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X2 (2003)
Directed by
Bryan Singer

Writing credits (WGA)
Zak Penn (story) and
David Hayter (story) ...
 (more)

Add to MyMovies Photo Gallery IMDbPro Details

Photo Gallery (132 photos)
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Genre: Action / Adventure / Sci-Fi / Thriller (more)

Tagline: The time has come for those who are different to stand united (more)

Plot Outline: The X-Men band together to find a mutant assassin who has made an attempt on the President's life, while the Mutant Academy is attacked by military forces. (more) (view trailer)

User Comments: An Excellent, Action-Packed Sequel, With a Bigger, Better Cast, a Great Plot, a New, Interesting Villain, and Much More! (more)

User Rating: 7.9/10 (55,508 votes)

Cast overview, first billed only:

Patrick Stewart .... Professor Charles Xavier

Hugh Jackman .... Logan/Wolverine

Ian McKellen .... Eric Lensherr/Magneto

Halle Berry .... Storm/Ororo Munroe

Famke Janssen .... Jean Grey

James Marsden .... Scott Summers/Cyclops

Anna Paquin .... Rogue/Marie D'Ancanto

Rebecca Romijn .... Mystique/Grace (as Rebecca Romijn-Stamos)

Brian Cox .... William Stryker

Alan Cumming .... Kurt Wagner/Nightcrawler

Bruce Davison .... Senator Kelly

Aaron Stanford .... John Allerdyce/Pyro

Shawn Ashmore .... Bobby Drake/Iceman

Kelly Hu .... Yuriko Oyama/Deathstrike
Katie Stuart .... Kitty Pryde
  (more)

Also Known As:
X-Men 2 (Singapore: English title) (USA) (working title)
X² (USA) (alternative spelling)
X-2 (USA) (poster title)
X-Men 2: X-Men United (USA) (promotional title)
X2: X-Men United (USA) (promotional title)
MPAA: Rated PG-13 for sci-fi action/violence, some sexuality and brief language.
Runtime: 133 min
Country: USA
Language: English / German
Color: Color
Sound Mix: DTS / Dolby Digital
Certification: Malaysia:18SG / Argentina:Atp / Australia:M / Brazil:12 / Canada:PG / Chile:TE / Denmark:11 / Finland:K-11 / France:U / Germany:12 / Hong Kong:IIA / Netherlands:12 / New Zealand:M / Norway:11 / Peru:PT / Philippines:PG-13 / Portugal:M/12 / Singapore:PG / Spain:7 / Sweden:11 / Switzerland:12 (canton of Bern) / Switzerland:14 (canton of Geneva) / Switzerland:14 (canton of Vaud) / UK:12A / USA:PG-13 (certificate #39703)

Trivia: The script went through 27 drafts. (more)

Goofs: Continuity: When Professor X visits the plastic prison, Magneto's face is very badly bruised. By the time he meets up with the rest of the X-Men his face is completely healed, even though it's less than a day later. (more)

Quotes: Pyro: You know all those dangerous mutants you hear about in the news? I'm the worst one. (more)

Awards: 4 wins & 32 nominations (more)
X2
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User Comments:

11 out of 13 people found the following comment useful:-
An Excellent, Action-Packed Sequel, With a Bigger, Better Cast, a Great Plot, a New, Interesting Villain, and Much More!, 4 March 2005

Author: The_Wolf_101 from United States

Having a new villain, a bigger cast, a great plot, and even more to come, this thrilling action-packed sequel is better than its predecessor, with more special effects, new characters, and a great, all-star cast to top it all off. I really enjoyed watching it because, being a big X-Men fan, thought it was really worth the watch.

The X-Men return, as they are forced to team up with their archenemies Magneto(Ian McKellen)(who escapes his little prison from the last film) and Mystique(Rebecca Romijn-Stamos) as a human named William Striker(Brian Cox) threatens the mutants by trying to kill them all to be rid of the beings that caused his wife to die. But, Striker seems to have a connection with X-Man Wolverine's(Hugh Jackman) past as Wolverine tries to find out more about himself.

