X-Men: The Last Stand
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X-Men: The Last Stand (also marketed as X3, or X-Men 3) is a 2006 superhero film based on the X-Men superhero team introduced in comic books published by Marvel Entertainment Group. It is the sequel to 2003 s X2, as well as the third installment in the X-Men film series, and was directed by Brett Ratner. It features an ensemble cast including Hugh Jackman, Halle Berry, Ian McKellen, Famke Janssen, Anna Paquin, Kelsey Grammer, James Marsden, Rebecca Romijn, Shawn Ashmore, Aaron Stanford, Vinnie Jones and Patrick Stewart. Written by Simon Kinberg and Zak Penn, the film is loosely based on two X-Men comic book story arcs: Gifted and The Dark Phoenix Saga , with a plot that revolves around a mutant cure that causes serious repercussions among mutants and humans, and on the resurrection of Jean Grey who unleashes a dark force.

Bryan Singer, who had directed the two previous films, X-Men (2000) and X2, decided to leave the sequel to work on Superman Returns (2006). X2 composer John Ottman and X2 writers Dan Harris and Michael Dougherty also left to work on Superman Returns, as did James Marsden, who had very limited screen time in The Last Stand before his character was killed off due to his departure from the film. Singer had not even defined the storyline for a third film. Matthew Vaughn, who was initially hired as the new director, left due to personal and professional issues, and was replaced with Ratner. Filming took place from August 2005 to January 2006 with a budget of $210 million, and was consequently the most expensive film made at the time of its release. It had extensive visual effects created by 11 different companies.

X-Men: The Last Stand premiered in the Out of Competition section at the Cannes Film Festival, and was released theatrically in the United States on May 26, 2006, by 20th Century Fox. It grossed approximately $459 million worldwide, becoming the seventh-highest-grossing film of 2006; it was at the time the highest-grossing film in the series and currently the fourth-highest-grossing film of the franchise. Critical reception was mixed, with praise for its action but criticism for its lack of depth.

Plot

In 1986, Charles Xavier and Erik Lehnsherr meet young Jean Grey at her parents house to invite her to join their school, the X-Mansion. Ten years later, the industrialist Warren Worthington II discovers his son is a mutant as he tries to cut off his wings.

In the present, Worthington Labs announces it has developed an inoculation to suppress the X-gene that gives mutants their abilities and offer the cure to any mutant who wants it. The cure is created from the genome of a young mutant named Jimmy, who lives at the Worthington facility on Alcatraz Island. While some mutants are interested in the cure, including Rogue, many others are horrified by the announcement. Magneto re-establishes his Brotherhood of Mutants with those who oppose the cure, warning his followers that the cure will be forcefully used to exterminate the mutant race. With help from Pyro, Magneto recruits Callisto and several other mutants. They attack the mobile prison holding Mystique to free her, also freeing Multiple Man and Juggernaut. Mystique, shielding Magneto from a cure dart, is hit by it and loses her mutant abilities. Magneto abandons her as a result. Meanwhile, Scott Summers, still distraught over the loss of his fiancée Jean Grey, drives to her resting location at Alkali Lake. Jean appears to Summers but, as the two kiss, Jean kills him. Sensing trouble, Xavier sends Logan and Storm to investigate. When they arrive, they find only telekinetically floating rocks, Summers glasses, and an unconscious Jean.

When Logan and Storm return to the X-Mansion, Xavier explains to Logan that when Jean sacrificed herself to save them, she also freed the Phoenix , a dark and extremely powerful alternate personality which Xavier had telepathically repressed, aware of the Phoenix s godlike destructive potential. Logan is disgusted to learn of this psychic tampering with Jean s mind but, once she awakens, he discovers that she killed Summers and is not the Jean Grey he once knew. The Phoenix emerges, knocks out Logan, and escapes to her childhood home. Magneto learns of Jean s resurrection through Callisto, and the X-Men arrive at the Grey home at the same time as the Brotherhood. Magneto and Xavier go in, and both vie for Jean s loyalty until the Phoenix resurfaces. She destroys the house and kills Xavier by disintegrating him, before leaving with Magneto. After interrogating a depowered Mystique, the FBI discover Magneto s base in the woods. However, the life forms in the camp are all decoy copies of Multiple Man. Magneto and the Brotherhood have gone to storm Alcatraz by using his magnetic manipulation powers to reroute the Golden Gate Bridge. The remaining X-Men confront the Brotherhood, despite being significantly outnumbered, and arrive just as the military troops who thus far have been neutralizing the attacking mutants are overwhelmed by the Brotherhood.

During the fight, Kitty Pryde saves Jimmy from Juggernaut, who had been sent to kill him by Magneto. Logan has Colossus throw him at Magneto and distract him long enough for Hank McCoy to inject Magneto with the cure and thus nullify his powers. The Phoenix is awakened and begins to destroy Alcatraz and anyone within range of her powers. Logan realizes that only he can stop the Phoenix due to his healing factor and adamantium skeleton. When Logan approaches her, Jean momentarily gains control and begs him to save her, and everyone else, by killing her. Logan fatally stabs Jean, killing the Phoenix, but mourns her death. Sometime later, mutant rights are finally obtained and Xavier s school is still operating with Storm as headmistress. The President of the United States appoints McCoy as ambassador to the United Nations. Rogue reveals to Bobby Drake that she has taken the cure, much to his disappointment, but they hold hands. Meanwhile, Magneto sits at a chessboard in San Francisco, seemingly human and weak. As Magneto gestures toward a metal chess piece, it wobbles slightly.

Elsewhere, Moira MacTaggert checks on a comatose patient who greets her with Xavier s voice, leaving her startled.

Cast

  • Hugh Jackman as Logan / Wolverine: A Canadian mutant born with hyper-acute, animal-like senses, claws on his hands, and an accelerated healing factor that made it possible to implant a coating of the indestructible metal alloy adamantium on his skeleton. Jackman was pleased to see that the script allowed Wolverine to expand his character choices, as instead of questioning whether he would remain a loner or join the X-Men, Logan now is asked if he will play a leadership role in the X-Men.
  • Halle Berry as Ororo Munroe / Storm: A mutant, who is one of Xavier s earlier students and the leader of the X-Men in Cyclops absence. Storm is a woman with the ability to manipulate the weather. Berry had stated during interviews for X2 that she would not return unless the character had a significant presence comparable to the comic book version, leading to a larger role in The Last Stand s script. Berry declared that her ethnicity made the actress identify with the cure plot: When I was a child, I felt that if only I could change myself, my life would be better. As I ve gotten older, I ve come to terms with what utter nonsense that is. The character was given a more modern haircut, and costume designer Judianna Makovsky opted to give Storm more black clothes, a color she only wore in the leather costume for previous films, to make her tougher and sexier .
  • Ian McKellen as Erik Lehnsherr / Magneto: Leader and founder of the Brotherhood, Magneto is a mutant Holocaust survivor who wages war against humanity in the name of mutant superiority. He has the ability to control and manipulate metal, making him one of the most powerful mutants. Well known for his homosexuality, McKellen found a parallel of the cure with many prejudices: It s abhorrent to me, as it would be if a person said I need curing of my sexuality, or if someone said that black people could take a pill that would cure them of being black. McKellen s shooting schedule had to accommodate his work in both The Da Vinci Code (2006) and the London theatre, going as far as filming the actor in England to later superimpose into the Vancouver plates.
  • Famke Janssen as Jean Grey / Phoenix: A mutant former member of the X-Men, a Class 5 mutant who possesses potentially limitless telepathic and telekinetic powers. The X-Men learn that she has survived the flooding dam from the previous film, but when the rest of the team finds her, Grey has given in completely to her aggressive alternate personality of her powers, the Phoenix. Her mutant powers rival those of Xavier. The writers described the multiple personalities as an Oedipal drama played out , where the Phoenix was someone embodying Greek goddess , while Jean Grey kept the character as a human, grounded in Freudian terms, a victim, a schizophrenic. To mark the change of Jean Grey into Phoenix, her wardrobe focused on red colors, and everyday fabric in contrast to the leather costumes of the X-Men. Digital make-up also made Jean s face darker with her skin showing some veins and her eyes turning black, signifying the Phoenix personality of her powers. Haley Ramm plays a young Jean Grey.
  • Anna Paquin as Marie / Rogue: A young mutant woman whose power causes her to temporarily take on the powers of anyone she touches, leaving her victims (mutant or human) unconscious; Rogue s lack of control over her power causes a great deal of strain on her relationship with Iceman. Paquin declared that while Rogue did not have a large physical component in this movie , the adult decisions the character was forced to do made for more intensity on the emotional side.
  • Kelsey Grammer as Dr. Henry Hank McCoy / Beast: A mutant former student of Xavier s Institute for Gifted Mutants who is now a member of the U.S. Cabinet as the Secretary of Mutant Affairs, Beast is a brilliant scientist and statesman. He is covered in blue fur and has heightened strength, reflexes and agility, as well as pointed fangs and a lion-like roar. Grammer s make-up took three hours to apply, it involved applying latex prosthetics before painting his eye area and lips blue, applying various hair pieces and wigs, and a muscle suit covered with a hand-punched fur suit.
  • James Marsden as Scott Summers / Cyclops: A mutant, who is X-Men s field leader, Cyclops emits powerful energy blasts from his eyes, and must wear specially made glasses to prevent the destruction of anything he looks at. Although he is in a committed relationship with Jean Grey, her Phoenix persona kills him early in the film. Marsden saw no problem in having a smaller role, as the films opted to feature Wolverine as the standpoint character, and feeling that it s difficult when you have however many new characters that you re trying to introduce to an audience in 90 to 120 minutes, to give everyone their due.
  • Rebecca Romijn as Raven Darkholme / Mystique: Magneto s mutant blue-skinned right-hand woman possesses the ability to shape-shift to mimic anyone s appearance, as well as fight with incredible agility, reflexes and strength. She is also a woman of few words. She jumps in front of cure darts intended for Magneto and, after she loses her mutant abilities as a result, Magneto abandons her. Romijn described this story as a traumatic experience for Mystique, given that the previous movies implied that she and Magneto had a deep-seated bond , and becoming a frail mortal would be her worst nightmare .
  • Shawn Ashmore as Bobby Drake / Iceman: A young mutant, Iceman can create constructs of ice or blasts of cold. Ashmore s commitments to X-Men made him decline Bryan Singer s invitation to play Jimmy Olsen in Superman Returns. The actor was content with his bigger role after Bobby joined the X-Men main team in X2, as during the previous production he wondered When do I get to freeze something or get into a fight?
  • Aaron Stanford as John Allerdyce / Pyro: A mutant who was a student of Xavier s School for Gifted Mutants with a grudge against his former friend Bobby Drake, Pyro has the ability to manipulate fire, generated through wrist-mounted lighters. Stanford stated that with the Brotherhood, Pyro is allowed to fully explore his power for lacking moral restraints. The actor was comfortable with returning to the role, particularly for following The Hills Have Eyes, which had an exhausting shoot in the Moroccan desert, while Pyro was nowhere near as physically demanding – My character s pretty much stand-and-deliver, stand there and throw fire at people. There s no acrobatics.
  • Vinnie Jones as Cain Marko / Juggernaut: A mutant criminal recruited by the Brotherhood in a prison truck, Juggernaut is incredibly strong, fast and, once he gains momentum, he is nearly unstoppable. The film s version of Juggernaut is depicted as a mutant and his relation to Charles Xavier was never mentioned. Matthew Vaughn cast Jones, who he met producing the Guy Ritchie gangster movies where Jones began his acting career. The actor had to go through a four-hour make-up process to portray Juggernaut, which included a muscle suit and a prosthetic chin. The costume tried to retain the bullet-shaped helmet of the comics without going excessively over the top.
  • Patrick Stewart as Charles Xavier / Professor X: A mutant with uncharted telepathic powers, and founder of Xavier s Institute for Gifted Mutants. Xavier is an authority on genetic mutation and an advocate of peaceful relations between human and mutant kind. Stewart signed to the film without knowing Xavier would die, and not meeting original director Matthew Vaughn – both would meet in Manchester, where Stewart was filming Eleventh Hour, but eventually Brett Ratner called to introduce himself as the new director.

