20160612 – Colossus by Nick Bradshaw — Marvel Comics of the 1980s

via Colossus by Nick Bradshaw — Marvel Comics of the 1980s

20160610 – Comics Art : X-Men: The Hidden Years #3 cover by John Byrne & Gregory… — John Byrne Draws…

X-Men: The Hidden Years #3 cover by John Byrne & Gregory Wright. 2000.

via X-Men: The Hidden Years #3 cover by John Byrne & Gregory… — John Byrne Draws…

20160603 – Comics News :Exclusive: X-Men’s Death Of X Comes For Deadpool, Cyclops, And Warpath

Marvel Comics has provided ComicBook.com with an exclusive first look at three “Death of X” […]

 

Source : Exclusive: X-Men’s Death Of X Comes For Deadpool, Cyclops, And Warpath

20160606 – Rogue by Dean Kotz — Marvel Comics of the 1980s

via Rogue by Dean Kotz — Marvel Comics of the 1980s

20160519 – Comics Art : 1983 – Cyclops by Paul Smith — Marvel Comics of the 1980s

via 1983 – Cyclops by Paul Smith — Marvel Comics of the 1980s

20160519 –  Comics Movie News : James McAvoy : « X-Men : Apocalypse est le meilleur de la franchise » – metronews

SUPER-HEROS – L’acteur écossais reprend le rôle du Professeur Xavier face à Jennifer Lawrence et Michael Fassbender dans « X-Men : Apocalypse ». Rencontre avec le comédien qui, même s’il est arrivé au terme de son premier contrat sur la saga, se verrait bien jouer à nouveau les mutants télépathes.

 

James McAvoy, ses derniers pas dans la peau du Professeur Xavier ?

© Twentieth Century Fox

Photo:

Source : James McAvoy : « X-Men : Apocalypse est le meilleur de la franchise » – metronews

20160517 – Comics News : ‘Apocalypse’ Pow: The New ‘X-Men’ Makes the Comic-Book Movie Great Again | Village Voice

There’s a scene during the first half of Bryan Singer’s X-Men: Apocalypse that is so emotionally resonant, so well put-together, and so quiet that you might briefly forget you’re watching a superhero film. It involves a raid by some Polish officers in the remote forest where Erik Lehnsherr, a/k/a Magneto (Michael Fassbender) — the powerful mutant antihero and sometimes villain of this series — has been living incognito with his wife and young daughter. Magneto can control metal, so the men wear no badges and carry no guns. They come under cover of night, carrying bows and arrows, and the resulting, subdued face-off — full of silent glances, hesitant actions, and ultimately tragic consequences — serves as a reminder that the makers of comic-book blockbusters don’t have to abandon subtlety, character, performance, and film grammar completely. After the Everything’s-a-Metaphor! sledgehammering of Batman v. Superman and the jokey flab of Captain America: Civil War, Singer’s film feels like something somewhat rare: an actual superhero movie.

It’s not that X-Men: Apocalypse is itself a quiet film. In some ways, it’s brasher, louder, and more cartoonish than any comic-book flick in recent memory. The success of the first X-Men, back in 2000, helped kick off the current craze, and this new one still carries some of those earlier films’ embrace of colorful weirdness, grand gestures, and melodramatic dialogue. (Just think, while everyone else tries to make their heroes’ costumes darker, more au courant, more bad-ass, Apocalypse, set in the 1980s, has the gall to let one character sport a Michael Jackson « Thriller » jacket throughout.)

The film even starts off with a nutty, elaborate Egyptian prologue involving human sacrifice, levitating sarcophagi, gravity-defying spurts of gold, and collapsing pyramids, before plunging headlong into a credits sequence in which notable symbols of world history — Jesus on the cross! The Twin Towers! A Swastika! – come flying at us in 3-D. The plot involves the awakening of a villain called Apocalypse (Oscar Isaac, his soulful face caked in thick makeup and ornate headgear), an ancient, all-powerful Egyptian being who can, by transferring his consciousness, absorb the abilities of all other mutants. Having discovered that humanity has become soft and weak during the 6000 years that he’s been asleep, Apocalypse decides to do away with the world and start anew. (« Where did you come from? » « A time before man lost his way. » « Well, welcome to the Eighties. ») His first victims: a group of Cairo hoodlums that he beheads softly, with a handful of dust, and another man he just as gently turns into a wall; the offhandedness of his villainy is both ridiculous and chilling.

Apocalypse nabs X-Men leader Charles Xavier (James McAvoy) and seizes his fancy, global mutant-tracking system. The bad guy’s aim is to use Xavier’s technology to transfer his consciousness all over the world, and to control the other mutants — particularly the uniquely powerful Magneto, who as usual is torn between good and evil, between his wounded psyche and desire for justice. A group of Xavier’s students — including shape-shifting Raven (Jennifer Lawrence), teleporting Nightcrawler (Kodi Smit-McPhee), telepath Jean Grey (Sophie Turner), and powerful-eye-beam-thingamabob-shooter Cyclops (Tye Sheridan) — join forces to rescue their leader. On Apocalypse’s side, at least for now, are another cadre of young mutants, including the weather-controlling Storm (Alexandra Shipp), the high-flying Angel (Ben Hardy), and the slicing, dicing Psylocke (Oliva Munn). That’s a lot of individuals and superpowers — there’s even a non-mutant, Xavier’s former flame and now-amnesiac CIA agent Moira MacTaggert (Rose Byrne), thrown into the mix — but the script’s focus on teamwork and its clear delineation of characters makes it easy to keep up. Even though Apocalypse is filled with cities being destroyed, much of the action reminded me of nothing so much as a classic Mission: Impossible episode, where each member of the team gets a chance to do their thing.

