I had to go into the theater bathroom to cry right after Logan ended...

I had to go into the theater bathroom to cry right after Logan ended. I can't be the only one to have had that kind if reaction, right? I was five years old when I saw the first X-Men movie in theaters; I've grown up with Wolverine, and now that chapter of my life is closed. Maybe I'm just a big wimp.

that's understandable

I was sad, too.

I cringed a little when Laura said ''Daddy'' all of the sudden.
Maybe if she had listen to some girl saying it along the road trip.

It was pretty sad, but I was happy with the send off for the character.

I didn't feel any emotion for Logan's death until she turned the cross into an X.

the x-men movies sucked for the most part, why were you so invested in them?. it would be be like if they had made star wars prequels every 2 years up until now, and you had to go cry in the restroom when anakin turned into vader.

Yeah, that was a nice touch.

X1, X2, FC, TW, DOFP and now Logan... the x-men movies have been good for the most part, user.

no
just deadpool and logan

I was stoned when I first saw the trailer and I cry and had a heavy breathing and high heart rate because it was like such an emotional trailer and then when Charles said "Logan you still have time" I started crying like punk ass little bitch

>I was five years old when I saw the first X-Men movie in theaters
>you share the board with literal teenagers

>This guy couldn't do enough basic math to figure out OP is at least 21
>you share the board with retards

>5 years old at 2000
>teenager

Xmen was out in 2000?

Wait -
No.
It's true.

Fuck. I could have sworn it was at least 06. What happened?

we're getting old

>I cringed a little when Laura said ''Daddy'' all of the sudden.
My mom cried at that. Said it reminded her of my grandpa dying.

same here,
partly because they 'bonded' zero freakin percent during the entire fuckin movie. They just kinda brooded next to each other,

better get angry dude... wtf happened with the adamantium milking machine from The wolverine? when did he got his metal back? mongoloid and his fucking adamantium bullet...seriously... look a steel door, no problem ill hit it with my steel hammer and it will break.
besides... she was not his daughter, she is a clone, if thats the case we need to close the fucking sperm banks asap., from the beginning of the movie i was saying "This manipulative shit is gonna end with a dad or daddy shit" oh sorprise surprise. It was not bad, but not as unique and awesome as everybody was saying. Jackman was great, caliban was great, Xavier was so fucking anoying.

>go cry in the restroom when anakin turned into vader.
this dude got it right

Man,.. for a guy who was born in the 1800s and looked the same all up until 2010ish.. those last 20ish years were super hard on Wolvie. He aged like sour milk..

and people were dying left and right..

>crying at a movie

>>>/reddit/ is that a way

>you share this board with anons who are worse at counting than literal grade schoolers

Didn't cry, but I did got sort of a knot in my stomach because of it.

I didn't know much about X-Men when I saw it so I had no idea Laura was going to pull out the claws and start slicing people in half which was pretty cool.

Some are saying this has been one of the best superhero movies. Does Sup Forums agree?

Fuck off.

I got right on the edge of crying a couple of times (the family dinner scene nearly did it), but the last scene hit me hard enough to get a few tears out of me.

>Some are saying this has been one of the best superhero movies.

I would legitimately list it alongside "Blade II", "Spider-Man 2", "Iron Man", "Dredd", and "The Crow" as one of the best comic book films ever. Shit, I would even put it above them all. It did so many goddamn things right that its few flaws (like the middling antagonists) are worth forgetting.

>saw it with best friend
>best friend is by all definitions an edge lord who feels nothing
>Laura turns the cross so its an X
>hear "aww man"

My reaction wasn't that strong, but I admit I teared up a little in the theatre myself. It's pretty powerful stuff. No shame in allowing yourself to feel what you feel.

"X-Men" does not hold up well; "X2" is good, but not great (same goes for "First Class"); "The Wolverine" falls apart in the third act; and "Days of Future Past" is middling at best. "Logan" is the only great X-Men film - and it did that by damn near stripping itself away from the X-Men franchise.

>I had to go into the theater bathroom to cry right after Logan ended.
What are you? Steven Universe?

I get the sense that at some point in the fairly recent past his healing factor finally started to crap out on him, and at that point he started falling apart FAST. More than just rapid onset of aging, but the constant trickle of poison into his bloodstream from the adamantium in him would greatly accelerate that process.

>It's got water...and...uh...
>It's got water...and...uh...

The second viewing made me tear up even more than the first one.

People have these things called "emotions". Being a heartless sociopath, you obviously do not know this.

