X-Men: Days of Future Past
Maybe I should have paid attention to the X-Man canon. Perhaps knowing the history and backstory might have helped me understand or care about the characters or what was going on.
I liked looking at Jennifer Lawrence's blue belly and booty. But as a key component of this movie, she just didn't carry her weight. Her performance was eclipsed and overshadowed by anyone and everyone on the screen, including extras. She had no magnetism (insert Magneto joke). The film would have been better had it eschewed the big name star and cast someone in this role who was more dynamic. Lawrence alternates in the real world between some really great performances (Winter's Bone, American Hustle) and some sleepwalking, duds where she just has no presence and wilts on the screen (House at the End of the Street, the blank-faced Hunger Games movies). Her performance here was far closer to her dim-witted turns as Katnips Everteen in those awful Hunger Games films. When you're going to be completely blue, you need the ability to emote with your expression and your eyes and Lawrence's face (while pretty) looks like it's been botoxed into a wax figure. She just doesn't have an expressive face which would have been a real benefit here.
I liked the 70s attire. I liked the sly Nixon inside joke. I liked James McAvoy's performance because I think he's a good actor. I liked seeing Tyrion Lannister in a role that wasn't angry or elf. I really liked the ten minutes Evan Peters (from American Horror Story) was on the screen. His segment was by far the best and most creative part of the movie. Too bad the rest didn't maintain the same fast-paced tone.
I'm not a fan of the "go back in time and create a new future" concept when it comes to movies. That gets really muddled for me, particularly when you have characters occupying two different spaces at the same time. This movie didn't give me any reason to change my mind.
Never been a follower of X-Men to begin with. Always felt like they were just a ripoff/spinoff of the Fantastic Four anyway. This movie tried hard, but it didn't win me over to the X-Men universe. When it comes to Marvel the pecking order still goes Avengers, Iron Man, Thor, Captain America, Fantastic Four, Blade, X-Men (and any of the associated Wolverine movies, etc.), Daredevil/Electra, Hulk, Ghost Rider, Punisher, Howard the Duck and Spiderman. Just don't care for the movie versions of the webslinger. I liked his comics, but the films are bubbling turds.
If you're an X-Men fan, this might be good. But there were so many nuances I probably missed because this is the first and only X-Men film I've ever watched completely, I didn't understand the significance of a lot of what was going on.
The destruction was extremely limited compared to other recent superhero films. Entire cities were not reduced to rubble, no skyscrapers fell, roads did not buckle, explosions didn't engulf entire buildings and there were no earthquakes or volcanoes or machines designed to remake the world in the image of some alien race (Godzilla, Superman, Transformers 3 and so on). I felt like the film tried to be more cerebral than simply celebrating mayhem, but as a non X-ophile I didn't really know what they were cerebreing about a good bit of the time.
So, in short? X-Men follower? Pretty good movie I'd wager with the exception of a disappointing Mystique. Non X-Men fan looking for big budget action? Not so much.