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On one hand, you can start with the 2000 original and keep going until you’re at Deadpool & Wolverine. On the other hand, if you want to go by universe chronology, well, it’s a little more difficult, because there have been…shifts.
14) X-Men: First Class

The original X-Men opens on Erik Lehnsherr in Nazi Germany, but most of it takes place when he’s an older man. X-Men: First Class opens much the same way but then goes to when he’s in his 30s. Specifically, X-Men: First Class opens in 1944 but spends most of its time in 1962, towards the end of the height of the Cold War (in other words when it was really, really scary). First Class is where you start if you want to go the chronological route, and in terms of quality it’s a great way to get a newcomer hooked.
13) X-Men: Days of Future Past

We’re already at the point where the timeline gets very wonky. If you could split X-Men: Days of Future Past into its two parts, the scenes focusing on the original trilogy cast and the scenes focusing on the prequel films’ cast (aka its majority), it would place both here and not long before Deadpool & Wolverine. Specifically, Days of Future Past takes place in both 1973 and (a potential) 2023. Then there’s the fact that the finale of Days of Future Past essentially undoes most of the original trilogy’s biggest events. Basically, it’s why there’s a strong argument to be made that this franchise is best watched in release order.
12) X-Men Origins: Wolverine

Sure, the opening montage of X-Men Origins: Wolverine (which is basically the best part of the movie), takes place in 1845. But that’s a swiftly moving montage, we’re not going to jot it down as the earliest chronologically just because of that. Instead, much of it takes place in 1979. Then again, everything you see here was briefly covered in X2, and that was really all you needed to see of this Origin. In a perfect world, you skip this dud entirely.
11) X-Men: Apocalypse

Hey, speaking of duds, X-Men: Apocalypse takes place in 1983, just four years after Wolverine. This overlong, hollow extravaganza brings about the greatest threat save for the Sentinels and has him try to rule the world. Like with Wolverine, it opens far in the past (3600 BC, specifically, just a tad farther back than Wolverine‘s 1845 montage), but the vast majority is ’83.
10) Dark Phoenix

We’re now three in a row when it comes to skippable X-Men movies. But, if you insist upon watching every last one of them, Dark Phoenix (or X-Men: Dark Phoenix) takes place in 1992, nine years after X-Men: Apocalypse, even though all of the characters introduced in that film look as though they haven’t aged a day. We also get a scene of a young Jean Grey back in 1975, but the film largely takes place in ’92.
9) X-Men

Charles Xavier and Erik Lehnsherr sure did age quite a bit in less than a decade, because the original X-Men takes place in the present day. And its definition of present day was around the year 2000. It’s definitely the early aughts, so at most 10 years post-Dark Phoenix.
8) X2: X-Men United

Like with the film that preceded it, X2: X-Men United was set in the present day for early aughts audiences. So, looking at X-Men as a film that takes place in 2000 and X2 as a film that takes place in 2003 makes perfect sense.















