Sinopsis(1)

Hugh Jackman recupera el papel que hizo de él una superestrella encarnando a una feroz máquina de combate poseedora de asombrosos poderes curativos, unas garras duras como el diamante y una furia primaria conocida como la cólera del berserker. La película también nos presenta a un grupo de mutantes entre los que figuran varios cuya aparición en la serie se esperaba hace mucho con impaciencia. Los espectadores conocerán al Equipo X, una célula militar clandestina formada íntegramente por mutantes. Sus miembros son: Lobezno; su hermano Victor Creed, alias Dientes de Sable, una salvaje criatura de inimaginable fuerza; Wade Wilson, que más adelante será conocido como Masacre, un mercenario de alta tecnología maestro en esgrima; Agente Zero, experto rastreador y tirador de mortífera puntería; Espectro, un teletransportador; Fred J. Dukes, también llamado La Mole, un obeso mórbido de tamaño y fuerza colosales; y Bradley, quien puede manipular la electricidad. Al mando de todos ellos está William Stryker, personaje introducido en "X2" pero cuyos orígenes y motivos se examinan ahora por completo, porque es la extraña relación que existe entre Stryker y Lobezno lo que define gran parte del pasado de Logany de su futuro. (20th Century Fox España)

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POMO 

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español Una primera media hora muy prometedora: acción espectacular, buen trabajo con los exteriores montañosos, un Hugh Jackman simpático, una relación creíble con su pareja, frases geniales («Soy canadiense») y un supervillano genial interpretado por Liev Schreiber. Lobezno comienza como un sabroso equilibrio entre acción dinámica y agradable aventura familiar con una dosis de romance... Así que es una pena que el talentoso Gavin Hood tenga que someterse poco a poco cada vez más a estúpidos giros de guión que quieren disparar al espectador hambriento de acción fuera de su asiento A TODA COSTA. Así pues, la película termina en un punto intermedio entre Doom e X-Men: La decisión final. No estoy disgustado ni decepcionado, eso ya se notaba en los avances. Pero es una pena. Estos personajes y sus actores merecían algo más ingenioso. A Bryan Singer. ()

Isherwood 

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inglés Mourning for Singer went out of fashion long ago after Ratner's collapse, so why not enjoy mutants in the brisk action guise dictated by the increasingly popular 1980s model? Hood grasped the point of the subject matter on offer and presents us with a very decent piece of work that relies on the fact that if something moves, shoots, and explodes on the screen (preferably ten times in a span of a few seconds), it is impossible to be mad at it. However, Skip Woods is still writing like he’s had a lobotomy, so the dialogue is solidly rough, and the twists and turns were surely foreseen by the group of twelve-year-old snots sitting a few seats away. My fondness for Reynolds, the fact that Schreiber is a crackerjack and Jackman a major crackerjack, who simply is Wolverine, saved a lot of this film for me. I’ll probably forget it in a few days, but the fact that I wasn't bored for two hours, and the over-the-top finale on the cooling tower gives it just enough bonus points. Edit: Even after the second viewing it still has some energy, but the stupidity is also quite visible. I give it a better three stars. ()

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Marigold 

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inglés Disappointment that is on a level higher than the final part of the trilogy. Even Jackman's unquestionable charisma cannot hold together a story which, after a fairly promising start, burst into disjointed fights, silly dialogues and terribly predictable twists. The unique magic of the X-Men series has somehow disappeared, and I'm really wondering what puts Wolverine above all other soulless comic book fight films. Instead of the neglected question of the mutants vs. people relationship, Hood's film was supposed to feature a troubled hero, but only those shiny claws and an angry expression really remain of Logan. Paradoxically, the biographical film contributes the least to the image of the Wolverine of all the films, and while it does benefit from the charisma of previous films, the new knowledge about the hero's past is very weak, contrived, exaggerated and sometimes almost embarrassingly calculated. The image concept has nothing with which to captivate, the music is ok, the actors ok, but the added value that the viewer is used to with Singer is simply missing here. Unfortunately, what I suspected with regard to X-Men: The Last Stand has been confirmed. Without Singer, this universe lacks any distinctive charm. [50%] ()

J*A*S*M 

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inglés Crap that cost a lot of money always piss me off the most, and with Wolverine's origin my anger is clear. It’s an incredibly unoriginal comic book movie that fails in everything. Really, one cliché after another, already during the first fifteen minutes or so there are two shots of a screaming kneeling figure with a camera flying upwards. At least it makes you retroactively appreciate Ratner’s third part. ()

Malarkey 

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inglés Wolverine alone has earned two films over a period of four years purely about him. I didn’t understand why they did it, and overall I don’t even understand the meaning of the whole X-Men movies, where they return from the present to the past only to gradually jump into the future. I don’t understand the narrative line of all the movies, and I’ll probably never understand it. But what I admit is that this movie, unlike the Wolverine film itself, is perhaps even better. This is mainly due to the atmosphere of the 1970s, which seems absurd to me whenever I’m reminded of it. However, so be it. Three stars for not being completely bad at filmmaking. But everything else in this series is meaningless, and I think I will never find any meaning in other films from this series. ()

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