Michael Fassbender was sent out to appease the X-Men fanboys

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As I talked about yesterday, an image of the cast of X-Men: First Class was released a few days ago, and the lack of quality of the image seemed to piss off the fan boys. Fangirls were also disappointed – that stars Michael Fassbinder (Magneto) and James McAvoy (Xavier) were not making out, or embracing, or looking at each other tenderly. What? Fangirls are all over the homoeroticism, and with the Fassdong and McAvoy sharing a screen together, there better be something sexy and intimate for the ladies.

Anyway, people were confused by the poor quality and general budget-ness of the first image, so the studio sent out three nicer promotional images to tease the fans. They also sent out Michael Fassbender to give an interview. The whole piece (here) is all about X-Men, and there’s nothing about the Fassdong (boo!), but I still enjoyed it:

MSN: What drew you to play this character and take on the challenge of assuming a role established by Ian McKellen?
Michael Fassbender: Hopefully I won’t disappoint the fan base out there, because I know that what Ian McKellen did sort of latched onto a lot of imaginations and was very successful. But what drew me was the script and Matthew Vaughn and the fact that James McAvoy was going to be playing young Xavier. I thought it was a fresh take on the whole story. I’ve never been a big comic book enthusiast, but I thought it was an interesting concept to go back to when they were both friends and initially came together.

After you signed on for the role, did a box come in the mail packed with hundreds of “X-Men” comics for you to peruse?
Yes, it did, and I got knee-deep into them once I got involved. That was all my source material, because it’s all there in the comic books in terms of a backstory and formulating the character. I did also watch the other films and took notes from those, but took most of my references from the comic books.

As someone coming to this from a sort of open perspective and not really being a fan, what did you learn about this character?
He’s such a complex character, really, and the idea of him being a villain is interesting considering his history (Lehnsherr is a Holocaust survivor who lost his family in the camps, and later lost his wife and daughter) … he’s a very solitary individual, and the pain and grief that’s gone on even before we meet him in this film is an interesting pool of information to draw from, in coming up with this Machiavellian character for whom the ends justified the means. You can see where he’s coming from. Human beings don’t have the greatest track record in what they’ve done throughout history, so his point of view is, “Well, we are the next stage of evolution — (humans) are to us what Neanderthals were to Homo sapiens.”

He’s always been a fascinating character because he’s not completely wrong, but thinks that everything he does is right, no matter what the cost.
He’s an extremist, and that’s always a dangerous place to be. By the time we leave him at the end of this movie, he’s become very clear about what he wants and his decisions and his game plan.

Early word on the movie’s story line draws parallels between Xavier and Lehnsherr and Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X in terms of the methods they use to achieve their goals. Did that comparison come out for you while making the film?
You don’t set out to play these things that way, but it’s a good parallel to have in the back of one’s mind, as something to take from real life as a reference. I didn’t study any Malcolm X videos or anything like that. But it clarifies where both these characters are coming from. Hopefully by the end of the film, the audience is like, “Damn, why didn’t these two guys stay together?” They have enough in common and not in common to keep each other in check, and hopefully the audience will feel like they could have worked together for the greater good.

The words “reboot” and “prequel” are thrown around so much these days, and are sometimes even used interchangeably. Is this a reboot of the entire “X-Men” franchise, or a true prequel where you could watch this and then sit down and watch the three earlier films and see a connection?
I think the fundamentals are the same. The main thread of the story is still the same. I don’t really know how to answer the question because I haven’t seen this one yet, so I haven’t had a chance to watch it side by side with the other ones and see if they’re relative to each other. Hopefully they are, I think, but also we want to do something fresh as well and open a whole new chapter with this without totally betraying what was laid down before.

The film is set in the ’60s and Vaughn has said he wanted to capture a certain look — specifically referencing the James Bond films of that era. He has also said that the costumes will be more like the comics’ versions and not the black rubber look of the other “X-Men” films. Can you comment on both of those ideas?
There’s a scene where they just sort of transformed this hall in London into Buenos Aires Airport, and I just looked around this mock airport and said to myself, “My God, I’ve just had a feeling of being in the ’60s.” From the colors to the costume designs to the production design itself, there’s a sort of nostalgia in the air when you look around the room. It’s just from my own perception of the ’60s, and all that came with it in terms of the music and the fashions and so forth, but all of that comes across in the visual references that we all have. All of that is there to encapsulate the feeling of that era, for sure. As for our costumes, we went back and forth on so many things. We added things that worked in the comics, took them away again, and stripped them down again. … When it came to the Magneto suit, you know, there’s various stages of what has been done with it, but you will have something that is traditional to the comics. There is a helmet (laughs), which is of course essential to keep Charlie-boy out of my head, and the colors are also kept traditional to the comics, that sort of red and purple. I don’t know if I’m giving you too much, but I’ll say it anyway (laughs).

Fans of the “X-Men” franchise were not completely happy with the way that the third film, “X-Men: The Last Stand,” was handled, even though it was financially successful, and there were grumblings about the “Wolverine” film as well. Is there a sense that you’ve set out to earn back the fans’ trust with this one?
I certainly hope so. My face is gonna be up there and my name is gonna be attached to it. I’ve got a lot of faith in Matthew, and everyone is very passionate and working very hard to earn back any trust that’s waned a little bit from the last film.

This interview is one of the first of the early stages of prerelease publicity for the film, which has been kept very much under wraps until now. Any other thoughts that you want to get out there about the movie at this point?
Well, I just hope that this and some of the photos that are being released will whet the fans’ appetites for the summer. Hopefully they’ll be excited.

