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The X-Men: Dark Phoenix trailer shows the X-Men going up against one of their own

Jean Grey becomes the iconic X-Men villain.

Alex Abad-Santos
Alex Abad-Santos is a senior correspondent who explains what society obsesses over, from Marvel and movies to fitness and skin care. He came to Vox in 2014. Prior to that, he worked at The Atlantic.

The Phoenix is coming.

Fox has released the first trailer for X-Men: Dark Phoenix, the fourth movie in Fox’s rebooted X-Men franchise. (The film is preceded by 2011’s X-Men: First Class, 2014’s X-Men: Days of Future Past, and 2016’s X-Men: Apocalypse.)

In this installment, the X-Men will have to deal with a villain in their own ranks: Jean Grey (played by Sophie Turner in the upcoming film as well as its predecessor, Apocalypse). Directed and written by Simon Kinberg, Dark Phoenix adapts what is arguably the most essential X-Men story ever written: that of Jean and her relationship to the Phoenix, a powerful cosmic entity.

In the new trailer, we see a glimpse of Jean’s chaotic childhood trauma — a car crash that kills her parents. The trauma is part of a bigger narrative that paints Jean as capable of hurting her loved ones with her powers, and Jean’s struggle to keep that from happening.

This is in line with the original story in the X-Men comics, which was told in Uncanny X-Men’s late-’70s Phoenix Saga arc and 1980 Dark Phoenix Saga arc. The titular Phoenix bonded itself with Jean, giving her immense power as well as the ability to cause immense destruction. Ultimately, the story concluded with the death and sacrifice of Jean.

Elsewhere in the trailer, we see the return of Jennifer Lawrence, Michael Fassbender, and James McAvoy as Mystique, Magneto, and Professor X — the mentors of the younger, newly formed group of X-Men we saw at the end of Apocalypse (Jean Grey, Storm, Cyclops, and Quicksilver are the new recruits). However, a brief glimpse of a sad funeral scene, and a conspicuously absent Mystique during that sequence, suggests there’s no guarantee that all three will make it out of Dark Phoenix alive.

Dark Phoenix looks to be more in line with the X-Men comics than previous movies about Jean Grey

This isn’t the first time Fox has tried to tell Jean Grey’s famous story.

In Bryan Singer’s X2 (2003), we saw a glimpse of Jean (played in that film by Famke Janssen), who was saving her friends by sacrificing herself and tapping into a power she didn’t know she had. X2 was followed by the cinematic mess known as Brett Ratner’s X-Men: The Last Stand (2006), in which Janssen’s Jean returned as the Phoenix and was portrayed as a mentally unstable, extremely powerful villain. In both movies, the Phoenix was more alter ego than cosmic entity.

But the official synopsis for Dark Phoenix, as well as the shots we see in the trailer of the X-Men wearing space uniforms, suggest that Kinberg is taking a different route that’s truer to the comic books, by making the Phoenix a cosmic force that imbues Jean with immense power and immense instability. She and the Phoenix become one and she struggles to keep the cosmic being in check. And the result is the X-Men fighting the battle of their lives against one of their most powerful foes who is also one of their most beloved friends.

X-Men: Dark Phoenix is scheduled to hit theaters on June 7, 2019.

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