Tag Archives: x-men

Franchise Detours Episode 66: ‘X-Men: Apocalypse’ (feat. Clare Brunton of W-Rated)

After exploring time travel and creating a shared universe with X-Men: Days of Future Past, where could the sequel go next? Why, the gods, of course! For better or worse, 2016’s X-Men: Apocalypse pits the Marvel mutants against their most formidable enemy yet: a big, blue Oscar Isaac.

In this episode, Clare Brunton of W-Rated helps us uncover the truth behind director Bryan Singer’s most divisive X-Men installment. We’ll discuss whether the movie is actually unjustly hated, how it serves as a prequel to Singer’s original trilogy, and whether Isaac’s performance hurts or helps.

Join us as we journey back to the Apocalypse and decide whether the movie lives up to its name. Is this where the X-Films finally jumped the shark?

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Franchise Detours Episode 65: ‘X-Men: Days of Future Past’ (feat. film critic Rosa Parra)

After The Avengers, superhero cinema has never been the same. Suddenly, everything needed to be interconnected, featuring tons of characters and an increasingly complicated timeline. Naturally, the X-Men series retroactively created its own shared universe of sorts with X-Men: Days of Future Past.

Fourteen years after the first film, director Bryan Singer’s film combined the original trilogy cast and that of X-Men: First Class to create a time-travel adventure that raised the bar for what Marvel’s mutants could do onscreen. Or at the very least, it put pressure on the series to be more ambitious.

Film critic Rosa Parra joins Franchise Detours to travel back to 2014’s X-Men: Days of Future Past, a movie that feels like even more of a wild swing nearly a decade later. We’ll discuss its unique place in the series, that epic cast, and how this installment may have doomed the series going forward.

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Franchise Detours Episode 64: ‘The Wolverine’ (feat. Ryan Luis Rodriguez of One Track Mind)

Hugh Jackman’s Wolverine has always been a fan favorite. But X-Men Origins: Wolverine called into question whether the mutant hero would get the opportunity to carry more than a single solo film. Thankfully, Jackman’s desire to take Logan to Japan paid off in the form of 2013’s The Wolverine.

Adapting one of the character’s most popular storylines, the movie marks a departure from its predecessor, tying more closely in with X-Men: The Last Stand than the first Wolverine film. It also marks James Mangold’s first time directing an X-Men movie, a decision which paid off remarkably years later.

Ryan Luis Rodriguez of One Track Mind joins us to break down The Wolverine. We’ll talk about how it draws inspiration from what’s come before — including X-Men Origins: Wolverine — bemoan the lack of Rila Fukushima’s Yukio in future projects, and that CGI-heavy third act.

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