Here’s Why X-Men Comics Were Banned From Set Of Hugh Jackman’s 2000 Film ( Photo Credit – Facebook )

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Plot twist: the X-Men comics were banned on set during the making of the 2000 film. Yep, Bryan Singer, the director, actually banned them. No, it wasn’t some kind of strange mutant power—he was just worried about the movie being taken seriously. The man had a plan.

According to Collider, Singer didn’t want the X-Men to be seen as mere comic book characters. “Bryan really wanted to take comic book characters seriously,” Hugh Jackman recalled. He was concerned that “people who don’t understand these comics might think they’re two-dimensional.” The last thing he wanted was for audiences to think of the mutants as just fun cartoonish figures.

So, Singer banned comic books from the set. Yep, not even the actors could read them. This wasn’t some weird attempt to shut down geek culture—it was all about keeping things grounded. “It was contraband. I’d never read X-Men, so people were slipping them under my door,” Jackman said. Talk about a secret smuggling operation! Jackman, not exactly a die-hard fan of the comics at that point, still found himself on the receiving end of a comic book underground network.

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