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« Box Office: Wolverine slays while Get Out stays... | Main | Are you a patron saint? »
Sunday
Mar052017

Review: Hugh Jackman's Last Stand as Wolverine in "Logan"

This review was originally published in Nathaniel's column at Towleroad

Logan, the latest and last (for now) solo Wolverine movie, was not kidding around when it opted for Johnny Cash’s “Hurt” as its trailer music. It’s not just the severity of the title, but the elegiac lyrics, and the dying man as guiding spirit / inspiration. Some trailers lie but this one spoke world-weary truth. This is exactly the kind of movie James Mangold, who also directed the Johnny Cash biopic Walk the Line, delivers.

Wolverine’s mutation were never those iconic claws, which were a science experiment to weaponize him, but his ability to instantly heal which also slows down his aging process. The movie franchise got very silly about this, placing him in the civil war context in X-Men Origins as if the once feral Canadian hero was an immortal vampire rather than a mutant. 

But Logan is anything but silly about aging...

 

That is wise since this franchise is long in the tooth. What’s more Hugh Jackman does age as he is not, alas, a mutant — unless you count bonafide movie star charisma as a superpower, which: fair point!

So Logan hits Jackman with harsh light, exposes the wrinkles, grays the hair, and piles on the scarring and ‘seen better days’ makeup. Logan jumps ahead to the future of 2029 in which everything in the US has gone to total shit (this seems less like science fiction than probability given Trump’s America) and our world, particular for mutants, is unforgiving like a dystopian western. Logan is not healing quickly like he used to and is hiding decrepit Charles Xavier (Patrick Stewart) from authorities.

At first Logan doesn’t believe his former Professor that young mutants exist again (the movie is thankfully low on backstory, expecting you to imagine things that came between the films). But soon our familiar heroes are on the run with a mute young girl who is suspiciously like Wolverine himself, complete with claws and murderous rampages. 

The story of Logan is actually fairly clever, dropping us into a plausible dystopia and shoving our faces in terrifying ‘What If?’ scenarios, which stack on top of each other like a Jenga tower ruled by Murphy’s Law. What, for example, would happen if the world’s most powerful psychic mind was experiencing mental deterioration and his seizures could incapacitate and even kill everyone around him? The film’s best action sequence, in which Wolverine has to agonizingly make his way through a crowded hotel and soldiers before Xavier accidentally kills everyone, is terrifying and superbly executed.

One of the film’s boldest moves, and its only arguable nod to “fun” is a meta riff on comic lore and superhero movies. Old X-Men comic books come into the plot and Logan has nothing but disdain for them, writing off superhero stories as escapist fantasy. Despite impressively smart elements like this, the movie falls into many usual traps of the genre: the villain is unsatisfying and ill-defined despite Boyd Holbrook trying his damnedest to zjoosh his role up on charisma alone; there are sacrificial characters of color (sigh) – why must black characters always die in genre films?; and the action scenes become repetitive.

About those action scenes…

It doesn’t take long to realize that Mangold and team are as thirsty for blood baths as Countess Báthory and are going for the hardest of possible “R” ratings from the MPAA. Gone are the days when the X-Men movies pretended that Wolverine wasn’t a mass murderer (he doesn’t even try to leave survivors in any action situation now). This is the first X-Men movie in which people have arteries. There will be (lots of) bloodletting.

If the violence wasn’t enough to ensure critical favor for the film’s “seriousness,” Logan and Xavier both use “F**k!” in seemingly every other sentence as if to proclaim that they’re inside a very serious IMPORTANT movie for adults. The “R” seems to be winning unanimous praise from critics but I can’t personally hop on this bandwagon. Brutality, like any other noun, is not qualitative. It cannot make any work of art serious or important. It can only make it brutal.

this fuzzy image is from the best action sequence in any Wolverine film

I don’t have children but weirdly I’ve never felt older while watching a movie. You can say all you like, as people have to me when I’ve expressed this concern, that “this movie isn’t for kids!” but tell that to the hordes of children who love superheroes and will surely find a way to see it themselves. I literally have never seen a movie this violent that wasn’t part of the slasher genre and I see a lot of movies.

All that said, Logan is not just the latest but the greatest Wolverine movie. Sure, sure, the bar was very low after the appallingly joyless X-Men Origins: Wolverine and better but disposable follow-up The Wolverine but that’s still good news. A quick look around at early reviews suggests that Mangold has made a masterpiece. Like so many things connected to the world’s current favorite movie genre, this is more hype than reality. Still, even if the movie doesn’t live up to the fannish excitement, it is wonderful that Hugh Jackman got a swan song worth his time as he says goodbye to the character he’s played for nearly his entire career. For all of its flaws, this sometimes inspired hellish neo-Western is worth seeing (for those with strong stomachs).

