the story of the marvel movie (logan)

the story of the marvel movie (logan)

0 reviews

Logan is a 2017 American superhero film starring Hugh Jackman as the titular character. It is the tenth film in the X-Men film series and the third and final installment in the Wolverine trilogy, following X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009) and The Wolverine (2013).

 The film, based on the comic strip "Old Man Logan" by Mark Millar and Steve McNiven, follows an elderly Wolverine and a terminally ill Charles Xavier who must defend a young mutant named Laura from a team of Reavers led by Donald Pierce and Xander Rice.

 The film is produced by 20th Century Fox, Marvel Entertainment, TSG Entertainment and The Donners' Company, and distributed by 20th Century Fox. The film is directed by James Mangold, who co-wrote the screenplay with Michael Green and Scott Frank, from a story by Mangold. 

In addition to Jackman, the film also stars Patrick Stewart, Richard E. Grant, Boyd Holbrook, and Stephen Merchant, and introduces Dafne Keen in her film debut as Laura.

Logan is designed to look like the near future, with slight updates to the technology and social environment, and is written in a dark and violent tone closer to the Western genre than the traditional superhero genre. 

Principal photography began in Louisiana on May 2, 2016, and concluded on August 13, 2016 in New Mexico. The locations Logan used were mainly in Louisiana, New Mexico and Mississippi. The film was given a false Juarez title to reduce visibility during production.

Logan premiered at the 67th Berlin International Film Festival on February 17, 2017, and was released theatrically in the United States on March 3, 2017. The film received critical acclaim, with praise for its emotional depth, screenplay, and uncompromising tone, The thematic depth, and the performances of Jackman, Kane, and Stewart. 

The film became the best-reviewed film in the X-Men series, with some critics calling it one of the greatest superhero films ever made, and was selected by the National Board of Review as one of the ten best films of 2017. 

It was nominated for Best Adapted Screenplay at the 90th Academy Awards, Becoming the first live-action superhero film to be nominated for screenwriting. The film grossed $619.2 million worldwide and became the third highest-grossing R-rated film at the time of its release.

In the year 2029, no mutants have been born in 25 years, and an aging Logan suffers from the failure of his healing ability. 

Working as a limo driver in El Paso, Texas, he and mutant tracker Caliban care for 97-year-old Charles Xavier, founder of the X-Men, at an abandoned smelting plant in northern Mexico.

 Xavier suffers from dementia that causes him to have devastating telepathic attacks, one of which infected 600 people and killed several X-Men in the previous year.

Logan reluctantly agrees to accompany Gabriela Lopez, a former nurse for the biotech company Alkali-Transigen, and a young girl named Laura to Eden, a supposed asylum near the US-Canadian border.

 After Gabriella is found dead, Logan confronts her killer, Donald Pierce, who is Transigen's head of cyborg security. Pierce searches for Laura, who has hidden in Logan's 

limo and has powers similar to his.

ANSWER OF THE FIRST QUESTION : 78902145360785

 She, Logan, and Xavier escape from Pierce and his colleagues, but Caliban is captured. Pierce tortures Caliban to track down Laura. Xavier and Logan watch a video on Gabriela's phone, which reveals that Transigen created Laura and other children from mutant DNA to become weapons.

 The children were difficult to control and were scheduled to be executed, but Gabriella and other nurses helped some to escape. 

Xavier reveals to Logan that Laura was created from Logan's DNA and calls her Logan's daughter.

In Oklahoma City, Logan finds out that Aiden is appearing in Laura's X-Men comic and tells her that he is fictional.

 The Reavers arrive, but Xavier suffers an epileptic seizure that incapacitates everyone except Logan and Laura, who kill the attackers and inject Xavier with his medication. As they flee, Dr. Xander Rice, head of Transigen, arrives to aid Pierce.

