This article, X-Men: Extermination Agenda (MCU MarvelousMarty), is property of MarvelousMarty. |
X-Men: Extermination Agenda is the sixth film in Phase Three of the Marvel Cinematic Universe by MarvelousMarty. The film is directed by Alex Garland, produced by Kevin Feige, Victoria Alonso, Lauren Shuler Donner, Louis D'Esposito, and Stan Lee, and written by Garland, Simon Kinberg, and Jane Goldman. The film is a predecessor to the upcoming MCU film, Avengers: Age of Ultron.
Synopsis[]
Following their years of journeys and adventures which were solely dedicated into protecting both human and mutantkind (X-Men, The Uncanny X-Men), the X-Men has once again crossed paths with their greatest enemies, the Brotherhood of Mutants, as they both deal with a mutant who claims to be from a dark and desolate future where their kind was on the verge of extinction at the hands of restless machines that were programmed into exterminating them, the Sentinels. As the signs of today viciously warns them of their grim fate in the form of the anticipated executive Sentinel Program, both heroic and villainous mutants alike have no other choice but to form an alliance and spark a war for mutants in the present with the united goal for peace and freedom, before there would no longer be a tomorrow left for them to live in.
Cast[]
- X-Men (First Cinematic Return)
- Michael Jai White as Lucas Bishop (First Cinematic Appearance) (Leaves Future Hellfire Club) (Death)
- Patrick Stewart as Professor X (Charles Xavier)
- Jessica Chastain as Phoenix (Jean Grey)
- Hugh Jackman as Wolverine (Logan)
- Chris Pine as Cyclops (Scott Summers)
- Anna Paquin as Rogue (Marie D'Ancanto)
- Thandiwe Newton as Storm (Ororo Munroe)
- Ron Pearlman as Beast (Hank McCoy)
- Channing Tatum as Gambit (Remy Lebeau) (First Cinematic Appearance)
- Zoey Deutch as Shadowcat (Kitty Pryde) (First Cinematic Appearance)
- Ellen Page as Shadowcat (Future) (Last Appearance)
- Colton Hayes as Iceman (Bobby Drake) (First Cinematic Appearance)
- Alexander Petrov as Colossus (Peter Rasputin) (First Cinematic Appearance)
- Daniel Cudmore as Colossus (Future) (Death)
- Moisés Arias as Nightcrawler (Kurt Wagner) (First Cinematic Appearance)
- James Marsden as Havok (Alex Summers) (First Cinematic Appearance)
- James Marsden as Havok (Future) (Death)
- Brotherhood of Mutants (First Cinematic Return)
- Ian McKellen as Magneto (Erik Lehnsherr)
- Charlize Theron as Mystique (Raven Darkholme)
- Jake Abel as Pyro (John Allerdyce)
- Aaron Stanford as Pyro (Future) (Death)
- Evan Jonigkeit as Toad (Mortimer Toynbee) (Death)
- Sofia Boutella as Callisto (First Cinematic Appearance) (Leaves Team)
- Hafbor Julius Bjornsson as Juggernaut (Cain Marko) (First Cinematic Appearance)
- Hellfire Club (First Cinematic Appearance)
- Tricia Helfer as Adrienne Frost (Only Appearance) (Death)
- Tricia Helfer as White Queen (Adrienne Frost) (Future) (First and Last Cinematic Appearance)
- Annabelle Wallis as Emma Frost (First Appearance)
- Annabelle Wallis as Emma Frost (Future) (Only Appearance) (Death)
- Milo Ventimiglia as Trevor Fitzroy (First Cinematic Appearance) (Death)
- David Sakurai as Shinobi Shaw (First Cinematic Appearance)
- Tricia Helfer as Adrienne Frost (Only Appearance) (Death)
- Michael Weatherly as Bolivar Trask (First Appearance)
- Kiowa Gordon as Forge (Jonathan Silvercloud) (First Appearance)
- Michael Greyeyes as Forge (Future) (Last Appearance) (Leaves the Hellfire Club) (Death)
- Brian Cox as William Stryker (Death)
- Christoph Waltz as Senator Robert Kelly (Death)
- Rutger Hauer as Mojo Adams (First Cinematic Appearance)
- Samuel L. Jackson as Nick Fury (Cameo)
- Clark Gregg as Phil Coulson (Cameo)
- Stan Lee as Freedom Fighter (Future) (Cameo)
Trivia[]
- This movie is the first feature Marvel film to be directly tied and connected with another media, as its story and setting was first established in the latter half of the second season of The Uncanny X-Men in 2013-2014.
- This film in itself is based on the real-world film, X-Men: Days of the Future Past, which also premiered on the same date and year in the real world.
- While borrowing elements from X-Men: Days of the Future Past, this film retained having the consciousness of mutant Lucas Bishop (Michael Jai White) decades back in time in his younger body to warn the present-day mutants as the future's final hope in saving mutantkind from extinction at the hands of the proactive Sentinel Program.
- Recalling Bishop's life in the future as one of the last standing members of the elite Hellfire Club, the mutant alliance's investigation in the present would later found out the grim truth that it was the club themselves who were revealed to be one of the top benefactors of the Sentinel Program until the very future development of the sentient machine Master Mold and its greatest creation, the Nimrod Sentinels.
- Calling out this hypocrisy, its present leader Adrienne Frost (Tricia Helfer) eventually lashed out in the final battle as she was stripped of her leadership in the Hellfire Club's Inner Circle after the truth was exposed to the entire society, expelling her and her faction from the club.
- In her death, Adrienne's younger sister Emma (Annabelle Wallis) would later take over her place as White Queen, declaring that despite the Club's notorious and continuous influence over economic and political matters, never would she let the club fuel nor participate conflicts that holds discrimination against her own fellow mutants.
- While borrowing elements from X-Men: Days of the Future Past, this film retained having the consciousness of mutant Lucas Bishop (Michael Jai White) decades back in time in his younger body to warn the present-day mutants as the future's final hope in saving mutantkind from extinction at the hands of the proactive Sentinel Program.
- Foreshadowing Marvel's Civil War, a mid-credit scene spotlights Nick Fury, no longer the director of S.H.I.E.L.D., still giving instructions to new director Phil Coulson from the shadows on how the agency can help in cleaning up the destruction caused by the X-Men and the Brotherhood to keep the situation from worsening to the public eye.
Sequels[]
Further information: List of Marvel Cinematic Universe (MarvelousMarty) films and series
- The Uncanny X-Men (Seasons 3-9) (2014-2025)
- The Extraordinary X-Men (2018)
- Marvel's X-Force (2021)
- X-Men: Decimation (2023)
- Avengers vs. X-Men (2026)