[From MSN Entertainment]

Yeah, Fassbender is a pro, and he cares about making the fanboys happy. But I still have a bad feeling about this – and I think it’s interesting that the studio didn’t sent McAvoy out as well to do interviews. I wonder if they tried and McAvoy refused? Perhaps because McAvoy knows this thing might be a train wreck? I want to believe it could be good though – I loved two of Matthew Vaughn’s films, Layer Cake and Kick-Ass. I wish he would make another movie like Layer Cake, honestly, and stop messing around with these big-budget messes.

Oh, these images come from the Los Angeles Times – they got an interview from the set with Matthew Vaughn. It’s an interesting read too.

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Promotional images courtesy of the Los Angeles Times.

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17 Responses to “Michael Fassbender was sent out to appease the X-Men fanboys”

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  1. caramia says:

    I also have a ‘bad feeling about this’…anyone watching this crap will not have an IQ over 30, so what’s the problem?

  2. devilgirl says:

    Don’t get what the big deal over this man is.

  3. gabs says:

    Those leaked promo pics were hilariously bad! Especially January Jones. Its not a good sign. I agree that he should stay away from the big budget type films. These pics and interview do not reassure me.

  4. Solveig says:

    As long as Fassbender and McAvoy are in the same movie, who cares about the plot, the X-men and the fans base?
    I loved Kick-ass and I’m sure Matthew Vaughn can do a good job, tho.

  5. maria says:

    He looks old and stinky.

  6. Dizzybenny says:

    This slooche will probably be in 3D also.
    No thanks!

  7. Stephie says:

    Fassbender and McAvoy, who are these two? Don’t see what the big deal is about them at all. I like the X-men and will probably see this whenever it comes out (on Netflix at least) but for now I don’t have any anticipation about it at all.

  8. MissyA says:

    As the lone dissenter. . . I actually really, really identified with the X Men (and most of the Marvel and DC Universe) as a child. The plot personally resonated with me – a group of social outcasts with extraordinary inner strength go on to amazing things. It made me a remarkably easy kid to shop for because all I wanted was comic books.

    This film has so much potential – the Uncanny XMen was a groundbreaking new series that paralleled the race riots and civil unrest in the 60’s. It was the first series to identify a change in social consciousness; the first to articulate the struggle between one’s identity, and one’s place in society.

    So it pains me to see that they’re reinventing Marvel history to shoehorn this prequel into that horrible franchise’s storyline. It’s insulting to eliminate key players from the original series (Storm? Jean Grey? Cyclops and Wolverine?) because they fear the audience will react poorly to the movie series’s f’ed-up timeline.

    And to cast January Jones in anything. Haven’t we learned our lesson about style over substance after casting Halle Barry as (my beloved and all-time favorite) Storm? Blech. No thank you.

    Oh well. I’ll probably Netflix this when it comes out on DVD.

    (I am pumped that they’ve included the Beast, though. He’s a personal favorite of mine.)

  9. Mia Girl says:

    I love McAvoy – in a major way – and will see him in whatever movie he’s in, crap or no crap. Really – i’ve even seen Penelope 4 times.

    But I must say he looked awful in that initial promo picture they sent out – and still not so great in the subsequent photos. Maybe the movie is crap and he was drinking his way through the production…

  10. devilgirl says:

    @Mia Girl- I loved Penelope.

  11. Mia says:

    This movie is going to be awful, and I knew that from the moment they started casting characters that weren’t in the origins mytho. Add into it January Jones and I lost interest in the whole thing. The promo pics validated my misgivings. I’ll pass, though I love me some Fassbender.

  12. Mia Girl says:

    @devilgirl – me too.
    That last scene where McAvoy kisses Cristina Ricci – the expression on his face right before he does – kills me every time.

  13. Hmmm says:

    I adore McAvoy and will even endure sitting through this movie for his sake (and mine!). He was terrific in ‘Wanted’ and all the indie films whose names I have promptly forgotten. He certainly was the best thing in Atonement too.

  14. Addy says:

    @MissyA, I relate to everything you had to say regarding X-Men and this new movie.

    I was so looking forward to it but it seems it is going to be just as much as a disappointment as the last two X-Men related movies. I just don’t buy their dumb reason for not using the most high profile characters and the best X-Men they have and instead are going to give us a bunch of characters that just aren’t up to par with the likes of Jean Gray, Wolverine, Storm or Cyclops.

    I love Michael Fassbender and James McAvoy but they are not enough to make up for what this movie will lack.

  15. Girafe99 says:

    Vaughn did Kick Ass and that was brilliant, so while I am not a huge X MEN fan, I think I might go to see this film

  16. MissyA says:

    @Addy – Beyond that, the most high profile characters were actually the original circa 1960’s X-Men! Don’t get me wrong, I’m delighted that they didn’t ask Halle Berry back to reprise her role as a teenaged Ororo Munroe, but it just feels like they’re missing a tremendous opportunity to make a thoughtful movie with meaningful (and recognizable) characters. I mean, Storm was the amongst first African American superheros (if not the first) and she created a lot of controversy “back in the day” – they’re telling me that wouldn’t make for a compelling plot point in a storyline based 1960’s America?

    I’ve come to peace with the realization that all my childhood (super)heros will be repeatedly bastardized by studios. Comic Book Heros = Summer Blockbusters. No studio is interested in the subtleties and nuances that make superheros compelling. They’re in it because the formula sells: CGIed special effects, big explosions, tight costumes, quippy one-liners. . . I get it. It’s what audiences pay to see. I just wish they would balance the action with some subtext. It can be done, I thought Christopher Nolan did an exceptional job with this in The Dark Knight.

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