Logan, Laura, and Xavier help farmer Will Munson and his family after a traffic accident, and accept the offer of dinner at their home, as Logan evicts the enforcers from the company farm. Rice unleashes X-24, a mindless clone of Logan in his prime who was created to be the Transigen's ultimate weapon

. X-24 kills Will and Xavier's family before capturing Laura. Caliban fired grenades, killing himself and several Reavers but only wounding Pierce. Logan is matched by X-24, but Will pins X-24 to his truck before succumbing to his injuries. Logan and Laura escape with Xavier's body.

After burying Xavier, Logan faints. Laura takes him to the doctor and convinces him to prove that the site in North Dakota is not Eden. 

There, they find Rector and the other Transigen children preparing to cross to Canada. Laura finds an adamantium bullet that Logan has kept since escaping from the weapon, and Logan decides not to accompany them, much to Laura's dismay.

When the Reavers ambush the children, Logan takes an overdose of a serum given to him by Rictor that temporarily enhances his healing abilities and enhances his strength. With Laura's help, he slaughters most of the Reavers before the serum disappears

. As Pierce holds Rector at gunpoint, Rice tells Logan, who, after finding a gun, shot Rice, killing her and wounding Pierce.

 X-24 fights Logan while the kids combine their powers to kill Pierce and the rest of the Reavers. Rictor uses his powers to flip the truck onto X-24, but X-24 frees himself and impales Logan on a large tree branch. Laura loads Logan's gun with an adamantium bullet and shoots X-24 in the head, killing him.

Near death, Logan told Laura not to become the weapon she was created to be, and after she tearfully acknowledged him as her father, Logan died peacefully in Laura's arms. 

She and the children bury Logan, and before they leave, Laura tilts the cross on his grave marker to create an X, honoring him as the last of the X-Men.

In November 2013, 20th Century Fox began discussions about another solo film starring Wolverine, with James Mangold in negotiations to write the film treatment and Loren Shuler Donner returning to produce under Donner's Company. 

At the time, Hugh Jackman neither confirmed nor denied his revenge on Logan in a new film. Jackman has clarified that his expiring contract with Fox, which will reportedly need to be renegotiated after X-Men: Days of Future Past (2014),

 does not mean he will leave the franchise, as he has been working on a feature-length film since X2 (2003).[58] He also said: "I want to do it with Jim and with [producer] Lauren Shuler Donner because we had a great experience. I'm really proud of The Wolverine (2013)." Mangold announced that the pre-production aspect of the film had not yet begun, nor had the writing process, although he backed this up by saying

: "...I'd like to say I'm not there yet. But I've got my finger on the key." Let's say it. There was writing. And ideas. And the conversation between all principles. "

ANSWER OF THE SECOND QUESTION : 789632140257896

Shortly after the release of The Wolverine, Mangold talked about a potential sequel with the intention of not turning it into a "Will the world survive?" film, while also emphasizing his need "...never to make the same picture again".

 In December 2013, Jackman spoke about approaching the end of his time as the character, while mentioning that the film had him in the lead role. Very early stages of development.[63] Jackman also revealed that Mangold has started talking about potential ideas, adding: "...Jim Mangold and I were on the phone last night talking about ideas but there's no script and no writer yet, so it's a long shot." [64] Mangold later revealed that Jackman was very involved in developing the story, saying: "Hugh and I have been friends for almost twenty years, and he's been there every step of the way

. For Hugh and I, he's the number one goal." "It was meant to build something more intimate.

 Hugh often mentioned The Wrestler and Unforgiven as examples. I used those references as well as others. I presented to both Hugh and the studio that I had an idea for a very existential and gory Little Miss Sunshine."[33]

By March 2014, a decision was made to begin filming after Bryan Singer's X-Men: Apocalypse (2016), with an initial plan to shoot the films back-to-back, with producer Hutch Parker stating, "...

the target will be 2016's X-Men: Apocalypse, Which means at the latest [filming starts] in the summer of 2015, and then the same with Wolverine, either before or after that, but depending on the script.” Also in March, 20th Century Fox set a release date of March 3, 2017,[68] [69] Mangold took over the project as director, [70] Jackman signed on to reprise his role,  and David James Kelly was hired to write the screenplay. 