There won’t be a sing-a-long version of Logan (that wouldn’t be sober and important enough!) but there should be:

I hurt myself today
To see if I still feel
I focus on the pain
The only thing that’s real
The needle tears a hole
The old familiar sting
Try to kill it all away
But I remember everything
What have I become
My sweetest friend
Everyone I know goes away
In the end
And you could have it all
My empire of dirt
I will let you down
I will make you hurt

Freed finally from those Adamantium claws, we can only hope that the next act of Jackman’s career will make up for lost time and allow him to explore his range as an actor. He’ll embrace his song and dance side in The Greatest Showman this Christmas and let’s hope for a comedy and a romantic drama follow on its heels. There’s more to movie life than superheroes and berserker rages. In other words: RIP Wolverine but long live Hugh Jackman.

Grade: B
Oscar Chances: I'd say unlikely but every year there's a push to finally honor superhero films so eventually something outside of the Batman series will have to find a nomination somewhere outside of the three some time comic book categories: Visual Effects, Makeup, Sound Editing.

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Reader Comments (14)

I thought the movie was pretty good -
but Dafne Keen as X-23/Laura was GREAT...
I really loved her.
I'm so keen og her standalone/spinoff movie X-23.

Boyd Holbrook was also really impressive -
he's like a better and cooler Garrett Hedlund!

March 5, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterUlrich

Nat: I'd imagine this only helps his The Greatest Showman campaign. I'm still in the camp that says "If anything non-DC breaks through beyond the "typical" categories, it'll be a Marvel Studios release". (Note: This genre has NO Oscar nominations for Costume Design. Yeah...no.)

March 5, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterVolvagia

"What, for example, would happen if the world’s most powerful psychic mind was experiencing mental deterioration and his seizures could incapacitate and even kill everyone around him?"

Now THERE'S an allegory for the Trump era.

March 5, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterAkash

Akash: If you wanted to make a political joke out of that, you SHOULD have said "now THERE'S an allegory for the Democratic Party/The American Left", because targeting that joke at Trump implies he was EVER intelligent.

March 5, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterVolvagia

They've got to push for a Patrick Stewart nomination. The man is an undecorated legend saying goodbye to his second iconic character and, in my opinion, worthy of consideration here.

March 5, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterDevin D

Hugh is my April Fool's pick as Best Actor next year.

March 5, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterMARKGORDONUK

Devin D: Critics REALLY should have been pushing for Stewart to get nominated last year, for Green Room.

March 5, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterVolvagia

I quite liked it. A nice wrap up to Hugh Jackman's career as wolverine. I did think the kids reminded me a bit of Spielberg's Hook kids.

March 5, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterJames

@devin d

I'm all about that!

This movie was just beautiful. The blood didn't really bother me or make me feel my age. I just kept thinking it took 17 years to finally see Logan cut someone's head off.

I will say the blood/R-Rating was particularly effective when he is (SPOILER?) trying to pull out his one claw that was sort of stuck/not coming out. I really felt the pain there.

March 6, 2017 | Unregistered Commentermikenewq

"I literally have never seen a movie this violent that wasn’t part of the slasher genre and I see a lot of movies."

I felt like someone's grandma watching this. If i had pearls, they would have been *clutched* at all the VIOLENCE. Like damn. I saw a mother come in with her 10 year old kids and I judged the living daylights out of her before she left 20 minutes later. I guess it's an easy mistake to make for parents who aren't plugged into X-Men movies.

Decent movie and oddly affecting at times too.

March 6, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterDerreck.

If they work as hard as they did with Deadpool, Patrick Stewart could easily find himself a supporting nod. I hope they push for it, he was wonderful.

March 7, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterFig

There's an unfinished thought there in paragraph seven!

March 7, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterGlenn Dunks

Spot on review, Nate. There seems to be group thought amongst the nearly universal critical praise for this film, and the praise is a bit overblown. I found it to be good, but not amazing. It's certainly unique to the super hero genre, so points for that. It's also the best of the Wolverine franchise, but as you mentioned, low bar. It was over-violent and I'm not squeamish, felt like Tarantino was a consultant for the film. Also Laura and the main villain characters could have been a bit more fleshed out, found myself not very emotionally invested in the outcome.

March 8, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterMike C

Love the movie but I hate the idea about the WOLVERINE dieing. Puting a end to the wolverine sequel is a stupid idea and the idea that he dies at the end is unlikely because he still has his mutant power that he can heal

May 10, 2017 | Unregistered CommenterEthan Sylvester
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