Additionally, Elliot Page appears as Kitty Pryde / Shadowcat: A mutant with the ability to phase through matter and walk through solid objects, her clear affection for Iceman further adds to the tension already present between Iceman and Rogue. Maggie Grace was considered for the role, before Ratner invited Page, who impressed the director with their performance in Hard Candy. The actor initially declined, not wanting to yet jump to Hollywood filmmaking, but accepted after reading the script. Page said part of their motivation was having a new experience: I thought, well, when else am I going to have a chance to wear a leather suit and run through exploding things? Why not be a superhero for a change? Daniel Cudmore appears as Peter Rasputin / Colossus: A mutant with the ability to transform his body into an organic steel, while also granting him superhuman strength and a resistance to physical damage while in that form. Cudmore wore a foam latex muscle suit covered with a chrome-plated plastic plus a hard plastic head to have the metal skin on the set, with some digital augmentation being used to enhance the facial expressions. A digital double was used only for stunts that could not be achieved practically, such as the Fastball Special where Colossus throws Wolverine at Magneto., Ben Foster appears as Warren Worthington III / Angel: The mutant son of an industrialist, who has feathered wings which allow him to fly. The static wings were models with a 15 feet (4.6 m) wingspan and 5 feet (1.5 m) height glued to Foster s back, replaced with computer-generated ones when movement was required.

Cayden Boyd appears as young Angel, Michael Murphy appears as Warren Worthington II: The head of Worthington Labs, the corporation developing the cure , Worthington expects to rid his son of his mutant abilities. The addition of the character allowed to integrate Angel into the cure plot, which also added a parallel between Warren s discovery of his son s mutation with a father finding out about his son s homosexuality., Dania Ramirez appears as Callisto: The leader of the Omegas, Callisto is a mutant with enhanced superhumanly acute senses, who senses mutants and their powers, and possesses superhuman speed and an expert hand-to-hand combatant. The character combined the powers of the comics Callisto with another of the Morlocks, Caliban, and was written as someone who could be beautiful, but with a tough persona . Ramirez had originally auditioned to play the mutant prostitute Stacy X, and impressed Brett Ratner so much that he decided to bring her in to play Callisto., Shohreh Aghdashloo appears as Dr. Kavita Rao: A scientist who works at Worthington Labs on the mutant cure, she is killed by Kid Omega. Aghdashloo signed without a completed script, and erroneously said her character would be mutant doctor Cecilia Reyes., Josef Sommer appears as the President: The President of the United States is tolerant of mutants, but fearful of the Brotherhood s threats. While creating the role, the producers felt that a different president, like an African American or a woman, had become a cliché in itself and went for a traditional route with an elder caucasian man. Sommer was invited by Ratner following their collaboration in The Family Man., Bill Duke appears as Trask: The head of the Department of Homeland Security, Trask aids the president of the United States during the war against the mutants. The character is probably related to the comic books Bolivar Trask; however, his first name was never mentioned in the film and he is portrayed as African American. In the comics, Bolivar Trask is the head of Trask Industries and creator of the mutant-hunting Sentinels, and Eric Dane appears as James Madrox / Multipleman: A mutant and thief recruited by the Brotherhood in a prison truck, Madrox has the ability to create a very large number of copies of himself. The writers considered Dane s performance memorable despite being featured in only two scenes. Madrox s wardrobe invoked the symbols worn in his comics costume.

Other actors who portrayed mutants were: Meiling Melançon as Psylocke, a mutant with the ability to teleport herself through areas of shadow, although that depiction differs significantly from the comics; Omahyra Mota as Arclight, a mutant who has the ability to generate shock waves of concussive force; Ken Leung as Kid Omega, a mutant with the ability to eject spikes from his body, most notably his face (though the character resembles the comic books character Quill and was later confirmed as such however, the official cast credits erroneously read Kid Omega ); and Cameron Bright as Jimmy / Leech, a mutant who has the ability to neutralize the powers of nearby mutants. Various characters were included at the suggestion of editor Mark Helfrich, who brought Marvel s X-Men Encyclopedia to director Brett Ratner, searching for mutants who could make appearance. These include Phat, a mutant that is a very large man who can slim down to fit in a smaller space (played by two actors, Via Saleaumua – large mode – and Richard Yee – small mode ); Spike (played by Lance Gibson), a mutant who battles Wolverine in the forest by extruding bony spikes from his flesh – the character was added because the editing team felt that the original cut of the scene portrayed Logan as a cold-blooded killer, which could be changed if another mutant attacked Wolverine before he struck the Brotherhood and Glob Herman (played by Clayton Dean Watmough), a mutant with transparent skin. Mark Helfrich portrays an unnamed mutant with ash-gray skin. Various other mutants make cameos at the X-Mansion; Shauna Kain and Kea Wong reprised their cameo roles as Siryn and Jubilee respectively, and three identical girls in the background in one scene are a reference to the Stepford Cuckoos. Olivia Williams portrays Moira MacTaggert. Adrian Hough, who previously voiced Nightcrawler in X-Men appears as John Grey, Jean s father. X-Men co-creator Stan Lee and writer Chris Claremont have cameos in the film s opening scene as the neighbors of young Jean Grey. The sergeant directing defensive preparations before the Brotherhood assaults Alcatraz Island is played by R. Lee Ermey. Lloyd Adams portrays the green-skinned mutant that climbs the guard tower on Alcatraz. Many fans believed this was Toad; however, the credits list him as lizard man and Brett Ratner confirmed it was Anole. Avalanche and Vanisher also appear; however, it is not known who portrayed them.

Production

Development

Bryan Singer, the director of the first two 20th Century Fox X-Men films, left the project in July 2004 in favor of developing Superman Returns (2006) for Warner Bros. Pictures. Singer stated that he didn t fully have X-Men 3 in my mind in contrast to a fully formed idea for a Superman film and interest in joining that franchise. By the time of his departure, Singer had only produced a partial story treatment with X2 (2003) screenwriters Dan Harris and Michael Dougherty, who accompanied him to Superman Returns. The treatment focused on Jean Grey s resurrection, which would also introduce the villainess Emma Frost, a role intended for Sigourney Weaver. Frost was an empath manipulating Jean s emotions in the treatment and, like the finished film, Magneto desires to control her. Overwhelmed by her powers, Jean kills herself, but Jean s spirit survives and becomes a god-like creature, which Dougherty compared to the star child in A Space Odyssey (1968).

New contracts for returning cast members were made, as the actors and actresses had signed for only two films. Hugh Jackman s contract included the approval of director, initially offering the position to Darren Aronofsky, with whom he had just finished filming on The Fountain (2006). Joss Whedon, whose comic book storyline Gifted which he wrote was integrated into the script s plot, turned down the offer because he was working on a Wonder Woman film. Rob Bowman and Alex Proyas were also rumored to be up for consideration, though Proyas personally turned it down, citing feuds with 20th Century Fox president Thomas Rothman while producing I, Robot (2004). Zack Snyder was also approached, but he was already committed to 300 (2006). Peter Berg was also considered to direct the film but he too turned down the job. Guillermo del Toro was also offered to direct the film but turned down as he was already committed to Pan s Labyrinth (2006). In February 2005, with still no director hired, Fox announced a May 5, 2006, release date, with filming to start in July 2005 in Vancouver. One month later, the studio signed Matthew Vaughn to direct, and pushed the release date three weeks to May 26, Memorial Day weekend. Vaughn cast Kelsey Grammer as Beast, Dania Ramirez as Callisto, and Vinnie Jones as Juggernaut, but family issues led him to withdraw before filming began. Vaughn was also cautious of the tight deadlines imposed by Fox, stating that he didn t have the time to make the movie that I wanted to make .