 In April 2014, Jackman spoke about his ambitious feelings for the character of Logan, and stated that they could go further than what they achieved in The Wolverine. Jackman also expressed his feeling for the ending through his portrayal of the character Logan,

while regarding the story, he explained that nothing has been decided yet.[75] Jackman concluded by highlighting that the success of the script's development would determine whether Jackman would return at all: "I would do it. I think it has to be better.

 I can still see where we can improve the final story. I loved the intimacy of that story, I loved the little things, I loved that it was It was a bit unexpected.” 

In February 2015, Patrick Stewart spoke about discussions about a third Wolverine film, centered around a team-up between Jackman's Wolverine and himself as Charles And Hugh Jackman together... This is going to be a very different kind of X-Men than the four movies I've already done.

"[80][81] By April 2015, Michael Green had taken over screenwriting duties, while Mangold was still actively supervising the process. 

Scenario development.[82] In September 2015, Jackman spoke about the writers being halfway through the script, and that the story would delve into the relationship between Wolverine and Professor "Witness signs of the kind of father-son quasi-relationship that has never been seen before, and special aspects of Professor X that have never been seen before.

" Jackman spoke of Mangold's plan to begin filming the following year.

 Although he expressed uncertainty about the filming locations. Also in September, Fox creative consultant Mark Millar confirmed that Mangold's film would be a loose adaptation of the "Old Man Logan" story he wrote in 2008, something Jackman had previously hinted at. In October 2016, the film's title was announced as Logan.

In January 2016, Jackman confirmed that Mangold had a completed, though incomplete, script.

ANSWER OF THE THIRD QUESTION : 7802365149541524

 The following month, Liev Schreiber expressed interest in returning to portray Victor Creed/Sabretooth, with Jackman himself mentioning Mangold's vision for Schreiber. After the film's release, Jackman revealed that the script originally had the character playing a role in the film,

 but Sabretooth was left out of the final script. By April 2016, Mangold had selected Boyd Holbrook to portray the film's main antagonist, [96] [97] [98] the head of security for a global corporation pursuing Wolverine. Also by April, Richard E. Grant had been cast as the evil mad scientist,[101][102] as had Stephen Merchant.[103] [104] [105] [106] [107] In May, Eric Lassalle and Elise Neel were cast in supporting roles, [108] [109] and Elizabeth Rodriguez entered negotiations for a small but major role.

 Also in May, producer Simon Kinberg revealed that filming had already begun, and confirmed that the film would be rated R; Regarding setting and tone, he said: "It's set in the future, and as you and others have mentioned, it's an R-rated movie.

 It's a violent movie, it's a bit like a Western in tone. It's just a cool, different movie."

The film included some old X-Men comic books, which were used to advance the plot and as metafictional reference. The director explained that Marvel Comics allowed this on the condition that they could use actual characters and designs, but not use any real-life versions of the comic books. 

As a result, the comic book covers and pages seen in the film were made specifically for him, by writer Joe Quesada and artist Dan Panosian. “The truth is that, like in Unforgiven, when [Clint] Eastwood meets Richard Harris, who writes these fantastical novels about great Western heroes, or Pat Garrett in Billy the Kid, where you find these heroes,” Mangold commented. Old people.

 Who are kind of crepuscular versions of their own mythology - I think the idea of being kind of a celebrity, or like a star athlete long after your prime, was really interesting for me to investigate that kind of world. Panosian did 10 comic book covers Fake, and no interior arts were used. 

He noted that the arts should resemble the style used in the Bronze Age of comic books, and noted that it also served to contrast its campy style with the darker tone of the live-action film itself. He said that "the colors and art themselves facing off against the world

 The rawness and brutality of the film captures how much innocence has been lost over time."

comments ( 0 )
please login to be able to comment
article by

articles

48

followers

3

followings

12

similar articles