>not crying over a movie makes you a sociopath
Maybe you're just a pussy.

>XD

>XD

Or maybe I like to let a story affect me on an emotional level, like damn near every other person who goes to watch movies.

What are you, a metal endoskeleton surrounded by living tissue?

lol what a fag.

Being sad is one thing, but outright crying? You're just a pussy.

I'm a dad now, my wife is pregnant with #2 right now, a daughter. Little known fact: dads have hormone swings while their wives are pregnant too. Anyway, the whole bit where Logan is dying and she's calling him "daddy" fucking killed me.

Man, fuck you. That wasn't there for you.

Why, because an emotional reaction to something results in a subsequent physical reaction?

People cry. It is generally a sincere reaction to something emotional. Of course, your being an insincere asshole means you cannot understand that.

>I'm a dad now, my wife is pregnant with #2 right now, a daughter. Little known fact: dads have hormone swings while their wives are pregnant too.
Thanks for the blog update

Or people who forgot it came out in 2000 (which is an honest mistake.)

You're crying. Over a fictional character.
Keep your emotions in check. You whiny little faggot. It shouldn't make you cry.

Why even watch movies if you can't be made to feel things about fictional characters? Shouldn't that money be better spent on... fuck, booze or something?

You guys need to pull that stick out of your ass. Crying at movies is fun. Don't be afraid to open up and let yourself safely experience the range of human emotion. Live a little.

>if you can't be made to feel things about fictional characters?
Did you even read what I was saying? Or were your tears blurring your vision. It's ok to feel sad for him but crying? Fucking get yourself together and stop being a baby.

t. numale

Someone's comfortable in their masculinity.

In the current age of constant reboots, it's truly remarkable that Hugh Jackman was able to play the character of Wolverine for over a decade.

Have fun crying because you made a boo boo from jerking yourself off too hard.

>You're crying. Over a fictional character.

Yes, and? If a fictional story can make me feel the kind of emotions that make me cry, why does that bother you so much? Why WOULD it bother you so much unless you are incapable of feeling that kind of emotion?

Im not that user but there hasn't been a movie I've been interested in for years. I think the last time I went to see one was with my dad on father's day.

It was kingdom of the crystal skull.

Yeah, I wouldn't wanna watch another movie after seeing that one, either.

Just because he finds it laughable doesn't mean he's incapable of feeling that emotion.

Well done, user.

>why does that bother you so much? Why WOULD it bother you so much unless you are incapable of feeling that kind of emotion?
Not me, buddy. You're the one with the problem. Butting into a post between two people that didn't concern you like a typical tripfaggot. You're the one continuing this conversation when it's clear all I'm going to call you is a whiny emotional faggot. Which you are. The fact that we're still talking is on you.

It kinda does, though. If you really cannot understand why a story - even a fictional one - might make some people cry, it is likely something you cannot ever do yourself.

>You're the one continuing this conversation when it's clear all I'm going to call you is a whiny emotional faggot.

At least I cry at funerals. What do you do, pop open a cold one and drink it during the eulogy?

You're making a critical error in logic. While I don't care if you cry in movies or not, the connection you're drawing is fallacious.

>If you really cannot understand why a story - even a fictional one - might make some people cry
I understand. I just think they're faggots for doing it. You want to cry so hard? Cry over something that really deserves it.

>At least I cry at funerals.
There you go. That's something worth crying over.

>Cry over something that really deserves it.

Why can't you accept that some people think crying due to an overwhelming amount of emotion invoked by a fictional story tapping into a shared experience is "acceptable"?

Cry in movies...
Cry at movies?
Cry while watching movies...
Cry at THE movies...

>Why can't you accept that some people think crying due to an overwhelming amount of emotion invoked by a fictional story tapping into a shared experience is "acceptable"?
I do accept it. I think they're faggots.

Why do you think it is less-than-human to cry at something that invokes a strong emotional response, regardless of whether it is fictional?

I can think of a few reasons but I think the biggest is you're a tripfag and the nail that sticks up gets hammered down. If I were to take a guess I'd say he saw your name first and wanted to find something to disagree with or attack second.

>I'd say he saw your name first and wanted to find something to disagree with or attack second.
Except he started an argument with me.

He had aged, or he would obviously looked the same as when his healing factor activated as a teenager. Plus, it's established in the film that his healing factor isn't working as well, most likely due to the adamantium being literally a constant strain on it.

