TheX-Menfilms are a curious series. They have a bit more to say than the typical comic book fare, showing superheroes fighting bad guys as well as human prejudice and intolerance. Of course, it’s a mixed bag like any long-running franchise. Some entries have been more inspired than others. On its best days, however, theX-Menseries has captivated audiences with sharp filmmaking, passionate performances, and strong stories utilizing poignant themes.

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Liev Schreiber and Tyler Mane both play Sabretooth in the X-Men movies

For how carefully crafted many of them are as individual films, the same can’t be said for their continuity. As the franchise progressed to multiple creative teams, it went in wildly different directions. The filmmakers of one project clearly didn’t care about lining up with those that came before, leading to some glaring errors regarding certain characters and storylines. At this point, even the most devout fans can’t make sense of the series.

10From Victor Creed To Sabretooth

Plenty of other characters have had conflicting versions over the course of these films, but this one is especially egregious due to the time spent with him. Keep in mind, this was back when the series still tried to maintain some semblance of continuity.X-Men Origins: Wolverineundermines this with its portrayal of Victor Creed. Appearing as a normal guy with fangs and claws,Liev Schreiber plays him as a cool, smoldering menace with bouts of beastly bloodlust.

How did he go from this to the animalistic Tyler Mane rendition in the first movie? In addition, why doesn’t he seem to remember Logan as his brother? One can assume that his feral tendencies caused his body to mutate and his mind to degrade, but the writers never make this clear. So, you’re left with two radically different sides of one pivotal character.

Beast and Mystique reconnect in X-Men: Days of Future Past

9Beast And Mystique

TheX-Men: First Classfilm was where the plot hole floodgates really opened. The creators simply didn’t prioritize lining this prequel up with the movies made before it. Among the more bizarre decisions was an impromptu romance between Beast and Mystique.

This would ordinarily be a harmless inclusion, but it somewhat flies in the face ofX-Men: The Last Stand. In the cluttered finale of the original trilogy, this relationship is never acknowledged or even vaguely hinted at.

Peter Dinklage and Bill Duke each play Trask in the X-Men films

8A Tale Of Two Trasks

This calculating villain’s presence inThe Last Standwas never more than a throwaway cameo. Bill Duke’s Trask doesn’t create the mutant-hunting Sentinels; he just sits around with the President and does nothing. That’s not surprisinggiven how messy the movie was.

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OnceX-Men: Days of Future Pastreintroduces Trask to make his mechanical monstrosities in the ’70s, the role has passed to Peter Dinklage. Evidently, he’s such a maniacal genius that he changed his race, age, and size to escape the feds. Then again,The Last Standopens with the X-Men fighting Sentinel simulations in the Danger Room, so maybe he’s not as smart as he used to be. That’s not even counting theX-Men Origins: Wolverinegame, which has the Ol' Canucklehead thwarting Trask and the Sentinels by himself.

7When Did Charles And Eric Meet?

It’s no secret that Professor X and Magneto go way back, starting as friends before their differing ideologies made them enemies. That much remains constant. Themanner of their meeting, however, is a different story. Charles explains in the firstX-Menfilm that he was 17 years old when he first encountered Eric.

InFirst Class, they’re both in their late 20s or early 30s. Charles is working on his thesis, and Eric is hunting former Nazis. Apparently, the professor can’t even remember how he met his best buddy. How does anyone trust him to run a school?

Professor Xavier and Magneto have a tense meeting in X-Men: First Class

6Where Do The TV Shows Fit In?

While Marvel series likeWandaVision,Falcon and the Winter Soldier, andAgents of S.H.I.E.L.D.adhere to the framework of the films, the twoX-Menshows do their own thing. They adapt more obscure characters from the comics, sometimes paying lip service to the X-Men without letting them impact the narrative. This pays off for the most part.

From the psychedelic creativity ofLegionto the family drama ofThe Gifted, both series provide a compelling alternative, venturing into wildly different genres, stories, and stylings than the films. Sadly, going this radical will likely confuse longtime fans, especially when the shows provide their own versions of established characters like Charles Xavier and Blink.

Neither Legion nor The Gifted connect to the X-Men films

5Who Created Cerebro?

Another offhand line from the first flick gets thrown away byFirst Class. Although Xavier reveals that Magneto helped him build this telepathic mutant-finding device, the prequel instead gives all the credit to Beast. Not only does he create a machine to enhance Charles’s abilities mere days after meeting the guy, but he does so offscreen.

This somewhat lessens Eric’s agency in forming the X-Men. More than that, though, it creates another plot hole. If Magneto didn’t help create Cerebro, how would he know how to shield himself from it through a telepathy-proof helmet? Of course, that’s also a moot point since he apparently just stole Sebastian Shaw’s helmet.

Cerebro has ambiguous origins in the X-Men movies

4That Deadpool Cameo

TheDeadpoolspinoff flickshave no interest in lining up with the mainlineX-Menseries. They make that clear from the get-go, only sometimes referencing the heroes for a punchline. At the very least, however, viewers know that the movies take place in the modern-day. As such, any cameos would come from the olderX-Mencast, right?

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The X-Men make an unwilling cameo in Deadpool 2

Wrong. When the iconic team pops up withDeadpool 2, viewers instead see the prequel actors playing them. Granted, this is a simple sight gag. Fans aren’t meant to take it seriously, but those who do will find the timeline more mangled than it already was. It’s no wonder even Deadpool himself is confused at this point.

3Wolverine’s Claws

At the end ofThe Wolverine, Logan loses his metal claws to the Silver Samurai. He thenregrows his bone blades, implying that they’ll be his weapons going forward. The following ensemble piece,X-Men: Days of Future Past, retcons this by portraying the modern Wolverine with metal claws.

This wouldn’t be such an issue if not forThe Wolverine’s mid-credits scene leading directly into the next film. Here, he explicitly has bone claws when the war with the Sentinels starts. Granted, he could have coated them with adamantium in the intervening years, but this is never made clear. He simply has his metal slicers back because they’re more popular (and probably more effective against giantTerminators).

Wolverine goes from bone claws to metal ones in the X-Men films

2Logan And The New Mutants?

When Dani Moonstar and the other mutant misfits investigate their gilded cage, they discover that they’re actually guinea pigs of Essex. This is the corporation experimenting on mutant kids inLogan. Even the handheld footage they find is the same.

Aside from this, however, nothing aboutThe New Mutantsindicates that it takes place in the same decaying world asLogan. Not to mention, Dani and the others talk aboutpossibly becoming X-Men, but this superhero team was supposedly wiped out. These contradictions make this small connection a flimsy one at best. Speaking ofLogan…

The New Mutants work to escape their prison

1Logan’s Entire Setting

At first glance,Loganappears to be a continuation of the series, specifically the exploits of the older cast. It even references events from past films, albeit vaguely. Oddly enough, these connections fall apart upon further inspection.Days of Future Pastleft these characters in a good place, with the heroes alive and well and a brighter tomorrow in sight for mutants.

Despite taking place just a few years after,Logan’s setting couldn’t be more different. The world is a hostile place, and mutants are practically extinct. The film also implies that Xavier inadvertently killed most (if not all) of the X-Men through a psychic episode. That’s not even mentioning the fact that he and Logan look twenty or thirty years older.

Wolverine and Charles Xavier survive in a world without the X-Men in Logan

Basically, this spits in the face of the previous movie’s happy ending. That said, unlike other series (looking at you,Star Warssequel trilogy),Loganis too good for fans to really disown. That’s why some consider it an alternate take on the characters, which is nothing new. It’s yet another in the long line of seemingly separate timelines in theX-Menseries.

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