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X2 - This page is about the 2003 movie X2; see X2 (disambiguation) for other meanings.
X2 (promoted in some markets as X2: X-Men United or X-Men 2: X-Men United) is a 2003 movie, the sequel to X-Men. It was directed by Bryan Singer, and stars Patrick Stewart, Hugh Jackman, Ian McKellen, Halle Berry, Famke Janssen, Rebecca Romijn-Stamos, Alan Cumming, and Anna Paquin. Plot After a devastating attempt on the President's life, and the revelation that a mutant was involved, public pressure to ratify the Mutant Registration Act increases. An attack on Professor Xavier's School for the Gifted (labeled a Mutant training facility by the media), leads to an unlikely alliance with the just-escaped Magneto in a frantic race to stop William Stryker, a military leader with a hatred of mutants, before he can succeed in his plan to destroy all mutants. Stryker has orchestrated the attack on the President to get official approval for his attack on all mutants. He is able to control mutants with a powerful drug, and gains control over Professor Xavier through Jason, one of the professor's former students, who is able to project visions in the mind, blinding a person to reality. Stryker has created a copy of Professor Xavier's machine Cerebro which, we learn, was invented by then-friends Professor Xavier and Erik Lensherr (Magneto). In the process, Wolverine learns some of his forgotten past and how his body was enhanced with a superstrong adamantium skeleton. He meets another adamantium-laced foe, Lady Deathstrike, and fights her to protect the other mutants who have been imprisoned in a secret facility by Stryker. The character Nightcrawler, the German named Kurt Wagner, is introduced in the film and becomes a member of the X-Men. Magneto secretly becomes an enemy again and escapes. In the end, Dr. Jean Grey sacrifices herself to save Professor Xavier and the other X-Men. However, there is evidence she may return, like she did in the comics, as the Phoenix. The X-Men convinced the President of the truth behind his assassination attempt and persuade him to make a choice: Human and Mutantkind working together and living in peace or destroying each other in a war. The basic story elements, involving Stryker's plot to use Xavier's powers against all mutants, and the X-Men's resulting alliance with Magneto, are loosely adapted from the graphic novel God Loves, Man Kills by Chris Claremont. In that story, Stryker has a military background, but is currently a religious leader whose wife gave birth to an obviously mutant infant. In a fit of rage, he killed them both and decided that he had been chosen by God to destroy mutants. In the film, his military background is moved to the foreground, and the religious aspect of the character is eliminated. Instead of killing his wife and son in childbirth, this Stryker sent his son to Xavier to be cured of his mutation. Unable to change his mutation, and resentful of his parents, he began tormenting his mother by projecting nightmarish images into her brain, causing her to commit suicide by drilling a hole into her head. William responded by giving his son a lobotomy, and extracting his brain fluid, which he now uses to control other mutants. Main cast External links
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