Now, this X-Men film is better than the first film by a long-shot because it has such a new, interesting basis with, for example, having a human for a villain instead of a new, evil mutant that threatens to kill all humanity. The new villain, Striker, forces the good guys and normal villains to team up, which is also new... to me, since I haven't read the comics and don't remember the show so well. But, besides the point, this film has excellent performances (especially by Hugh Jackman, who hides his Australian accent with a rough American one), a great plot, a great cast, and more, which makes the film something worth your watch (even if you haven't seen the first film).

4/4 stars

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X2 (film)

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X2
Directed by Bryan Singer
Produced by Stan Lee
Tom DeSanto
Avi Arad
Bryan Singer
Ralph Winter
Written by Comic Book:
Stan Lee
Jack Kirby
Story:
David Hayter
Bryan Singer
Zak Penn
Screenplay:
Michael Dougherty
Dan Harris
David Hayter
Starring Patrick Stewart
Hugh Jackman
Ian McKellen
Halle Berry
Rebecca Romijn
Famke Janssen
James Marsden
Brian Cox
Alan Cumming
Bruce Davison
Anna Paquin
Shawn Ashmore
Aaron Stanford
Kea Wong
Daniel Cudmore
Music by John Ottman
Cinematography Newton Thomas Sigel
Editing by John Ottman
Elliot Graham
Distributed by Twentieth Century Fox
Release date(s) May 2, 2003
Running time 133 min.
Language English
Budget $110 million
Gross Domestic:
$214,949,694
Worldwide:
$407,557,613
Preceded by X-Men
Followed by X-Men: The Last Stand
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

X2 is an action movie, first released in the United Kingdom on April 24, 2003, and in the United States on May 2, 2003. It is also called variously in promotional materials X2: X-Men United, X-Men 2: X-Men United and X-Men 2. The film is the second part of the trilogy; following X-Men (2000), and preceding X-Men: The Last Stand (2006). It was directed by Bryan Singer, and starred an ensemble cast including Patrick Stewart, Hugh Jackman, Ian McKellen, Halle Berry, Rebecca Romijn, Famke Janssen, James Marsden, Anna Paquin, Brian Cox, Shawn Ashmore, Kelly Hu and Alan Cumming.

The film is loosely based on the 1982 X-Men graphic novel God Loves, Man Kills. In the film, William Stryker is a high-ranking army colonel who leads an assault into Professor Xavier's school to build his own version of Xavier's mutant-tracking computer Cerebro in order to destroy every mutant on Earth. The X-Men are forced to ally with Magneto and Mystique to defeat Stryker. X2, which introduced Nightcrawler to filmgoers, surpassed the initial film at the box office, earning approx. $215 million in North America compared to $157.3 million for X-Men, making the sequel one of the top ten movies of 2003.

Taglines:

  • The time has come for those who are different to stand united.
  • Get ready for the return of the Evolution.
  • Evolution Continues.
  • The ones we fear most, will be all that can save us... again.
  • In this world wide conspiracy the only thing you can count on... is the X-Factor.
  • First, they were fighting for acceptance. Now, they're battling for survival.
  • X-Men United.
Contents
  • 1 Plot
  • 2 Cast
  • 3 Inspiration
    • 3.1 Links to the Marvel Universe
    • 3.2 Differences from the comic book
  • 4 Critical reaction and box office
  • 5 Posters
  • 6 Trivia
    • 6.1 Video Games
    • 6.2 Comics
  • 7 Sequel
  • 8 External links

[edit]

Plot
Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The opening scene shows a mutant by the name of Nightcrawler attempting an assassination of the President of the United States. After a lengthy battle with Secret Service agents, he is shot and disappears, leaving behind a knife with a tag that reads "Mutant Freedom Now!"

Wolverine finally reaches Alkali Lake, the facility used for experiments on mutants like him. He finds nothing but an empty dam. Meanwhile, the mutants of "Professor Xavier's School for the Gifted" visit a museum. Jean Grey is confronted by Cyclops after she demonstrates her lack of focus. She confesses to him that she has been having bad feelings about the future. In the food court, Iceman, Rogue, and Pyro engage in an alteraction with two other young men. After Pyro sets one of the boys' clothes on fire and Iceman extinguishes him, everyone in the museum freezes as if time has stopped. Only the mutants are unaffected. Professor Xavier wheels in, unamused by the situation, lectures Pyro on "showing off" and decides that it is time to leave.

