Watched: 03/20/2021
Format: Disney+
Viewing: Unknown
Decade: 2000's
Director: (ahem) Bryan Singer
Arguably *the* game changer for the entire comic book movie and TV genre - from goofy b-movies with occasional hits to the world we're in today with Justice Leagues, WandaVisions and whatnot everywhere you look, X-Men (2000) arrived on the scene to an excited fanbase who saw a trailer that kinda/ sorta looked like an X-Men comics and seemed to treat the concept of X-Men with some faint degree of dignity.
Now, many will argue that Blade was the kickstarter, and they're right! But the thing about Blade was that it operated way more like a horror movie/ action adventure and less like a superhero flick - and there were maybe a couple thousand people walking around in 1998 who knew anything about Blade. To this day, I have no idea if Blade has any real relation to the comics (and don't care. Blade kicks ass.).
From the late 1970's to the late 1990's, X-Men was a powerhouse franchise all its own, even within the Marvel line of comics. It was more or less like the Game of Thrones of comics - even if you didn't read it, you knew about it, and the gravity well of the comic was massive. In the mid-90's, I guess it was outperforming literally every other thing Marvel comics put out, so they rebooted their entire universe for about - I dunno - 6 months? minus X-Men. Because X-Men was too big, baby!