Marvel Wants To Bring The Heart Back To The X-Men
The X-Men are finally making their way back boldly into the MCU. As the saying goes “you live and you learn” and it sounds like Marvel may have learnt a few painful lessons from the Fox era along the way. In saying this, I’m not at all suggesting that the old films were failures. Some of them absolutely slapped. And Others…..well they felt like somebody threw them together at the last minute. But according to new comments from writer Lee Sung Jin and director Jake Schreier, reported by Screen Rant, this reboot plans to dig much deeper into the emotional DNA that made the X-Men resonate with fans in the first place.
Lee Sung Jin stated that the original Chris Claremont comic run is something that has always sat close to his heart. This statement is absolutely massive for longtime fans. If there’s one thing we can all agree on, it is that the Claremont’s stories revolved more around emotional conflict than laser beams, sharp claws, and mutant fistfights. Those comics brought out the messy relationships, ideological tension, and characters who constantly felt like outsiders. Characters who have always been trying to survive a world that feared them. So, the news that this is where this new MCU version wants to focus its energy is welcomed with delight.
“When they came back with X-Men 97, I devoured that,” said Lee Sung Jin. “The original Claremont run of the comics is near and dear to my heart.” Lee added that he is most “excited” to work on the reboot because Schreier “wants to get back to focusing on the characters first.“
“These are amazing characters with very rich backstories full of so much emotion,” said Lee. “There are so many intra-team dynamics and relationships. There’s soapy stuff. And sure, there are political themes baked into the DNA of X-Men too, and those are evergreen, but we want to get back to character-first storytelling.“
The upcoming film will delve heavily into the interpersonal side of the X-Men universe, added Jake Schreier. Underneath all the superhero chaos, he described the franchise as having almost a “soap opera” quality underneath. And he couldn’t be more right. If anything, The X-Men have always thrived on emotional instability. That emotional focus could end up being the biggest difference between the MCU reboot and the older Fox films. Fox universe has delivered numerous iconic performances and some incredible moments, but it often revolved around Wolverine carrying the emotional weight of the entire mutant species on his shoulders. As for the rest of the team, they just waited in the background. The new creative team sounds far more interested in the group dynamic itself. The friendships, betrayals and ideological clashes. The complicated family energy that makes the X-Men feel less like superheroes and more like emotionally damaged roommates with powers.
Lee Sung Jin also admitted he initially had no plans to jump back into another Marvel project after working on Thunderbolts*. But when X-Men entered the conversation, he said you “drop everything” for that opportunity. Now if that’s not fandom at the highest level. I don’t know what is. Also fans can usually sniff out when somebody understands what is required versus when someone is just chasing the money. So that is a special type of commitment. What’s also interesting is that Marvel seems determined to make this version feel unique instead of just recreating the Fox formula. Now that’s spot on.
Marvel wants to embrace the deeper emotional and political layers that made the comics so enduring in the first place. Which is exactly what Kevin Feige previously alluded to. And by placing Schreier and Lee Sung Jin as the creative leads, they just may pill it off. There are also rumours that the film may lean toward a younger energy while focusing far more on the team dynamic instead of centring everything around one or two major characters. Which if you ask me, feels overdue. The X-Men work best when everybody in the team matters. Not just Wolverine but also Storm, Rogue, Cyclops as well as Gambit. Even the characters constantly trapped in emotional chaos matter because that chaos is the franchise.
Like with all things Marvel, plot details remain locked, but you have to admit that the direction sounds promising. Especially after years of superhero movies becoming increasingly obsessed with multiverse gymnastics, cosmic sky beams, and CGI armies that collide into grey dust clouds for two hours straight. The X-Men were always more human than most comic book teams. Just look beneath the powers and the spectacle, and you will find that these stories have always been about identity, fear, rejection, belonging, and people trying desperately to hold themselves together while the world keeps pushing them apart. If Marvel truly understands that, this reboot could finally give the mutants the emotional depth they deserve instead of turning them into another disposable superhero content machine.