Cyclops defending Professor X outside of Magneto's prison.

Wolverine reappears at the School for the Gifted and is immediately asked to "babysit" the children of the school. After some difficulty, Professor Xavier locates Nightcrawler with Cerebro and sends Storm and Jean to retrieve him. They find Nightcrawler in a church and he willingly comes along with them, explaining that the entire time he was in the White House, he had no controll over his actions. Meanwhile, Cyclops and Professor X visit Magneto in his plastic prison to see if he had any part in the attack on the President. While reading Magneto's thoughts, Professor X discovers that a covert government operative, William Stryker, has been extracting information from Magneto. During their conversation, a trap is sprung and Cyclops and Professor X are captured.

Wolverine awakens to nightmares of his first memories and heads to the kitchen. While conversing with Iceman, a military invasion of the school begins. The soldiers attempt to sedate every mutant they find, but Siryn wakes everybody up with one of her sonic screams. Colossus and Wolverine round up a number of the students. Wolverine stays behind to confront the attackers, but is shocked to discover that they are being led by William Stryker. Stryker, himself surprised to see Wolverine in the mansion, reveals that he knows much about Wolverine and wishes for him to come with the military to discuss it. Before Wolverine answers, Iceman is able to create an impenetrable wall of ice between them. The kids persuade Wolverine to come with them, to protect them.

In the meantime, Mystique has been posing as Senator Robert Kelly and also Stryker's assistant Yuriko Oyama in order to obtain information about Magneto's prison. She eventually manages to trick one of his security guards and drugs him, and injects something into him. When the guard later arrives at the prison, Magneto extracts the contents of Mystique's injection; Mystique had injected him with liquid iron and Magneto is able to create small balls of metal, which he uses to destroy his prison and escape.

Wolverine and the kids (Pyro, Iceman, and Rogue) head to Iceman's home in Boston. After an awkward meeting between his parents and Wolverine, Iceman decides to tell his parents (who believe he has been going to a boarding school) that he is a mutant. His parents are shocked to learn the truth, especially when their son demonstrates his power by freezing a cup of tea. During the discussion, Iceman's disgruntled brother runs upstairs and calls the police, telling them that mutants are holding his family hostage. Wolverine meanwhile receives a call from Storm who decides to come and pick them up.

Colossus taking on Stryker's soldiers.

Just as the group leaves, the police arrive and draw their weapons on Wolverine and his younger companions. A police officer mistakes Wolverine's claws for knives and orders him to drop them. When Wolverine tries to explain and sheathes his claws, the officer shoots Wolverine in the head. Pyro becomes enraged and begins using his flame-controlling powers to attack the officers and destroy their cars. Just before his attack turns deadly, Rogue grabs hold of him with her bare hand. Pyro falls to the ground, drained of his powers, which Rogue then uses to put the fires out. The X-Jet arrives to pick them all up, and Wolverine, now fully recovered thanks to his adamantium skull and healing factor, stands up and the bullet falls out.

During the flight, the X-Jet is targeted by two Air Force F-16s who attempt to force a landing. After the X-Jet refuses to land, the pilots fire missiles. Storm creates a number of tornadoes in order to lose the aircraft. One plane is unable to maintain control and ejects. The other is able to fire two missiles before ejecting. Storm attempts evasive maneuvers, but quickly loses distance. Jean uses her powers at an unnaturally high level (partial manifestation of the Phoenix?) and is able to destroy one of the missiles. Unfortunately the other detonates directly behind the jet, rupturing the fuselage. In the ensuing depressurization, Rogue is pulled out of her seat and out into a free fall. Nightcrawler teleports outside the jet to grab Rogue, then teleports back in, saving her life. The jet, still en route to a crash landing, is stopped at the last moment by Magneto, who is standing on the ground.