Not a perfect film by any means, but an excellent action film, and demonstrated how the superhero genre specifically can be used to explore themes, not unlike TDK.

I hate to continuously play devil's advocate but he said faggot. Not less than human or not human. Don't misconstrue an insult as penultimate dehumanization.

Is The Crow good?

There you are then. Starting up arguments with people tends to make them combative to your ideas regardless of what they may actually think or feel about them. You see them as an enemy immediately and they shut themselves off to discourse and become intransigent as a defense mechanism. It's not terribly unusual.

That hit me harder than the ending

And when Xavier drove through the casino after he hurt everyone and he's like "I'm sorry, I'm so sorry!". He's the kindest, most caring person in the world and he just hurts 400 people and remembered he killed 600 people years before

>Don't misconstrue an insult as penultimate dehumanization.

Nah senpai, we good.

If anything, it is more about demonstrating how to avoid the pitfalls of the nebulous and broadly-defined "superhero genre" by rooting a story in a pre-existing genre (a Western, in this case) and adding superheroes and fantastical elements as necessary. If you could take the mutant/superhero shit out of "Logan" and rework the film as a "modern Western", the film would probably work just as well.

It is a bit more direct and "blatant" about the story than the original comic (which had vibes of "is this really happening"), but it is a damn fine film in its own right. It might feel a bit dated due to the soundtrack and the general aesthetic, but the story still holds up, and Brandon Lee's performance is incredible.

Wrong

Fuck off, faggot

>it shouldn't
Sounds like you need some Expectations Management

DOFP is great, so is X2

I think Logan is pretty overrated. It's not a bad movie, probably the best movie in the X-Men franchise so far, but I think people are giving it far too much credit just for being a decent movie in a sea of cheap schlock.

The story was paper-thin and didn't make a whole lot of sense, literally all of the background stuff was glossed over in just a few throwaway lines, there was almost no character development at all and when it did happen it happened suddenly and for no reason other than that the plot demanded it, and the action was full of awful quick cuts in order to attempt to hide the shitty choreography.

I'm not saying I hated the movie. Like I said, it was quite good for a superhero movie and some of the scenes worked quite well. But I seriously believe that the only reason people are heaping praise onto it the way they do is only because it's not the garbage everyone has been trained to accept from cape movies.

I happened to see T2 Trainspotting and Logan on the same day and it's jarring to see how everyone agrees that T2 is worse than the original and a pretty mediocre movie overall, while Logan, a worse movie in pretty much every regard, gets almost universal praise and high scores simply because the standard for cape movies is ridiculously low. Should an ok sequel to a bad movie really be held in such higher regard than an ok sequel to a good movie?

Oh trust me. I have plenty low expectations for whatever half assed bullshit you bring to the table. Knob gobbler.

Your father didn't love you enough so you hardened your heart so you wouldn't be sad about it and now you rationalized a hardened heart as a good thing

>I have plenty low expectations
Grown men crying makes you uncomfortable so you get angry at it, because that's the only way you know to react emotionally

Now now, be fair. Maybe his mother didn't love him enough and his father beat him. Or maybe his mother molested him and his father beat him. Or maybe his mother beat him and his father molested him.

You charge by the hour, doc?

>so you get angry at it, because that's the only way you know to react emotionally
Gee, I didn't know laughing at them meant I was angry.

Sweet projection you got going on there.

Or maybe his father left, his mother couldn't handle it so he blamed his father and now anger is all he knows

Or maybe I experienced some repeated trauma with friends and has serious trust issues and - oh you're talking about him.

Now now, don't make yourself cry.

>laughing at them
You're calling them pussy and faggot

Hit a little too close to home there, Dirk?

Because those are totally not used to ridicule people. No siree bob.

There are no more guns in the valley

Not even close, crybaby. Try again.

This thread feels very hostile

I never watched that original movie so I didn't really care that much

There's this one guy who can't deal with emotions so he lashes out and I don't like that

But you must have understood the intent of the line and how it related to the death of Logan, right?

Or maybe you're just mad because you didn't get the little feelsy asspats you were looking for? There's always /r9k/ for that.

Yeah I did

But it wasn't the most emotional part of the movie for me
>I'm sorry, I'm so sorry! (in the casino)
>There's water and uhm...
>The look on Laura's face when Logan goes upstairs while X24 carries her away
>Daddy

>Maybe I'm just a big wimp.
yup

I wish I could feel like you did OP

I don't remember the last time I cried

If she had said it in Spanish it would make more sense