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X2
Dec 5, 2005 6:43:33 GMT -5
Post by kg redhead on Dec 5, 2005 6:43:33 GMT -5
Already living in a society that mistrusts them, the mutants are faced with even more discrimination after an unforeseen enemy - who may be a mutant with extraordinary powers - launches a devastating attack. The news of the assault causes a public outcry against the mutants, including renewed support for the Mutant Registration Act, and William Stryker, a military leader rumored to have experimented on mutants (possibly including Wolverine), is among the most vocal supporters of the legislation. Stryker puts into motion a plan to eradicate the mutants and begins an offensive on the X-Men mansion and school. Magneto, having escaped from his plastic prison, forms an unlikely alliance with Professor Xavier to stop Stryker. Meanwhile, Wolverine heads north to investigate his past.
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X2
Dec 5, 2005 6:46:29 GMT -5
Post by kg redhead on Dec 5, 2005 6:46:29 GMT -5
Hugh Jackman worked with the same trainer who trained Angelina Jolie for the title role in Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (2001)
In the bar, the TV is showing a debate on the mutant situation. One of the panelists is "Dr. Hank McCoy," which is the real name of the blue-furred behemoth X-Man, Beast. The other, not seen but called "Dr. Shaw," is presumably Dr. Sebastian Shaw, the leader of the Hellfire Club in the comics.
On Stryker's computer, the following files are listed: Guthrie, Paige (Husk); Guthrie, Samuel (Cannonball); Harada, Keniucho (Silver Samurai), LeBeau, Remy (Gambit); Lehnsherr, Erik (Magneto); Maddicks, Garrison (Weapon X); Madrox, Artie (Artie); Madrox, Jamie (Multiple Man); Mahn, Xi'an Coy (Karma);Maximoff (2) (Wanda and Pietro, Scarlet Witch and Quicksilver); McTaggart, Kevin (Proteus); Moonstar, Danielle (Moonstar); Munroe, Ororo (Storm). On another screen there were a series of folders on the computer's desktop. These folders listed some well-known individuals or places from the X-Men universe, including: Omega Red (Russian mutant super soldier), Muir Island (Scottish mutant research facility), Project Wideawake (Codename for Sentinel project), Franklin Richards (son of Fantastic Four's Reed Richards and Sue Storm; born a mutant), and Cerebro (mutant tracking device created by Professor Xavier and Magneto). Using the "zoom" feature on the X2 dvd in this scene reveals even further research was put into it. Zooming in you can see the names of other legendary X-Men characters such as Braddock, Elizabeth (Psylocke); Blaire, Alison (Dazzler); Cassidy, Sean (Banshee); Cassidy, Tom (Black Tom); Dane, Lorna (Polaris); and many others.
Alan Cumming had to endure 10 hours of make-up to become Nightcrawler for the scene in the church (where his skin/make-up is shown from the waist up).
Professor Xavier's wheelchair from the first movie was bought by a lawyer (who also works for the same law firm as Patrick Stewart's attorney). When production began, the studio realized they had no chair anymore, so the lawyer rented it back to the studio - as Stewart said in an interview - "for a significant sum".
The "Lady Deathstrike" claws were glued to the bottom of Kelly Hu's own fingernails. She had to grow them out a bit so that the claws would fit securely.
Hugh Jackman was given a nutritionist to get in shape for his role as Wolverine and gained 20 pounds.
Rebecca Romijn-Stamos' make-up took five hours to apply.
The fight between Wolverine and Yukiro took three weeks to film.
Jean Grey's closing monologue is the same as Professor X's opening monologue in X-Men (2000).
When Wolverine is in the kitchen in Bobby Drake's parents' house, and he is surprised by the cat, he lets it lick his claws - seemingly a very cute moment. But if you listen closely when he hears someone come in and retracts his claws, you hear the sound effect of Wolverine's claws extending (if you listen closely, you can tell the difference, as the retracting sound is the same as the extending sound, but played in reverse), and then the cat crying out. This was an unintentional moment of comedy which was going to but cut but the last minute decision was made to leave it in.
The Arctic snow scenes were filmed in Alberta, Canada, an area known for its heavy snows. Naturally when the production arrived, there was none, so the snow had to be recreated.
Most of the actors from the scene in the museum where Professor X freezes everyone were actually mimes, who are used to not moving. Likewise, mimes were used for the final scene in the Oval Office.
Kelly Hu has only one line of dialogue in the entire film.
Unlike the first film where Rebecca Romijn-Stamos wore contact lenses, this time Mystique's eyes are rendered digitally.
The set for Stryker's underground lair was built in an old Sears warehouse and was the largest set in North America. It involved over 60 miles of cable and was so large that cast and crew members used bicycles to get them to and from the bathroom as quickly as possible. Even then, the production only used about half the space in the warehouse.
Frozen tea was put on the end of Wolverine's claws for the cat at Iceman's home to lick off.
The script went through 27 drafts.
They had to shoot Professor X's pristine Cerebro set first before distressing it to show Stryker's cut-price version.