The X-Men join with Magneto and Mystique to stop Stryker.

Magneto has learned that Stryker orchestrated the attack on the President in order to gain approval to attack the school and has been experimenting on mutants (including Nightcrawler) at a secret base. Jean Grey reads Nightcrawler's mind and determines that Stryker's base is located at Alkali Lake. When Wolverine claims that there is nothing at Alkali Lake, Jean insists that the base is inside the dam. Stryker is able to control mutants with a powerful drug that he has used on Nightcrawler, Magneto, and a number of other mutants, including Lady Deathstrike. He has also stolen enough equipment from Xavier's own Cerebro unit to build a second Cerebro and plans to use Professor X to kill all of the mutants in the world. The X-Men and Magneto join together to stop Stryker.

Stryker gains control over Professor Xavier through his son, Jason Stryker (a former student of the professor), who is able to project powerful visions in the mind, blinding a person to reality. Jason (in the form of a young girl) instructs Professor X to use Cerebro to find all existing mutants and kill them. Magneto, Mystique, and the remaining X-Men stage their assault on the facility, by having Mystique infiltrate disguised as Wolverine. Stryker orders his guards to let "Wolverine" in, as he believes his experiment has finally decided to come home. Somehow Mystique's disguise doesn't fool Colonel Stryker. Mystique quickly incapacitates the soldiers and manages to take control of the control room, opening up the main gates so that the X-Men can enter the Alkali Lake Facility. Storm and Nightcrawler pair off, searching for the kidnapped students. Jean Grey joins Magneto and Mystique in order to keep an eye on them as they attempt to bring Professor Xavier back to his senses and rescue him. On their way, they are attacked by a brainwashed Cyclops. Jean stands her ground against Cyclops in order to buy Magneto enough time to get to Dark Cerebro and stop the coming mutant annihilation. Jean withstands Cyclops' optic blast, reflecting it again at an extremely high level (another partial manifestation of the Phoenix) and both are propelled backwards, causing damage to the generators that keep the dam from collapsing. The destruction of the base is unstoppable.

Wolverine runs off on his own to look for Stryker. He finds Stryker in an adamantium smelting room along with Lady Deathstrike. After Stryker leaves, Wolverine attempts to follow him but is attacked by Deathstrike. A battle of blades ensues, which results in Wolverine pumping Deathstrike full of molten adamantium metal, killing her. Wolverine finds Stryker on a landing pad and stabs him in the stomach. Stryker attempts to bargain with Wolverine, telling him that if he comes with him he can tell him about his past. Wolverine refuses and straps the wounded Stryker to the helicopter wheel, saying that if the X-Men die, Stryker will too.

Storm summons a snow blizzard inside dark cerebro.

Magneto breaks into the new Cerebro and uses Mystique, disguised as Stryker, to convince Jason of a "change of plans" - to kill all humans. Magneto escapes on the helicopter, taking Pyro along with him. The X-Men save Professor X and stop the killing process, but the dam is falling apart. As the team prepare to leave, Wolverine revisits Stryker and gets rid of his mutant tag. A malfunction aboard the X-Jet prevents it from taking off and the dam finally bursts. The flood gets stronger, drowning Stryker. Jean Grey leaves the jet, uses her heightened powers to stop the onrushing flood, and raises the jet at the same time, all the while surrounded by a flaming energy field (the Phoenix fully manifesting itself). Nightcrawler attempts to grab her but she chooses to stay. She raises the jet just high enough for it to take off as the water floods over her. Cyclops and Wolverine both mourn Jean's death.

Back at the White House, the President prepares to address the country on the perceived mutant threat. Just as he begins his speech, the lights flicker and everyone in the room freezes except for himself. The X-Men appear before him and Rogue gives him the files from Stryker's private offices while Professor X tells him about the events of the last few days, saying that in the files some humans and mutants tried to start a war and there have been casualties on both sides. Then Professor X gives him an ultimatum: either humans and mutants work together to build peace, or they will destroy each other through war. The mutants leave in the same manner they entered. As everyone else in the room returns to motion, the shocked President looks at the files and is uncertain whether to continue his speech.

