X-Men: The Last Stand

En X-Men: La decisión final, el último capítulo de la trilogía cinematográfica de los "X-Men", hay una "cura" para los mutantes que amenaza con alterar el curso de la historia. Por primera vez, los mutantes pueden elegir: seguir con su singularidad, aunque eso les aísle y les separe, o renunciar a sus poderes y convertirse en seres humanos normales. Los opuestos puntos de vista de los líderes mutantes, Charles Xavier, que aboga por la tolerancia, y Magneto, que cree en la supervivencia de los más aptos, se ven sometidos a la prueba definitiva: desencadenar la guerra que pondrá fin a todas las guerras...
X-Men: The Last Stand is a frustrating low point for a franchise that started so promisingly just six years earlier. Where the first two films balanced character, metaphor, and superhero spectacle, this one feels rushed, overstuffed, and strangely hollow. As someone who loved and grew up on the comics, watching iconic storylines like the Dark Phoenix Saga and the mutant “cure” arc get mashed together and flattened was painful. Characters are killed or depowered for shock value, emotional beats rarely land, and the heart of the X-Men—outsiders finding family and purpose—is buried under noisy set pieces. It didn’t just disappoint; it almost killed the series outright until the soft reboots and prequels arrived to repair the damage. Sitting in the cinema, I felt more numb than thrilled. There are flashes of what could have been, but The Last Stand ultimately stands as a cautionary tale about wasting hard-won audience trust and rich source material.
X-Men: The Last Stand is a frustrating low point for a franchise that started so promisingly just six years earlier. Where the first two films balanced character, metaphor, and superhero spectacle, this one feels rushed, overstuffed, and strangely hollow. As someone who loved and grew up on the comics, watching iconic storylines like the Dark Phoenix Saga and the mutant “cure” arc get mashed together and flattened was painful. Characters are killed or depowered for shock value, emotional beats rarely land, and the heart of the X-Men—outsiders finding family and purpose—is buried under noisy set pieces. It didn’t just disappoint; it almost killed the series outright until the soft reboots and prequels arrived to repair the damage. Sitting in the cinema, I felt more numb than thrilled. There are flashes of what could have been, but The Last Stand ultimately stands as a cautionary tale about wasting hard-won audience trust and rich source material.




















