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And of course, more attention was given to Nightcrawler and Storm, again, largely because the point of view switching and use of internal monologues in places helped bring them a little more focus compared to what they might have gotten in the movie if you weren't paying attention to them already. An example might be the scene in which Kurt begins his introduction just before he and Storm go into Dark Cerebro. While I had thought introducing himself that way was an ingrained habit, the book offers the interpretation that it's an attempt to diffuse the situation due to being flustered and overwhelmed by the request to teleport, as well as the tension between everyone. It may not have been my first interpretation, but I found it to be a valid one that could match with the way he's portrayed in the movie.
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The biggest difference between the novelization and the film, the main reason I think it might have been based off an earlier script, the reason which you may have heard of this book before now, is because of the ending. A character who sacrifices herself in the movie opts for a different method of rescue in the book. While I was hoping for the book to provide some insight into why she thought it was "the only way," I think it makes a little more sense in the book, where not only did she break her leg fighting off a brainwashed Scott Summers (Cyclops), but she was also blinded by the backlash from Dark Cerebro, and had to rely completely on her telepathy to see what was going on through others' eyes. Without any visibility, she might not have been able to get out of the jet to sacrifice herself as in the movie. Although I would have liked to have seen her reasoning behind the movie's "It's the only way," I appreciated the alternative solution.
Finally, I was a little concerned by the name "Chris Claremont," since, although I respect his work on Uncanny X-Men and think that for the most part, he did a remarkable job, I also know that when you get used to working on one medium and then transfer to another, it can sometimes be difficult to reshape your writing to fit the new style. (Imagine Sir Arthur Conan Doyle trying to write a comic, as a purely hypothetical example) But I was again, pleasantly surprised. The work actually reads fairly easily. My one complaint would be the length of the penultimate chapter, as I don't recall a single chapter break from Mystique's infiltration until after the final escape from Alkali Lake. It's understandable, considering a lot happens there, but I thought it might have been wiser to put a chapter break immediately after the first time Dark Cerebro is shut off, picking up as everyone begins recovering from the effects. It's not a major complaint for me, since I've never had a problem putting a book down and picking it back up wherever and whenever I wanted, but it might make it a bit of a slog for readers with different habits.
Nevertheless, if you enjoy the X-Men, or are simply curious as to what might have been in the movie series, would like focus on something besides Logan/Jean/Cyclops, or you simply agree that there isn't enough Nightcrawler in the X-films at this point, I would highly recommend Chris Claremont's X-Men 2: The Novel.
So please, enjoy, and I'll see you on the next shelf.
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