This makes emotional sense, too: The particular genius of the X-Men films has always been the way they followed their characters’ journeys of self-acceptance. (It’s no great secret that while the original comics were inspired partly by the civil rights struggle of the 1960s, the earlier films have made clear nods to the gay rights movement.) But here, these young characters, in part because they’ve spent childhoods living in shame and in part because they’re still often unable to control their abilities, are sometimes torn over whether to use their powers. That lends even the most basic action sequence surprising levels of both suspense and (gasp) humanity, so much so that even the film’s dated-looking and occasionally tacky special effects — complete with awkwardly-floating-dudes and magic light-shows — aren’t particularly distracting. It’s further proof that movies like these work better when they’re about people instead of pyrotechnics.

What makes X-Men: Apocalypse so exciting isn’t really any one thing but rather its cohesion, its storytelling verve. Where other recent superhero films have struggled to jam-pack their unwieldy plots with characters and incident and meaning, this film nimbly mixes narrative exuberance and emotional depth, flamboyant displays of power with quietly terrifying exchanges. It zips along, combining the highs and lows of a real comic book — all the feeling, color, and wonder, even some of the dopiness — with gloriously cinematic storytelling.

Article by Bilge Ebiri for VillageVoice.com

 

Source : ‘Apocalypse’ Pow: The New ‘X-Men’ Makes the Comic-Book Movie Great Again | Village Voice

20160514 – Comics News : The X-Men Could be Heading to Space After « Apocalypse » | Comic Book Resources

The X-Men Could be Heading to Space After « Apocalypse » – Bryan Singer’s « Star Trek » influences may bleed into his next « X-Men » movie, which will be set in the 1990s.

 

Source : The X-Men Could be Heading to Space After « Apocalypse » | Comic Book Resources

20160510 – Marvel Comics Movies : Learn The Origin Of ‘Cyclops’ In Lengthy New Clip From X-MEN: APOCALYPSE

Early word on X-Men: Apocalypse isn’t particularly good, but this two minute clip revolving around Scott Summers discovering his mutant powers is still pretty impressive! Hit the jump to check it out…

Reviews for X-Men: Apocalypse are currently hovering somewhere between mixed and negative, and while it’s still early days, we could be looking at Bryan Singer’s first critically panned X-Men movie. Regardless, a new clip has been released today which features Scott Summers discovering his mutant powers for the first time, and it seems as if the filmmaker has at least got this character right in the movie. We’ll find out more when it’s released later this month, so for now, check out the clip below.

 

Source : Learn The Origin Of ‘Cyclops’ In Lengthy New Clip From X-MEN: APOCALYPSE

20160502 – News / X-Men : Apocalypse dévoile de nouveaux costumes très proches du comics original – Actualité Film – EcranLarge.com

X-Men : Apocalypse: Si nous sommes maintenant habitués aux super-héros en collant dans nos salles de cinéma, rappelons-nous que cela n’a pas toujours été le cas et qu’il a fallu ruser pour ne pas…

Si nous sommes maintenant habitués aux super-héros en collant dans nos salles de cinéma, rappelons-nous que cela n’a pas toujours été le cas et qu’il a fallu ruser pour ne pas tomber dans les abîmes du ridicule.

Il y a encore quelques années, nous n’aurions jamais imaginé que les Avengers puissent sortir au cinéma avec des costumes proches de leurs homologues papier. Peut-être parce que les tenues vestimentaires de nos héros préférés étaient assez ridicules une fois transposés dans la vraie vie, on aurait pu s’attendre à quelques surprises farfelues. Il n’y a qu’à d’ailleurs se rappeler le Fantastic Four de Roger Corman pour avoir une idée de la catastrophe que cela aurait pu donner si les choses avaient été faites littéralement.

Pionnier des films de super-héros à grand succès, le premier X-Men avait contourné le problème en modifiant la garde robe des mutants, laissant les couleurs au vestiaire et parant ses personnages de combinaisons en cuir. Un choix qui s’est avéré payant et qui a permis au moins initiés des spectateurs de s’immerger totalment dans ce nouvel univers.

Mais voilà, nous sommes à présent en 2016, les super-héros sont partout, tout le temps, on peut donc se permettre quelques folies. Et c’est exactement ce que va tenter X-Men : Apocalypse si l’on en croit la nouvelle photo du film qui vient de paraitre sur Internet. Nous y découvrons effectivement la team quasiment au complet, dans des tenues qui ressemblent fort à ce que l’on connait dans les comics et il faut bien avouer que le résultat est plutôt classe.

S’il aura fallu attendre quasiment 20 ans pour en arriver là, on espère que ce choix audacieux sera lui aussi payant et que nous verrons enfin Wolverine dans sa combi jaune et bleue, celle-là même qui nous avait été teasée dans une scène coupée de son dernier film solo.

Verdict dans 2 semaines.

 

Source : X-Men : Apocalypse dévoile de nouveaux costumes très proches du comics original – Actualité Film – EcranLarge.com