were German-speaking (and Magneto's family had a German surname). More importantly, the word is also "Nein" in Yiddish (although pronounced slightly differently).
  • Bloodless Carnage:
    • The only person in X-3 to have blood is Wolverine. Everyone else is made out of clothes and skin. People are torn to shreds without spilling a drop.
    • In First Class, Shaw's death and Xavier getting shot, as well as Azazel's massacre of the CIA agents.
  • Breakout Character: Deadpool was already popular among comics fans, but his reception in Origins has lead to him getting his own feature film, though something of the sort was probably in the works anyway.
  • Brick Joke: During Wolverine's introduction in an underground fight club, the announcer warns a challenger not to hit him in the balls, as he would take it personally. Later on when Wolverine is fighting Mystique, she kicks him in the balls before escaping. When Wolverine found her disguised as Storm, he promptly stabs her.
  • The Cameo: Stan Lee in the first and third movie, Chris Claremont in the third.
    • Patrick Stewart in Wolverine.
    • Hugh Jackman and Rebecca Romijn in First Class.
  • Can't Have Sex Ever: Rogue takes this to can't kiss ever.
  • Character Development: Wolverine has had the most character development throughtout the film series.
  • Civvie Spandex: Which was even ported to the early-2000s comics.
  • Code Name: Yeah, um, all of them. (Many of the characters have real names, but we haven't listed them. There's a character sheet for that.) Greatest lampshade comes in the first, when Wolverine asks Xavier:

"Sabertooth? *looks at Ororo* Storm? *looks at Xavier* What do they call you, Wheels?"

    • First Class has a scene where the younger mutants make up code names for themselves, Charles and Erik.
  • Comic Book Movies Don't Use Codenames: Played with in just about every way possible. See the main page for details.
  • Composite Character: Some of the characters are amalgams of various mutants from the comics. Which explains weird power combinations such as Callisto.
    • Rogue in the first three movies has the comic Rogue's powers and appearance but the comic Kitty Pride's personality and relationship with Wolverine.
    • Stryker is a combination of the homonymous preacher from the arc "God Loves, Man Kills", and Weapon X's Professor Thornton.
    • In First Class, Angel has her comics powers but the wings of Pixie.
    • Shaw in First Class is a composite of Sebastian Shaw and Mr. Sinister, combining Shaw's powers and personality with Sinister's immortality and obsession with mutant genetics.
  • Continuity Snarl: Wolverine and First Class have plenty of inconsistencies for supposed prequels, specially with each other. (also, in X2 a human Hank McCoy makes a cameo, but in The Last Stand he's blue and hairy)
    • To be Fair Wolverine and Last Stand all supposed inconsistencies can be explained away if they're thought about hard enough or if you really try to make them fit. First Class however has no such luck, to the point of many fans believing that it's a reboot rather than a prequel.
      • Examples in First Class: Charles Being Crippled in the 60s when he's shown walking in the 80s, Magneto and Charles going there separate way earlier than before, Hank's blue furry form, etc.
  • Deus Exit Machina: In the first three films, Professor X is removed from the action so his potential Story-Breaker Power doesn't resolve everything in one scene.
    • In X-Men, he is poisoned by Mystique and is in a coma for the entire final act.
    • In X2, he is subjected to illusions by Stryker's conjuring mutant son, and rescuing him is the plot.
    • In The Last Stand, he is killed by Jean Grey as she succumbs to the Phoenix.
    • Averted in First Class, where Xavier is active, but the bad guys have both Emma Frost and a telepathy-blocking helmet to counter him, and he's not as overwhelmingly powerful as in the chronologically-later films.
  • Dyeing for Your Art: Hugh Jackman, Liev Schreiber, and Ryan Reynolds worked out to get ripped bodies, and Famke Janssen dyed her hair red.
  • Elaborate Underground Base: The Weapon X facility, and arguably the X-Mansion.
  • Enemy Mine: X2 has the X-Men teaming up with Magneto and Mystique because of a greater threat to mutant kind, Wolverine has Logan and Victor teaming up to fight Weapon XI and First Class has the USSR and the US uniting against the "mutant threat."
  • Fan Service - Mystique (particularly a leg take from below in X2), some shots of the women, and the Lingerie Scene in First Class. Actually, all of the women in First Class (Mystique, Angel, Emma and Moira) get at least one scene where they're wearing little or nothing; for Emma and Angel it's most of their scenes. It's a little glaring.
    • For fans of the male form, Wolverine features Hugh Jackman's naked tush, Gambit's incredible handsomeness, and Ryan Reynolds' arms.
  • Fantastic Racism: The main driving conflict of the series.
    • The attempts by non mutants to find a cure for mutants in the films and the mutants that are ashamed of their abilities leans more towards a Gay Aesop.
  • Fully-Clothed Nudity: A variant in Mystique's natural form.
  • General Ripper: William Stryker.
  • Genius Bruiser: Beast.
  • Blue Skinned Babe: Mystique is this in her natural form.
  • Groin Attack: Mystique to Wolverine, and Wolverine to another healing mutant ("Grow those back").
  • Hollywood Evolution: In this universe, the concept of evolution is, some people develop a random super(natural) power when they hit puberty.
  • I Just Want to Be Normal: Rogue. In a deleted scene from the first movie, she asks if Xavier can "cure" her. She takes the cure to become human in the third film.
  • Kill All Humans: In the second movie, Stryker wants to Kill All Mutants, then Magneto changes plans to Kill All Humans. In First Class, Shaw plots the extinction of humans so that mutants can replace them as the dominant species.
  • Lampshade Hanging: Wolverine gets a lot of screen time, just like in the comics. Magneto likes to point this out in every movie: "Once again, you think it's all about you."
  • Leitmotif: Mystique has a particularly exotic one that lets you know when it's really her.
    • First Class: Erik has a pretty brooding one. If you've made an enemy of him and it kicks in, things are about to get unpleasant for you.
    • Schmidt/Shaw plays a record of Edith Piaf singing La vie en rose as an establishing motif in the past and in the present of First Class.
  • Like Cannot Cut Like: Adamantium blades, such as Wolverine vs. Lady Deathstrike and Wolverine vs. Deadpool.
  • Loads and Loads of Characters: In the third movie especially.
  • Logo Joke: The first three movies feature the "X" in the Twentieth Century Fox logo fading out a fraction of a second later than the rest of the logo.
  • Made of Iron: Well, made of adamantium to be exact. Also, the Juggernaut, and Mystique is really hard to kill.
  • Magic Pants: Averted; Mystique does all her shapeshifting nude and forming the clothes of her disguises out of her body. Played straight with Wolverine, though, as Phoenix's attacks destroy all the rest of his clothes, as well as skin and muscle, but his pants remain.
  • Make Me Wanna Shout: A Xavier student in X2 (implied to be Siryn), and Banshee (who is Siryn's father in the comics) in First Class.
  • Marquee Alter Ego: Mystique's default normal human form in the film trilogy is... Rebecca Romijn.
    • In First Class, it's Jennifer Lawrence. But when Magneto says he might sleep with her "in a few years", she briefly becomes Romijn.
  • Meaningful Echo: Between two movies, highlighting the difference between the Xavier School and Magneto's views on mutants. In a deleted scene from the first movie, Bobby asks Rogue her name, she says "Rogue," and he says "What's your real name?" She tells him "Marie". Then in X2, on the plane, Magneto has a conversation with Pyro:

Magneto: What's your name?
Pyro: John
Magneto: What's your real name, John?
Pyro: Pyro.

  • Movie Superheroes Wear Black
  • Mythology Gag: Wolverine complains about the costumes. Cyclops: "What would you prefer, yellow Spandex?" Then in First Class, the uniforms are yellow spandex (and look dreadful), and the reaction of one character is "Do we really have to wear these?"
    • The explanation for how Rogue acquired the signature strands of white hair
    • Allusions to Wolverine's past
    • The way Mystique approaches Wolverine disguised as Storm– and how he identified her– is very similar to a scene from The Dark Phoenix Saga, where a skrull named Raksor, also impersonating Storm, tried the same trick on Logan, with a similar result.
    • In the second, there is a brief exchange between Nightcrawler and Mystique who are mother and son in the comics.
    • In First Class, the helmet Erik seizes from Shaw and the repainted version in the final scene of the film resemble his helmet in the comics much more than the helmet worn by Ian McKellen, Banshee's wings are striped only to resemble the comics counterpart, and given that the movie is set in 1962, Xavier opened his school the following year... when the actual comic first debuted in 1963.
  • Not Even Bothering with the Accent - Xavier keeps Patrick Stewart's English accent, and Gambit doesn't sound remotely Cajun (in fact, he almost sounds like he's from Texas).
    • Somewhat justified in Gambit's case, as Louisiana and Texas, being right next to each other, share a significant degree of dialect between them.
    • While Halle Berry attempts some sort of accent in the first film, by the third she's not even trying anymore. Same with Anna Paquin and Rogue, who has a slight Southern accent in the first movie which disappears in the sequels.
    • The North Albertan bartender in X-Men Origins: Wolverine seems to be from Tennessee for some reason.
    • First Class de-accentizes Banshee and Moira.
      • Basically, if you're not Nightcrawler, you WILL lose your trademark speech pattern in the movieverse. (However, it's less glaring than you think in some cases - in the original comics, after being taught English telepathically, the X-Men are noted on-panel to have no accents. It's just that we hear that once ever, characters' talk is positively filled with random words from their own languages, and every adaptation ever keeps the accent.)
    • Also based on Mystique's origins in First Class, she probably should have gained a British accent after spending 20 years there but has none. It's kind of funny how even though they're not related British Charles's "sister" sounds completely American
  • Novelization: The second and third films have novelizations by Chris Claremont; the one for the third film shows a lot more of what's going on in Jean's head than the movie is able to, appropriate from the man who wrote the Dark Phoenix Saga.
  • Oddly-Named Sequel 2: Electric Boogaloo: Have you read the intro for the sucession? (also, despite some saying it's not a true sequel, X-Men Origins: Wolverine > The Wolverine)
  • Ooh, Me Accent's Slipping: Sometimes Hugh Jackman simply can't hide that he's Australian.
    • Michael Fassbender also lapses into his Irish origins while playing Magneto.
      • It's somewhat unavoidably noticeable if he was speaking German the moment before and he's meant to be from the Eastern bloc.
  • One-Scene Wonder:
    • In The Last Stand, Elliot Page as Kitty Pride. Somewhat limited screen time and perhaps the most memorable performance.
    • The Spike is pretty well remembered despite appearing in only one scene - probably because his fight with Wolvie was so cool.
      • This may be because many fans believe he's the live action version of another Spyke from a certain show that had recently ended.
    • Angel also steals the scene where defiantly refuses the cure (his father invented it out of shame). We see him three times, but all are memorable.

