The movie should've been more like the comic(right) and less like Australia.
How do you make mutants dull? They bend, they bounce, they fly, laser beams come out of their eyes, they can twist metal with their minds. You want these people at a party on a Friday night. But somehow Hollywood has managed to make mutants seem thoroughly commonplace and uninteresting in "X-Men Origins: Wolverine." Instead of offering the mutant concept as witty and exotic commentary on prejudice and individuality -- as it was with varying degrees of success in the first three "X-Men" movies -- this film uses its characters as obvious pawns in a money-grab. It's not so much a film as a franchise launch, and it has all the soul of a cereal commercial. The resultant chilliness undermines what's supposed to be the over-ruling characteristic of its protagonist: His passion. At no time do you believe anyone in this movie is feeling anything. At all times you suspect concerns about roles in future sequels are lurking in the back of their mutant minds. READ MORE