X-Men: Days of Future Past

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The original X-Men join forces with their younger selves from the past in order to change a major historical event and fight in an epic battle that could save our future.

Release Date: May 23, 2014

Phase:

Classification:

Runtime: 2h 29m

Budget: $250,000,000

Box Office: $748,045,700

Phase

Classification

Runtime
2h 29m

Production

Budget
$250,000,000

Box Office
$748,045,700

Hugh Jackman
Logan / Wolverine
James McAvoy
Charles Xavier
Michael Fassbender
Erik Lehnsherr
Jennifer Lawrence
Raven / Mystique
Elliot Page
Kitty Pryde
Peter Dinklage
Dr. Bolivar Trask
Patrick Stewart
Professor X
Nicholas Hoult
Hank / Beast
Shawn Ashmore
Bobby / Iceman
Omar Sy
Bishop
Evan Peters
Peter / Quicksilver
Adan Canto
Sunspot
Famke Janssen
Jean Grey
James Marsden
Scott Summers
Len Wein
Congressman Davis
Chris Claremont
Congressman Parker
Michael Lerner
Senator Brickman
Mark Camacho
President Nixon
Harry Standjofski
Groundskeeper
Mike Dopud
Pinstripe Mafioso
Andreas Apergis
Col. Sanders
Zabryna Guevara
Trask Secretary
Zerha Leverman
Ms. Maximoff
Angela Galuppo
Pentagon Tour Guide
Kyle Gatehouse
Pentagon Cook
Darryl Scheelar
Armed Kitchen Guard
Thai-Hoa Le
General Nhuan
Johnny Tran
Vietnamese Captain
Julian Casey
Peace Summit Reporter
Robert Crooks
Nixon Aide
Matt Cooke
Secretary of Defense
Tim Post
US Army General
Jason Deline
Desk Anchor
Karine Vanasse
French Emergency Nurse
Jude Beny
Female Traveler
Arthur Holden
Blue Suit Traveler
Sean Curley
Airport Backpacker
Susanna Fournier
Flight Attendant
Andrew Peplowski
White House Reporter
Neil Napier
Secret Service Agent
Mizinga Mwinga
Potomac River Cop
Josh Helman
Maj. Bill Stryker
Alexander Felici
Young Mutant Scavenger
Lee Villeneuve
Black Coast Mafioso
Robert Montcalm
Vietnam MP Guard
Jaa Smith-Johnson
Mutant Soldier
Alex Ivanovici
Quarantine Doctor
Alain Dahan
Quarantine Doctor
Freddy Bessa
Quarantine Doctor
Patricia Tougas
Quarantine Nurse
François Paquette
Congressman McCarter
Milo Chang Sigel
Pentagon Young Boy
Kiana Chang Sigel
Pentagon Young Girl
Victor Cornfoot
Surveillance Guard
Brent Skagford
Surveillance Guard
John-sebastien Cote
Mustachioed Kitchen Guard
Stéphane Julien
Kitchen Guard
Taris Tyler
Pentagon Elevator Guard
Gregory Hlady
General Petrov
Dang Quoc Thinh
Vietnamese Translator
Vladimir Aksenov
Russian Translator
Jimmy Chan
Chinese Translator
Pierre Leblanc
French TV Reporter
John Sanford Moore
White House Lawn Reporter
Moe Jeudy-Lamour
White House Ticket Man
Brianna Bone
Red Haired Girl
Jason Koehler
White House Stage Guard
Miya Shelton-Contreras
Peter's Little Sister
Christian Jadah
Potomac River Cop
Bryan Singer
Director / Producer
Simon Kinberg
Writer / Producer
Hutch Parker
Producer
Stan Lee
Executive Producer
Todd Hallowell
Executive Producer
Josh McLaglen
Executive Producer
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Reviewer:
The Movie Mob
Date:
January 2, 2023
**X-Men: Days of Future Past leverages time travel to bring its expansive universe and different casts together for one of the most powerful and entertaining superhero epics ever made.** Days of Future Past was the pinnacle of the 20th Century Fox X-Men franchise. It beautifully unites the original cast with the First Class cast in one of the best X-Men comic book stories. The story feels urgent and high stakes right from the beginning, with the world destroyed and only a small band of mutants fighting to survive and try to prevent this apocalyptic future. The time travel plot of the film allows Hugh Jackman to interact with McAvoy and the young X-Men but also bring back the older cast and correct some of the franchise's past mistakes. Evan Peters' Quicksilver offers some of the movie's best moments with his silly but technically stunning scenes. Seeing Stewart and McKellen back and seeing their performances contrasted with McAvoy and Fassbender was incredible. With great highs like X2 and First Class and disappointing lows like Last Stand and Dark Phoenix, Days of Future Past rises as the best X-Men movie and one of the best comic book films of all time.
Rating:
10
Reviewer:
CinemaSerf
Date:
December 26, 2022
So in the best spirit of "Terminator", the X-Men conclude that the best way of securing the future is to send "Wolverine" (Hugh Jackman) into the past to try to stop history from causing the demise of both human and mutant alike. Why? Well that's because they realise that modern science, which has created the unstoppable robotic "Sentinels", is capable of destroying all in it's path - and them fighting each other will merely ensure they all end up going the way of the dodo. The task assigned to "Wolverine" is to try and convince the 1973 version of "Mystique" (Jennifer Lawrence) upon whose DNA these metallic creations are based, to co-operate - and that is not going to be an easy task. Especially as she has no idea that she is the crucial source of their genetics. This is easily the best of the series for my money. The amalgam of new and old cast deliver the best, meatiest, of the stories efficiently and entertainingly. "Wolverine" takes the lead but there is plenty of scope for the other characters to shine, use their powers, have a bit of romance and generally keep this 2¼ hour action adventure moving along quickly. We are spared much of the repetitive close-combat scenes that Jackman's character usually delivers; the visual effects are lively and vibrant and the denouement offers a degree of food for thought amidst the chaos and mayhem. Great to watch on a big screen and well anchored by the (slightly side-lined) Thespians, this is well worth a watch.