The red scar on the back of Cyclops' neck to signify his being controlled by Stryker was added digitally afterwards.
Another huge set was the turbine hall of an old dam which now housed a museum. Unfortunately the museum was painted in bright, lurid colors so the production design team had to dress it up to make it look old and dank (something which horrified the museum administration until they realized that it was just temporary).
The adamantium that pours out of Lady Deathstrike's face is CGI and that's a highly detailed mannequin of her that falls down into the bottom of the tank.
Bryan Singer insisted that the writers did proper research on what would happen if a dam was breached. Remarkably, they found plenty of information about that on the Internet.
Health and safety restrictions meant that helicopter blades were not allowed to be moving when the actors - in this case, 'Rebecca Romijn-Stamos' and Ian McKellen - were sitting inside the helicopter. The moving blades had to be added in digitally afterwards.
Originally the idea was that Jean Grey was temporarily rendered blind after her violent reunion with Cyclops. This was initially filmed as such, but ditched during production, but in the scene where Wolverine shuts a dam door, saving the X-Men from a wall of water, Jean Grey is the only character not looking at him.
The replica of the President's desk in the Oval Office was so detailed that it took two months to build.
In an effort to keep the ending a secret up until the movie came out, the novelization and the movie comic both have different endings.
Several sets for the film were not used. Some of these sets included The Danger Room, Danger Toom, and several areas in Stryker's underground bunker. One room in Stryker's underground base was going to be the setting of a Nightcrawler vs. Toad fight.
The animated movie being shown on the video monitors in the museum in the opening is Why Man Creates (1968). The segment being shown is a quick history of human culture.
Director Bryan Singer credits the X-Men graphic novel "God Loves, Man Kills" as an influence for the script.
The car that Wolverine drives (which, according to Iceman, belongs to Cyclops) is a Mazda RX-8. The X's in the rims where made especially for the movie.
Shortly before the opening assassination attempt on the US president, a number of portraits of past assassinated presidents are featured in the background: Abraham Lincoln, John F Kennedy and William McKinley.
When Mystique is going through the files in Stryker's computer, she goes through the pictures of the guards in Magneto's prison. The second to the last picture shows the director Bryan Singer, complete with guard uniform. His name is shown as "Singer, B."
On "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" (1992), Hugh Jackman related a story that happened during the filming of the Weapon X flashback scene: while he was filming the corridor run (in which he is nude and backlit), he turned the corner and saw the female cast members, including James Marsden's mother, waiting for him, hooting and waving dollar bills.
The mansion used for the school also appears as Lex Luthor's home in "Smallville" (2001).
There was an extended scene that doesn't appear in the final film, nor as a deleted scene on the DVD that features Cyclops's fight with Yuriko (Lady Deathstrike), where he picks up and fights with the two prison guards' plastic nightsticks.
Wolverine's dog tag number is 458-25-243.
The set from the bathroom scene where Mystique incapacitates the prison guard and injects him with a foreign substance is actually an unused set from X-Men (2000). The scene in question (written and storyboarded, but not shot) involved Cyclops manifesting his powers as a teenager, destroying a high school bathroom.
When Jean and Storm are in the church looking for Nightcrawler, Jean is wearing a jacket with a phoenix on the back. This is a nod to the fans of the comic book where Jean becomes Phoenix.
Alan Cumming was Bryan Singer's first choice for the role of Nightcrawler. However, during initial casting, he was unavailable. The project labored in development long enough that by the time the film was ready to shoot, Cumming was able to come onboard. Ethan Embry was rumoured to have won the role before Cumming was available.
David Kaye who voices Professer Xavier in the television show, "X-Men: Evolution" (2000), appears as a TV announcer.
When Pyro destroys the police cars, mixed in with the explosion sound effect is the sound of a pig squealing.
Most of the exterior shots of the Xavier mansion were recycled from the first movie because there was no budget for them.
The final scene on Xavier mansion with Cyclops, Wolverine and Professor X was shot on Shepperton Studios in London, simply because Hugh Jackman was shooting Van Helsing (2004) at the time and the producers released him for only one day to do the final shooting of X-Men. The reason of Wolverine's hair looking higher than usual in this scene is because Hugh Jackman had long hair for Van Helsing and had to wear the Wolverine wig over a lot of hair.
According to director Bryan Singer, this is the first film to feature a woman piloting an American military aircraft, but it isn't.
Bruce Davison (Senator Kelly) and Brian Cox (William Stryker) were born only 27 days apart, but Cox's character indicates that Senator Kelly is at least 20 years his junior.
When Wolverine visits the adamantium processing chamber of Stryker's Alkali Base, there is a wall covered with x-rays detailing the adamantium bonding process. On the far right is an x-ray of what appears to be a left wing. The DVD acknowledges this as a hint to a winged character named Angel. In the comic books, Angel's wings are replaced with metal ones and becomes the Archangel.
In the scene at the bar, the foam in the beer is fake. Singer chose to do this to avoid continuity conflicts.