Brett Ratner, who was previously considered to direct X-Men (2000) in 1996, and John Moore were both in the running to replace Vaughn during pre-production. On June 5, 2005, Ratner was confirmed as Vaughn s replacement. Ratner said he was surprised to get an invitation, as he thought he would have no chance to do a comic-book film after the cancelled Superman: Flyby for Warner Bros. With a limited knowledge of the X-Men mythos, Ratner trusted his writers on doing something faithful to the comics, having the script drawing all of its scenes from the original Marvel publications.

Writing

Simon Kinberg, who had worked on two other 20th Century Fox adaptations, Fantastic Four (2005) and Elektra (2005), was hired as writer for X-Men 3 in August 2004. X2 co-writer Zak Penn was separately working on his own draft, and the two joined forces for a combined screenplay in January 2005. Kinberg wanted the comic book arc The Dark Phoenix Saga by writer Chris Claremont and artist John Byrne to be the emotional plot of the film, while Gifted by Whedon and artist John Cassaday would serve as the political focus. The duo had seven months to complete The Last Stand s script, and during the first week of work completed the first eighty pages, consisting of the first two-thirds of the plot. This incomplete draft was leaked to Ain t It Cool News, who proceeded to write a negative review. Matthew Vaughn later helped co-wrote the script, storyboarded the entire film, and prevised all the major sequences. Though he did not get a writer s credit.

The writers had to fight Fox s executives to retain the Phoenix plot, as the studio only wanted the cure story as it provided a reason for Magneto s conflict with the X-Men. Still the disputes made them not add much for Jean Grey to do in most of the film s second half, as the executives considered the tone of the Phoenix story too dark for a mainstream summer movie, and that its appeal would be limited to hardcore fans rather than a general audience. Penn defended the divergences from the original Dark Phoenix stories, stating that the Phoenix was not a firebird-shaped cosmic force because it doesn t fit into the world, and that Cyclops did not have as much screentime as Wolverine because the latter was more popular and with Cyclops, you can t see his eyes. It s a harder character to relate to for the audience. Killing Cyclops was Fox s decision, based on the availability of actor James Marsden, who was cast in Singer s Superman Returns. The studio considered killing him off-screen with a dialogue reference, but Kinberg and Penn insisted that Jean kill him, emphasizing their relationship. Xavier s death was intended to match the impact of Spock s demise in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, as Fox felt the script called for a dramatic turning point. Kinberg and Penn were originally cautious, but grew to like the idea of killing off Xavier. They decided to write a post-credits scene suggesting the character s return for a sequel.

As the studio was simultaneously developing X-Men Origins: Wolverine, limitations were set on which mutants could be used for cameo appearances in X-Men 3 in an attempt to avoid risking character development for Wolverine. Gambit was considered for both the convoy scene being freed by Magneto and the Battle of Alcatraz along with the X-Men, but the writers did not want to introduce a fan favorite character and not be able to do him justice. Kinberg reasoned, there just wasn t enough space , and considered Gambit would only work with as much screentime as Beast. Alan Cumming had been uncomfortable with the long hours he had to take with the prosthetic makeup as Nightcrawler in X2, but still planned to return for the sequel. The part of Nightcrawler was so minimal, however, that the studio felt it was not worthwhile to go through the long and costly makeup process, and the character was cut. Kinberg felt that there wasn t much left to do with the character. It also felt like he might tread a little bit on the terrain of Beast, in terms of similarities in the characters and their political standpoints in terms of dealing with their mutancy. Nightcrawler s absence was later explained in the tie-in video game. The introductory scenes tried to emulate the Auschwitz opener for the first film, going with different scenes that resonated later in the plot instead of an action scene like in most blockbusters. Afterwards came a scene in the Danger Room, which was considered for the previous X-Men films but never included for budget and writing concerns. The writers tried to make the simulation not feel extraneous by showcasing some of the character conflicts and abilities in a Days of Future Past -inspired battle with a Sentinel. Another repurposed scene was Magneto attacking the convoy to free Mystique, Madrox and Juggernaut, which Penn had previously envisioned for X2.

Ratner collaborated with Penn and Kinberg in rearranging the plot structure of the film. Originally, the Golden Gate Bridge sequence was in the middle of the film, where the moved bridge was used by Magneto to free mutants being held prisoners on Alcatraz, and the climax was set in Washington, D.C. Ratner felt too many recent action films, such as Planet of the Apes (2001) and X2 itself, had their ending in Washington, and the Golden Gate sequence would be the biggest sequence in my entire career , and suggested to instead put the Worthington laboratory in Alcatraz, along with creating a face for the cure , which became the character of Jimmy/Leech. Kinberg agreed, as he previously argued with Penn about blowing so many things early in the movie .

Filming

X-Men: The Last Stand began shooting in August 2005 and wrapped in January 2006. Much of the film was shot at Vancouver Film Studios, the same location of X2. Locations included the Hatley Park National Historic Site and Royal Roads University, which doubled for the X-Mansion. An old lumber mill next to the Fraser River doubled as Alcatraz Island. The tight schedule made Ratner begin post-production the day I started shooting, sending the scenes he had just filmed to his editors. The editing team was led by Mark Helfrich, who had edited all of Ratner s films, assisted by Mark Goldblatt in the action scenes and Julia Wong with effects-heavy footage.

According to associate producer Dave Gordon, This is the biggest production ever filmed in Canada. It used to be X2, now it s X3. The $210 million budget also made The Last Stand the most expensive film to be made at the time. The film s record would be first broken by Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man s Chest s $225 million budget. The original cinematographer was Philippe Rousselot, who eventually opted to depart production. Dante Spinotti, a frequent collaborator of Ratner, replaced him, with assistance of J. Michael Muro. Fox Filmed Entertainment co-chairmen Thomas Rothman and Jim Gianopulos debated whether Rogue should give Iceman a passionate kiss at the film s end or simply hold his hand. The two executives screened The Last Stand for their daughters, as well as the studio s female marketing executives, and the hand holding prevailed. Gianopulos stated that the kissing was all about sex, and we didn t want that. A strong campaign of secrecy about the script was enforced by Ratner and the writers. Even the actors had problems with getting full screenplays, the call sheets did not reveal all the characters, and many scenes were shot in varied ways. Both of the ending scenes were not included on the shooting script, with Ratner taking a small crew during one day s lunch time to film the post-credits scene with Xavier, and later going to London to film Magneto in the park.

In 2014, Kinberg said of the wobbling chess piece at the end of the film, There is a scene before the credits where Magneto s playing chess, and you see that he can just make the chess piece move, so there s a hint that he s starting to regain his powers. The leap from there was that cure from The Last Stand didn t work exactly the way they thought it would, and so we just leaped forward however many years, and he s got his powers back.

Visual effects

To make sure the visual effects were made in just one year and without exceeding the budget, special effects supervisor John Bruno shipped the 900 effects shots to eleven companies in four countries – United States, New Zealand, United Kingdom and Canada – and did extensive previsualization. Their work begun in April 2005, before the director Brett Ratner had even been announced, and Bruno made sure to emphasize practical effects, shoot as many practical elements as possible, and only use CG when we had to. For instance, complex wirework rigs were employed which enabled the actors to do some stunts without resorting to digital doubles, including a computer controlled flying rig from Cirque Du Soleil for Angel s flight, and one for Halle Berry s flying spins.

Bruno estimates one-sixth of the effects budget was spent on the Golden Gate Bridge scene, which employed both a miniature of the bridge and computer graphics. The miniature was filmed over a period of two months in Santa Clarita, California, just outside of Los Angeles. The effects team would shoot one minute of footage outdoors each day at golden hour, complete with explosives in order to have enough plates to composite the scene.The effects team had to work without reference footage due to the city of San Francisco vetting any filming in the actual bridge, including aerial shooting as the area has restrictions on flying helicopters. Framestore had further challenges in matching the varied weather conditions across the film s plates. As compositing supervisor Matt Twyford detailed, the elements consisted of cold, rainy night live-action footage from Vancouver, sunny day miniature elements, traditional misty day background plates of San Francisco, and of course the CG bridge and fx elements. Another miniature was for the Grey home, which had a destructable equivalent matched the Canadian location and also had a digital equivalent. A notable effect was the digital skin-grafting , which rejuvenated the faces of senior actors Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen, made by the Brothers Strause s Lola Visual Effects. Bruno made sure to ask the atomization made by Phoenix was not too vivid and gruesome, instead resembling oatmeal.

Music

Ratner, a fan of John Powell s work in The Bourne Identity, invited Powell to write the music for The Last Stand. Powell was unsure if the Bourne work was the kind of score that would fit the film and Fox became reluctant on the composer s availability, given he was already scoring Ice Age: The Meltdown at the time of Ratner s contact. However, Powell finished the Ice Age score early to accept the job even if it resulted in a tighter schedule. Powell included references to the score from the previous two films as it all had to be in the same family, and the same language . The Phoenix theme used lyrics from Benjamin Britten s Requiem Mass for the choir parts. A soundtrack album was released on May 23, 2006.

Marketing

The marketing for The Last Stand was darker and more ambiguous compared to the two predecessors. 20th Century Fox president Tom Rothman declared that the decision was made so the film would be different from all of the other movies in the summer, with a campaign that wanted people to stop and not have it be so immediately apparent that we re selling a movie. We re interested in selling an emotion and an idea. The film s official website was launched in October 2005. The teaser trailer release with King Kong the following December was done in conjunction with the studio releasing the film s first official screen shots of the film to USA Today. Diamond Select Toys created a toy line, scanning the actors from the film with likenesses for the first time in the trilogy. Additional product tie-ins came with Harley-Davidson and 7-Eleven. A seven-minute sneak peek aired on Fox Broadcasting two weeks before the film s theatrical release.