The film ends with a voiceover by Jean Grey, identical to the voiceover at the start of the initial film, on the process of evolution. The camera floats over Alkali Lake, showing a vague but ominous shape in the water surface, the shape of a burning bird, the Phoenix.

[edit]

Cast
The X-Men
Actor Role
Patrick Stewart Professor Charles Xavier
Hugh Jackman Logan / Wolverine
Ian McKellen Eric Lensherr / Magneto
Halle Berry Ororo Munroe / Storm
Famke Janssen Jean Grey
James Marsden Scott Summers / Cyclops
Anna Paquin Marie / Rogue
Rebecca Romijn-Stamos Mystique
Brian Cox Colonel William Stryker
Alan Cumming Kurt Wagner / Nightcrawler
Bruce Davison Senator Robert Kelly
Shawn Ashmore Bobby Drake / Iceman
Aaron Stanford John Allerdyce / Pyro
Kelly Hu Yuriko Oyama / Lady Deathstrike
Katie Stuart Kitty Pryde / Shadowcat
Kea Wong Jubilation Lee / Jubilee
Daniel Cudmore Peter Rasputin / Colossus
Shauna Kain Theresa Rourke Cassidy / Siryn
[edit]

Inspiration

The basic story elements, involving Stryker's plot to use Xavier's powers against all mutants, and the X-Men's resulting alliance with Magneto, are loosely adapted from the graphic novel God Loves, Man Kills by Chris Claremont. In that story, Stryker has a military background, but is currently a religious leader whose wife gave birth to an obviously mutant infant. In a fit of rage, he killed them both and decided that he had been chosen by God to destroy mutants. In the film, his military background is moved to the foreground, and the religious aspect of the character is eliminated. Instead of killing his wife and son in childbirth, the Stryker of the film sends his son (loosely based on the character Mastermind from the comics) to Xavier to be cured of his mutation. Unable to change his mutation, and resentful of his parents, he began tormenting his mother by projecting nightmarish images into her mind, causing her to commit suicide by drilling a hole into her head. Stryker responded by giving his son a lobotomy, and extracting his brain fluid, which he now uses to control other mutants.

[edit]

Links to the Marvel Universe

In the scene where Mystique accesses Stryker's computer for the location of Magneto's cell, a list of mutants can be seen, many of which are from the comic books, including Remy LeBeau (Gambit), the Guthrie children Sam (Cannonball) and Paige (Husk), Kevin McTaggert (Proteus, the son of Moira MacTaggert), Jamie Madrox (Multiple Man), the Maximoff children Wanda (Scarlet Witch) and Pietro (Quicksilver) (Magneto's offspring in the comics), Xi'an Coy Mahn (Karma), and Danielle Moonstar (Moonstar); the latter two are part of the New Mutants group of the X-Men. Of these, only Multiple Man appears in any of the films, playing a small role in X-Men: The Last Stand. Also on the list was Arthur Maddicks, a Morlock in the comics; it is generally assumed that the child with the forked tongue, called 'Artie' by Storm is Arthur Maddicks in the film's universe.

Also in that scene, Mystique sees a computer file on Omega Red; a folder on Project Wideawake, an operation that called for the construction of giant, mutant-hunting robots known as Sentinels; a folder on Muir Island (Moira MacTaggert later plays a minor role in the third film) and a folder on Gamma Flight, assumingly a play on Alpha Flight or its junior level training squad bearing that name. In the scene where Mystique confronts the guard to Magneto's plastic cell in a bar, a news broadcast is on the TV by the bar. It shows an interview with a Dr. Hank McCoy, who in the comics is the X-Men member Beast, debating Dr. Sebastian Shaw, the Black King of the Hellfire Club.

In the scene where William Stryker's troops raid Charles Xaiver's school for mutants, the panicked students include Kitty Pryde (Shadowcat) and Theresa Rourke Cassidy (Siryn). Theresa is the girl whose blood-curdling scream wakes everyone up, and Kitty the girl who becomes intangible, falls through the bed, and jumps through several guards.