Warren Worthington II: Its a better life. Its what we all want.
Angel: No. Its what you want. *bursts out the window and takes off*

    • In Wolverine Ryan Reynolds as Wade Wilson/Deadpool Note: this only counts when Reynolds is playing him, not Scott Adkins as Weapon XI).
    • In First Class, surprisingly, Wolverine, who is only in the movie for less than a minute, but whose scene also happens to be one of the funniest.
  • Opposed Mentors: Pyro in the second X Men movie had the choice between Magneto or Xavier. This is often the case with some characters in the comics too.
  • The Other Darrin: Sabertooth was played by Tyler Mane, a pro wrestler, in the first movie. In X-Men Origins: Wolverine, he was played by stage and film actor Liev Schreiber, best known in front of the camera as Shaw in the remake of The Manchurian Candidate and for the Scream movies. Kitty Pride was portrayed by three different actresses (though she's only a major character in the third).
    • Alex Burton portrays Pyro in the first movie, Aaron Stanford in the following two.
  • Patrick Stewart Speech: (what did you expect?) First and second films. The DVD of the third shows it would also have it.
  • Psychic Radar: It's X-Men with Professor X. This was going to come up. Cerebro provides him with a massive boost, allowing him to mentally trace people all over the world. He knows as soon as he scans the school that Rogue has up and run away, too.
  • Retcon: At least one character per movie: Sabertooth, Lady Deathstrike, Juggernaut and Deadpool.
    • Considering the way the movies have changed around some of the comic book characters' generations, there's likely to be more in the future if more movies are going to be made based somewhat on the comics.
  • Sequel Escalation: Each film was bigger/more expensive than the previous one, which is why Fox started spinoffs instead of an X4.
  • Shapeshifting Seducer: Mystique in X2 and First Class.
  • Sharp-Dressed Man: Almost everyone in First Class, with Azazel and Riptide standing out the most.
  • Shock and Awe: Storm.
  • Smart People Play Chess: Xavier and Magneto, in the first film and in First Class, less obviously in the second film when Magneto's in his plastic prison, and alluded to again in the third at the end with that one scene with Magneto in the park with a board of chess...
  • Spandex, Latex, or Leather: Black leather.
  • Stuffed Into the Fridge: Cyclops. Double points for being killed by his lover! Triple points for being a Rare Male Example!
    • In Wolverine, Temporary Love Interest Kayla. Then subverted when we learn her death was faked and Stryker was specifically invoking this so Logan would agree to join the Weapon X program, and double subverted when she is Stuffed Into the Fridge for real. Also, the old couple who help Logan and are killed by Agent Zero, and arguably John Wraith when he is killed by Victor.
  • Teleport Spam: Nightcrawler, Wraith, Weapon XI and Azazel all do this.
  • Vietnam War: Alluded to by Stryker in X2, and the intro to Wolverine.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: Magneto sincerely believes he is valiantly championing a righteous cause - at least as far as mutants are concerned.
  • Winged Humanoid: Warren Wortingthon III has bird wings; Angel Salvatore has dragonfly wings.
  • Wolverine Claws, 'natch
  • World War II: The first film begins with a flashback as Jews are being herded into a concentration camp. Wolverine has an even shorter one in the opening credits. First Class has an extended version of the concentration camp scene from the first film.