Del Rey Books published a novelization of the film, written by comic book writer Chris Claremont, while Newmarket Press published The Art of X-Men: The Last Stand: From Concept to Feature Film. Claremont also worked on Activision s tie-in video game, X-Men: The Official Game, doing the script along with screenwriter Zak Penn. The game s story bridges the events between X2 and The Last Stand, featuring Wolverine, Iceman and Nightcrawler as playable characters, voiced by their film portrayers Hugh Jackman, Shawn Ashmore, and Alan Cumming. Patrick Stewart also appears as Professor X. The game was released to negative reviews and eventually underperformed commercially.

Release

Theatrical

X-Men: The Last Stand premiered at an out-of-competition event of the 2006 Cannes Film Festival on May 22, 2006. Two days later, Hugh Jackman, Halle Berry and Kelsey Grammer attended an advance screening at USS Kearsarge (LHD-3), as the ship was en route to New York City for Fleet Week. The film was released in the United States on May 26, 2006, in 3,690 theaters, while also opening in 95 international markets that same weekend.

Home media

X-Men: The Last Stand was released on October 3, 2006, on DVD. It was available in three editions: single-disc, two-disc, and a trilogy box set with the previous two films. Extras included three alternative endings, each with optional commentary by director Ratner; 10 deleted scenes; audio commentaries from Ratner, the writers and the producers; and two hidden Easter eggs. The two-disc edition came with a 100-page commemorative comic book with a new story written by X-Men co-creator Stan Lee, his first original Marvel comic book in five years. The DVD sold 2.6 million units in its first day, exceeding Fox s expectations, and sold a total 5 million in its first week. A Blu-ray edition was issued in November 2006.

X-Men: The Last Stand is included in the 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray set X-Men: 3-Film Collection, which was released on September 25, 2018.

Reception

Box office

X-Men: The Last Stand earned $45.1 million on its opening day and went on to generate $102.7 million during its three-day opening weekend, making it the fourth-highest opening weekend of all time, behind Shrek 2, Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith and Spider-Man. The film then grossed $122.8 million during the four-day Memorial Day weekend, which was the highest at that time, surpassing The Lost World: Jurassic Park and Shrek 2. It would hold this record until it was surpassed by Pirates of the Caribbean: At World s End the next year. The film s release was also a new single-day record for Friday openings. The opening weekend gross was surpassed six weeks later by Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man s Chest, making The Last Stand s opening the second-highest of 2006. Internationally, The Last Stand topped the box office in 26 countries with a total gross of $76.1 million overall, but suffered competition from The Da Vinci Code, which retained the top spot in most markets, and beat The Last Stand in international gross that weekend with $91 million. The film s second weekend dropped 67 percent to $34 million, which was the steepest post-Memorial Day opening drop on record. X-Men: The Last Stand eventually grossed $234.4 million in the domestic box office and $225 million internationally, for a worldwide total of $459.4 million, the fourth-highest in domestic grosses and seventh-highest worldwide for 2006. X-Men: The Last Stand was also the highest-grossing film in the franchise, until it was surpassed by X-Men: Days of Future Past eight years later.

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes, X-Men: The Last Stand has an approval rating of 57% based on 238 reviews, with an average rating of 5.9/10, as of May 2022. The site s critical consensus reads, X-Men: The Last Stand provides plenty of mutant action for fans of the franchise, even if it does so at the expense of its predecessors deeper moments. At Metacritic, the film has a score of 58 out of 100, based on 38 critics, indicating mixed or average reviews . Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of A− on an A+ to F scale.

Ebert and Roeper gave the film a two thumbs up rating, with Roger Ebert saying, I liked the action, I liked the absurdity, I liked the incongruous use and misuse of mutant powers, and I especially liked the way it introduces all of those political issues and lets them fight it out with the special effects. Stephanie Zacharek of Salon.com gave it a mixed review, noting that it was only half a mess , and that Ratner could have stuck a bit more closely to the Dark Phoenix narrative than he did. However, Zacharek did note that that third act captured some of the original story s majesty , praising the performances of Jackman, McKellen, Romijn and Janssen. Famke Janssen s performance was praised by critics. Matt Mueller of Total Film was impressed with Janssen s performance and said, Playing the super-freaky mind-control goddess like GoldenEye s Xenia Onatopp s all-powerful psycho sister, her scenes – particularly that one with the house – crackle with energy and tragedy. If only the rest of X3 had followed suit.

Justin Chang of Variety said the film was a wham-bam sequel noticeably lacking in the pop gravitas, moody atmospherics, and emotional weight that made the first two Marvel comicbook adaptations so rousingly successful. Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly called it a diminished sequel, a brute-force enterprise and said it was an example of what happens when movies are confused with sandwich shops as franchise opportunities . The Minneapolis Star Tribune characterized Ratner s approach as Forget subtlety! Let s blow things up! David Edelstein of New York magazine called it just another big-budget B-movie. It s a fast and enjoyable B-movie, though. Foreshadowing X-Men: First Class, Peter Travers of Rolling Stone said, Last stand? My ass. Billed as the climax of a trilogy, the third and weakest chapter in the X-Men series is a blatant attempt to prove there is still life in the franchise. And there is: just enough to pull a Star Trek and spawn a Next Generation saga.

X-Men: The Last Stand has been criticized by fans for killing off major characters such as Charles Xavier, Cyclops, and Jean Grey. The 2014 film X-Men: Days of Future Past has subsequently been viewed by some critics as a revision of those controversial plot elements in X-Men: The Last Stand. Writer Kinberg would later state that there are a lot of things about X3 that I love and there are a lot of things that I regret , detailing that he would have preferred the Dark Phoenix as the main plotline and I would have fought harder for that, considering that at the period the darkness of her story was a little bit daunting on a huge $200 million studio movie leading Fox to ask for rewrites. Previous X-Men director Bryan Singer declared that The Last Stand isn t what I would have done and he was dissatisfied with the busy plot and excessive character deaths, but Singer still liked some parts of the movie, such as Elliot Page s casting – leading Singer to bring Page back as Kitty Pryde in X-Men: Days of Future Past – and the scenes with Leech, which he described as really sweet moments . Matthew Vaughn, who was attached as director before dropping out, said that given the limited time they had to make it, the film was pretty good but criticized Ratner s direction: I could have done something with far more emotion and heart. I m probably going to be told off for saying that, but I genuinely believe it. While promoting his own installment of the franchise, 2011 s X-Men: First Class, Vaughn would say regarding The Last Stand that I storyboarded the whole bloody film, did the script. My X3 would have been 40 minutes longer. They didn t let the emotions and the drama play in that film. It became wall-to-wall noise and drama. I would have let it breathe and given far more dramatic elements to it. Having admitted being unhappy with the way some elements of the film turned out, Kinberg then went on to direct and write the reboot film Dark Phoenix, which retold the events of X-Men: The Last Stand.

Accolades

Awards and nominations for X-Men: The Last Stand
Award Category Nominee(s) Result
Costume Designers Guild Awards Excellence in Costume Design for Film – Fantasy Judianna Makovsky Nominated
Empire Awards Best Sci-Fi / Fantasy X-Men: The Last Stand Nominated
Scene of the Year The Phoenix and Professor X showdown Nominated
Irish Film & Television Award Best International Actor Ian McKellen Nominated
People s Choice Award Favorite Female Action Star Halle Berry Won
Favorite Movie Drama X-Men: The Last Stand Nominated
Favorite Movie X-Men: The Last Stand Nominated
Satellite Award Best Editing Mark Helfrich, Mark Goldblatt, Julia Wong Won
Saturn Award Best Costume Judianna Makovsky Nominated
Best Music John Powell Nominated
Best Science Fiction Film X-Men: The Last Stand Nominated
Best Special Effects John Bruno, Eric Saindon, Craig Lyn Nominated
Best Supporting Actor Kelsey Grammer Nominated
Best Supporting Actress Famke Janssen Won
Teen Choice Award Choice Action Movie X-Men: The Last Stand Nominated
Choice Action Movie Actor Hugh Jackman Nominated
Choice Action Movie Actress Halle Berry Nominated
Choice Movie Liplock Nominated
Choice Movie Rumble X-Men: The Last Stand Nominated
Choice Movie Villain Ian McKellen Nominated
Young Artist Awards Best Supporting Young Actor in a Feature Film Cameron Bright Nominated

Future

In February 2006, Ratner said that The Last Stand could be the final X-Men film: We wanted to make sure the audiences knew that this was a trilogy. Even though they weren t made together like Lord of the Rings, this is really closure for the X-Men series. … This is the last stand for sure.

The next two X-Men films, X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009) and X-Men: First Class (2011) were prequels that took place before the events of the first X-Men movie. The first film set chronologically after The Last Stand was The Wolverine, released in 2013. A stand-alone sequel, The Wolverine shows Logan heading for Japan to escape the memories of what occurred during The Last Stand. Hugh Jackman and Famke Janssen reprised their roles, while Ian McKellen and Patrick Stewart appear in a mid-credits scene.

X-Men: Days of Future Past, the direct sequel to The Last Stand, was released on May 23, 2014, with Jackman, Berry, Stewart, McKellen, Paquin, Page, Ashmore, Cudmore, Grammer, Janssen, and Marsden reprising their respective roles. The plot, inspired by the comic book Days of Future Past story arc, begins with a dystopian future set years after The Last Stand. Wolverine s consciousness is sent back in time, to his 1973 body in order to guide the younger Xavier and Magneto into preventing the events that lead to the desolate future. The events of the film end up retroactively changing the continuity of the series, changing some events in films set after First Class, resulting in an altered timeline where Jean and Cyclops are still alive.

