Jennifer Lawrence has finally taken over the 'X-Men' franchise
When she was originally cast in "X-Men: First Class," the fifth installment in the superhero franchise, she was neither America's sweetheart nor the reaction .GIF queen she is today. She had only a handful of film credits to her name before 2010, when she broke out in the independent drama "Winter's Bone." "First Class" went into production just a few months later, and by the time it premiered in 2011 Lawrence was a promising, rising star, but relegated to a supporting role behind Michael Fassbender, James McAvoy, and Kevin Bacon.
The very next year, however, Lawrence catapulted to blockbuster stardom with "The Hunger Games," and netted herself a Best Actress Oscar for "Silver Linings Playbook." By the time "X-Men: Days of Future Past" came out in 2014, she'd star in another "Hunger Games" sequel and snag her third Best Actress nomination
The producers at 20th Century Fox were presumably thrilled to have signed Lawrence to a three-picture deal before she became one of the biggest stars in Hollywood, and capitalizing on her fame seemed only natural. Thus, her importance to the plot of the franchise has grown along with her stardom. In the first film, she served as more of a moral compass, torn between Professor X and Magneto's dueling philosophies, but she became more crucial to the story in "Days of Future Past." The only person bigger than her on the poster is Hugh Jackman's Wolverine, though it's worth noting that he's forced to go back in time to prevent her blood from powering a dystopian line of robots out to end the mutant race.
As her plot-importance and screen-time seemingly grew to match her fame, the blue makeup obscuring her marketable face receded. While Mystique learned a big lesson when she accepted her true blue form at the end of "First Class," she seems to have forgotten it. In "Days of Future Past" the blue makeup was ditched as she frequently needed to look inconspicuous, but based off of trailers in which Lawrence looks like herself, "Apocalypse" is largely giving up on that pretense, and just letting Lawrence be Lawrence. It makes sense: if your character can look like anybody, then, well, why wouldn't you want them to look like the biggest movie star in the world?
"Apocalypse" might very well be Lawrence's last turn as Mystique, and it looks like Fox has made the most of her.
Who's going to be the next breakout star on the X-Men's uncanny roster? The latest trailer's preview image focuses on Jean Grey, played by Sophie Turner (Sansa Stark from "Game of Thrones"). Maybe by the 12th movie, she'll be the lead. But until then, Lawrence remains the most powerful - and profitable - mutant around.