In the lab where Wolverine's adamantium skeleton was implanted, there are X-rays on the wall; one appears to depict a person's back with a wing. This may have been intended as a reference to a comics storyline in which the X-Man Angel lost his wings and was implanted with metal ones; however, the appearance of Angel with his feathered wings in X-Men: The Last Stand contradicts this minor detail. There are also X-rays of one of Deathstrike's forearms and hands, with her talons retracted and extended.

A bit more obvious amount of foreshadowing of the third movie is used. Whenever Jean's powers became stronger than usual, she was often depicted as glowing with fire, a sign of the Phoenix. The ending shot over the Alkali Lake shows the image of a burning object in the shape of a bird under the water.

[edit]

Differences from the comic book

Longtime fans of the X-Men title will recognize that some liberties have been taken with the X-Men characters. While the movie need not follow all the conventions of the comic, they are interesting to note and may be considered to be parallels with the Ultimate X-Men series.

  • Iceman appears as a teenager and is much younger than many of the other X-Men. In the comics, Iceman was one of the original X-Men, and the youngest of the team (16 years old in 1964). He appeared and left many years before the 1980s X-Men like Rogue, Storm, and Wolverine. If he were around at all, he would appear closer to Jean Grey's age and maturity. Iceman, Jean Grey and Cyclops are part of the original X-Men line-up.
  • Colossus is in this movie but has only a very small part and is not part of the X-Men team, only an older student of the academy. While young in age when he began with the X-Men, he was a full-fledged member for many years in the comics. In addition, he does not speak with the expected Russian accent.
  • William Stryker is a zealot preacher in the comics, while the film's version is the head commander of the covert black ops program Weapon X. His son, Jason, is a very loose incarnation of Jason "Mastermind" Wyngarde, who was a full-grown, mentally and physically able illusionist (with no relation to Stryker) from the Brotherhood of Evil Mutants and Hellfire Club in the comics. In the film, Jason is mute, lobotomized, and wheelchair-bound; his brain secretes a powerful chemical which is extracted through a tap in his spine and used by his father as a mind control agent on Nightcrawler, Deathstrike, Magneto, and Cyclops. In his illusions, Jason projects himself as a young girl; both he and his illusory form have heterochromic irises (one blue, one brown).
  • Deathstrike, who in the movie appeared as a mutant under Stryker's control was the daughter of the inventor of the adamantium bonding process in the comic books. Also, in the comics she was a cyborg, not a mutant.
  • Rogue, according to the comic books has the ability of flight and superhuman strength, whereas in the movie she lacks these abilities. However Rogue only possesses these abilities in the comic books because she accidentally absorbed Ms. Marvel's powers by touching her for too long. By changing her backstory, skipping her original villainous phase, she is closer to her original basic ability.
  • The role Rogue plays in the films - that of a young mutant who became a sort of surrogate daughter/little-sister to Wolverine - was originally established in the comic books by Kitty Pryde, and later Jubilee.
  • There is no indication in the movie that Mystique is Nightcrawler's mother. Neither is there any indication in the movie that Mystique is Rogue's foster mother. However, as in the comic book, Mystique and Nightcrawler bear a strong physical resemblance. In the X2 DVD, they said that the scene between the two where Nightcrawler asks Mystique advice (asking why she doesn't just hide among humans) was a subtle reference to their relationships in the comics. It should be noted, however, that the story involving Mystique and Nightcrawler's kinship was not mentioned or elaborated upon in the comic book universe until long after both characters had been firmly (and separately) established.
  • In the movie, Pyro is an American teenage student at the Xavier academy who defects to Magneto's Brotherhood at the movie's climax. In the comics, he is a tall, blond, blue-eyed, Australian novelist in his 40s who always worked with the Brotherhood, though never under Magneto.

In summary, characters from many different times, titles, and lineups were selected and placed into a new lineup that never before been seen in any X-Men comic or graphic novel.

[edit]

Critical reaction and box office

As with the original film, X2 garnered praise from critics and won over most of the comic book community, and it earned more money at the box office, totaling $214.9 for North America (228.1 when adjusted for inflation) and $407.5 worldwide[1]. The comic-book hobbyist magazine Wizard called it the best comic book movie of the year (2003). Empire magazine called it the best comic book movie of all time in 2006.