Rating:
7.0
Reviewer:
Wuchak
Date:
November 21, 2018
***Focuses on the best characters and an interesting story*** "X-Men: Days of Future Past" (2014) starts in an apocalyptic near-future where mutants are being wiped out by Sentinels, government-made robots created for this very purpose. The X-Men and Magneto decide to send Wolverine's consciousness back to his body in 1973 to prevent the Sentinels from attaining their mutant-killing powers. This is easily one of the best X-Men films because of the interesting plot and the focus on the most interesting characters. Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) has been the top X-Men since day one so you can't go wrong with making him the focal point. James McAvoy and Patrick Stewart are excellent as Professor X, as are Michael Fassbender as young Magneto, Jennifer Lawrence as Mystique and Evan Peters as Quicksilver, the latter in a small but highly entertaining role. Nicholas Hoult as Beast gets an honorable mention and Bingbing Fan is notable as Blink, particularly her stunning face. The plot is convoluted and yet easy to follow if you're familiar with the franchise's story arc. The film is all-around compelling. It has the confidence to slow down and be pensive while throwing in the requisite thrills and not forgetting to be entertaining. For instance, the creative and amusing way Quicksilver takes down a bunch of security guards at the Pentagon, which is one of the movie's top scenes. Lastly, I like the way Magneto’s great power is illustrated (you’ll see what I mean). The film runs 2 hours, 11 minutes and was shot in Québec, Canada. GRADE: A
Rating:
9.0
Reviewer:
Dark Jedi
Date:
October 12, 2014
This is a good and very enjoyable movie which, to me, was a bit surprising since I generally find that time travel is akin to sticking your foot in some messy and smelly stuff. It almost always screws up the movie in some way or another. This one was not without its faults but it did survive becoming too screwed up by it. The opening scenes are indeed somewhat impressive throwing the viewer directly into an apocalyptic future where mutants as well as human are rounded up by sentinels. I could not help but think about Terminator during these scenes. Maybe not very original from a general point of view but the dark and gloomy opening was not the opening scenes I would have expected from an X-Men movie. Then we, unfortunately, dive straight into some time travel when they send Wolverine back to 1973. This is of course a opportunity to make yet another twist of the mutant scare, mutants hunt, a good mutant is a dead mutant etc. story that we have seen in so many movies now. The main adversary changes but the general story idea stays the same and the arguments for hunting down the mutants are as silly as ever. Quite frankly, I find that angle a wee bit overdone and boring by now. Luckily the story is fairly well implemented. The scene were Wolverine wakes up and disposes of the three thugs are rather funny. Pretty standard stuff but pretty funny nevertheless. The part where they retrieve Magneto is quite nice and the scene down in the Pentagon where the guards and everything else is “frozen” while Maximoff calmly walks around and rearranges things is outright hilarious. I quite disliked the cheap twist where Magneto just decided to go amok and screw things up just when they were about to retrieve Mystique though. They could have spent some time coming up with a better way to twist the story at that time. The idiotic stuff with Wolverine getting a fit at the same time was just adding to my annoyance with that scene. This part is the main reason I will not give this movie a top score. Apart from this scene the movie is a very well done superhero movie with lots of nice special effects. Sure it is also rather predictable but most people, including myself, do watch these movies mostly for the effects after all. As long as the plot is not downright stupid it get to pass. Time travel. Okay, I have to harp a bit about time travel. I do not like it in movies because there are too many things that just does not add up. In this movie it is not too bad and most of the time the actual time travel aspect is kept out of the action. Wolverine goes back in time, does his stuff with a lot of action, and saves the day. Sure the dialog often comes back to the “I’m from the future” aspect but not much more. One thing annoys the hell out me though. Wolverine affects a lot of events while he is back there but not a single things seems to change in the future until one single event passes at the end of the movie. Then everything changes and it is happy ending. That is the kind of nonsense that time travel in movies ends up with. Bottom line is that this is a very enjoyable movie. Without the rubbish plot twist in the middle it would have gotten 9 or 10 stars.
Rating:
8.0
Reviewer:
Andres Gomez
Date:
August 17, 2014
Not as good as the previous X-Men movies but it has a pass... Jennifer Lawrence doesn't even get close to Rebecca Romijn. Also, Michael Fassbender and James McAvoy are really far from their senior characters performed by Ian McKellen and Patrick Stewart but the rest of original cast from first 2000's movie are great, as always.
Rating:
6.0