75
Metascore
44 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 90VarietyJustin ChangVarietyJustin ChangIf the characters’ quandaries at times feel overly circumscribed, they’re also advanced with a bracing emotional directness, devoid of either cynicism or sentimentalism, that touches genuine chords of feeling over the course of the film’s fleet 130-minute running time.
- 90The Hollywood ReporterDavid RooneyThe Hollywood ReporterDavid RooneyWhile it's more dramatically diffuse than the reboot and lacks a definitive villain, the new film is shot through with a stirring reverence for the Marvel Comics characters and their universe.
- 83HitfixDrew McWeenyHitfixDrew McWeenyIt feels like the single most successful attempt to pull the shape of one of the beloved comic stories into the film world. It also feels like Bryan Singer has finally figured out how to shoot an action scene where the X-Men actually look and feel like the X-Men, and where the fantastic is handled the right way.
- 80EmpireNick de SemlyenEmpireNick de SemlyenWith so much going on, and such a ferocious pace, several parts of the story feel undernourished... But what we do get here is largely fantastic.
- 80Total FilmKevin HarleyTotal FilmKevin HarleySinger has refreshed the series with blasts of his original entries’ X-factors: vim, levity, clarity and a sincere, soulful grip on the emotional stakes involved.
- 67TheWrapAlonso DuraldeTheWrapAlonso DuraldeWhile there are fun moments and a continuation of the franchise's main idea — Professor X's peace, love and understanding vs. Magneto's fight the power — Days of Future Past ends up feeling more exhausting than exuberant.
- 60The GuardianThe GuardianNon-devotees might well give up, but director Bryan Singer always has a neat special effect, a well-timed gag or an action set piece around the corner, whipping up the action towards a symphonic climax.
- 60CineVueAdam LowesCineVueAdam LowesImpressive for the most part without being awe-inspiring, the film's two timelines converge in a much more satisfying and thrilling ways towards the end, where the emotional stakes are considerably upped.
- 50Village VoiceAmy NicholsonVillage VoiceAmy NicholsonFuture Past starts fast and never slows down. There's not a line of dialogue that isn't exposition... What fun there is slips in through director Bryan Singer's visuals.
- 40The TelegraphRobbie CollinThe TelegraphRobbie CollinThe film squanders both of its casts, reeling from one fumbled set-piece to the next. It seems to have been constructed in a stupor, and you watch in a daze of future past.