Year 2006
ReleaseDate 2006-05-26
RuntimeMins 104
RuntimeStr 1h 44min
Plot The human government develops a cure for mutations, and Jean Gray becomes a darker uncontrollable persona called the Phoenix who allies with Magneto, causing escalation into an all-out battle for the X-Men.
Awards Awards, 7 wins & 40 nominations
Directors Brett Ratner
Writers Simon Kinberg, Zak Penn
Stars Patrick Stewart, Hugh Jackman, Halle Berry
Produced by Avi Arad,Lee Cleary,Ross Fanger,Kevin Feige,James M. Freitag,David Gorder,Stan Lee,John Palermo,Lauren Shuler Donner,Kurt Williams,Ralph Winter
Music by John Powell
Cinematography by Dante Spinotti
Film Editing by Mark Goldblatt,Mark Helfrich,Julia Wong
Casting By Heike Brandstatter,Coreen Mayrs,Richard Pagano
Production Design by Ed Verreaux
Art Direction by Chad S. Frey,Geoff Hubbard,Helen Jarvis,Justin Scoppa Jr.,Sandi Tanaka
Set Decoration by Elizabeth Wilcox
Costume Design by Judianna Makovsky,Lisa Tomczeszyn
Makeup Department Martin Astles,Gitte Axen,Brent Baker,Laura Baker,Rick Baker,Jason Barnett,Nicholas R. Bayly,Julie Beaton-Pachauer,Chris Bellamy,Anji Bemben,Linda Benavente-Notaro,Roland Blancaflor,Darin Bouyssou,Beth Boxall,Jack Bricker,Norman Cabrera,Anne Carroll,Leo Corey Castellano,Leeann Charette,Diana Choi,Rosalina Da Silva,Jayne Dancose,Emanuela Daus,Victoria Down,David Dupuis,Joel Echallier,Mary Elizalde,Mike Elizalde,Jayme Evans,Kris Evans,Peter Farrell,Rocky Faulkner,Fernando Favila,Jose Fernandez,Bill Fesh,Mike Fields,Rachel Fionda,Thomas Floutz,Céline Godeau,Maiko ‘Mo’ Gomyo,Leslie Graham,Sarah Graham,Charlotte Greenwood,George Grove,Karin Hanson,Moto Hata,Robin Myriah Hatcher,Gideon Hay,John L. Healy,Norma Hill-Patton,Carlos Huante,Tanya Hudson,Joan Isaacson,Carol Jones,Linda Jones,Taishiro Kiya,Rich Knight,Kris Kobzina,Richard Kohlen,Daria Kokhanenko,Aaron Koons,Steve Kuzela,Tim Larsen,Rebecca Lee,Kandace Loewen,Barbara Lorenz,Lisa Love,Harvey Lowry,Andrea Manchur,Karen Manzel,Mike Manzel,Lloyd Matthews,Cass McClure,Ryan McDowell,Julie McHaffie,Ann McLaren,Kevin McTurk,Teresa A. Meyer,Holland Miller,Bart Mixon,Tana Lynn Moldovanos,Beverly Moncrief,Matthew W. Mungle,Kenny Myers,Sylvia Nava,Candace Neal,Jennifer Bower O’Halloran,James Ojala,James Patterson,David Perteet,Tim Phoenix,Christopher Mark Pinhey,Jennifer Powell-Folk,Margaret Prentice,Sheryl Ptak,Glenn Pulliam,Geoff Redknap,Missy R. Russell,Danna Rutherford,Yoichi Art Sakamoto,Liah Saldaña,Jamie Salmon,Constantine Sekeris,Jackie K. Seo,Roy Sidick,Wendy Snowdon,Nancy Steyns,Mitchell Stone,Thomas E. Surprenant,Laurel Taylor,Bill Terezakis,Mario Torres,Kyla Rose Tremblay,Monique Venier,Fay von Schroeder,Brian Walsh,Steve Wang,Clinton Wayne,Michelle Webb,Simone Williams,Neil Winn,Vince Yoshida,Krista Young,Chet Zar,Karen Asano-Myers,Stacey Butterworth,Renate Leuschner,Sharon Markell
Production Management Stephanie Antosca,Stewart Bethune,Debra K. Chinn,Chris Dowell,Ross Fanger,Connie Kennedy,Jason McGatlin,Mika Saito
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director David Arnold,Ashley Bell,Tom Brewster,Misha Bukowski,Silver Butler,Lee Cleary,Richard Cowan,Simon Crane,James M. Freitag,Sallie Hard,Gary Hawes,Katherine Keizer,David Klohn,Marian Koprada,Rob Larson,Terry Madden,David Pinkus,Megan Roberts,Cabral Rock,Cliff T.E. Roseman,Megan M. Shank,Rhonda Taylor,Fiona Winning,Conrad E. Palmisano,Adam J. Piechnik
Art Department John G. Anderson,Adrian August-Keating,J.P. Bagshaw,Cal Barnett,Michael Bethune,Jennifer R. Blair,Brent Boates,David Stanley Brand,Shirley Bruce,Gordon Brunner,Timothy Burgard,Andrew Campbell,Melanie Cassidy,Mira Caveno,George Cawood,Lubor Cencak,James H. Chow,Steve Christensen,Janet Clark,James Clyne,Trevor Cole,Louise DeGagne,Derek Del Puppo,Sharon Dever,Greg Diachok,James Dickson,Daren Dochterman,Paul Duffy,John Eaves,Dean Eilertson,Warren Flanagan,John Gallagher,Rick Gamez,James Gawley,Brent Gloeckler,Max Gloeckler,Veloz Gomez,Sean Goojha,Collin Grant,Jim Green,Gabriel Hardman,Leigh Harrington,Aaron Haye,Michelle Hendriksen,Erich Hepnar,Peter Hinton,Michael Anthony Jackson,Jasmin Jakupovic,Zoe Jirik,Ura Jones,Jeff Julian,Patrick Kearns,Franziska Keller,John Kobylka,Barry Kootchin,E.J. Krisor,Ken Laderoute,Ray ‘Raygun’ Lai,Jason B. Landels,Janis Lee,Catherine Leighton,Charles Leitrants,Andrew Li,Philip Lunt,Vladimir Lushnikov,Victor James Martinez,Jaydene Maryk,Max Matsuoka,Richard F. Mays,Ignacio McBurney,Morag McLean,Dale Menzies,Sheila Millar,Jay Mitchell,Paul Mulder,David R. Murray,Rick Newsome,Leo Aza O’Leary,Claudio Palavecino,Dan Petrescu,Bill Phillips,Derek Pineo,Matt Reddy,Christopher Mark Richardson,Jay Robinson,Francisco Rosa,Al Rourke,Ann Rowley,Nathan Schroeder,Dean Sherriff,Dennis Simard,Vladimir Spasojevic,Scott Stewart,Bryan Sutton,Peter Sysoev,Richard Tenewitz,Dave Tennant,Miles Teves,Ron Turner,Bruce Van Slyke,Adrien Van Viersen,Paolo G. Venturi,Cale Wilbanks,Dean Willson,Paul Willson,Gary Young,Milena Zdravkovic,Gordon Bellamy,Kurt Bruun,Janice Lynn Coats,Veloz Gomez,Constantine Sekeris,Wyatt Soutzo,Fraser Stepanick,Greg Winter,Suzy Zarate
Sound Department Scott Aitken,Paul Apted,James Bennett,David Betancourt,James Bolt,David Burk,William Butler,Derek Casari,Smokey Cloud,Blake R. Cornett,Susan Dawes,Yann Delpuech,Susan Dudeck,Dawn Fintor,Linda Folk,Christopher Fyfe,Tim Gomillion,Laura Graham,Doug Hemphill,Craig Henighan,David Husby,Mildred Iatrou,R.J. Kizer,Rick Kline,Dave Kulczycki,John A. Larsen,David Lucarelli,Steve Maslow,Roderick Matte,Daniel McIntosh,Matthew McKenzie,Chuck Michael,John Morris,John Murray,Charles O’Shea,Erin Michael Rettig,Charleen Richards,Dennis Rogers,Karen Schell,William Stein,Alicia Stevenson,Paul Stula,Holger M. Thiele,Alex Williams,Onofre Ortega,John Soukup
Special Effects by Ozzy Alvarez,Becky Bates,David Benediktson,Ian Binnie,Stewart Bradley,Greg Bray,John ‘Buff’ Buffery,Nicole Connelly,André Dominguez,Robin Dufay,Dave Dunaway,Doug Falconer,Jose Fernandez,Chris Flemington,Blair Foord,Franz Fraitzl,Joe Halford,Chris Hampton,Sven Harens,Gideon Hay,Iain Hutton,Clark James,Jordan Kidston,Stephen Knight,Rob Krauzig,Mi Kyung Lee,Robert Lyle,John MacCuspie,Jason Marsh,Timothy Martin,Eric Milner,Gary Minielly,Nicole Morelli,Paul Noël,Michael O’Brien,Bill Pankiw,Brian Rae,Derek Rockhill,Robert Rockhill,Liah Saldaña,W.A. Andrew Sculthorp,Andrew Smith,Rafael Sola,Brett Stern,Chris Sturges,Richard Stutsman,Corie Tornack,Geoff Turner,Patricia Urias,Attila Vaski,Andrew Verhoeven,Mike Vézina,Cameron Waldbauer,Steven Whitaker,John Wilkinson,TaMara Carlson Woodard,Brad Zehr,Jonathan Roy Grindlay,Phil McLaren
