Skip to main content

X-Men Days of Future Past review

It’s not easy being a mutant. Sure, some can manipulate metal with the twitch of a finger, and others can pop claws from their knuckles without breaking a sweat. But those strengths have become weaknesses, as far as mutantkind’s ongoing survival goes — weaknesses that, ironically enough, have led to the strongest X-Men film yet.

X-Men: Days of Future Past, the first X-Men film directed by Bryan Singer since 2002’s X2: X-Men United, marries two eras of mutantkind for the single most massive movie in Fox’s storied superhero franchise. It features no less than a dozen main characters, and many more minor mutants — and somehow, it works. The size and scope isn’t daunting. Indeed, the film’s gargantuan cast and decades-spanning story helps to make it such an epic success.

X-Men: Days of Future Past is The Avengers of the X-Men films, the biggest and best of the bunch.

From the very first film in the X-Men franchise, man and mutant have coexisted on shaky terms at best. By the time Days of Future Past begins, that truce has shattered and given way to a holocaust horror show. In the future, mutants are rounded up and imprisoned, feared and loathed by the dominant human race. Shape-shifting robots called Sentinels, with the ability to reshape and react based on their targets’ strengths, roam the skies, hunting and killing every mutant they can find.

Mutants face a virtually hopeless future, with genocide all but inevitable. But there are still X-Men in the world, operating as underground rebels. In China, the remnants of the X-Men gather together for one last shot at eradicating the Sentinel threat. The plan involves sending the indestructible Logan (Hugh Jackman) back through time to the 1970s to enlist a borderline drug-addicted Charles Xavier (James McAvoy) and a murderous Magneto (Michael Fassbender) into helping him stop the shape-shifting vigilante Mystique (Jennifer Lawrence) from killing Sentinel inventor Bolivar Trask (Peter Dinklage), an assassination that will inadvertently trigger the events that make the future so bleak for all mutantkind.

Whew. That’s a mouthful.

XMen Days of Future Past
Image used with permission by copyright holder

It’s a complicated plot, but it works, thanks almost entirely to the fact that the two different eras of mutants are already well established. Singer’s two X-Men films provide enough character development for folks like Bobby Drake and Colossus that when they’re smashed and shattered by Sentinels, it matters. (Not much of a spoiler, as you’ll learn when you see the film.) Matthew Vaughn’s X-Men: First Class, meanwhile, presented new takes on Xavier, Magneto and Mystique that totally worked thanks to sharp writing and even better performances. These veteran mutants are the beating heart of Days of Future Past, the reason why it matters.

Rather than focusing on a ton of new mutants, Days of Future Past leans on what already works. McAvoy, Fassbender, and Lawrence are right at the heart of the tale, operating as the movers and shakers of the Sentinel menace, wittingly or otherwise. Jackman, of course, gets in on the action as Wolverine, the poster-boy of the X-Men films, for better or worse. Here, however, he’s less of a leading man than ever, blending into the ensemble with ease. Really, he almost fills out the Xavier-modeled mentor role, while Chuck himself is the struggling young mutant with Wolverine-like rage.

Days of Future Past feels like a follow-up to two movies that don’t exist: a sequel to First Class and sequel to The Last Stand.

The film’s future isn’t as rich of a character study, but those scenes have weight thanks to what three previous X-Men films have already told us about the characters — Xavier and Magneto especially. It goes without saying that Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellan are masters of their craft, and are equally masterful when it comes to their respective X-Men legends. They’re right at home here in Days of Future Past.

There are new mutants in the mix, of course, like the teleporting Blink (Bingbing Fan) and the fiery Sunspot (Adan Canto), but they pale in comparison to the veterans. However, there is one true highlight among the newbies: Evan Peters as the impossibly fast Quicksilver. Design issues aside (Peters could have used some more time in hair and wardrobe), Quicksilver is at the heart of one of the most entertaining scenes in the entire X-Men franchise, let alone in Days of Future Past. You’ll know it when you see it.

