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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 .
X-Men, X2, X-Men: The Last Stand, X-Men Origins: Wolverine, X-Men: First Class, The Wolverine, X-Men: Days of Future Past, X-Men: Apocalypse, Dark Phoenix, The New Mutants As of May 2014, the DVD and Blu-ray sales of the first six films in the United States earned more than $620 million.
President Robert Kelly (voiced by Len Carlson in the original series, Ron Rubin in the revival series [1]) – Robert Kelly ran for president on an anti-mutant campaign during the beginning of the show's first season. Kelly came to befriend the X-Men and support mutants shortly after he is elected president in the season's final episode after ...
The show features a team similar to that of the early 1990s X-Men comics by Jim Lee, specifically the Blue Team established early on in X-Men (vol. 2).It consists of Cyclops, Wolverine, Rogue, Storm, Beast, Gambit, Jubilee, Jean Grey, and Professor X, as well as original character Morph, who is based on Changeling.
The X-Men manage to track down the Sentinel's headquarters and free Jubilee. She decides to join Xavier's academy. Notes: "The Mutant Registration Act" mentioned in this episode was first used in "Days of Future Past" from Uncanny X-Men #141 (January 1981) by writer Chris Claremont and writer/artist John Byrne.
He first appears in X-Men (2000), X2 (2003), and X-Men: The Last Stand (2006), portrayed by James Marsden. [citation needed] All throughout, he serves as a field leader for the X-Men until he is killed by the Phoenix. Due to his role being increasingly reduced in response to Logan's popularity, several fans and critics grew upset by this.
Spyke is Storm's nephew, who was born and raised in New York City.After learning that he is a mutant, she recruits him into the X-Men despite his initial reluctance. In the third-season episode "X-Treme Measures", Spyke loses control of his powers and becomes unable to retract his spikes after drinking Pow-R8, an energy drink that is harmful to mutants.
X-Men: Pryde of the X-Men is an animated television pilot originally broadcast in 1989 on the Marvel Action Universe television block, featuring Marvel Comics' mutant superheroes of the X-Men. [1] The pilot aired infrequently in syndication and was later released on video. It later served as the basis for Konami's X-Men arcade game. [2]