quotes
Films[]
X-Men: First Class[]
- “You can't. You'll drown. You have to let go. I know what this means to you, but you're going to die. Please! Erik, calm you mind.”
- — Charles stopping Erik from trying to kill Sebastian Shaw
- “Can't stop thinking about the others out there. All those minds that I touched. I could feel them. Their isolation. Their hopes. Their ambitions. I tell you, we've started something incredible, Erik. We can help them.”
- — Charles telling Erik about his experiences with Cerebro.
- “Would you mind if I...?”
- — Charles indicating he wants to go into Erik's head.
- “There's so much more to you than you know. Not just pain and anger. There's good to you, I felt it. And when you can access all that, you'll possess a power no one can match. Not even me.”
- — Charles trying to help Erik gain control over his powers
- Erik – “I thought I was alone.”
- Charles – “You're not alone. Erik, you're not alone.”
- — Charles stopping Erik from trying to kill Shaw
- Erik – “What an adorable lab rat you make, Charles.”
- Charles – “Don't spoil this for me, Erik.”
- Erik – “No. I've been a lab rat. I know one when I see one.”
- — Charles trying Cerebro for the first time
- Erik – “Us turning on each other, it's what they want. I tried to warn you, Charles. I want you by my side. We're brothers, you and I. All of us together, protecting each other. We want the same thing.”
- Charles – “My friend, I'm sorry, but we do not.”
- — after Charles has been shot in the spine
- Emma Frost – “Where's your telepath friend?”
- Erik – “Gone. Left a bit of a gap in my life, if I'm to be honest. I was rather hoping you would fill it.”
Deleted scenes[]
- “You've never looked more beautiful, darling.”
- — Charles to Erik, using his telepathy to transform Erik into a drag queen
Other[]
- “In a fab montage, the pair go on a recruiting drive, in which they perch on a strip-club bed.
"That scene got exceptionally silly at one point," says McAvoy. "I don't know if I'm even allowed to tell you what originally happened. But it got pretty f---in' kinky. I'm not joking."
Was the dashing duo's bromance, uh, consummated?
"Unfortunately no. But there was a little bit of cross-dressing going on. That's all you need to know."
(For the record, McAvoy would have preferred it if Xavier and Magneto stayed together. Like, really together. "It is a little bit of a mini-tragedy that him and Magneto don't, you know, have sex and become married and become best friends.")” - — Neela Johnson, The Daily Telegraph
- “The only thing that matches the strength of their bond is the strength of their belief in separate ideals. And ultimately, one of them pays the price. Both emotionally and physically.”
- — James McAvoy
- “He’s [Xavier] just been paralyzed and he’s been betrayed by the person who he’s probably come to care about more than anybody else in the world, and he’s the guy who did it to him.”
- — James McAvoy, Collider
- “It’s kind of a love story, like “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” which, really, was a love story between two men. This is the first time in their lives they’ve met someone who is an equal of sorts, someone who understands them and can connect and push them too.”
- — James McAvoy, Hero Complex
- “Um, no offense, but you're wrong. I helped write the movie, and can tell you the gay rights/post-Holocaust Jewish identity/civil rights allegory stuff was all put in there on purpose. Joss Whedon designed the whole "Cure" storyline in the comic books specifically as a gay allegory, and Bryan Singer wove his own feelings of outsiderdom as a gay man into the movie series. The whole "Have you ever tried NOT being a mutant" coming out scene in X2 isn't even particularly subtle, while it is effective.”
- — Zack Stentz
- “If the story between Charles and Erik is on some level this…you know, tragic romance, you’ve got to arrange the other elements in that way too.”
- — Ashley Miller, X-Men: First Class Blu Ray special features
- “I think the movie would be less interesting, and much less fun, without [the romantic throughline]. I'm not sure, however, that the majority of moviegoers necessarily recognize the gay love affair, coded as it is, but I do think they'd notice its absence. The late, great Vito Russo (The Celluloid Closet) would probably agree with this assertion, seeing as he found these kinds of coded gay relationships informing so many mainstream films over the decades.”
- — Professor William Earnest, E! News
- “With this not-always-subtle subtext established, finding ways to play with it is easy—a task made even easier by the fact that it's homoerotic, not homosexual in the literal sense, so it's about desire, tension, and, above all, unrequited love. No clothes have to come off, and so far as we know, they don't. But there are looks, body language, conversations, and above all, intimacy...The chess scene aside, from the standpoint of sexual imagery, I think the 'satellite dish' [scene] is the film's richest.”
- — Professor William Earnest, E! News
- “If First Class was Eric’s story and Days Of Future Past is Charles’s story, then Apocalypse will be both of their stories. The first movie was about Eric becoming empowered. That’s the origin story of a man’s power. Days Of Future Past is about a guy who is a mess, masterminding the end of this massive movie. So they are both at their peak powers at the start of Apocalypse, so Apocalypse for me is culmination of that three-act love story.”
- — Simon Kinberg, writer of First Class and Days of Future Past, Empire
X-Men: Days of Future Past[]
- “It's going to take the two of us. Side-by-side at the time when we couldn't be further apart.”
- — Erik
- “All those years wasted fighting each other, Charles.”
- — Erik
- Charles – “Are you sure I can't convince you to stay?”
- Erik – “You're psychic, Charles. You could convince me to do anything.”
- Charles – “Good-bye, old friend.”
- Erik – “Good luck, Professor.”
- — Erik departing the X-Mansion
Comics[]
- “I love you, Charles.”
- — Magneto to Charles Xavier, Ultimate Origins #5
- “Magneto is closer to me than my own brother. We're like bookends of the same soul.”
- — Charles, Excalibur Vol 3 #5
- “Perhaps this explains why we were initially drawn together. Like kindred spirits -- two birds of the same feather.”
- — Magneto to Charles Xavier, X-Men Movie Prequel: Magneto
- “We thought we were going to change the world, you and I! Instead... the world changed us.”
- — Charles Xavier looking at a photograph of him and Magneto, Onslaught: X-Men Vol 1 #1
- “You were too good for this world, Charles. But I... I am precisely what it deserves.”
- — Magneto to Charles; House of M: Civil War #4
- “I gave you my word, Charles. Come what may... I will be true to it.”
- — Magneto, Uncanny X-Men Vol 1 #200
- “I give you your dream, Charles. But I fear, in time, your heart will break, as you realize it has ever been a fool’s hope. Farewell, my friend.”
- — Magneto to Charles Xavier, X-Men Vol 2 #3
- “I don’t blame you. I’m your oldest friend and I don’t blame you... how could I? I owe you all so much more than just an apology. I owe you... well, at least an article of faith, I suppose.”
- — Magneto to Charles Xavier, Uncanny X-Men Vol 1 #520
- “Whatever has been there between us over the years... all our disagreements - all the anger at the other’s relentless ideology and unyielding persistence... that ends today. You have my word.”
- — Magneto to Charles Xavier, House of X #6
X-Men '97[]
- Magneto – “Back when we were friends, I would always sense Charles in my mind. I was in his thoughts and he in mine. Not invading, more a presence. I told myself I needed [my helmet] to protect myself from his psychic powers...”
- Rogue – “But you were worried if you still felt how much he loved you, you wouldn't be able to go through with your crusade.”
- — Mutant Liberation Begins