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The X-Men film series is the second highest-grossing film series based on Marvel Comics characters after the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). [170] In North America, it is the fifth-highest-grossing film series, having earned over $2.4 billion. [171] Worldwide, it is the tenth-highest-grossing film series of all time, having grossed over $6 ...
Marsden was cast as Cyclops in the X-Men films. His character is prominent in the comics; his screen time in the films, however, is reduced in the sequels. Marsden also appeared in Bryan Singer's Superman Returns. Singer had dropped out of the third X-Men film to direct Superman and Marsden was cast as Lois Lane's fiancé, Richard
Cyclops appears in the novel X-Men: The Chaos Engine Trilogy, by Steven A. Roman. [19] This version is a member of a detachment of X-Men who were inside the Starlight Citadel when Doctor Doom, Magneto, and the Red Skull obtained a flawed Cosmic Cube and separately rewrite reality to their liking. Due to the citadel protecting them during Doom's ...
Cyclops first appeared in The X-Men #1 (September 1963). He was created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, and has been a mainstay character of the X-Men series. Lee said that Cyclops and Beast were his two favorite X-Men, elaborating that "I love tortured heroes—and he was tortured because he couldn't control his power."
The X-Men returned the following season in "The X-Men Adventure", [2] with appearances from Professor X, Cyclops, Kitty Pryde (as Sprite), Storm, Nightcrawler, Colossus and Thunderbird. In 1989, Marvel Productions produced a half-hour X-Men pilot episode titled X-Men: Pryde of the X-Men.
X-Men marked the American debut for Jackman, a last-second choice for Wolverine, cast three weeks into filming. Filming took place from September 22, 1999, to March 3, 2000, primarily in Toronto. X-Men premiered at Ellis Island on July 12, 2000, and was released in the United States on
X-Men: The Last Stand [6] (also marketed as X3: The Last Stand, or X-Men 3) is a 2006 superhero film based on the X-Men comic books published by Marvel Entertainment Group. [7] It is the sequel to X2 (2003), as well as the third installment (and the final film of the original X-Men trilogy) in the X-Men film series .
Director Bryan Singer's regular collaborator John Ottman worked on the score of the film, in addition to being its editor, [115] thereby becoming the first composer to score more than one film in the X-Men film series, having previously scored X2 (2003). He reused some of themes from X2, including the title theme, which is a first for a X-Men ...