Visual Effects by Victor Abbene,Dave Isaac Santos Abuel,Holly Acton,Kevin Aguirre,Ben Aickin,Malcolm Aitchison,Nicolas Aithadi,Matt Aitken,Brad Alexander,Paul Alexiou,Eric Algren,Belinda Allen,Casey Allen,Simon J. Allen,Stan Alley,Jon Allitt,Robert Allman,Eric Almeras,Alp Altiner,Colin Alway,Malcolm Angell,Christopher Anthony,Christine Arboit,Elisabeth Arko,David Armitage,Chris Armsden,Joe Arnold,Asregadoo Arundi,Daniel Ashton,Mia Askew,Dave Asling,Jean-Luc Azzis,Sindharmawan Bachtiar,Henry Badgett,Andrew Baggarley,Michael Bain,Wayne Baker,Felix Balbas,Saraswathi Balgam,Michael Baltazar,Berj Bannayan,Jared Barber,Craig Bardsley,Reuben Barkataki,Ned Barraud,Angela Barson,Tim Barter,Peter Baustaedter,Scott E. Baxter,Basel Bazlamit,Jamie Beard,Shyal Beardsley,Kelly Bechtle-Woods,Lyse Beck,Cory Bedwell,Paul Beilby,Adrian Bell,Paula Bell,Scott Belyea,Philip Benn,James Bennett,Stephen Bennett,Rodrigo Bernardo,Teresa Berus,Carl Bianco,John-Michael Bills,Graham Binding,Antoine Birot,Christopher Bonnstetter,Alessandro Bonora,Christina Boon,Nick Booth,Philip Borg,Guy Botham,Virginie Bourdin,Brigitte Bourque,James Boyce,Adam Bradley,Lee Bramwell,Leslie Brennan,Kristie Breslin,Giselle Brewton,Melissa Brockman,David Brunette,John Bruno,Mike Bryant,Izet Buco,Sam Bui,Stuart Bullen,Matthew Bullock,Andrew Bunday,Joerg W. Bungert,Helen Bunker,Delphine Buratti,Clare Burgess,Jose Burgos,Shannan Burkley,Catherine Burns,Andy Burrow,Alex Burt,Dorian Bustamante,Julian R. Butler,Kirk Cadrette,Sonia Calvert,Andrew Camenisch,Kevin Campbell,Paul Campion,Jessika Canizalez,Cedric Enriquez Canlas,Jon Capleton,Simon Carlile,Mei-Ming Casino,John Cassella,Norman Cates,Stephen Chan,Robert Chapin,Chris Chappell,Catherine Chase,Daniel Chavez,Tim Cheng,Georgios Cherouvim,Lee Chidwick,Evan Christie,Glen Christie,Rhys Claringbull,Kirsty Clark,David Clayton,Simon Clutterbuck,Adam Coglan,J.D. Cohen,Ross Colgan,Daniel Aristoteles Collins,Ian Comley,Brian Conlon,Rob Conn,Grant Connor,Paul Conway,Shane Cook,Shane Cooper,Ian Copeland,Joshua Cordes,Alasdair Coull,Jessica Cowley,Jim Croasdale,Steve Cronin,Chris Crowell,Tiffany Cullum,John Curtis,Tony Cutrono,Alexandra Daunt Watney,Giles Davies,Mark Davies,Rupert Davies,Juliette Davis,Luan Davis,Mo Davoudian,Yoshi DeHerrera,Eric Deinzer,Mark Della Rosa,Graeme Demmocks,John ‘D.J.’ Des Jardin,Amit Desai,Lee Dexter,Richard Dexter,Marco Di Lucca,Robin Dicker,Jonny Doig,Paul Doogan,Warren Douglas,Rebecca Downes,David Dozoretz,Paul Driver,Laura Dubsky,Wayde Duncan-Smith,Simeon Duncombe,Gord Dunick,Shawn Dunn,Frank Dürschinger,William J. Earl,Dave Early,Jonathan East,Areito Echevarria,Erich Eder,Andrew Edwards,Clwyd Edwards,Samuel Edwards,Nadav Ehrlich,Joël Einhorn,Michael Elson,M.B. Emigh,Philip English,Nick Epstein,Thomas Esmeralda,Charlie Eubanks,Joe Eveleigh,Paul Everitt,Oliver Exmundo,Oliver Faldo,Jonathan Fawkner,Joel Feder,Christine Feistl,Florian Fernandez,Rhett Finch,Patrick Finley,Forest P. Fischer,Paul Flanagan,Ben Flatter,James D. Fleming,Joel Fletcher,Rich Floyd,Donald Fly,Steven Forrester,Ben Forster,Fiona Foster,Matt Foster,Richard Fox,Richard Frances-Moore,Adam Francis,Zachary Franks,Rod Fransham,Diane Fraser,Mark Freund,Nick Gabchenko,Martin Gabriel,Eric Gambini,Jason Gandhi,Shannon Blake Gans,Tamara Garabedian,Richard Garnish,Helmar Gerhardt,Jennifer German,Danny Geurtsen,Tracey Gibbons,Benedict Gillingham-Sutton,Bill Gilman,Brent Gilmartin,Kenneth Gimpelson,Joe Godfrey,Lisa Gonzalez,Don Greenberg,Elysia Greening,Daniel D. Gregoire,David ‘Rudy’ Grossman,Lewis Guarniere,Alex Guri,Geoff Hadfield,Mikael Hakansson,Ben Hall,Keith Hamakawa,David Hampton,Joe Han,Qian Han,Chris Haney,Joe Harkins,Nina Harlan,Dan Harrod,Peter Hartwig,Chris Harvey,Leann Harvey,Josh Hatton,Lionel Heath,G.G. Heitmann Demers,Richard Helliwell,Quentin Hema,Allen Hemberger,Charley Henley,Jeff Heusser,Jeremy Hey,Frederic Heymans,Brent Heyning,Martin Hill,Christian Hipp,Bryan Hirota,David Hochstadter,Dark Hoffman,Matt Holland,Richard Hopkins,Kathryn Horton,Christopher Horvath,David Houghton-Williams,Sandy Houston,Bryan Howard,Greg Howe-Davies,Charles Howell,John Hughes,Nathan Hughes,Ian Hunter,Katherine Hurst,Marc Hutchings,Ryan Hutchings,Atsushi Imamura,Chris Ingersoll,Anna Ivanova,Gary Jackemuk,Carl Jackson,James Jacobs,Mel James,Suzanne Jandu,Beau Janzen,Kimberly Jase,Paul Jenness,Merrin Jensen,Mia Jewett,Danny Jones,Drew Jones,Owen Jones,Zack Judson,Simon Jung,Sandip Kalsy,Patrick Kalyn,Barry Kane,Miae Kang,Matt Kasmir,Charles B. Katz,Dan Kaufman,Patrick Kavanaugh,Peng Ke,Josh Kent,Elaine Kieran,John Kilkenny,J. Kitazaki,Susie Kleis,Jeffrey Kleiser,Ryan Knowles,Sergei Koudriautsev,Athena Kouverianos,Michael Kowalski,Alex Kramer,Lars Kramer,Jerry Kung,Bill Kunin,Laure Lacroix,Christian Laffey,Michael Lanzensberger,Shandy Lashley,Colin Laski,Kim Lavery,Jason Lazaroff,Christopher Learmonth,Geoff Leavitt,Jake Lee,Iva Lenard,Michael Leonard,Phillip Leonhardt,Philippe Leprince,Joe Letteri,Joe Lewis,Todd Lewis,Sean Lewkiw,John Peter Li,Erik Liles,Richard Little,Flip Livingston,Patricia Llaguno,David Lloyd,Benjamin Loch,Daniel J. Lombardo,Lance Lones,Ryan Lorie,Ruth-Anne Loveridge,Daniel Lu,Sam Lucas,Robyn Luckham,David Luke,Craig Lyn,Matthew Lynch,Bob Lyss,Natalie MacDonald,Tibor Madjar,Allan Magled,Angela Magrath,Tony Man,Paul Maples,Howard Margolius,William H.D. Marlett,Jean Matthews,David Mayhew,Alan McCabe,Pat McClung,Graham T. McClusky,Ryan A. McCoy,Riggs McGee,Steve McGee,Steve McGillen,Marlin McGlone,Nakia McGlynn,Scott McLain,Brian McMillin,Alasdair McNeill,Dan McRae,Duncan McWilliam,Paul McWilliams,Tony Meagher,Naveen Medaram,Rebecca Melander,Ximena Melendez,Matthias Menz,Rob Menzer,Diana Miao,Scott Michelson,Ellen E. Miki,Erick Miller,Jon Miller,Keith Miller,Seth F. Miller,Ryan Mintenko,Saki Mitchell,Kaori Miyazawa,Andrew Moffett,Paul V. Molles,Mike Mombourquette,Dejan Momcilovic,Carl S.G. Moore,Hailey Moore,James Moore,Eileen Moran,Ivan Moran,Ben Morgan,Daisuke Morita,Chris Moss,Matt Mueller,Nicky Muir,Michael Mulholland,Ryan Mullany,Gareth Murphy,Stephen Murphy,Daniel A. Murray,Alfred Mürrle,Tom Nagy,Julia Neighly,Stuart Nelhams,Guy Nesfield,Sergei Nevshupov,Martin Newcombe,John Nguyen,Thuy-Van Nguyen,Vinh Nguyen,Rachel Nicoll,Wolfgang Niedermeier,Gustaf Nilsson,Thomas Nittmann,Stephen Nixon,Shannon Noble,James P. Noon,Clare Norman,Sarah Norton,Alexander Nowotny,Brian Nugent,Conor O’Mara,Cyndi Ochs,James Ogle,George Oliver,Mihaela Orzea,David A. Ostler,David Owen,Michael Pangrazio,Stephane Paris,James Parris,Jim Parsons,Steve Parsons,Helen Paul,Chris Paxson,Alex Payman,Chris Payne,Simon Payne,Erik Paynter,Russell Pearsall,Anthony Peck,John Peck,Arnaud Pecqueur,Hannah Peirce,Christine Penn,Stuart Penn,Joseph Pepper,Mike Perry,Dana Peters,Emil Petrov,Daniel Pettipher,Adrian Pinder,Teresa Pino,Teresa Alvarez