X-Men movie following Disney's purchase of the franchise as a part of its company buyout. Are the film's reshoots adjusting the story to send the mutants out with a fiery bang?
Officially, Dark Phoenix is the seventh film in Fox's X-Men: The Last Stand. This time, Sophie Turner will take Jean Grey through her transformation into Phoenix after she is hit by a solar flare during a space mission.
Related: Dark Phoenix Trailer Breakdown
The film, the directorial debut of Simon Kinberg (who wrote and produced four previous X-Men movies), was originally set to premiere on November 2, 2018. However, earlier this year, Fox made the decision to delay the release until February 14, 2019. A similar reshuffle happened for another Fox X-Men title, The New Mutants, which will premiere on August 2, 2019 after having its release date changed twice.
The the Dark Phoenix trailer has once again started conversations, it's worth considering whether it's all part of giving the whole X-Men series a fitting end.
- This Page: Dark Phoenix Is An Ending (In Multiple Ways)
- Page 2: How Reshoots Could End Dark Phoenix
Dark Phoenix Can Be An Apocalyptic Story
Already, Dark Phoenix is something of an end. The trailer opens with a moody cover of Hugh Jackman to bow out as Wolverine.
Even before it was set to be the final entry, the Dark Phoenix storyline was set to go out with a (literal) bang. Many consider the storyline one of the definitive narratives in X-Men canon and the version from The Last Stand proved disappointing to many fans. Doing it over is thus a redemptive act, but the grand nature of the story - and how the new version will finally question Charles Xavier's altruistic motives - gives a concluding note. It's not out of the question to be able to adjust it to have a greater sense of finality with reshoots.
This Version Of The X-Men Won't Survive The Disney Merger
The Fox X-Men franchise, as well as the fates of X-Men would be integrated with the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
Related: Don't Expect To See the X-Men in the MCU Until At Least 2021
Ultimately, this means that the X-Men series as it currently stands will be no more. Despite Kinberg’s 2016 promise (via new actors for the X-Men roles who are willing to sign multi-film contracts, not to mention a new creative team to work them into the MCU.
The X-Men franchise will already have to deal with a few continuity concerns in of Marvel's tightly constructed narrative through this merger, the major question being Spider-Man into the canon.
Page 2 of 2: How Reshoots Could End Dark Phoenix
A Changed Ending Explains Giving Dark Phoenix Extensive Reshoots
Reshoots are a normal part of the filmmaking process and have become more commonplace than ever as budgets get bigger and the stakes get higher. Sometimes, reshoots happen for reasons as mundane as actor schedule conflicts and other times it's to fix fundamental errors. They can improve a film but have also been known to drastically alter the plot, tone and approach (see Justice League for a notable recent example).
Dark Phoenix's reshoots are a bit of all of these, with some degree of changes exacerbated by Sophie Turner's schedule. This makes gauging the exact nature of the reshoots and expected impact hard to discern, but no matter the truth there is one overriding question: why would so much expense be put into this film? Fox has decided reshoots that will have an impact on the release date and be undoubtedly costly are important for Dark Phoenix, even in the face of the acquisition by Disney.
Related: All The X-Men Films Fox Still Has In Development
One explanation for this would be that they're making changes to deliver a climax more than a continuation. Financially speaking, it would be an unwise investment to continue pumping money into a franchise with hopes of it having sequels when everyone knows that will never happen. Whatever X-Men films we get under the rule of Disney, they won’t be part of this canon and Fox are aware of that. Now, neither party is able to react to the deal until its finalized, but changes that are ostensibly self-serving may toe the line.
Franchises Never End - Dark Phoenix Can
It's often joked that franchises nowadays don't end. They're rebooted or re-imagined or they just keep going for the foreseeable future. It's a side-effect of where the film industry currently is: the big money is in IP and expanded universes with never-ending narratives that can be spun off, given endless sequels or made into multi-media experiences. The chances are that the MCU as it currently stands will never end, for better or worse.
The Fox acquisition gives the studio the rare opportunity to end a story with a definitive climax, and it’s one they should take. There's only been one undeniable conclusion to a superhero arc on the screen (most others just taper off): The Dark Knight Rises, which only resolutely ended Christian Bale's Batman thanks to the clout of Christopher Nolan (and, of course, the character has still been rebooted, just not this version). Dark Phoenix could pull a similar trick, giving the Fox X-Men a finale that resolves key themes and characters.
This is something Fox sort of did with Logan, ending Hugh Jackman's run as Wolverine, although it was just one part of the franchise. With Dark Phoenix, it could be a whole universe. It's an opportunity to wave off the near decade of the current X-Men core cast – which includes James McAvoy, Michael Fassbender and Jennifer Lawrence among its ranks – and characters who some version of have been on the big screen since 2000. This is a bold move, but in the face of no further movies, taking the time to craft an ending - even via retroactive reshoots - isn't the worst idea.
Related: Why Dark Phoenix Has Dropped "X-Men" From Its Title
The Fox era of Dark Phoenix reshoots.