X-Men on DVD – The DVDfever Review

Overall, the film left me feeling very underwhelmed and certainly not very X-cited. The special effects are nothing particularly adventurous these days and Magneto’s brief attempt at turning everyone’s brains to mush is as stretching as it gets.

For a 12-certificate, there’s quite a lot of violence within including multiple stabbings, many by Wolverine thanks to his metal talons. With its comic overtones it gets away with the lower certificate, whereas Freddy routinely received an 18 for his antics, but it’s not a film for kids under the certificate’s age, despite the cinema’s complete lack of bothering to keep them out, as they did for The World is Not Enough and The Matrix.

By the end of the film, are we not meant to think that Xavier and Magneto are enemies? It just looks like they’ve got the same “male-bonding” thing that Tarantino said Maverick and Iceman had in Top Gun :)

Either way, X-Men 2 and a further sequel are already on their way, with many of the original cast members signed up for these additional exploits. No doubt they’ll coin even more money in than this limp effort, which recently grossed more revenue in its opening weekend than any other non-sequel (or non-prequel) in movie history.


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Storm has a bad hair day.


So, while the film feels like a series of extended pop videos with a lack of substance, Fox can still be congratulated upon a full-on AV experience. The 2.35:1 Panavision ratio looks fantastic with zero artifacts and a cracking anamorphic transfer, bringing the life of the comic book sparking onto the big screen (well, a 32″ WS TV is a fairly big screen :)

I could not determine the average bitrate. Playing the film itself I couldn’t access all the usual DVD-ROM onscreen remote control features such as the titles for the individual bitrate count, so heaven knows what Fox have done to the disc on that scale.

Couple this with the Dolby Digital 5.1 surround sound, which makes all the many action scenes such as Senator Kelly’s “experience”, Professor X’s echoing voice and the train station explosion all rumble and shake as they ought.


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“Whatever Geordi can do, Picard, so can I!”


In the extras dept, we begin with six Deleted Scenes, in non-anamorphic 2.35:1 widescreen and Dolby Pro Logic, but the clever part is that it allows you to either watch them on their own or mixed back into the film where they would have been, courtesy of seamless branching. There’s also an interview with director Bryan Singer by Charlie Rose, plus 3 Theatrical Trailers (totalling 6 mins) in non-anamorphic 16:9, 3 30-second TV Spots, similarly attired, a 30-second trailer for the soundtrack album and a trailer for the animated film that flopped so badly it put the mockers on any future Fox-drawn films, Titan A.E.

Two featurettes are included: The Mutant Watch (22 mins), in which non-anamorphic 16:9 clips are mixed in with general soundbites from the cast and crew and the plainly-titled X-Men Featurette (7 mins), which is more of the same and even contains bits of the same material. Hugh Jackman’s Screen Test does exactly what it says on the tin but lasts just a mere two minutes.

The Storyboard Animatics are animated storyboards used to visualise the look of a scene before filming. There’s two, lasting around a minute each, showing the action in the train station and upon the Statue of Liberty and they come across rather like the FMV sequence from a 3Dfx game. Finally, the Still Galleries wouldn’t play on my Creative Dxr2 DVD-ROM at all – making it crash – and on the PS2, things were rather the same. It tells you to navigate this section with the ‘next’ and ‘previous’ chapter buttons but it just doesn’t work.


FILM CONTENT
PICTURE QUALITY
SOUND QUALITY
EXTRAS
4
10
10
7
OVERALL 8


Detailed specs:

Cert:
Running time: 100 minutes
Year: 2000
Cat no: 19942 DVD
Released: 2001
Chapters: 15
Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1
Languages: English, French
Subtitles: 4 languages available
Widescreen: 2.35:1 (Panavision)
Disc Format: DVD9

Director: Bryan Singer
Producers: Lauren Shuler Donner and Ralph Winter
Screenplay: David Hayter
Music: Michael Kamen

Cast :
Professor Charles Xavier/X: Patrick Stewart
Magneto: Ian McKellen
Wolverine: Hugh Jackman
Dr. Jean Grey: Famke Janssen
Cyclops: James Marsden
Storm: Halle Berry
Rogue: Anna Paquin
Sabretooth: Tyler Mane
Toad: Ray Park
Mystique: Rebecca Romijn-Stamos
Senator Robert Kelly: Bruce Davison


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