
#DAYS OF FUTURE PAST TIMELINE MOVIE#
The 1962-set First Class is chronologically the first movie to happen in the series. Voila, Professor X was gone, and now he’s back. Moira MacTaggert checks on a comatose patient who ends up being a telepathically melded Professor X, who Ratner reveals in the DVD commentary is Xavier’s identical twin brother - something never explained in any other films or mentioned ever again. The real problem stems from Phoenix disintegrating both Cyclops and Xavier, killing them both. Thankfully, the X-Men prevail, with Wolverine’s healing factor helping to destroy Phoenix, while Beast injects Magneto with the “cure,” rendering him literally powerless until later on when he can somehow still move metal with his mind. Flash forward back to 2006 or 2007, and the group teams up to fight Magneto again, this time allied with Grey’s evil Phoenix persona, to also combat a lab developing the “cure” for their mutations. Chronologically in the movie, a younger Magneto and Professor X meet Jean Grey to recruit her.

X-Menĭirector Bryan Singer left the franchise for this 2006 entry directed by Brett Ratner, and things started falling apart. So with X-Men: Apocalypse hitting theaters, let’s take a look at how all this came to be.

They’re a cohesive whole because the filmmakers say they are, even when they really aren’t.
#DAYS OF FUTURE PAST TIMELINE SERIES#
Sure, there’s a little retconning here and there, but nothing to completely upend the overall understanding of the cinematic universe as a whole like the other self contained Marvel cinematic X-Men universe.Īll that confusion basically makes the X-Men movies the most comic book-y comic book movie series out there. This kind of approach is in direct conflict with the uber-successful Marvel Cinematic Universe, which has established a strict cohesion meant to seamlessly bridge the gap between each movie. In that case, you should do what the X-Men movie franchise does and just not really make any sense with continuity and cross your fingers to hope nobody is paying close attention.

Making sense is difficult, especially when you’re trying to make movies in a long-running franchise with multiple directors tackling multiple storylines from a 50-year comic book history.