Pino,Travis Pinsonnault,Emrys Plaisted,Ed Plant,Richard Poet,Marine Poirson,Melvin Polayah,Travis Porter,Michael Possert Jr.,Tim Pounds-Cornish,Donna Poynton,Martin Preston,Niklas Preston,David Pritchard,Olivier Pron,Aled Prosser,Cristina Puente,John Purdie,Lucas Putnam,Chris Radcliffe,Danny Rafic,Gerald Ragland,Pascal Raimbault,Troy Ramsey,Dane Rapaport,Jorge Razon,Clint G. Reagan,Paul Redican,Nicholas David Reed,Stephan Remstedt,Marco Revelant,Anthony Riazzi,David Richardson,Mark Richardson,Hannes Ricklefs,Michael Ridgwell,Matthew Riordan,Serge Riou,Anne Ritter,Gizmo Rivera,Becky Roberts,John Roberts-Cox,Dave Robinson,Guillaume Rocheron,Dennis Rogers,Jody Rogers,Karl Rogovin,Daniel Roizman,Kevin Romond,Amanda Roth,Jean-Paul Rovela,Sue Rowe,Matthew Rubin,Juan Rubio,Karim Sahai,Eric Saindon,Gustavo Sanchez-Perez,David Sanger,Mahria Sangster,Matthew Charles Santoro,Michael Sarkis,Karen Scarborough,Caterina Schiffers,Claude Schitter,Scott Schneider,Ben Schrijvers,Hamish Schumacher,Andrew Schwartz,Jens Schwarz,Denis Scolan,Candice Scott,David Scott,Alexander Seaman,Wendy Seddon,Jarmila Seflova,Ziad Seirafi,Brad Selkirk,Keith Sellers,David Sewell,Thrain Shadbolt,Aatesh Shah,Adam Shand,Glen Sharah,John Sharp,Tom Shaughnessy,Dan Sheerin,Ben Shepherd,David Shere,Kevin L. Sherwood,Scott Shields,Gregory Shimp,Shervin Shoghian,Randal Shore,Roger Shortt,Craig Shumard,Martin Simcock,Serdar Simga,Gershom Sissing,Bryan Smeall,Alex Smith,Cameron Smith,Marc Smith,Michael Todd Smith,Steve Smith,Jason Snyman,Eylem Sonmez,Jamshed Soori,Greg Souers,Robert Spurlock,Anthony Stadler,Ryan Stafford,Marcin Stangel,Simon Stanley-Clamp,Brett Stapleton-French,Justin Steel,Albrecht Steinmetz,Mike Stevens,Marc Stevenson,John Stewart,Paul Venn Stirling,Rainer Stolle,Paul Story,Colin Strause,Greg Strause,Petra Stueben,David Sudd,Roxanne Sutherland-Valentine,Sarah Swick,Peter Syomka,Charles Tait,Mark Tait,Hirofumi Takeda,Kenny Tam,Chu Tang,Eric Tang,Taisuke Tanimura,Alex Tate,Jonathan Taylor,Sandy Taylor,Christopher Thomas,Michael Adam Thompson,Joe Thornley,Garv Thorp,Dan Tindell,Steve Tizzard,Geoff Tobin,Shigeharu Tomotoshi,Shahin Toosi,Charles Trebino,Matthew Twyford,Ryan Valade,James Van Der Reyden,Phil Van Der Reyden,Kara Vandeleur,Courtney Vanderslice,Chris Villa,Maggie Walby,Shawn Wallbridge,Don Waller,Ian Ward,Jason Wardle,Roland Watson,Matt Welford,Chris Wells,Ben White,Bob Wiatr,Thom Wickes,Chad Wiebe,Lisa Wildermoth,Royston Willcocks,Stephen Willey,Edson Williams,Guy Williams,Mark Williams,Pete Williams,Scott Williston,Chris Wilson,Eric Wilson,Ned Wilson,Stephen Wilson,Kate Windibank,Erik Winquist,Oliver Winwood,Kathy Wise,Rob Woiwod,Ammann Christine Wong,Loeng Wong-Savun,Jamie Wood,Melody Woodford,Alan Woods,Rachel Wyn Dunn,Xye,Yoshiya Yamada,Anna Yamazoe,Kwan Wayne Yu Yee,Mattaniah Yip,Dennis Yoo,Chris Young,Aiden Zanini,Luca Zappala,Blade Zavier,Dru Zipkin,Ken Zorniak,Ryan Zuttermeister,Johan Åberg,Ian Abbott,Gary Abrahamian,Maura Alvarez,Svend Andersen,Matt Ashton,Keith Barton,Dan Beresford,Julian Blom,Jayni Borgaro,Randy Bosh,E.M. Bowen,Hayley Brazelton,Federico Cascinelli,Tom Chamberlain,Emma Clifton,Joanna Davison,Max Dennison,Martyn Drake,Philippe Gaulier,Larry Gaynor,Sukh Gill,Jon Hanzelka,Brandon Harr,Jan Hektor,Meredith Hook,Jeffrey Jasper,Marta Knudsen,Serena Lam,Maryjane Layani,Paul Maurice,Robert Minsk,Danielle Nadal,Naveen Nathan,Earl Paraszczynec,Mark Pinheiro,Scott Rushforth,Heather MacPhee Ryan,Frederique Schafer,Madeleine Scott-Spencer,Kevin Tengan,Mark H. Weingartner,Kyle Yamamoto
Stunts Trevor Addie,Fraser Aitcheson,Nick Alachiotis,Dave Alexander,Kathryn Anderson,Taryn Ash,Scott J. Ateah,James Bamford,Nickolas Baric,Loyd Bateman,Shawn Beaton,Trevor Beeby,Krista Bell,Chad Bellamy,Guy Bews,Leigh Bianco,Marco Bianco,Claude Bouchard,Donovan Boucher,Richard Bradshaw,Greg Bray,Dustin Brooks,Simon Burnett,Sylvain Cameron,Dave Campbell,Kirk Caouette,Clint Carleton,Janene Carleton,Mark Chadwick,Douglas Chapman,Lauro David Chartrand-DelValle,Alex Chiang,Kimberly Chiang,Phil Chiu,Dean Choe,James M. Churchman,Stuart Clark,Laura Lee Connery,Brent Connolly,Rodney Cook,Peter Cox,Simon Crane,Crystal Dalman,Mike Desabrais,Duane Dickinson,Mike Dobbin,Mike Dopud,Wayne Downer,Wade Eastwood,Marny Eng,Dane Farwell,Caroline Field,Christian J. Fletcher,Corbin Fox,Dena Fox,Gary Fry,Kylie Furneaux,Monique Ganderton,Lani Gelera,Corry Glass,Mike Godenir,Christopher Gordon,Dean Hart,Adrian Hein,Brian Ho,Dave Hospes,David Jacox,André Jette,Trevor Jones,Mandy Kahl,Brian Kaulback,Liise Keeling,Brad Kelly,Alistair King,Ken Kirzinger,Larry Lam,Mike Lambert,Dave Lane,Michael Langlois,Nito Larioza,Thomas J. Larsen,William Lawrence,Paul Lazenby,Paul Leonard,Don Lew,Nancy J. Lilley,Danny Lima,Dean Lockwood,Brad Loree,Kurt D. Lott,Brian Lydiatt,Deb Macatumpag,John MacDonald,Kit Mallet,Patrick Mark,Cotton Mather,Leslie McMichael,Anthony McRae,James Michalopolous,Reg Milne,Mike Mitchell,Phillip Mitchell,Tony Morelli,Gaston Morrison,Mark Mottram,Kathleen Mullan,Vince Murdocco,David Mylrea,Jovan Nenadic,Scott Nicholson,Jim Orava,Efosa Otuomagie,Gerald Paetz,Rick Pearce,Nick Powell,Branko Racki,Robert Racki,Dan Redford,Alison Reid,Ronald Robinson,Shawn Robinson,Michael Roselli,Kevin Rushton,Justin Sain,Raymond Sammel,Jeff Sanca,Chad Sayn,Shayna Segal,Dan Shea,Sharon Simms,Andrew Smith,Grant Smith,Kimani Ray Smith,David Soo,John Stoneham Jr.,Sylvesta Stuart,Melissa R. Stubbs,Monte Thompson,Rorelee Tio,Ty Trand,Angela Uyeda,Dave Van Zeyl,Clay Virtue,Marshall Virtue,Leah Wagner,John Wardlow,Ron Webber,Geoff Williams,Paul Wu,Peng Zhang,Chris Atkinson,Richard Bradshaw,Janene Carleton,Brent Connolly,Crystal Dalman,Mana Hira Davis,Marny Eng,Monique Ganderton,Lani Gelera,Christopher Gordon,Winham Hammond,Stephannie Hawkins,Brian Ho,Paul Lazenby,Alexander Mandra,Tim McLachlan,Conrad E. Palmisano,Willa Potter,Shane Rangi,Jeff Sanca,Darryl Scheelar,Andrew Stehlin,Amie Stephenson,Melissa R. Stubbs,Monte Thompson,Tim Wong
