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X-men: The Last Stand
War looms between the followers of Charles Xavier who preaches tolerance, and those of Magneto who advocates survival of the fittest when the discovery of a cure for mutations draws a line between them.
15 November 1952, Budapest, Hungary
24 March 1944, Emporia, Kansas, USA
5 January 1965, Watford, Hertfordshire, England, UK
19 May 1965, England, UK
29 October 1980, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
23 April 1997, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
24 July 1982, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
26 July 1968, Camden Town, London, England, UK
May 26, 2006
[Director] Ratner makes a hash of the story and characters his predecessor brought to such complex, sympathetic life, delivering a pumped-up exercise in mayhem, carnage and blunt-force trauma.
May 30, 2006
What a comedown, after the weirdly beautiful things Singer and his technicians did in the first two movies.
August 30, 2009
Nothing really feels at stake other than box-office opening-weekend numbers
January 07, 2011
It's kinda lame. There's slightly more to it than that, but basically, that's what X-Men: The Last Stand boils down to.
May 15, 2012
A mostly fun movie, but also one not given the full emotional room to breathe that it has over the course of the trilogy earned.
June 22, 2006
X-Men: The Last Stand has shifted the shape of the franchise from pretty good, if uninspired, to terrifically entertaining.
July 07, 2010
It's the first halfway decent summer movie so far.
June 07, 2006
[I] found myself strangely moved by the sense of relationships, friendly and unfriendly, coming to an end in a dull return to normality in the world of humans and mutants.
May 26, 2006
The Last Stand is a hugely ambitious picture, and it would have been far more successful if Ratner had scaled it down to focus more on the interaction between the characters.
July 07, 2010
Sillier than the Singer versions, Ratner's movie is also -- for this less-than-reverent X-Men fan -- more satisfying.
July 21, 2015
The CGI is indeed magical. But watching this, I thought maybe we've seen too much magic. Maybe what we really need, even in summer action movies, isn't to see magic, but to feel emotion.

