10. X-Men: Wolverine (2009)
X-Men Origins: Wolverine describes the origins of wolverine, one of the X-Men's hottest characters. It also allowed Ryan Reynolds to play the role of Deadpool for the first time, and also closed Deadpool's mouth inside. Deadpool's nickname is The Little, and the movie sews his mouth, and how scary it is for this movie, without Deadpool's mouth cannon, the movie is a lot less fun.

9. X-Men: The Last Battle (2006)
The third X-Men film shot after director Brian Singer left, Brettrattner directed the X-Men film. In the end, Tinglin sacrificed himself. X-Men: The Last Battle originally had many, many developments, but ultimately failed to achieve the only important theme: the Dark Phoenix storyline is an important part of the X-Men comic book. Fox tried again in next year's X-Men: Dark Phoenix.
8. X-Men: Apocalypse (2016)
The idea of having Oscar winner Isaac play such a role and asking him to be covered in blue makeup throughout the film is a terrible idea. Unlike Josh Brolin's Thanos in Avengers: Infinity War, Isaac plays Apocalypse as a blue alien. Brian Singer has been disappointed in the film since he won the directing rights for X-Men: Reverse Future.
7. Wolverine 2 (2013)
Before James Mangold directed Wolverine 3, the film was first tested, but compared to Wolverine 3, it is hard to believe that it was directed by the same person, but Wolverine 2 is much better than the previous Wolverine 1.
6. Deadpool (2016)
Deadpool is a little bit overrated. This anti-superhero exists in order to mock the clichés of the superhero genre. But, despite this, the film falls into the same clichés without fully expressing anything of value. Capturing Deadpool is a very interesting movie, and as mentioned earlier, Ryan Reynolds was born to play this role.
5. The X-Men (2000)
It was very difficult to shoot the movie like this, and X-Men pioneered the superhero genre. X-Men is a controversial film even today, but it's still an interesting nostalgic journey that relives that history and helps kick-start the superhero movie phenomenon that has evolved to this day.
4. X-Men: First Battle (2011)
Whether X-Men: First Battle is a prequel or a reboot, it's very appealing and tries to make a great pattern. Michael Fassbinder and James McAvoy served as Magneto and Professor X, respectively. As a glamorous film that spans history, it offers viewers a unique perspective on the X-Men series of movies.
3. X-Men: Reverse Future (2014)
Brian Singer received the rights to X-Men: Reverse Future in 2014, which adapts the best storylines from X-Men comics, such as Dark Phoenix in The Last War. Bringing together two generations of X-Men casts, Reverse Future may have a time-travel storyline that may be completely out of track and not as big as Infinity War, but just as impressive.
2. X-Men 2 (2003)
X-Men 2 is better than its predecessors and sequels, mainly because of the mythological story introduced in its original version in a more serious and dramatic way (such as Empire Strikes Back and The Dark Knight).
1. Wolverine 3 (2017)
Wolverine 3 you won't see Magneto and time travel here. Wolverine 3 is almost like an X-Men movie, more like a Western. And the development of the plot is also not shy about mentioning that Hugh Jackman has starred in seven X-Men movies (excluding cameos) in nearly two decades, and Hugh Jackman is basically the same as Wolverine Scratch. Audiences are infected by their emotions, it's hard to say goodbye to characters we're used to, and it's the only superhero movie to be nominated for an Oscar-winning screenplay.