Some will complain that Days of Future Past doesn’t fully address continuity problems established in previous X-Men films. There’s no explanation for how Xavier is still alive after X-Men: The Last Stand, nor is there any explanation for how Wolverine got his adamantium claws back after The Wolverine. But that’s part of the design of the film. In a way, Days of Future Past, repeatedly described by Singer as “an inbetweequel,” feels like a follow-up to two movies that don’t exist: a proper sequel to First Class, and a proper sequel to The Last Stand.

Rather than explaining how Xavier came back to life, rather than showing us how First Class heroes like Banshee met their maker, Days of Future Past yadda-yaddas its way through the details and gets to the meat of the matter: Sentinels eradicating mutants, and mutants fighting for their future. Who needs to know how Xavier returned from the grave when there are so many other pressing concerns?

Conclusion

With Days of Future Past, the X-Men franchise manages to reset some of its most glaring continuity issues, while also providing closure to the story Singer started with 2000’s X-Men. It’s emotional and action-packed, brimming with familiar heroes and villains, and fan-service for the deepest-cut X-Men lovers. It’s The Avengers of the X-Men films, the biggest and best of the bunch. It’s tempting to call Days of Future Past a surprise success, but in reality, it’s the third great X-Men film in a row. Between First Class, The Wolverine and now Days of Future Past, the X-Men franchise is on a roll. In a perfect world, all of Marvel’s characters would share the same roof — but as long as Fox can keep churning out this level of X-Men excellence, mutantkind is in good hands.

(Media © Twentieth Century Fox Film)

Editors' Recommendations

Josh Wigler
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Josh Wigler is a freelance entertainment reporter who has been published by Comic Book Resources, Comics Alliance…
Celebrate Mother’s Day with HBO, Max, and a lot of great movies and TV shows
Tina Fey and Amy Poehler in Baby Mama.

This Sunday, May 12, is Mother's Day, making it the perfect time to look back and reflect on the mothers in our lives. It's a special day for anyone whose parents are still with them, or even an occasion to celebrate between spouses and partners with children of their own. However you choose to mark the event, Max has shared a list of its top movies and TV shows for Mother's Day.

Topping the list of Feel Good Comedies is Baby Mama, the 2008 film starring Saturday Night Live legends Tina Fey and Amy Poehler as a woman, Kate Holbrook, and her freewheeling surrogate, Angie Ostrowski, respectively. Almost all of the selections on that list deal with motherhood in some way. The only list here with only slight connections to the shared theme is Coming of Age Movies and TV. But look at that list this way: They're just suggestions that you can watch with your mothers or your partners. It's entirely up to you.

Read more
New York City falls in new trailer for A Quiet Place: Day One
Lupita Nyong'o and Joseph Quinn in "A Quiet Place: Day One."

The Office's John Krasinski established himself as a first-rate horror and sci-fi director and writer with 2018's A Quiet Place and its 2021 follow-up, A Quiet Place Part II. For the third film in the franchise, A Quiet Place: Day One, Krasinski is turning the clock back to the beginning of the franchise's central alien invasion .

Krasinski co-wrote the script with Michael Sarnoski, who also directed the film. And in the new trailer, we get a firsthand look at the fall of New York City.

Read more
The best movie and TV show trailers of the week of May 3
Freya Allan in Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes.

Unless you're super dialed in to the latest entertainment news every day of the week, it's really easy to miss a new trailer for your favorite movie or TV show. That's why we're bringing together the best movie and TV show trailers of the week of May 3 in one place. All you really have to do now is scroll down and hit play.

Just releasing a new trailer isn't enough to get it on our roundup. We believe that the best trailers are the ones that don't give away too much about the story, while also building up a sense of excitement for the film or TV series. Most of all, we still want to be surprised when we actually watch the programing in question. Keep this in mind as we go over this week's trailers.
From season 3

Read more