Movie · 2000 · Adventure, Action, Science Fiction · 1h 44m · PG-13 · English
Curator score: 4.2/10 (1.5M ratings)
Trust a few. Fear the rest.
Overview
Two mutants, Rogue and Wolverine, come to a private academy for their kind whose resident superhero team, the X-Men, must oppose a terrorist organization with similar powers.
Ratings
Curator score: 4.2/10
IMDb: 7.3/10
Letterboxd: 3.35/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 82%
Metacritic: 64
TMDB: 7.0/10
Director
Bryan Singer
Production
The Donners' Company, Bad Hat Harry Productions, 20th Century Fox, Marvel Entertainment Group
Cast
Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart, Ian McKellen, Famke Janssen, James Marsden, Halle Berry, Anna Paquin, Tyler Mane, Ray Park, Rebecca Romijn, Bruce Davison, Matthew Sharp, Brett Morris, Rhona Shekter, Kenneth McGregor, Shawn Roberts, Donna Goodhand, John Nelles, George Buza, Darren McGuire
Where to watch
Disney Plus
Curator Review
Verdict
A foundational superhero ensemble that still works as a clean, accessible origin for the modern comic-book movie boom. It’s a little stiff and dated in places, but the cast, the central conflict about fear and prejudice, and the streamlined action make it an easy recommendation.
Best for
Viewers curious about early 2000s superhero cinema
Fans of ensemble action with a serious tone
People who like mutant powers, team dynamics, and ideological conflict
Anyone starting the X-Men franchise
Skip if
You want fast-paced, joke-heavy MCU-style energy
You’re allergic to early-2000s CGI and glossy studio aesthetics
You prefer comic-book films with more visual invention or emotional depth
Overview
X-Men is one of the key films that helped make superhero movies feel like a serious studio genre again. It takes the comic-book premise and grounds it in a straightforward conflict about discrimination, belonging, and power, giving the material a clean, accessible shape that still plays well for new viewers.
Worth noting
The movie’s biggest strength is the cast. Patrick Stewart and Ian McKellen give the central ideological clash real weight, while Hugh Jackman’s Wolverine became an instant franchise anchor. The action is not especially elaborate by modern standards, but the movie moves efficiently and keeps the focus on character introductions and team dynamics.
Bottom line
It can feel a bit restrained and occasionally dated, especially in its effects and some of its early-2000s polish. Even so, it remains a strong entry point for the series and an important piece of superhero-movie history, especially for viewers who like their comic-book films a little more earnest than flashy.
Top Letterboxd reviews
ZaraGwen (4.5★) · 8084 likes
Do YoU kNoW wHaT hApPeNs To A tOaD wHeN iT's StRuCk By LiGhTnInG? ThE sAmE tHiNg ThAt HaPpEnS tO eVeRyThInG eLsE
Mark Mooney (4★) · 6017 likes
"What do they call you? 'Wheels'? This is the stupidest thing I've ever heard." - Wolverine
bre (3★) · 5669 likes
on a scale of 1-gay how gay is it to play chess with your frenemy in prison while talking about the future
Holly-Beth (4★) · 3445 likes
sorry......... i don’t know who the fuck “the avengers” are..... sounds lame if you ask me...
maddie (3.5★) · 2854 likes
the director yelled "CUT" but all storm heard was serve CUNТ!
2002 · Action, Science Fiction · 2h 1m · PG-13 · Curator 7.3/10 (3.3M ratings) · Where to watch: Netflix, Disney Plus, Hulu, fuboTV, Netflix Standard with Ads
A similarly pivotal early-2000s superhero film that balances origin-story clarity, earnest emotion, and blockbuster spectacle.
2004 · Action, Adventure, Science Fiction · 2h 7m · PG-13 · Curator 8.2/10 (2.8M ratings) · Where to watch: Netflix, Disney Plus, Hulu, fuboTV, Netflix Standard with Ads
For viewers who like superhero stories with stronger character drama and a more polished sense of momentum.