[edit]

Posters
[edit]

Trivia
  • Colonel William Stryker (Brian Cox) is referred to in dialogue as being up to 20 years older than Senator Robert Kelly (Bruce Davison). However, in real life, Cox and Davison were born only 27 days apart.
  • In the first movie Mystique's yellow eyes were due to contact lenses but in the second, computer-generated imagery was used.
  • Despite popular belief, the car that the X-Men drive in this film is actually just a modified Mazda RX-8, and is not a concept car.
  • The film continues the running gag of the rivalry between Wolverine and Cyclops, Wolverine having hijacked Cyclops' motorbike at the end of the first film. He returns it to him at the start of this film, and later steals his car when he, Rogue, Iceman and Pyro are escaping Stryker's forces.
  • Many X's are hidden in the X-Men movies. One is on top of the President's door at the beginning of the movie. These X's are actually part of the architecture of the Oval Office, but they fit well in the film.
  • When Nightcrawler attacks the Secret Service at the beginning of the movie, the "Dies Irae" from Mozart's Requiem plays.
  • Just before the assassination attempt, Nightcrawler is shown in the White House with head cast downwards, mimicking a pose of a painting of John F Kennedy, which hangs in the background (Oil Portrait of John F. Kennedy by Aaron Shikler).
  • When Nightcrawler tries to scare away Storm and Jean Grey, he speaks German phrases: Ich bin der Bote des Teufels. Ich bin die Ausgeburt des Bösen! The translation is: I am the messenger of the Devil. I am the spawn of evil!
  • In the scene where Mystique takes the information out of the computer, she looks at a list of names of mutants. Included in the list are the Guthries, Samuel Guthrie (Cannonball) and his sister Paige (Husk); Keniucho Harada (Silver Samurai); Garrison Kane; Remy LeBeau (Gambit); Eric M. Lensherr (Magneto); Elizabeth Braddock (Psylocke, who appears briefly in X-Men: the Last Stand); Lorna Dane (Polaris); Roberto DaCosta (Sunspot); Angelo Espinosa (Skin); the Cassidy Family (Banshee and Siryn, the latter of whom is briefly in X2 and X-Men The Last Stand); Allison Blaire (Dazzler); Bobby Drake (Iceman); John Allerdyce (Pyro); Artie Maddicks; Jamie Madrox (the Multiple Man, who appears in X-Men: The Last Stand); Xi'an Coy Mahn (Karma); Pietro and Wanda Maximoff (Quicksilver and the Scarlet Witch, though their first names aren't seen); Kevin McTaggart (Proteus, though his last name is misspelled); Danielle Moonstar (Psyche/Mirage); and Ororo Munroe (Storm). Folders on another screen carry the names Omega Red; Franklin Richards (son of Mr. Fantastic and Invisible Woman of the Fantastic Four); Project Wideawake (Sentinels); Muir Island; and Cerebro. Many of these are spotted only by pausing and possibly zooming the screen.
  • The movie implies that Logan got his claws in the Weapon X program. In the comics, the claws are part of his mutation – only the adamantium was added.
  • In the scene where the channels change on the television, an episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation from 1987 is seen, starring Patrick Stewart, the actor who plays Professor Charles Xavier in this movie.
  • Bryan Singer credited The Empire Strikes Back and The Wrath of Khan as his influences on this film. The latter film also features a voiceover at the end from a dead character, hinting at their resurrection in the next film.
  • In the scene where Stryker uses the serum to interrogate Magneto, we see Magneto reading The Once and Future King by T. H. White. At the end of the movie, the camera pans out as Professor Xavier begins to teach his English class. If you listen closely, he asks his students if any of them have ever read "The Once and Future King" by a famous English novelist named T.H. White. According to the commentary, Bryan Singer chose the novel because the title is similar to Magneto while he was imprisoned: previously a leader, and a leader-to-be again later.
  • This is the second film with both Famke Janssen and Alan Cumming. Their first was Goldeneye, only as antagonist to the lead character. Their characters respectively Xenia Onatopp and Boris Grishenko.
  • In the beginning of the film Nightcrawler initially wears a layer of white makeup to help him infiltrate the whitehouse. As he teleports around during his attack the disguise wears off. Due to the extensive makeup and prosthetics Alan Cumming wore to play Nightcrawler, it is sometimes incorrectly thought the layer of white makeup disappearing is a blooper.
  • In the comics, Nightcrawler has from time to time used various devices to make him temporarily appear more human.
  • The film is referenced in the movie Clerks II, when Jay suggests that prison cells be built like Magneto's plastic cell in X2.
  • In the beginning of the film when Jean's telepathy is acting strange, the "thoughts" that are seemingly being thought by the people Jean looks at are actually bits of audio taken from different parts of the film.
[edit]