Camera and Electrical Department Jill Allanson,Dustin Allen,Matt Almas,AJ Anderson,Jay Anderson,Ken W. Anderson,Stephen Arnott,Roger Bailey,John H.L. Baker,John Banovich,Troy Bassett,Greg Beaton,Klemens Becker,Harold Bernard,Sylvia Betts,Hans Bjerno,Richard Boisvert,Scott Bonner,Kyle Boorman,Brian Bouma,Paul Brebner,Dennis Brock,Shawn Campbell,Andreas Carmona,Paul Chorney,Reid Cohoon,George Collins,Roberto W. Contreras D.,Chris Cove,Jesse Deacon,Rusty Deluce,Glen A. Dickson,Sean Elliott,Fernando Espiritusanto,Jim Filippone,Toby Gorman,Andrew Greve,Phil Gries,Ian Guns,Joel Guthro,Chris Haarhoff,Jeff Hall,Rod Haney,Dion Hartley,Russell Hawkes,Kerry Hayes,Gavin Hill,Rob Hillstead,Paul Hughen,Sierra Hurst,Randy A. Jablonka,Demetri Jagger,Leigh Jenkins,Robin Jobin,Ken Johns,Craig Jones,Norbert Kaluza,David Kohler,Markus Konrad,Cary Lalonde,Andrew Learmonth,Rob Lee,Iván Maldonado,Todd Martin,Paul Martins,Kelly Mason,Taylor Matheson,David McIntosh,Paul C. McKenna,Zane Mohamed,Liane Moore,Patrick Moore,Chantal Morin,Reuben Morrison,Chris Moseley,J. Michael Muro,Charlie Newberry,Dayton Nietert,Craig Nix,Frédéric North,Peter Pacula,Rob Parisien,Diyah Pera,Nigel Percy,Sasha Proctor,Don Quinn,Jay Rathore,Dan Riffel,Peter Ronan,Grizz Salzl,Bippen Kumar Sammy,Robin Say,Ronald Schlueter,Richard Schmon,Ryan Schubert,Ian Seabrook,Matthew Sharp,Adrian Merritt Smith,Ian Smith,Steve Smith,Brian Steadman,Jonathan Taylor,Jim Thibo,Jarrod Tiffin,Jim van Dijk,Scott Wallace,Pat Waller,Michael D. Weldon,Shawn White,Tony Whiteside,Trevor Wiens,Gary J. Williams,James Williams,Steven J. Winslow,Darin Wong,John Woods,Brian Woronec,Peter Chun Mao Wu,Thomas Yardley,Andrew Deiters,Ian Speed,Greg Yoshida
Animation Department Ali Donovan,Thanh Nguyen
Casting Department Deanna Brigidi,Andrea Brown,Robin D. Cook,Andrea Hughes,Caitlin McKenna,James McKenzie Moore,Stephanie Pheifer,Michele Wallin,Lance Peverley
Costume and Wardrobe Department Michelle Baines,Andre Brouwer,Michael John Bugera,Anne Burke,Courtney Daniel,Daevina Danyluck,Cathy Darby,Brodie Davison,Dominick De Rasmo,Carol Demarti,Summer Dietz,Salvatore Forino,Denise Gingrich,R.A. Hossie,Katherine Huang,Michelle Hunter,Tamaryn Lang,Jana MacDonald,Corinne Mameli,Robert Miller,Dan Moore,Keith Muessigmann,Nino,Andra Norton,Susan O’Hara,Maureen O’Heron,Ute Porath,Kurtis Reeves,Zina Richardson,Petra Wright,Celia Yau,Virginia Young,Lily Yuen
Editorial Department Steve Ansell,Chad Band,Don Broida,Jim Bruce,Gary Burritt,Christine Carr,Marisa Clayton,Jason Dale,Beth Dewey,Erin Druez,David Gallegos,Melody Gehrman,Chris Jensen,Richard Long,Carmen Morrow,Missy Papageorge,Amy Pawlowski,Robb Porter,Eric Putz,Greg Reed,Chris Regan,Tyler Ruocco,Stefan Sonnenfeld,Yvonne Valdez,Salvatore Catanzaro,Rob Doolittle,Mark Todd Osborne,Jim Passon,Frank Robinson,Jimmy Tom
Location Management Shawn Campbell,Teresa Darby,Sean Patrick Finnan,Warren Dean Fulton,Paul Giordano,Nina Gogishvilli,Ann Goobie,David Hakim,Dana Herriott,Peter Klassen,Paisley Shaw
Music Department Mark Adams,Eun-Mee Ahn,Pete Anthony,Rick Baptist,Jennifer Barnes,Joan Beal,Samela A. Beasom,Steve Becknell,Wayne Bergeron,Cindy Bourquin,Susan Boyd,Leanna Brand,Aleta Braxton,Tom Brown,Nathan Campbell,Darius Campo,Elin Carlson,Thomas A. Carlson,Jeff Carson,David Channing,Shoshana Claman,Wade Culbreath,Debbi Datz-Pyle,Brad Dechter,Constance Deeter,Monique Donnelly,Carol Drake,Andrew Duckles,David Duke,Bruce Dukov,Steve Erdody,Bruce Fowler,Walt Fowler,Germaine Franco,Matt Franko,Lorenz Gamma,Rick Giovinazzo,Jenny Graham,Mark Graham,Karen Harper,Amy Hershberger,Michael Hoffman,The Hollywood Studio Symphony,The Hollywood Symphony Orchestra,Steve Holtman,Jonathan A. Hughes,Alex Iles,Charles Martin Inouye,Patricia Johnson,Alan Kaplan,Dan Kelley,Randy Kerber,Harry Kim,Katie Kirkpatrick,Kevin Kliesch,Paul Klintworth,Mike Knobloch,Teri Koide,Robert Kraft,Armen Ksajikian,Ken Kugler,Risa Larson,Tim Lauber,Edie Lehmann Boddicker,Dan Lerner,Jon Lewis,Dane Little,Jason Lloyd,Charlie Loper,Warren Luening,Guy Maeda,Craig Mann,Darrin McCann,James McKee Smith,Joe Meyer,Todd Miller,Victoria Miskolczy,Yvonne S. Moriarty,Kristy Morrell,Shawn Murphy,Peter Myles,Brian O’Connor,Grace Oh,Bruce Otto,Victor Pesavento,Conrad Pope,Barbra Porter,Joshua Ranz,Bill Reichenbach,Diane Freiman Reynolds,John Reynolds,Cassandra Richburg,Bart Samolis,Marni Sanders,Jim Self,Andrew Shulman,Dan Smith,Steven L. Smith,Kurt Snyder,Christina Soule,Niké St. Clair,Tereza Stanislav,Tom Steel,Erik Swanson,Bill Talbott,Phillip A. Teele,James Thatcher,John Ashton Thomas,Richard Todd,Doug Tornquist,John Van Houten,Brad Warnaar,Helen Werling,Gerald White,Frances Liu Wu,Phillip Yao,Joe Zimmerman,Gina Zimmitti,Thomas Cavanaugh,Danielle Diego,Ellen Ginsburg,Rebecca Morellato
Script and Continuity Department Martin Kitrosser,Tracy Young
Transportation Department Kelly Charlton,Greg Farmer,David Holm,Peter Huff,Linda Irvine,Scott Irvine,Herb Langill,Dave Miller,Andrew O’Bray,Ahluwalia Narinder Tiku,Tana Tocher,Clint Wilcox,Blake Zickefoose,Matthew Habgood
Additional Crew R. Ben Adams,Tanner Adams,Barbara Alexandre,Charlie Araki,Daniella Araya,Ashley Bell,Ron Blecker,Adam Bowick,Morgan Brady,Leon Thomas Braun,Amanda Bronswyk,Stephen Broussard,Suzie Bruce,Dannyelle Bryant,Ron Buck,Marc Buzzell,Melanie Callaghan,Allison Calleri,Simon Carrigan,Stephen Chan,Anita S. Chang,Terence Chase,Melissa Crich,Jason Crosby,Irena Dargenio,Martineau David,Gloria Davies,Ric De Groot,Winica Dewangga,Crystal Dignadice,Hopi Dobuler,Jeff Doiron,Anthony Dolhai,Alexandra Ducocq,Wesley Emms,Jim Filippone,Nick Fletcher,Rob Fournier,Ran Francke,Douglas Gauthier,Marcus Goodwin,Rob Graham,Christopher J. Green,Kevin Groff,Stephanie Fitch Groff,Sissy Grover,Brett Gursky,Michael Hendrickson,Sarah Hood,Chris Hopkins,Mark Jacyszyn,Mikael Jaeger Jensen,Keely Johnson,Gordon Juli,Stephen Kadlec,Faria Khan,Perry M. Kimura,Amanda Kirchhoff,Kyla Kraman,Nancy Kress,Nito Larioza,Christian Laub,Kyle Leydier,Brandon Linville,Kathy Liska,Nicole Lissner,Laura Livingstone,Spencer Hon Lui,Leona Maddeaux,Harvey Malkin,Dawn Mander,Ryan McCondach,Tracy McCreary,Jarod McCullough,Kenneth Meisenbacher,Christophe Meslin,Mark Miessner,Robert Milicevic,Hugo L. Morales,Doug Moreno,Melina Morokhovich,Ola Mota,Jena Niquidet,Jaesung Oh,Harley Pasternak,Duncan Pattillo,Peggy Pere,Joe Petrossie,Mike Phillips,Jess Platt,Leah Powell,Kenneth Pratt,Amelia Price,Kirk Renard,John Rickard,Wilson Rivas,Sonia Rivest,Darren Robertson,Lawra Robertson,Robert K. Rogers,John Rollins,Bobby Sabelhaus,Claudio Sepulveda,Alex Skrepnik,Michael C. Smith,Robert R. Snow,David Soldinger,Corey Spearman,Patrick Stark,Christopher K. Stenberg,Amie Stephenson,Robert Stone,Bonnie Sutherland,Ruchir Tandon,Lora Marie Taylor,John Ashton Thomas,Gladys Tong,Jodi Vanderjagt,Elizabeth Weinstein,Genevieve West,Fleur Western,Roger Williams,Robert ‘Bobby Z’ Zajonc,Pamela Abra,Damian Baxter,John ‘Duke’ Duquesnay,Jennie Empey,Dave Gilbert,Stacey Harris,Michael Heard,Annie Jackson,Wendy Jessen,Jason Keever,Ann McLaren,Jeff Nathanson,Howard R. Schuster,Robert Stone,Gene Turnbow
Genres Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi
Companies Twentieth Century Fox, Marvel Enterprises, Donners’ Company
Countries USA, UK, Canada
Languages English
ContentRating PG-13
ImDbRating 6.6
ImDbRatingVotes 514819
MetacriticRating 58
Keywords x men,walking through a wall,superhero team,logan character,erik lehnsherr character