Synopsis
In a world where mutants (evolved super-powered humans) exist and are discriminated against, two groups form for an inevitable clash: the supremacist Brotherhood, and the pacifist X-Men. Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi
X-Men – Review
Directed by Bryan Singer and starring Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart, and Ian McKellen, X-Men (2000) is one of the movies that helped start the modern superhero film era.
The story takes place in a world where mutants—humans born with special powers—are feared and misunderstood by society. Two powerful leaders emerge with different visions: Professor Charles Xavier, who believes humans and mutants can live peacefully together, and Magneto, who believes mutants must dominate to survive.
The film mainly follows Wolverine, a mysterious mutant with powerful healing abilities and metal claws, as he becomes involved with the X-Men team and their fight against Magneto’s plan.
Overall:
X-Men (2000) is an engaging superhero film with strong characters, a meaningful message about acceptance and discrimination, and it laid the foundation for many superhero movies that followed.
| Title | Actions |
|---|---|
| X-Men |