Video Games

X2 had a game tie-in on X2: Wolverine's Revenge which has nothing to do with the events of the movie. The game focuses on Wolverine as he is looking to get his revenge on those who did him wrong (hence the title.)

There is also another game, X-Men: The Official Game which bridges the gap between X2 and X-Men: The Last Stand. Specifically, it explains Nightcrawler's absence from the third X-Men movie. However, X-Men: The Official Game is not truly X2's game, but the third X-Men movie, as this game came around in the same year as the third film.

[edit]

Comics

The comic adaptation of the film was written without its writers knowing the actual ending of X2 as it was kept under wraps and therefore the comic's ending is different from the finished film.

[edit]

Sequel

See X-Men: The Last Stand

[edit]

External links
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
X2 (film)
  • Official Site
  • TheXverse.com: X-Men Movie News
  • X-Men Movies hype at the SuperHeroHype!
  • X2 at Rotten Tomatoes
X-Men
Comics Bibliography Uncanny X-Men | X-Men vol. 2 | Astonishing X-Men | Exiles | Generation X | New Excalibur | New Mutants | New X-Men | X-Factor | X-Men Unlimited | Ultimate X-Men | X-Force
Major storylines "Dark Phoenix Saga" | "Days of Future Past" | "Mutant Massacre" | "The Fall of the Mutants" | "Inferno" | "The X-Tinction Agenda" | "X-Cutioner's Song" | "Muir Island Saga" | "Fatal Attractions" | "Phalanx Covenant" | "Age of Apocalypse" | "Onslaught" | "Operation: Zero Tolerance" | "Eve of Destruction" | "E Is For Extinction" | "Planet X" | "House of M" | "Decimation"
In other media Film: Generation X | X-Men | X2 | X-Men: The Last Stand | Magneto
TV: Mutant X | Pryde of the X-Men | X-Men: The Animated Series | X-Men: Evolution
Universe Avalon | Asteroid M | Cerebro | Crimson Dawn | Danger Room | Enemies | Fastball Special | Genosha | Legacy Virus | M'Kraan Crystal | Madripoor | Muir Island | Savage Land | Teams | Xavier Protocols | X-Jet | X-Mansion
Other History | Video games
Marvel Comics films
Single films Captain America (1991) | Ghost Rider (2007) | Howard the Duck (1986)
Franchises

Blade: Blade (1998) | Blade II (2002) | Blade: Trinity (2004)
Daredevil: Daredevil (2003) | Elektra (2005)
Fantastic Four: The Fantastic Four (1994) | Fantastic Four (2005) | Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer (2007)
The Hulk: Hulk (2003)
The Punisher: The Punisher (1989) | The Punisher (2004)
Spider-Man: Spider-Man (2002)| Spider-Man 2 (2004) | Spider-Man 3 (2007)
X-Men: X-Men (2000) | X2 (2003) | X-Men: The Last Stand (2006)

In development Iron Man (2008) | The Incredible Hulk (2008) | Ant-Man (2008) | Wolverine | The Punisher 2 | Magneto
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X2_%28film%29"

Categories: Best Science Fiction Film Saturn | 2003 films | Films shot in Super 35 | Sequel films | X-Men films | American films | English-language films | Films shot in Toronto | Films shot in Vancouver

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