by Wes Womble After seventeen years holding the role, Hugh Jackman’s final performance as The Wolverine came with the release of Logan earlier this month. Critically loved for its brutally realistic take on the character, Logan alongside 2016’s Deadpool show that Comic Book movies can profit from an R rating. The film is not only a heartfelt sendoff to the last of the original X-Men, but also provides a hopeful beginning for a new generation.
From Point A to Point B
Many of the superhero films from the past decade have had insanely high stakes – the world or galaxy had always been under threat of imminent destruction. But Logan keeps it simple, with a plot that can be boiled down to nothing more than a smuggling run across the country. There isn’t any mustache twirling super villain, and there is no doomsday device; it’s a just a story of the hunter becoming the hunted. The film begins with a two-hundred-year-old Wolverine, reduced to a limo driver on the border of Mexico and the United States. Saving money to buy a boat, his initial plan is to live out the rest of his days on the ocean with Charles Xavier, played by Patrick Stuart. Approached by a Hispanic woman named Gabriella and her daughter, he is offered enough money to fulfill this plan if he would simply take them to North Dakota. Of course, it is later revealed to Logan that the Gabriella’s daughter is more than just some young girl; she’s X-23, a clone of Wolverine himself. X-23 / Laura Kinney, played by Dafne Keen, is being hunted by a corporation called Transigen, who created a new generation of mutants based on D.N.A samples from their older counterparts. Leading the expedition to capture all the escaped children is Donald Pierce, Transigen’s chief of security. After narrowly escaping with their lives, Logan, Charles, and Laura begin their journey to the North with Tranisgen hot on their heels. In this sense, Logan is nothing more than a ferryman on the river Styx, taking the audience for a ride through the hell that has been and still is his life. Intermittent with the dialogue heavy scenes are of course ones filled with action – what’s a comic book movie without a few good fights anyway? But these sequences, much like their dialogue driven counterparts, are very graphic to the point some might call it gratuitous and unnecessary. However, they are arguably part of what makes this film so – for lack of a better term – real. Even the scenes with violence against children, although they are shocking, they help set the precedent that every single character is vulnerable and keeps you guessing as to where the story will go next.Well written and well-crafted characters
All their stories resonate both within and throughout their characters and ultimately help create a driving force for the film.The film is more focused on how the characters interact with one another rather than how they react to the situation at hand, which is why the low stakes plot works so well. Yes, the chase drives them ever forward, but not without stopping every so often to tend to various yet much smaller concerns. These small incidents however, provide wonderful points for character arcs as well as exploration and do not distract from the journey they are undertaking. Every single detail in these scenes helps expand on their individual stories and ultimately allows opportunities for not only characters to relate to one another, but for the audience to care for them as well. Take Logan himself for example: in this film, we see a man gifted with an extraordinary long life but who ultimately is broken down as a direct result of it. Everyone he has cared for is dead, yet he lives. He questions the amount of lives he has taken, telling Laura that it doesn’t matter if the people she kills are good or bad, but that killing regardless will take its toll on a person. In his advanced age, his ability to heal is also being diminished, which in a way provides a poetic circle to his life. The adamantium which has been limiting his healing factor mirrors his mental state, and how both have now come back to haunt him. Logan wasn’t the sole focus of character development however; the cast around him all had wonderful arcs, though most of them were just as tragic. Charles has lost control of his mind through a neurodegenerative disease and feels guilty about those caring for him. Caliban, Charles caregiver while Logan was away, was simply seeking redemption and recognition in the eyes of his former friends. He continues to look for approval even after he is captured by Transigen and forced to track Laura across the country . Even Laura, who is mute for half of the film still shows us a story in which she is a young child, new to the concept of a normal life, but all too familiar with a tragic one. All their stories resonate both within and throughout their characters and ultimately help create a driving force for the film.