Entered into The Guinness Book of World Records as "The Widest Film Release" having opened on May 2, 2003 on 3,741 screens on the same day.
The character Rogue, whose real name has never been revealed since her introduction in the comics in 1981, was given a name for this film - Marie D'Ancanto. Comic writer Chris Claremont, Rogue's creator, has used this name since the movie's release in the "X-Treme X-Men" comic, but for a different character.
Ian McKellen (Magneto) worked with screenwriters to make the scene in which Bobby Drake (Iceman) tells his parents he is a mutant to look more like a common gay "coming-out" scene.
Director Bryan Singer stated that he was inspired by the "The Twilight Zone" (1959) episode "The Howling Man" when making the scene where Senator Kelly transforms into Lady Deathstrike. In the episode, an old man progressively changes into the devil while walking by pillars.
In the final classroom scene, Professor Xavier talks about a book called "The Once and Future King" by T.H. White. This is the same book Magento was reading in prison before Stryker's interrogation.
The White House oval office is an exact recreation, but the corridors in the opening chase between Nightcrawler and the Secret Service, were wider than the actual walls to allow more room for fighting.
Beast and Gambit were considered as a new character but they ultimately went with Nightcrawler because he was the most outsider-like of the choices.
Pyro's cigarette lighter has a shark design to it, this is a tribute to director Bryan Singer's love of the movie Jaws (1975).
The Oval Office set used in this film was later used in several episodes of the sci-fi TV-series "Stargate SG-1" (1997)
The ice wall separating Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) and Stryker (Brian Cox) in the mansion scene where they meet for the "first time" was real ice and weighed 3,500 lbs.
Magneto's line "When will these people learn how to fly?" is a reference to the fact that some of the characters (Jean Grey and Rogue) have the ability to fly in the comics but haven't yet in the films. The only characters with the power of flight in the comics that have shown this ability in the movies are Magneto and Storm.
When Mystique reviews the information on the security guards at the facility housing Magneto, the following names are displayed, referencing crew members of the film: T. DeSanto (Tom DeSanto, executive producer), M. Dougherty (Michael Dougherty, screenwriter), L. Donner (Lauren Shuler Donner, producer), R. D. Young (possibly Rob Young, production sound mixer), D. Harris (Dan Harris, screenwriter) G. L. B. - Classified, R. B. M. - Classified, and B. Singer (Bryan Singer, director).
According to Bryan Singer's commentary, he removed a couple of seconds of footage after Wolverine stabs a soldier in the kitchen during the raid for ratings purposes. But the extended sequence can be seen as deleted footage in the Supplemental Features disc. The extended sequence was also featured in the theatrical version in other countries (ex: Brazil).
The music played in the opening scene when Nightcrawler attacks the White House is "Dies Irae" from Mozart's Requeim.
Initially, during the "Dark Cerebro" scene where it is attempting to kill all mutants, Bryan Singer had planned to show not only Cerebro's effects on the mutants in the Alkali Base, but mutants all over the world. During this scene, Hank McCoy aka Beast, as seen earlier on the television during the bar scene, was to be shown in agony, transforming into his furry form, and fan-favorite Gambit, was to be shown at a card game having his energy powers flare up. This scene was actually shot, using one of Hugh Jackman's stunt men, James Bamford as a stand-in for the role, shot from behind to remain ambiguous. For whatever reason, Singer decided to cut this sequence altogether and it remains unseen.
The illusion-casting powers that Mutant 143 (played by Michael Reid McKay) possesses, is a homage to a classic X-Men villain from the comics named Jason Wyngarde/Mastermind.
The Danger Room, the area where the X-Men train and hone their powers, was going to be included in this film. Bryan Singer had wanted it to appear in the first film, but due to budget cuts, the idea had to be scrapped. It was then worked into the story for this film, to take place when Wolverine is left to watch after the students in the mansion. He decides to do a workout in the Danger Room, which was going to segue into the scene of him lying down and having a vision of Stryker and his Weapon X procedure. The Danger Room was going to be a cylindrical-shaped room, with different sections of the floor raising and lowering at dangerous speeds, as well as holographic projectiles, etc. The earliest teaser trailer for the film gave a sneak peak at how the Danger Room was going to look, but shortly after this teaser was released, Fox cut Singer's budget down from $125 million to $110 million, forcing Singer to once again cut the Danger Room from the film. There is still a small reference to the Danger Room remaining in the film: when Stryker first enters the X-Mansion subbasement, directly opposite from the elevator is a door with a small label on it, which, according to Singer's DVD commentary track, identifies the door as the entrance to the Danger Room.
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X2
Dec 5, 2005 6:46:45 GMT -5
Post by kg redhead on Dec 5, 2005 6:46:45 GMT -5
In the American version of the movie, Wolverine asks for "something other than chocolate milk" and receives the reply "There should be some Dr Pepper..." In international versions, the replay is "There should be some soda...". In both versions, the bottle is still a Dr Pepper bottle, only the audio is altered.
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