An Ambitious Cinematic Experience in the latest “X-Men: Apocalypse”
Set a decade after the events of “X-Men: Days of Future Past,” the latest “X-Men: Apocalypse” that will open
on May 18 in Philippine cinemas finds the mutants in 1983 living their own
lives. Charles Xavier (James McAvoy) has his school for gifted youngsters up
and running, and has some promising new students he’s guiding as they figure
out their lives. Erik “Magneto” Lensherr (Michael Fassbender) is living a quiet
family life in Poland, while Raven (Jennifer Lawrence) is eschewing her mutant
side, worried that humanity still doesn’t completely accept them. Their world
is thrown into chaos when an incredibly powerful, ancient mutant named
Apocalypse (Oscar Isaac) awakens and decides that the world has taken a turn
for the worse and decides to destroy civilization and create it again in his
own image.
Taking the
cinematic experience to the highest level this time, “X-Men: Apocalypse” will
also be available in 3D and IMAX screens where director Bryan Singer brings the
X-men in an epic showdown with their most powerful unstoppable enemy.
Given
Apocalypse’s vision of global destruction, it’s no surprise that this is the
most visually ambitious of X-Men pictures. “We’re not only traveling the world,
we’re talking about the potential end of the world, and perhaps the end of the
universe,” says director of photography Newton Thomas Sigel, who previously
collaborated with Singer on DOFP, X2, and X-MEN, among other films. Adds Oscar Isaac, who plays the seminal
figure: “The stage is set for an epic mutant versus mega-mutant war. The battle between the X-Men and Apocalypse
is insane!”
Apocalypse’s
5,000-year slumber began when civilization was at its peak; his sleep ends when
it’s arguably at its nadir. Having grown
up in eighties, producer Simon Kinberg understood how it was marked by excess,
as seen in the hair styles, fashion, and automobiles. “In 1983, Apocalypse rises from the
perfection of ancient Egyptian culture into an over-populated, polluted,
nuclear-threatened culture,” he says. “So his motivation is understandable,
though his methods and goals are extreme.”
Oscar Isaac, who
took on the role of Apocalypse following his star turn as the heroic pilot Poe
Dameron in “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” and the avant-garde artificial
intelligence creator in “Deus Ex Machina” calls the character nothing less than
“the creative/destructive force of this earth.
When things seem like they’re no longer evolving—like they did in the
1980s—he destroys those civilizations.”
The character’s
makeup effects included a forehead piece, a nose and cheek piece, a jaw and
chin piece, a headpiece, a neck piece and even a helmet. “The only body part
that wasn’t covered was Isaac’s eyeballs,” jokes specialty makeup designer
Brian Sipe. “With a head dress and neck
piece, as well as a twenty piece costume, the entire process was “like a giant
jigsaw puzzle,” he adds. One of the
prominent features in the Apocalypse design is the metallic-looking
“dreads.” The challenge was making the
suit “look heroic on a normal man’s body while allowing the actor to maintain
mobility and conform,” says Sipe. They
also had to keep Isaac cool in hot and humid Montreal summer weather. “We used
a system called Cool Shirt,” Sipe continues. “It’s a cooling system similar to
what race car drivers use; Oscar was plugged into ice water whenever he wasn’t
filming to maintain a comfortable temperature.”
Prepare for a war
like no other when “X-Men: Apocalypse” opens May 18 in cinemas from 20th
Century Fox to be distributed by Warner Bros.







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