Release Date : Jul 25, 2013 Wide
Genre Movie :Action & Adventure
Actors :Hugh Jackman,Tao Okamoto,Rila Fukushima,Hiroyuki Sanada,Svetlana Khodchenkova,Brian Tee,Hal Yamanouchi,Will Yun Lee,Ken Yamamura,Famke Janssen,Saverio Di Biagio,Francisco Payó González,Shinji Ikefuji,Joseph Coors, Jr.,Nobuaki Kakuda,Yu Shao-Kang,Andrew G. Cesana,Conrad Coleby,Taris Tyler,Bela B. FelsenheimerMpaa Rating : PG-13
Plot Story : Hugh Jackman returns as Wolverine in this sequel to the member of the X-Men's first solo outing. Mark Bomback and The Usual Suspects' Christopher McQuarrie penned the script, which takes its inspiration from the Chris Claremont/Frank Miller Marvel miniseries from the 1980s dealing with the character's adventures in Japan as he fights ninjas in the ceremonial garb of the samurai. Knight and Day's James Mangold directs. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, Rovi PG-13
Best Trailer For The Wolverine
TagLine The Wolverine When he's most vulnerable, he's most dangerous.Visitor Ranting and Critics For The Wolverine
Critics Ranting For The Wolverine : 6.3Critics Percentage For The Wolverine : 69 %
User Ranting Movie The Wolverine : 3.8
User Count Like for The Wolverine : 151,329
Review For Movie The Wolverine
It's a relief to come across a blockbuster that finds a location and stays there, rather than hopping desperately from one place to the next ...Anthony Lane-New Yorker
It restores the tarnished lustre to this most fan-beloved of Marvel characters by doing precisely what Chris Claremont and Frank Miller's near-sacred 1982 run did: It pumps some feeling into the guy along with his muscles and steel talons.
Geoff Pevere-Globe and Mail
Director James Mangold's film features some breathtakingly suspenseful action sequences, exquisite production and costume design and colorful characters, some of whom register more powerfully than others.
Christy Lemire-RogerEbert.com
Too quickly the random fights pile up -- so many yakuza thugs who forgot to wear chain mail that morning -- and you yearn for the film that might have been.
Joshua Rothkopf-Time Out New York
Mangold front-loads the action, but near the end there's a first-rate fight atop a bullet train between Wolverine/Logan and some especially pesky ninjas. It puts the train fights in the recent The Lone Ranger to shame.
Peter Rainer-Christian Science Monitor
Just as comic-book movie fatigue was starting to set in, along comes The Wolverine to revive a moribund summer of superheroes.
Rene Rodriguez-Miami Herald
Slick, entertaining, super-hero thrill ride, the only quibbles are its length - every big film these days seems to be 20 minutes too long - and its 3D conversion. Really, it's another example of the marginal difference that process often makes.
Jim Schembri-3AW
A superior, even adult Marvel Comics adaptation that plays almost like a straight gangster/yakuza thriller for much of its length, until the obligatory climactic superhero/supervillain dust-up.
John Beifuss-Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN)
For all the up and down The Wolverine is definitely more up than down more of the time... It still doesn't feel like the definitive adventure for the character, but there's potential for the character still.
Joshua Starnes-ComingSoon.net
The Wolverine can proudly take its place with most of the rest of its comic book brethren this summer - high atop the mountain of the Massively OK.
Ken Hanke-Mountain Xpress (Asheville, NC)
The movie contemplates Logan's existential dilemma for all of two seconds before getting to the slashing and bashing.
Margot Harrison-Seven Days
Clawing Thriller
Diana Saenger-ReviewExpress.com
a murky and muddled thing saved, such as it is, by Hugh Jackman's steadfast commitment
Andrea Chase-Killer Movie Reviews
a man's mute, impotent melancholy and the many females around him engaged in the maintenance of their separate, disintegrating orbits.
Walter Chaw-Film Freak Central
After 2009′s bland X-Men Origins: Wolverine, it's refreshing to see Hugh Jackman inhabit the character in a movie that actually understands his inner conflict.
Eric Melin-Scene-Stealers.com
...its not the definitive Wolverine film that we had been promised. (Video Review)
Adam Ross-The Aristocrat
The Wolverine is surprisingly dour and uneventful, at least by the carnage-n-claptrap standards of modern superhero movies
Luke Buckmaster-Crikey
Much of the reason Wolverine has become everyone's favorite Canadian mutant is because, despite his origins in the Marvel Universe, he doesn't act much like a superhero.
Dan Lybarger-Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
It's Hugh's movie, and he's in formidable form, whether chatting with the dead Jean Grey, skewering multiple baddies, clinging to a bullet train's roof or performing seriously ouchy auto-surgery.
David 'Mad Dog' Bradley-Rip It Up
... a holdover to distract us from what we've been craving all along... it's still better than the last Wolverine sorta-solo outing, so there's that.
Kevin A. Ranson-MovieCrypt.com
The standout moment is when Logan gets to grips with an assailant atop a hurtling bullet train. Fights on the roofs of speeding trains are a cinematic cliché, but the giddying velocity of the Japanese train gives the scene a uniquely thrilling momentum.
Jason Best-Movie Talk
The very definition of a 'good enough' film... But 'good enough' is better by far than 'not good enough'.
Tim Brayton-Antagony & Ecstasy
Taken as a whole, The Wolverine is nearly as hit-and-miss as the rest of Mangold's filmography.
Scott Wold-Paste Magazine
With a contemplative tone and slower pace, "The Wolverine" doesn't feel much like a superhero movie, which isn't a bad thing considering how plentiful the genre has become ...
Greg Maki-Star-Democrat (Easton, MD)
At one point, with a giant metal suit controlled by Yashida battling Wolverine, the movie felt like outtakes from Pacific Rim.
Lori Hoffman-Atlantic City Weekly
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